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Isn't the alternative admitting you have committed copyright infringement?



Yes, but that only entitles you to monetary damages, which may be small in this case.


Monetary damages can be in the amount of the infringer's profits arising from the infringement.

[The following is copied and pasted from a Common Draft annotation:]

Consider the case of Frank Music Corp. v. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc., 886 F.2d 1545 (9th Cir. 1989) (Frank Music II): [1]

+ The MGM Grand Hotel had a floor show called Hallelujah Hollywood!, which included ‘tributes' to various MGM movies.

+ The floor show incorporated significant portions of the musical Kismet, which had been made into an MGM movie.

+ The court found that this went beyond MGM's ‘movie rights' and therefore infringed the copyright in the musical.

+ The resulting damage award included not just a portion of profits from the floor show itself, but 2% of the overall profits from the MGM Grand's hotel operations — including 2% of the casino profits — which, the court found, were indirectly attributable to the promotional value of the infringing floor show.

[1] https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=169034711262654...


Why do you think the monetary damages are small? Going head-to-head against a company that is apparently valued over $1billion by stealing their source code sounds expensive.


Depends on if it's determined to be "derivative" right?




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