Decision, EA: Judge Reverses Multimillion Dollar Award To Madden Dev
The San Francisco Chronicle reports that "A federal judge overturned a jury's multimillion-dollar damage award to the programmer of the original John Madden Football video game on Wednesday, saying there was no evidence that his work was copied for seven years, without credit, by the marketer of later versions of the hugely successful game. The ruling by U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer of San Francisco spared Electronic Arts Inc. from nearly $4 million in damages, plus interest that could have exceeded $7 million. The jury verdict also could have led to larger damages against the company for later versions of the game, which reaped billions of dollars in revenues, if future juries found that those, too, had been lifted from the work of programmer Robin Antonick." Also at Kotaku.
Look Mamma!!!!
-- Spoiled Onions: Exposing Malicious Tor Exit Relays
(PDF) http://cryptome.org/2014/01/sp...
http://www.cs.kau.se/philwint/...
&
-- What the "Spoiled Onions" paper means for Tor users
https://blog.torproject.org/bl...
&
-- Scientists detect âoespoiled onionsâ trying to sabotage Tor privacy network
Rogue Tor volunteers perform attacks that try to degrade encrypted connections.
http://arstechnica.com/securit...
Actually, I know nothing about this case. Maybe this jury is right and the other one was wrong. That, of course, won't stop me from seizing the opportunity to be cynical about the rich stomping on the poor.
What a mess they are, and always will be.
Like the one between Software Arts and Visicorp over Visicalc.
The irreconcilable difference between those who promise they will create that which they can, and those who promise what will be created that which cannot actually exist.
Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
Bribes are so easy nowadays.
-- Spoiled Onions: Exposing Malicious Tor Exit Relays
(PDF) http://cryptome.org/2014/01/sp...
http://www.cs.kau.se/philwint/...
&
-- What the "Spoiled Onions" paper means for Tor users
https://blog.torproject.org/bl...
&
-- Scientists detect "spoiled onions" trying to sabotage Tor privacy network
Rogue Tor volunteers perform attacks that try to degrade encrypted connections.
http://arstechnica.com/securit...
the CIA has owned TOR since it's inception. your point?
Patents and Copyrights are for rich companies....not people.
What a mess they are, and always will be.
It seems to be more like a dispute between developer and employer.
EA owned the rights to the game; they had signed with the programmer, an agreement for the developer to be compensated by royalties for the first edition.
For the second/third/later years editions, they claimed to have paid a team of developers to rewrite the software from scratch, so they could get out of having to pay royalties for future versions.
I'm sure from EA's point of view --- the millions of dollars in sales of later editions of the game were not attributable to the work of the programmer of the first edition or any individual software developer, but the valuable brand name they developed for their company and the product in partnership with Madden, and EA's fan base.
Antonick will appeal the ruling, his lawyers said. "The evidence showed they used his source code without permission," said attorney Robert Carey.
And so it's overturned, but will be appeled.
I think I'm going to trust the little guy getting screwed on this one.
" they had signed with the programmer, an agreement for the developer to be compensated by royalties for the first edition and any derivative works"
...."it depends on what your definition of 'is' is..."
FTFY
The fact that a jury already found his claim valid, and he is only asking for compensation from the first few editions of Madden (not all versions up to current gen), makes me think he probably is due compensation.
But, you now how lawyers are. I am sure the EA lawyers can prove that the sky is green.
Did the entire US legal system not think of diff'ing the versions? I mean, EA might pretend to have lost the source code, but you can still check out the binaries.
wow, thx for the link about some of the history about Visicalc! Didn't realize Mitch Kapor wrote VisiPlot and Visitrend, then left to found Lotus (of Lotus 123 fame)
Why don't they just look at the source code of the two versions? It should be obvious whether it was copied. Maybe the lawyers don't make enough money of they use common sense.
If the code itself is a derivative work is different than if the story or art are derivatives. It is actually rather hyper-technical, it is not enough to just say it is a sequel so it is a derivative.
I'm too lazy to plow through the ruling. But, wondering, did the plaintiff's side try or wish to present the actual games to the jury? Did the original trial judge not allow that? Pure speculation by me on those issues.
Also, did the defendant side object or make any presentation of fact or opinion to the jury that the games were not the same? IANAL, but I do watch Perry Mason a lot. If the defendants did not raise any objection or present contrary evidence that the games were not the same, did they lose their chance on this issue, legally?
