For anyone not interested in clicking on clickbait, it's a rug with a pentagram pattern, positioned in "homey" situations, e.g. with a baby on top of it.
autogenerated product listings are my favorite genre of internet. another classic are the "don't tread on me" doormats. there's also some software apparently used by several retailers that automatically edits various flag designs into a stock photo of a trump rally, with predictably amusing results.
Can someone with more background knowledge explain how an ad like this gets computer generated? Is it that this company probably has like 50 circular doormats with different designs, and they use the same imagery for all of them, or is there something deeper going on?
I really doubt that "putianshihanjiangquyumeizhangmaoyiyouxiangongsi" has much of a brand reputation to protect. These type of social media enabled algorithmically targeted products are probably really profitable.
More than most things, the spirit with which the design was laid down counts here.<p>What if they've put their own runes on it first? Could match the color of the fabric or bury it under a layer and the end user would never know until things go wrong.<p>Think that chinesium torque wrench was a disappointment when it bent into a full circle? That's nothing compared to what you're likely to get when your orders to the Underworld are subverted by lax quality controls.
Ah, if only we had these in the 90s! <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Day-care_sex-abuse_hysteria" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Day-care_sex-abuse_hysteria</a>