I'm not a lawyer either, but a few thoughts. When AD first bought Softimage
there were talks of monopoly. Unfortunately for us, AD's biggest market is
CAD, and they have several competitors in that arena. The government
doesn't really parcel out the market in a way that favors a claim on
monopoly for 3D artists. We are just a small bulb on a large tree.

Secondly, and this is a more serious problem, antitrust basically doesn't
exist anymore in the US like it did in the days of Ma Bell. I talked with
my partner, who is a larval lawyer, about this issue quite a bit. Every
antitrust decision for the past 70 years has gnawed away at plaintiff power
in antitrust cases and now there is essentially nothing left. Combined with
the weak case we would already have from the first part, and I think this
would be a really difficult row to hoe. That money and energy would
probably be better spent re-educating and resource sharing among SI artists
so they can move on, or perhaps fighting the subsidy/tariff issue.

I understand the anger, and it's heartbreaking to watch a superior product
die in favor of Maya, but this wouldn't be a good way to retaliate IMO.




On Sun, Mar 16, 2014 at 12:06 PM, skuby <sku...@gmail.com> wrote:

> There may be a case here for an Antitrust Class Action Lawsuit against
> Autodesk.  We would need to have a lawyer look at the details and I'm not
> the person to be able to do this, as I don't have the resources,
> connections or credibility to do so.
>
> However, if successful, it is potentially possible that Autodesk could be
> forced to divest their Softimage assets, aka. they could be compelled by a
> court to sell Softimage to a competitor at it's fair market value.
>
> Anyways, maybe someone out there in the aether can give the idea a shot, I
> would not know where to start outside of this initial suggestion.
>
> The Federal Trade Commission along with the Department of Justice
> Antitrust Division jointly regulate and enforce Antitrust Law and
> Anti-Competitive Monopoly practices.
>
> Anyways, this might work a little better than a petition to Autodesk or
> other-such cries for a change of heart, but the petition someone put out
> there to Autodesk might serve some use when presenting the idea to a
> Lawyer(s).  I think a lot of people and interested parties might just
> support crowdfunding for legal fees.  Good luck.
>

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