I suggest speculating why the source code of the possible derived version was not made available to the court or the expert witness.
It may have been completely innocent worry about trade secrets but there are other possibilities, such as the unwillingness to incriminate themselves, that sound more likely to me.
It's Madden football. The NFL is the story and the game is the football. Graphics and gameplay improved with the sequels but it's still football strategy.
TFA says:
> Breyer, who presided over the trial, ruled Wednesday that the jurors had no basis for that conclusion
> because they were never shown the games side by side in order to make their own evaluation, as the law requires for a verdict of copyright infringement.
If, as the article says, the law requires that the jury look at the two works and decide for themselves if they are the same, and that wasn't done, that's a slam dunk for the defense. The plaintiff's attorney should have followed the law and showed both games.
Additionally, remember this is about copyright on the source code - not the general idea of the game. EA says they wrote V2 from scratch, not using any code from V1. The expert witness didn't claim to have looked at the source code. If no-one who has seen the code thinks they are the same, the jury has no evidence that they are.
On top of voluminous case the, the statute requires that the plaintiff show evidence that the copyrighted source code is the same. What is at issue is not the general concept of the game, but the source code.
Plaintiff presented no evidence at all that the source was copied. Therefore as a matter of law, the defense prevails. It's upto a jury to determine if the evidence is "good enough" . Under the law, it's up to the judge to rule when no evidence eas presented, and that's what happened in this case.
Plaintiff may or may not be right, but his attorneys presented no evidence that he was right - that his source code was copied.
> But if defense doesn't present any evidence, doesn't that make it an automatic win for the plaintiff under preponderance of evidence?
I hereby state that CmdrTaco, founder of Slashdot, is a typing horse.
Noone has testified that he's not a horse. Do you believe that he's a horse?
Plaintiff has to convince the jury that "it is more likely than not" that his version of the facts are true. This case has a great example. Regarding the statute of limitations, plaintiff claims that it wasn't until version 4 came out that he started to suspect that v2-v4 were copied from v1. Without EA saying anything, we can think that's probably not true.
Additionally, in this case the plaintiff presented NO EVIDENCE that the source code was copied. Since the plaintiff presented NO evidence on the key question of the case, shouldn't the defendant win by default. Yes, they should, the judge ruled. The expert testimony saying the appearance of the games are similar doesn't provide any evidence of anything about the source code. If you make a football cake and I make a football cake, and the cakes are similar, that isn't evidence that I copied your recipe.
Does the expert opinion not count as evidence? If you had a vet testify that yes, CmdrTaco is a horse that likes to walk across keyboards, and the other side did nothing to refute that, why shouldn't the jury rule that CmdrTaco is a horse? Especially since the defense refused to present him to the jury to show that he is a human.
I actually interviewed at Software Arts, it was so long ago and I was so young (and so was everyone else there) I barely remember. The place had a hip vibe, just like today's startups. They said they wanted to hire someone to write applications for TK Solver. It didn't sound like a great technical challenge, so I passed, which turned out to be fortunate because Visicalc sales were going straight down and TK Solver never went anywhere in the market.
Although if someone in the right place had written a killer financial app for TK Solver, then maybe...
One judge or a thousand judges SHOULD NOT be able to overturn a ({[JURY'S]}) virdict. Period.
Graphics and gameplay improved with the sequels but it's still football strategy.
That's not good enough. The burden of proof rests with the plaintiffs, to show a preponderance of the evidence, that the works were strikingly similar, not that they were just both football strategy games within the same genre, with similar operation and game mechanics.
Yes, it does. The expert testimony in this case seems to have been that the two versions of the game had substantially similar appearances.
Which might be 100% true.
Alas, nearly (or even actually) identical appearance on the desktop in no way implies nearly (or actually) identical code.
And copyright cases are about code, not appearances.
"I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
What was in question was the code he wrote that managed playbooks. My understanding was this base line code had been in use since the 90s. If it was just a bunch of C functions that's not hard to imagine. I'm sure I could find some code in my Linux box from the gnu stuff that dates back to the 70s because there's nothing wrong with it :P
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
I know you're trolling, but even at that you're not too far off, it's just that the judge isn't necessarily greedy or evil. His perspective's just off.
I read an article about how contract law is taught in schools. The point the article made was that law schools teach sorta like medical school: first, do no harm. Basically, when lawyers & judges are faced with a contract suit, their looking for the optimal solution for _both_ parties. Their not exactly concerned with what's right or wrong, legal or illegal. They're asking themselves: how should I rule to make the maximum amount of money for everyone (including society at large)?
