But if you’re drawing attention to a certain country, it’s best to check the dates for that country first. No one would blink if the character was Russian and had the same birthday.
Yeah i agree but this is not a dev, this is a huge corporation with shit ton of money, tens of thousands of employees, probably plenty of non dev peoples in the list and an already growing PR issue.
They learned the hard way that some people care, it’s not their first time.
So what are they doing with all those resources in marketing and PR to not have a simple check over the last century?
A data scientist could do the software in python or R on a raspberry pi. You don’t have to look at the totality of human history, only the last century and Wikipedia will probably be 75% of the data source. So imagine what could do a multi million dollars company that loves jerking about blockchain and AI (they will, late as always but the management will want something AI).
As much as I dislike Ubisoft, it’s nitpicky as hell.
The Year only has 365 days. Billions of people have inhabited the planet and screwed over each other for thousands of years in various terrible ways. Add in shitty natural causes like plagues and such, And well…
Good luck finding a date something shitty didn’t happen.
I agree but it’s also a heavily scrutinized company with money and tons of employees.
They often get roasted for various reasons and they know it, so it’s not that hard to cross check our recent past, specially with that number of employees across the world.
People won’t say shit if the date is from the death of Billy the bitch of Moncuq in 869.
But checking the last century is not that hard of a job when you spend billions in marketing and salaries. If you want to avoid the same trouble you always have with your PR of course, unless you consider bad publicity is publicity
Again ? They did the same with the next AC release date and the metro bombing in Tokyo.
18 000 employees and not one to run a “check dates on google” department?
It is hard to find a date where nothing bad has ever happened. Most devs just write a random date, because who cares.
But if you’re drawing attention to a certain country, it’s best to check the dates for that country first. No one would blink if the character was Russian and had the same birthday.
Yeah i agree but this is not a dev, this is a huge corporation with shit ton of money, tens of thousands of employees, probably plenty of non dev peoples in the list and an already growing PR issue.
They learned the hard way that some people care, it’s not their first time.
So what are they doing with all those resources in marketing and PR to not have a simple check over the last century?
A data scientist could do the software in python or R on a raspberry pi. You don’t have to look at the totality of human history, only the last century and Wikipedia will probably be 75% of the data source. So imagine what could do a multi million dollars company that loves jerking about blockchain and AI (they will, late as always but the management will want something AI).
As much as I dislike Ubisoft, it’s nitpicky as hell.
The Year only has 365 days. Billions of people have inhabited the planet and screwed over each other for thousands of years in various terrible ways. Add in shitty natural causes like plagues and such, And well…
Good luck finding a date something shitty didn’t happen.
I agree but it’s also a heavily scrutinized company with money and tons of employees.
They often get roasted for various reasons and they know it, so it’s not that hard to cross check our recent past, specially with that number of employees across the world.
People won’t say shit if the date is from the death of Billy the bitch of Moncuq in 869.
But checking the last century is not that hard of a job when you spend billions in marketing and salaries. If you want to avoid the same trouble you always have with your PR of course, unless you consider bad publicity is publicity
I absolutely agree
To be fair, Google has been removing notable dates from their calendar.
Why does it even matter?
Apparently it does for some (not me).
So as a company you’re supposed to be cautious about stuff that could degrade your image even more.
What do I know, I’m not a billionaire CEO.
Most companies would prefer not to have a character accidentally associated with a terror attack?
They do this on purpose until someone notices. It’s a sick running joke at Ubisoft.