The legality of who owns that work will depend on your work contract and your local employment law.
You very well might create something, turn around to sell it to them, and find out that your employer legally owns the copyright to the work even if you did it on your own time with your own resources.
Employment law is nuanced.
Tldr; bring your work contract and your idea to a meeting with an employment attorney and ask them who would own this work.
Resurrecting woolly mammoths just in time for their natural habits to become decimated by climate change feels like a cosmic satire on the duality of human technological progress
These houses still had to be built, hooked up to plumbing, wired for electricity, have a lot cleared and excavated, concrete poored... Also you still need to decorate and provide appliances.
Add all that in and you'll see theres a few 100k worth of additional work not in the kit
So that $52k price is really just for building materials and plans, but doesn't include land, permits, building costs.
If I was going to build this prototype I'd start with just a semistructured textual play by play recap as the input. Also including roster, injury, amd schedule information with a fairly basic prompt would probably go a long way.
This data exists for most live games at this point via various web services. I'm sure espn has significant resources internally to source that info
> The archived technology was never touched. Years later there were multiple teams doing stuff redundant to what we did. They didn't know we ever existed and their projects will probably never be released.
I've worked there for 12 years and this is 100% accurate. It's all one big director and vp level circle jerk.
"Now the property is going for $2,695,000—the lowest asking price it has had on Zillow in the past three years. The public record of the property shows it was sold for only $40,000 in 1994, but between 2021 and late 2023, the asking price remained steadily above the $3 million mark."
You very well might create something, turn around to sell it to them, and find out that your employer legally owns the copyright to the work even if you did it on your own time with your own resources.
Employment law is nuanced.
Tldr; bring your work contract and your idea to a meeting with an employment attorney and ask them who would own this work.