I briefly saw your post about my past arguments regarding a lawsuit that was settled due to the use of an Oxford comma.
Nice try.
But I was right. Here's how the judge herself parsed the language:
On p5, she even did the SAME highlighting that I did.
"During the Term of the License, or any renewals thereof, and for a period of
two years thereafter, Licensee, its principals, and Affiliates shall not directly
or indirectly engage in the business of
designing, developing, creating [or]
promoting . . . (directly or indirectly) any game engine or middleware which
compete with CryEngine."
And she did it again on p7:
"During the Term of the License, or any renewals thereof, and for a period of
two years thereafter, Licensee, its principals, and Affiliates shall not directly
or indirectly engage in the business of
. . . promoting . . . or licensing"
This was my post about the Oxford comma. Search for "oxford"
https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1030420136250040320.htmlI quote:
Wait! It gets worse.
The language in 2.4 not only prevents CIG from using a competing engine, it also prevents them from being in the "business of" doing so.
I bring this up for a reason. First, read this.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/16/us/oxford-comma-lawsuit.html
The 1st part of 2.4 is explicit: "in the business of designing,"
Some of our Internet "lawyers" were claiming that 2.4 pertained to CIG developing their own engine based on CryEngine, and trying to do all those things.
I said it was FALSE back in Jan.