Hi Martin, Yes, Google might already have a subsidiary in a country (since they have them in many but certainly not in all countries) but they would still have to "go" there in the sense that: 1) I very much doubt the subsidiary would already have a plaintiff-side copyright attorney on speed dial, so they'd have to get one; 2) they'd have to produce the paperwork that shows that subsidiary owns the copyright in question. Given that this was a filing with the US FCC, odds are that all the people involved in producing the filing are in the US, and therefore the paperwork is in the US and would need to be transferred to the subsidiary in order for the subsidiary to sue... (Frankly, I don't think it'd be cheaper to that, vs the default ownership entity hiring local lawyers and filing suit in its own name, so I don't think the existence of the subsidiaries matters.) -Kathleen
On Sun, Apr 14, 2019 at 7:47 AM Martin Koppenhoefer <dieterdre...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > sent from a phone > > On 14. Apr 2019, at 10:48, Kathleen Lu <kathleen...@mapbox.com> wrote: > > For Berne counties, I think it technically depends on where the > "infringement" takes place, whatever that would mean in this scenario > > > > the information is stored and distributed from the UK, the mapper is more > likely to come from a different country. > > > but the idea that Google would go to another country to spend $$$ to sue > over this one line is preposterous to me. > > > > what I meant is that they are already there. > > Cheers, Martin >
_______________________________________________ talk mailing list talk@openstreetmap.org https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk