c. staley wrote:
JimHarrington wrote:
I'm not sure why Mr. Staley seems to think it hurts me somehow to say that we resolved lawsuits with defendants in our cases. Generally speaking, yes, if we settle with someone, it wipes the slate clean as far as we're concerned.
The point of these lawsuits isn't to punish people. It's to put the situation, as best we can, in the position it would have been in if the defendant had done things according to the rules.
Nice of you to finally admit that the purpose of the settlement has been restitution for past infringement. So you're okay with your past infringement because you magically wash it away "as far as we're concerned" as though it never happened as well, I'm sure.
Are you suggesting that there is some moral imperative at work here, that can't be fixed with an agreement between the affected parties?
I find that truly bizarre. These are civil business disputes, not existential and moral questions. Intellectual property has very little to do with morality and everything to do with legality. The purpose of intellectual property laws is to "promote the progress of science and the useful arts"--in other words, to encourage people to expand human knowledge and to make useful things--by making it possible for them to profit from their inventions and discoveries. The terms on which the owner of IP rights exercises those rights are up to the owner; when he is confronted with someone who's trespassing on his property, it's up to him to determine how to deal with that.
c. staley wrote:
JimHarrington wrote:
Trying to judge the character of a company or a defendant based on whether or not somebody sued them is a foolish approach. And determining that someone did a particular thing just because someone else said so in a legal document...that's pretty foolish, also. If the parties to a lawsuit are satisfied with the outcome, why can't you be?
I don't think it's "foolish" at all because it is the same basis you use for your lawsuits: a
preponderance as in "more likely than not." And apparently, when it's in your favor, it's all you need isn't it?
I've yet to see a civil case decided on the basis of the character of the defendant. It's just not at issue. What is at issue are (1) what happened? (2) who's responsible? (3) are there any mitigating factors? and (4) what will it take to put the situation right? If the parties can work out the answers to those questions, what difference does it make what the allegations were?
c. staley wrote:
The character of ANY company that commits copyright violations, then turns around and sues for "trademark violations" on the same material that was illegally produced to start with hits pretty low on the scale of honesty, integrity and ethical practices in my book. Especially with the CB trademark since that is pure trolling. Unfortunately, there were more than one manufacturer that took this approach but you're the only one suing after the fact.
If the copyright owners are satisfied with the resolution of the case, who gives a damn what you think about the case? I certainly don't. Whatever the resolution happened to be, it's between us and the publisher, period. You're not a party, so your views don't count.
c. staley wrote:
Remember that the topic of this thread is TRICERASOFT. If you'd like to have a sandbox we can spar in, I'd be happy to let the moderators create one in the legal section and we can duke it out there.
YOU made it about SC. You can't reasonably do what you did and expect me not to respond.