Damien Tokala, on 28 September 2014 - 03:21 PM, said:
given all the money they've made from clan sales, heros and more, i can safely say they've got enough money to bury HG
I think you grossly underestimate the costs of such a lawsuit and overestimate PGI's financial situation (while I think they're doing well, I can't really imagine that they've got millions kicking around in cash), but lets say you're right.
So they spend every penny they have, and earn the rights to sell Unseen mechs. That's basically Pheonix Pack 2.0. Do you think that'll sell more than everything they've made from clan sales, heroes and more? Enough to make back the
millions that legal battle would cost and provide a profit on top of that?
At the risk that - because IP law
is messy - no matter how air-tight their case is, there is always the possibility that they'd lose the case. If they did, they'd be backrupt instantly, MWO would cease to exist overnight, and they'd be out of a job.
They'd be freaking idiots to take that risk.
But the above isn't even the worst of it.
Lets assume that everything above works out. They can invest the money into the lawsuit, and they will inevitably win that lawsuit.
The problem is, those legal costs are consumed very rapidly... But the payoff from selling Phoenix Pack 2.0? That could take
years, because HG would drag that lawsuit out as long as possible... then appeals... then more appeals.
All that funding would be wrapped up in legal costs and unavailable, so PGI would be faced with being unable to keep the servers lit and pay for their staff and resources (these costs are very significant). MWO dies, then they win. Yay! =/
People seem to think that all these companies are stupid for not pursuing lawsuits with HG, when they're sure they'll win. This is why.
It doesn't matter if you can win, if you're in the right, it only matters if you can afford to have a vast amount of money eaten, with no chance of earning money from the IP you eventually gain for likely years.
This is why IP law sucks so bad, and why so many large companies can maintain control of IP that they shouldn't even have control over. All they need is a wad of cash and threat of ruinously expensive, long lawsuits.