The court dismissed most of Bungie’s legal claims against scam sales site AimJunkies, giving the game company its first major loss in its legal battle against Destiny 2 pirates.
TorrentFreak alleges in Bungie’s lawsuit that AimJunkies committed copyright and trademark infringement, breach of contract, corrupt interference, and unjust enrichment. AimJunkies responded by saying that the fraudulent software he created was his own work, not a copy of Bungie’s code, and that Bungie’s other claims should be amicably protected under the terms of Bungie’s own license agreement. from Bungie.
Scam provider AimJunkies accuses Destiny 2 creator of ‘sharp app’ button https://t.co/OwkhK26g5A
— TF (@torrentfreak) November 29, 2021
It appears U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Zill largely agrees with AimJunkie’s position.
“It should be noted that Bungie has not claimed any facts to explain what constitutes an unauthorized copying of bogus software of any copyrighted work cited in the complaint,” said a statement available here via TorrentFreak. Bungie’s complaint should include more than a “statement of the elements of cause of action.” The Destiny 2 developer may add evidence to the amended complaint.
Judge Zill also ruled that most of Bungie’s other claims should be resolved out of court.
Bungie made its only profit in this case by running an ad containing the phrase “Destiny 2 Hacks”, which is responsible for trademark infringement of AimJunkies. Bungie may take such violation to court. He has yet to publicly share his plans or comment on the decision.
Bungie is also taking legal action against several people accused of making false notifications for the DMCA’s removal of Destiny 2 content.
Source : dbl tap