• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Case dismissed! Discovery and Tardigrade game "not similar"

Status
Not open for further replies.
It would be unwise for anyone to be commenting on litigation without actual knowledge of IP rights at a legal level. Let's not forget all the nonsense that went back and forth in the early days of Axanar, with wild claims that Alec Peters would win in a slam dunk, or that Star Trek would enter the public domain because of some legal loophole.
 
It would be unwise for anyone to be commenting on litigation without actual knowledge of IP rights at a legal level. Let's not forget all the nonsense that went back and forth in the early days of Axanar, with wild claims that Alec Peters would win in a slam dunk, or that Star Trek would enter the public domain because of some legal loophole.
But logic and reason has no place here.
 
What are the odds that somebody on the Discovery Production Team had a STEAM Account, saw Abdin's game, and then actually voted for it.

Does ASTRONOMICAL even come close?

SO, now his lawyers have to find out the names of all the DIscovery production team (past & present);
Get STEAM to give them complete access to its members files to see if any of the above had a STEAM account;
Cross reference that list with more STEAM member info about who actually voted for his game.
And then convince the Judge beyond a reasonable doubt, that that person or persons had any influence on the decisions of how Discovery was developed.

I've been a very active member of STEAM for many years and had voted for several games to be "advanced" in that now defunct program but until all this hit the mainstream media, I'd never heard of him or had seen his game.

"This should be fun" seems a bit understated.
;)
 
Last edited:
Does ASTRONOMICAL even come close?
;)
It's in the ballpark. The number of registered Steam games is approaching a billion. Granted, the vast majority of them are nothing more than an entry in a database. Even still, the number of games that have a full dev page/tracker up and running is still in the millions. And the game didn't even have much on it Steam page until AFTER the shenanigans started. When the news first came out, I did extensive searching. All the relevant information was buried in a dev blog that I really had to go out of my way to find - a blog that was spread across nearly six years. The cherrypicked images were then reposted on a gaming forum less than a month before the lawsuit as filed. (And certainly years after Disco had been in development.)
 
Yeah, I went looking as well when this first came up and I couldn't even find it.
Wasn't till a couple of weeks later that it seemed to pop up out of nowhere when I looked again.
:vulcan:
 
ON AXAMONITOR: The Tardigrades lawsuit finally names a Discovery writer who might've learned about the videogame at the heart of the copyright infringement lawsuit, but alas, the plaintiff's timing may be a bit off. Also, the third amended legal complaint concedes Anas Abdin could win a lot less in damages than he initially hoped. Read more »
 
ON AXAMONITOR: The Tardigrades lawsuit finally names a Discovery writer who might've learned about the videogame at the heart of the copyright infringement lawsuit, but alas, the plaintiff's timing may be a bit off. Also, the third amended legal complaint concedes Anas Abdin could win a lot less in damages than he initially hoped. Read more »
I know you're just reporting facts, but you've indirectly condemned the writer you mention in your article to months of online abuse and rape threats, because your article and writing will be used by the white trash YouTubers for their upcoming bullshit.
 
On AxaMonitor: A federal judge challenges game developer Anas Abdin to show proof Star Trek: Discovery creators had seen his Tardigrades game before developing the TV series.

Thanks for the update.

This was what it was always going to come down to. Proof that someone involved with the show had access to the game materials.

Without that, there is no case that I can see.
 
This lawsuit is an absolute train wreck.

I know you're just reporting facts, but you've indirectly condemned the writer you mention in your article to months of online abuse and rape threats, because your article and writing will be used by the white trash YouTubers for their upcoming bullshit.
That would have happened anyways, they’re not the only person reporting on this.
 
Last edited:
Status
Not open for further replies.
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top