It's a weird sort of legal ethics. Basically, they mean well. They want everyone to come out ahead. But they're not exactly considering how the little guy is getting screwed per se...
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
But wasn't the ruling exactly the opposite of what you said? The judge said that because the jurors didn't see the appearance of the two games side by side they couldn't rule that EA reusing code. From what I've read there was nothing about source code in the ruling.
That is pure nonsense. There is no such thing as a typing horse. He must be dictating.
First off, the plaintiff brought in an expert who *did* make an assertion of source-code similarity. As programmers, we do this all the time. (Raymond Chen calls this "psychic debugging")
Secondly, without an understanding of how to identify underlying coding patterns from exhibited high level traits, how can the jury be expected to make a reasonable determination of code copying from a visual analysis of the *compiled* product? It's an on-the-face absurd assertion.
It is still surprising to me that decompilation didn't surface as an option when the source code was not produced, but sitting back and cruising to a jury verdict only to leverage a *really* rare motion to take a verdict notwithstanding judgment is bad news. This is *not* how we want to have our cases conducted. We want judges to have the latitude to correct for off-the-wall juries, but, in this case, this effectively signals that expert, aggregate, and indirect evidence is insufficient for jury determination of infringement, suggesting that respondents should just clean up their tracks after they've illegally copied code.
Additionally, in this case the plaintiff presented NO EVIDENCE that the source code was copied. Since the plaintiff presented NO evidence on the key question of the case, shouldn't the defendant win by default. Yes, they should, the judge ruled.
So why bother with juries in civil trials if the judge can over-rule them arbitrarily and capriciously?
Learn to love Alaska
I might agree somewhat with your conclusions if plaintiff properly attempted to get the source through discovery and EA didn't produce it. As far as I know, EA provided the source to plaintiff and plaintiff decided they didn't want the jury to see it. Perhaps it's written in an entirely different language.
If the source was copied, an expert should be able to SHOW evidence of that to the jury using techniques as simple as "strings". It sounds like the expert simply declared that he thought it was copied, rather than showing WHY he thought that and letting the jury decide.
Noticing that plaintiff didn't present any evidence regarding a required element is neither arbitrary nor capricious.
I'm not understanding what you're saying. You said:
> they couldn't rule that EA reusing code. From what I've read there was nothing about source code.
The ruling was that their was no evidence of EA copying the code, and there's nothing about code? Are you suggesting there is some other kind of code at issue other than source code? He sued EA for copying his source code.
The expert testified that the output of the game looked similar.
Bet you my bottom dollar some palms were greased here...
Generally, no opinions aren't evidence. Opinions are BASED on evidence and an expert can explain the technical evidence to the jury. ...". For example they do show and tell, showing the jury two DNA samples and pointing out the differences. The jury themselves see the differences, which are the evidence. The expert is there to show the jury where to look, to explain the evidence.
If the expert hasn't seen the code, he can't testify that it's the same. He can only testify "I think it's so BECAUSE
Apparently, in this case the expert said he thought it might be the same BECAUSE the games look similar from a player's perspective. He chose not to SHOW the jury what they look like, though. So the jury didn't even have any evidence that the games LOOK similar - only that one guy to THOUGHT they look similar (when he was paid to think that.)
The difference between evidence of thinking and evidence of truth is obvious if I point a gun at you, you act in self-defense, and later you find out mine was a BB gun. You might introduce evidence that you THOUGHT you were in danger. That's different from actually BEING in danger. Same here - they produced evidence that a guy THOUGHT they looked similar, not that they actually WERE similar. Evidence of actual similarity would be either the games themselves, so the jury could judge for themselves, or some measure of similarity like "of 249 classes in the binary, 242 of them have the same interfaces in both versions" (and show the jury how a COM inspector can show you the interfaces).
Agreed. I recently learned that the legal definition of a derivative work is narrower than what I had thought. You CAN, under copyright law, start from someone else's work and "make it your own".
Yeah, sorry about that.
From what I've read, the judge basically ruled that the jury couldn't say that EA made a derivative work, without the jury seeing the two games running side by side. So he didn't care about the source code, just the look of the games and ruled that the look was more important than anything else (such as the expert testimony).
Wow that's a bunch of complete nonsense. You haven't read TFS, TFA, the opinion, or any of the other comments, have you?
