GristyMcFisty lets us know that the
Japanese Lik Sang company has settled a case brought
by Sony out of court. Lik Sang was sued by Sony for selling so-called mod chips
with which game consoles such as the PlayStation 2 would accept back-up and
illegal game copies. The case against Sony included Lik Sang to cease trade in
any copyright circumvention devices and paying an undisclosed compensation
sum:
The company, which formerly operated the popular online game
retail site Lik-Sang.com
(now under new ownership and unaffected by this decision), has also agreed
to cancel its appeal against the ruling in favour of Sony by Hong Kong's
High Court in March.
However, it continues to fight similar cases
against Nintendo and Microsoft, both of whom were involved in the action
against the company in September of last year which won an injunction
against it for selling copyright circumvention devices.
According
to Lik-Sang International, the decision to settle with Sony was taken due
to new developments in international law surrounding mod chips and similar
devices, as well as for simple financial reasons.
As part of the
settlement, Lik-Sang International has undertaken not to become involved
in the trade of circumvention devices for any Sony products, an
undertaking which also covers the publication of information related to
Sony's copy protection
measures.
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