Okay that made me laugh.Exort said:Football is a ball not a sport.Fearzone said:Blizzard is gone. It's Activision now.
Also, it's a game, not a sport.
Okay that made me laugh.Exort said:Football is a ball not a sport.Fearzone said:Blizzard is gone. It's Activision now.
Also, it's a game, not a sport.
Agreed.Enkidu88 said:With all the lawsuits Blizzard has going their lawyers will be financially secure for the rest of their lives.
Ummm your game gets popular then you make an MMO based on that game?jono793 said:To be fair, Blizzard know better than most what happens when you don't protect your IP.
Also, this discussion is somewhat pointless. The question raised is whether Starcraft can be considered public domain *UNDER SOUTH KOREAN LAW*.
Would any of you happen to be South Korean lawyers?
More like someone else rips of your IPs, makes two hugely successful strategy game franchises off the back of them, then kills your own MMO!ionveau said:Ummm your game gets popular then you make an MMO based on that game?jono793 said:To be fair, Blizzard know better than most what happens when you don't protect your IP.
Also, this discussion is somewhat pointless. The question raised is whether Starcraft can be considered public domain *UNDER SOUTH KOREAN LAW*.
Would any of you happen to be South Korean lawyers?
Fair enough.asinann said:South Korea signed onto the international copyright treaties, so it gets tried under international copyright law. If Blizzard were a South Korean company, and since these TV stations are in South Korea THEN it would be tried under South Korea copyright law (and since Asian copyright law is a joke and completely unenforced) and Blizzard would be screwed.jono793 said:To be fair, Blizzard know better than most what happens when you don't protect your IP.
Also, this discussion is somewhat pointless. The question raised is whether Starcraft can be considered public domain *UNDER SOUTH KOREAN LAW*.
Would any of you happen to be South Korean lawyers?
I think they make games at some point.Kevlar Eater said:No wonder Blizzard is so big. All they do is sue and ban.
That was entirely GW's fault for having Blizzard make a WH game and then canceling it after it was 95% done, Blizzard releasing it with GW's approval under their own name, making money with it, making more money with a sequel, GW deciding they need more money too and hire Blizzard a second time to make a 40K game for them, then deciding that videogames aren't as profitable as selling people ?0.05 hunks of plastic for ?50 and canceled it again, Blizzard again releasing their work in progress under their own name with minor changes, making several more games which all make even more profit, one of them becoming the most profitable one in the world, GW then wondering why people aren't buying their bazzilionth ?75 stupidly unbalanced Marine Sergeant mini and deciding they not only need an MMO but they need exactly the same MMO Blizzard made except with their name on it. And then they learned the hard way that clones of existing games typically don't do well unless they're sequels to that game and backed by ?150.000.000 of marketing. And they hired Mythic do make it, who made 18 games at that point, daoc being the only good one.jono793 said:More like someone else rips of your IPs, makes two hugely successful strategy game franchises off the back of them, then kills your own MMO!ionveau said:Ummm your game gets popular then you make an MMO based on that game?jono793 said:To be fair, Blizzard know better than most what happens when you don't protect your IP.
Also, this discussion is somewhat pointless. The question raised is whether Starcraft can be considered public domain *UNDER SOUTH KOREAN LAW*.
Would any of you happen to be South Korean lawyers?
http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2006/4/10/
Ah, well... sue the bastards then.Exort said:Actually they did. before Starcraft 2 was even released.RobCoxxy said:If they just asked nicely, I'm sure the TV people would in turn return the favour and ask permission.
jono793 said:More like someone else rips of your IPs, makes two hugely successful strategy game franchises off the back of them, then kills your own MMO!ionveau said:Ummm your game gets popular then you make an MMO based on that game?jono793 said:To be fair, Blizzard know better than most what happens when you don't protect your IP.
Also, this discussion is somewhat pointless. The question raised is whether Starcraft can be considered public domain *UNDER SOUTH KOREAN LAW*.
Would any of you happen to be South Korean lawyers?
http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2006/4/10/
At least they are not grabing from their consumer like Valve with Mann Co selling gameplay changing items.Kazedarkwind said:im sorry i honestly hate both companies, the korean company for not getting televised companies and Blizzards cash grab hands suing everyone in the world for whatever reason they can pull out of their top hat. Seriously just sick of Blizzard altogether. and yes im a Valve fanboy who likes Valves practices *gets ready for flame* >.<
I don't know what the definitive worst thing ever invented by humanity is, but I do know that the best is birth control.Staskala said:Some people say the atom bomb is the worst thing humanity has ever invented.
I say it's copyright law.
A question: What wars had trade as a major reason?Therumancer said:snip
I would agree with this if it wasn't so damn expensive and so much damn work to make even a small videogame and keep it running: I can only imagine what it's like to do so with a massive game as starcraft 2.sosolidshoe said:What a colossal crock of shit. Seriously, is this how so-called "intellectual property" law is going now? In that case; Hello FIFA, I have documents here which prove unequivocally that my ancestor was the creator of the game known as "football" and, in some regions, "soccer". You have not, in the 200 years since these documents prove the inception and copyrighting of the game, paid any royalties whatsoever to my great great great great great great great grandfather, his estate, or his descendants and I insist that you cease and desist broadcasting tournaments based on the game he invented until such time as you pay me, as his direct ancestor, a million pounds a month.
Oh wait, hold on, no, because the person who invents the game doesn't own the goddamn rights to televised tournaments, the people who finance and run those tournaments do, my bad. Seriously, when are people going to wake up and stop supporting corporations in these despicable grabs for MOAR POWAH.