Chloe Veltman
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
In an article on its website, the Victoria and Albert Museum said the video, quote, captures a significant moment in the history of the internet and web design.
It acquired three YouTube-related artefacts, the Me at the Zoo video file, YouTube's original front-end website code from December 2006, and copies of YouTube advertisements from December 2006 and January 2007.
The museum worked with YouTube and a design studio to reconstruct the elements for its collection.
Meet Me at the Zoo is a 19-second long video shot in front of the elephant enclosure at San Diego Zoo.
YouTube co-founder Jawed Karim speaks to the camera.
The cool thing about these guys is that they have really, really, really long front legs.
In an article on its website, the Victoria and Albert Museum said the video, quote, "...captures a significant moment in the history of the internet and web design.
It acquired three YouTube-related artefacts, the Me at the Zoo video file, YouTube's original front-end website code from December 2006, and copies of YouTube advertisements from December 2006 and January 2007.
The museum worked with YouTube and a design studio to reconstruct the elements for its collection."
Netflix is the latest media giant to push back against ByteDance this week when it sent the Chinese company a cease and desist letter.
Netflix accuses ByteDance of allowing its latest AI video creation tool, Seadance 2.0,
to generate hyper-realistic imitations of characters from such Netflix-owned shows as Bridgerton and Squid Game.
Industry stakeholders, including the Motion Picture Association, have also joined the backlash.
The uproar began last week, after a video depicting a fight scene between two figures closely resembling Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt went viral.
In an email to NPR, ByteDance said it respects intellectual property rights and is taking steps to strengthen current safeguards, but did not say how.
Netflix is the latest media giant to push back against ByteDance this week when it sent the Chinese company a cease and desist letter.
Netflix accuses ByteDance of allowing its latest AI video creation tool, Seedance 2.0, to generate hyper-realistic imitations of characters from such Netflix-owned shows as Bridgerton and Squid Game.
Industry stakeholders, including the Motion Picture Association, have also joined the backlash.