Last year, Bungie launched a lawsuit against one of the many companies that sell cheaters Fate 2To AimJunkies. This week we made our first partial decision which was in favor of AimJunkies, unfortunately for Bungie.
U.S. District Judge Thomas Zelley ruled that to Bungie You did not provide sufficient evidence that AimJunkies infringed the copyright of their work creating the scams Fate 2.
Notably, Bungie has not provided any facts explaining how the cheat software constitutes an unauthorized copy of any copyrighted work identified in the lawsuit. Zelle made her decision. “Bungie’s complaint needs something more than a ‘formal citation of the elements that caused action’.”
The decision, however, is only partial, and Bungie’s lawsuit against AimJunkies continues. In addition to accusing the company of cheating in violation of its copyrights, its creator Saucepan He also lists in her lawsuit improper use of her trademarks, which the judge did not waive. Zilly has determined that the developer has provided enough evidence for the claim, so the process will continue in this part.
AimJunkies is defending itself against Bungie’s lawsuit by saying that there is no law against selling fraud, so the company hasn’t done anything illegal. There is a very large list of games they work with, which includes battlefieldAnd CS: GO And even some strictly non-competitive, such as elden ring. at the moment, Fate 2 It is no longer listed on the site.
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