SpoonyBard wrote:"Our name is Sony, blah blah blah. We can charge $500 for a console, blah blah blaaaah..."
Wingzero22 wrote:They have also been sue by Nintendo and Microsoft, so you just can't take blame Sony for this and if the big three were suing them.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:I see absolutely nothing wrong with wanting to buy an imported game.
In August of 2005, the company was once again in legal trouble, this time from Sony. Lik Sang had sold imported PSPs to UK customers before the UK release date, which they alleged was a breach of their trademark rights. Lik Sang continued shipping PSPs, citing Hong Kong's laws which it claims state an item can be traded freely once it appears in a market anywhere in the world.
On October 23, 2006, the High Court in London ruled the shipments were indeed in breach of Sony's rights. The following day, Lik Sang posted a message on their website claiming they had been forced out of business due to Sony's legal action. Sony responded in a statement saying that Lik Sang had not contested the case, thus incurring no legal fees, and had not paid any damages or costs to Sony.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:Yes. I was reading the "Sony denies responsibility" article. But I'm not entirely sure what to make of it. But my gut tells me to lean towards Lik-Sang's side.
kaemmerite wrote:...
Never mind. It was foolish of me to think you were going to read my post. Well, at least I know better.
kaemmerite wrote:...
Never mind. It was foolish of me to think you were going to read my post. Well, at least I know better.
ikimasu wrote:B: A violation of trademark laws.
ikimasu wrote:I will say though, I'm wondering if this was done due to the PS3 not being region encoded. This sends a message to all stores to not take advantage of price differences between countries.
I agree, but like I said before, it's Sony's right. Was it dirty of them to do? Yeah, probably, but it was legal. It's like how fansubbers cry when an anime company cracks down on 'em. Is it mean? Yes. Is it within the company's rights? Perfectly.
So Hong Kong BROKE TRADEMARK LAW. What part of doing illegal business do you NOT understand? Sony has EVERY right to sue this company for breaking the law and flippantly telling Sony "we can break the law if we want." Further, the company didn't contest the case, meaning they KNEW they were wrong and would waste money by doing so.
Shinja wrote:i find it sad that our main sources come from wikipedia
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