You've now circled back around to making the exact same argument which you made at the beginning of this most recent update to the
Tardigrades saga, despite offering no new points to support your claims and despite those claims being refuted by numerous well-founded
layperson arguments (shameless plug) and even several legal professionals and people who have been following this and other
Trek-related legal cases from the beginning.
By your own admission you are not a lawyer, which is not required to participate in the discussion obviously, but you've also demonstrated basic but significant misunderstandings of how the law is supposed to work that are pretty fundamental to most democratic legal systems around the world, including the US. You offer no links or supporting evidence to back up those claims, yet repeat them frequently and with an absolute certainty that is undeserved. You also resort to frequently either deliberately misrepresenting or completely misunderstanding the opposing arguments being made against you, or making arguments of your own which actually make the opposite point from what you think they do.
It's getting harder and harder to defend the idea that you are arguing in good faith and with an open mind rather than stubbornly digging in and holding a position just for the sake of it until you metaphorically die on this particular hill. Defending the little guy against perceived corporate wrongdoing is a noble pursuit, but blindly assuming guilt on the part of that corporation without evidence and ignoring or misstating learned opponent's arguments that are inconvenient to yours is not so noble.
If there was any indication that this guy's case had merit beyond just basic similarities that can be arrived at by coincidence because
spacefaring tardigrades were in the public consciousness at the time, you'd have more supporters for your position among even fans of the show. Some would cling to their position supporting CBS just like some of
Discovery's more vocal critics cling to the position that CBS must have stolen the idea (hell,
mos made an argument based on an erroneous idea of how Google searches work that not even the plaintiff is using to support his case) , but most would support the plaintiff, because most people don't want to see the little guy get ripped off without financial compensation and credit if deserved. And besides, it doesn't mean one can't still enjoy the show.
I'm not telling you that you have to drop your argument, so don't feel any pressure to do so. But I'm asking you to reevaluate your position critically and examine why you are so convinced that it's the truth without any real basis to support your claims. Because it feels like just arguing for the sake of argument at this point.