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The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
byCorporate T00l ( 244210 ) writes:
It's not really surprising that going to court and going public are really last resort sort of things. Court is expensive, and most people considering them to be a "roll of the dice". Actually negotiating with your counterparty in a contract dispute is always cheaper and more productive.
Going public, even after going to court, also sours the atmosphere, creating emotional contention that makes an actual agreement less likely. Look at out-of-court settlements with undisclosed terms and no party admitting fault. Once you get out of the public light, you can get people to sit down and discuss and actually come to a mutual agreement since the emotions have been toned down. If you're all fury and anger, you're not really in a position to negotiate someone into a corrective action.
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byIndustrialComplex ( 975015 ) writes:
Actually negotiating with your counterparty in a contract dispute is always cheaper and more productive.
It should be so far from not surprising I'm surprised that it had to be said.
Once you throw down the legal gauntlet, anyone you are dealing with now imagines, in bright red 30' letters, "Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law."
byWNight ( 23683 ) writes:
Yes, because they were living in the corporate dreamland of lawless cooperation until these open-source thugs just started asserting ownership of code.
Sometimes things can be honest mistakes and warning are nice, but other things are obvious and treating them like a mistake just gives the infringing person a victim role to play and by forgiving everything they did doesn't change their future behavior in the slightest.
Imagine shoplifting. You leave a store and they catch up with you and say "Hi, you MIGHT ha
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