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They are a foreign corporation suing in the american legal system. They should have done their homework and registered some sort of subsidiary in the US (probably DE, NY, or CA) and then said they did have a US arm and that they should not have to put up money for it.Interesting that that Crytech had to put up the bond. Says a lot about the judge's view of their position. But cash is king. I'd want the cash for that bond back too.
there...may be something to this......because they are getting leaned on by Amazon. That megacorp probably doesn't like the negative attention being ladled all over their newly acquired engine. Potential users could be looking at it warily and worried if we use this, will Crytek scream we stole their code?
I don't think this is much of a consideration personally. It's not open source, but you can use it like it was until you publish something - then you owe 5%.there...may be something to this...
No, it's more about Amazon saying "hey, you sold up this engine telling us we could do anything we want with it, including licensing it to other developers. Now you are suing a developer for using it claiming it's "your code"" In fact, it's not. Amazon owns the rights to that fork....and they have the right to make money off of it...if Crytek is successful in suing CIG for use of the code, it could make Amazon's code worthless because everyone else that develops a game using Lumberyard could now be sued for using CryEngine. Amazon has a definite interest in keeping the value of the purchase they made, and they have deeper pockets than CIG and Crytek combined....many times over. It would not take much in the way of percentage of assets to squash Crytek flat...and it probably wouldn't even keep more than a few percent of their existing legal department busy.I don't think this is much of a consideration personally. It's not open source, but you can use it like it was until you publish something - then you owe 5%.
CRYTEK/CRYENGINE
CRYENGINE is a powerful real-time game development platform created by Crytek. - CRYTEK/CRYENGINEgithub.com
That's where I was going with it, I figured Crytek could only poke so much before they woke up the sleeping dragon with a vested interest in keeping the value of the hoard up.No, it's more about Amazon saying "hey, you sold up this engine telling us we could do anything we want with it, including licensing it to other developers. Now you are suing a developer for using it claiming it's "your code"" In fact, it's not. Amazon owns the rights to that fork....and they have the right to make money off of it...if Crytek is successful in suing CIG for use of the code, it could make Amazon's code worthless because everyone else that develops a game using Lumberyard could now be sued for using CryEngine. Amazon has a definite interest in keeping the value of the purchase they made, and they have deeper pockets than CIG and Crytek combined....many times over. It would not take much in the way of percentage of assets to squash Crytek flat...and it probably wouldn't even keep more than a few percent of their existing legal department busy.