Sony Files Exhibits Trying to Link Hotz to California - Updated - A Supplemental Brief
Jan 19, 2011, 13:34 (2 Talkback[s])
(Other stories by Pamela Jones)
"I know you are wondering what happens next in Sony v. Hotz if
the judge in California decides Sony hasn't proven her court has
jurisdiction, which she expressed doubts about. And some of you may
wonder what jurisdiction means. Sony has filed some exhibits with a
Declaration by the lead lawyer, James Gilliland, and so we find out
now why Sony thought George Hotz had a PS3 Network account and had
links to California, so I'll use that to show you why I agree with
the judge that they may not. And if not, the simple answer to what
happens next is that Sony can file in New Jersey, which is where
George Hotz resides.
"So, he will have to face this litigation in one place or
another. And that has me wondering about something that some of you
will have the expertise to explain to me. Supposing you were Sony,
and you were in a panic because you figured some gamers out there
would use Hotz's research to cheat on games. You want to shut that
door. I know they could make new hardware with a better system to
keep this from happening. Hotz offered to show them how. But there
are many Playstation 3s out there already. Is there a way to do
what Sony wants to do, shut the door that was opened? I mean, for
networked gamers, not if you are in your own home tinkering. They
likely don't much care about that. But what about the gamers who go
online and want to play fair and square? Isn't there a way for Sony
to screen who gets to play networked gaming? Why wouldn't that
solve its problem? If it is a problem. Maybe it's a missed business
opportunity.
"Maybe you can explain that to me, and I'll explain to you some
things about jurisdiction."
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