The only thing left to do is see how many Brie Larson videos MegaRando42 posts to soothe her grief over Anas' loss.
Glad this is over. Not that it'll stop the armchair lawyers or conspiracy theorists who'll never say die.
Now we'll get another hundred pages of arguing over whether that decision was correct or not.
Kor
Shoot this right in my veins
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Yeah, his attorneys took this case on contingency, I doubt seriously they'd be willing to gift him with further legal services for which their chances of being paid are nonexistent.I truly feel bad for the guy at this point. I mean, the case was groundless, but the way all those Youtube grifters were pumping him up (for their own gain btw), and now encouraging him to appeal.
Yeah, his attorneys took this case on contingency, I doubt seriously they'd be willing to gift him with further legal services for which their chances of being paid are nonexistent.
Wonder if we'll hear from the folks who posted in this thread their belief that it was "obvious" that Ripper was a copy of Abdin's design and that Abdin would be vindicated.
Although I agree with others who feel the judge made up her mind long ago that the two characters weren't similar, it sure couldn't have helped Abdin's case when all those productions and articles about generic tartigrades started showing up around the internet. Interesting though, that the judge ruled 'no similarities' and not that a generic tartigrade could not be copyrighted.
Obviously the work of the Deep State.![]()
Like three or four times it was stated in the decision.The judge did say generic tardigrades couldn’t be copyrighted. That was in there too.
Thread title changed to reflect the news.
Obligatory music drop:The Tardigrade in Discovery isn't blue though.
I think it should be ... "In Court, Thy Will Be Done"Sidenote: I do not necessarily agree with the re-naming of the thread title either. The original name was: "It's going to court!"
The new name clearly includes a judgement call - "not similar" (one I don't even agree with, even though I agree with the case being dismissed).
I think any re-naming by mods should retain the spirit of the original name, in this case a neutral one:
"It never went to court!"
... would have IMO been better![]()
Which is also pretty well defined and clarified multiple times in the written decision.The Tardigrade in Discovery isn't blue though. And the mode of transportation has no similarity to the game, in which it holds the human in its arms.
The quote is from the judge herself in the written judgment. Knowing it would get questioned, I used her exact wordsThe new name clearly includes a judgement call - "not similar" (one I don't even agree with, even though I agree with the case being dismissed).
It's been my position from the beginning that the concept of the blue sparkling, human sized FTL tardigrade IS very close in concept.
As I see it, it's still a freakin' similarity. It's just a coincidental similarity, as both parties came up with it provable independent of another, and thus CBS didn't steal anything. But saying these works share "no substantial similarity" is in my opinion a mis-judgement.
Yeah, it's a judgement call. I can certainly understand why it was made, and I can understand everyone that agrees with it.This is one of these cases where there's "invisible brackets". There is "no substantial similarity [that proves that the defendant copied the plaintiff's work]" is what the judge is saying. She does not say that there are no similarities, she's claiming that at no point. She's saying that any similarities you do see are relatively random things born from real life facts, genre conventions, and just plain coincidence of which none point to plagiarism.
And to reiterate: the similarities regarding the tardigrades boil down to "huge, can travel through space and facilitate space travel for humans". But how it is done in the game concept and the show is completely different. In the game concept the tardigrade is the space ship, in Discovery it is a living navigator/interface for space ships in concordance with what actually facilitates the space travel, which is the mycelial network and its spores. In that way it owes more to guild navigators from Dune, or maybe even Pilot from Farscape than anything shown in Abdin's concept art/blog/videos. What else is there to compare between the two of them? The color is different (any blue on Ripper is the result from season 1's ubiquitous blue ambient lighting, he's muddish brown green), it's similarities in looks are based on the same real life animal, it's usage as a creature travelling through space is from association with the same real life animal's well-publicized ability to survive in space, and it's size falls under scene a fair because sci-fi has a long history of either scaling tiny animals up or scaling the protagonists down to be visually more interesting or even more dangerous.
This is what the judge is talking about when she's talking of a difference in concepts, setting, characters and "overall feel". Saying that they are "very close in concept" is like claiming that ... dunno ... Mission Impossible and James Bond are "very close in concept" because they are both about white, male secret agents outfitted with marvelous technical gadgetry.
Yes, you made sure to quote it correctly. It's still a judgement call in a title where there was none before. That's the part I don't like.The quote is from the judge herself in the written judgment. Knowing it would get questioned, I used her exact words![]()
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