Fragesteller
Muttersprache: Chinese
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international IP title
What does this "title" mean here? Thanks.
Kontext
Prince ABC was the first original game developed by the China team and was distributed globally as an international IP title.
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Nov. 15, 03:04 GMT
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Nov. 4, 08:05 GMT
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Kommentare über die Frage
Nov. 4, 10:03 GMT
Here is another "title" in the same document. Do these 2 titles mean the same? ...ABC Majiang won the prestigious ChinaJoy Awards in the “Best Mobile Game” category and since then, ABC Company has launched over 30 titles in this category. Here titles seems to mean computer games, or titles of computer games.
Nov. 4, 12:17 GMT
I think that's exactly what they mean Laura.
Nov. 4, 13:18 GMT
Some reference materials. I guess the IP is not just about the name of the film, but the film as a whole. -=== http://kotaku.com/5037277/ea-to-publish-new-ip-title-from-epic EA To Publish New IP Title From Epic Redwood City, Calif. – August 14, 2008 – Electronic Arts Inc. (NASDAQ: ERTS) and Epic Games, Inc. today announced that they have signed a publishing agreement for an all-new action title for the PC, Xbox 360® video game system and PLAYSTATION®3 computer entertainment system. The new intellectual property is currently in development by Epic’s People Can Fly studio in Poland. “Epic is excited to work with EA Partners to launch our next big IP on the global stage,” said Mark Rein, vice president, Epic Games.
Nov. 4, 14:46 GMT
Yes. In this example, the Xbox 360 and Playstation 3 are examples of intellectual property, which will be registered under a patent. The games developed to play on them each are also examples of intellectual property, and each one has a name - referred to as a title.
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Muttersprachen: Polish, English
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International Intellectual Property
Unless they mean something else.
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Nov. 4, 09:13 GMT
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Nov. 4, 09:34 GMT
Could well be, in the sense that it was trademarked, copyrighted or whatever...
Nov. 4, 10:00 GMT
Why don't they just say "distributed globally as international IP"? Without "title".
[Bearbeitet von Laura Liu am Nov. 4, 10:01 GMT]
Nov. 4, 11:29 GMT
Possibly because it was the title of the game (rather than, say, its content) that was protected as intellectual property.
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