SuperTaz Posted May 22, 2017 Share Posted May 22, 2017 https://www.pcgamesn.com/dota-2/dota-copyright-lawsuit As part of an ongoing lawsuit concerning two developers making unauthorised mobile versions of Dota, the defendants are attempting to argue that Valve doesn’t own the rights to the grandfather of MOBAs. This argument hinges on a forum post from one of the original Dota creators all the way back in 2004, which could prove Dota is actually open source. Start on the path to Dota mastery with our list of great beginner heroes. Summarised by federal judge Charles Breyer, this comes as a result of a lawsuit launched by Blizzard and Valve against the companies Lilith Games and uCool. Lilith Games and uCool are the publishers of Dota Legends and Heroes Charge, two immensely popular Chinese mobile games which use characters from Dota. In order to stop the court case, uCool called for a partial summary judgement, by stating that Valve does not actually own the trademark to the original Dota and its subsequent mods, and is therefore unable to make a claim against uCool. While uCool’s argument that the original Dota is a collective work have been shot down, Breyer comments that the sale of the Dota name to Valve by creators Icefrog and eul could infringe upon the original EULA for Warcraft 3. The EULA forbids the distribution of mods for “commercial purposes” and as far as selling the Dota name to Valve, Breyer states that it “seems as commercial as uses go.” Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HSMagnet Posted May 22, 2017 Share Posted May 22, 2017 yuge, hugely yuge Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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