The myth is that IP rights are as important as our rights in castles, cars, and corn oil. IP is supposedly intended to encourage inventors and the investment needed to bring their products to the clinic and marketplace.
We want to be a studio that makes a whole bunch of stuff we believe in, in all ranges of scale and time and length, and own as much as that IP ourselves and generate as much of that IP ourselves as possible.
Countries like Iran and China support an Internet Iron Curtain that would censor political dissidents and deny anonymous activity online through mandatory registrations of IP addresses.
Their Internet usage is growing very rapidly, and even they can do the math: If everyone in China needed an IPv4 address - just one - this country would use up one third of the entire public IP address space.
Linux doesn't have IP roots.
Bitcoin may be the TCP/IP of money.
The IP is a completely different side of the IT, and that is what we want Vijayawada for.
I'm a big believer in using the best IP for a given application.
Thing is: the internet's made of IP addresses, opinions, and assholes. It's what's there. That's the basic equipment.
In the end, I don't mind how you interact with our IP as long as you're interacting with it every day.
I used to say that you'll have 10 IP address on your body... and it looks like that's going to happen through medical monitoring.
Everything that can be associated to ideas, inventions, copyrights, and patents is part of the IP world - at least, that's my definition. That all starts with people. Education is key.
The Chinese need to be held accountable for their continued attempts to steal IP and trade secrets through cyber-intrusions into commercial companies.
In much the same way Ip Man embodied the struggles of the Chinese people, I wanted Gong Er to represent the changing role of women.
WolfCop' is such a great IP, and such a great franchise, that I wouldn't be surprised if it keeps going on and on. I would love to be involved.
Fragmentation is like classful addressing - an interesting early architectural error that shows how much experimentation was going on while IP was being designed.