Since you seem to only read my comments, here's a quick summary. The judge allowed an "expert" witness to take the stand to show the evidence to the jury and explain it, as expert witnesses do. The expert witness didn't show any evidence and didn't explain in any evidence. He just said "in my opinion plaintiff should win". That's nice and all, but it's not evidence.
The law requires that you prove your case with evidence, not just have your brother-in-law say "I want him to win". Either the guy had no case, or he had a completely incompetent attorney because he didn't present any case to the jury. If EA copied the source code, you show the jury the copied source and have the expert witness explain which parts are "special", which show copying, such as identical variable names. Then the jury can decide based on the evidence that the expert shows them. "I think they might have" isn't evidence that they did.
TThe judge didn't disallow the expert witness, he simply noticed that the expert witness didn't present any evidence. (Which makes him a more of a character witness; expert witnesses are experts in analyzing and explaining a particular type of evidence. Here, he didn't analyze or explain any evidence for the jury.)
There are two kinds of witnesses, material witnesses and expert witnesses.
Material witnesses saw, heard, or found something. Expert witnesses explain what someone else saw, heard, or found.
In other words, material wwitnesses provide evidence. Expert witnesses explain evidence.
This isn't my opinion, this has been law for hundreds of years, since before the American revolution.
He wasn't called as a material witness .The PLAINTIFF decided he was an expert witness, not a material witness. In other words it was the PLAINTIFF who said he was there to explain evidence, not provide it.
There are two kinds of witnesses, material witnesses and expert witnesses.
Material witnesses saw, heard, or found something. Expert witnesses explain what someone else saw, heard, or found.
In other words, material wwitnesses provide evidence. Expert witnesses explain evidence.
This isn't my opinion, this has been law since 1782, when Smeaton explained the silt in Wells Harbour.
In this case, he wasn't called as a material witness. The PLAINTIFF decided he was an expert witness, not a material witness. In other words it was the PLAINTIFF who said he was there to explain evidence, not provide evidence. You'll note he was paid handsomely for his services. If a material witness is paid, that's called bribery and it's punishable by 15 years prison under 18 USC 201. So which is it? Was the witness paid to testify as evidence, which makes the plaintiff guilty of bribery, or was he an expert witness, paid to explain independently existing evidence? You can't have it both ways.
He did not in fact explain any evidence brought before the jury, so either a) there is no evidence or b) his testimonial evidence is the result of felony bribery. Believe whichever you wish.
You mentioned fingerprints and bloody clothes as evidence. You'll notice a fingerprint examiner points to poster-sized copies of the fingerprints, showing the jury "this part matches, and this part, and this part." Then the jury can take the fingerprints into deliberations with them. The jury decides if they agree that the prints match. It's the fingerprints that are evidence, not the examiner's opinion. The examiners opinion is an opinion ABOUT the evidence. That's where this case fell down. The plaintiff didn't bring any evidence for the jury to see, they just paid someone to give an opinion. If that opinion were based on something other than getting paid, the plaintiff's lawyer should have brought that something into court for the jury to see.
This was on arstechnica last week. A number of people grabbed onto the "nearly identical" phrasing then too. Except the wording of the contract was something close to: royalties for any "derivative works". Whether the games were identical is irrelevant, and disingenuous of the judge to use the "virtually identical" phrasing as a basis for throwing out the juries verdict.
Can someone please clarify how Order 2 (that 'EA's Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law re: Phase II is granted') and Order 3 (that '[EA's] Motion for a new Trial is conditionally granted') coexist?
If judgment is given in favour of EA on the basis that there was no evidence from which a properly instructed jury could conclude that the games were virtually identical when compared as a whole (pg 15, lines 18-22), how can there be any necessity for a further trial as to whether 'there are substantial similarities between the expression of plays and formations [in the games]'? If judgment is already given, a further hearing that cannot change the outcome of that judgment is meaningless, a waste of the parties' (and the Court's) time, and a waste of the parties' (and the public's) money. Is this kind of conflict resolved by some customary or traditional arrangement between Counsel? (it seems odd because in the jurisdiction in which I practice the Court would resolve the conflict by making a determination in respect of the first order sought and only determine the alternative orders sought in the event that it was determined that the first order would not be made)
Also, is there some aspect of the requirement (in considering whether to grant Judgment as a Matter of Law) that the evidence be construed in 'the light most favorable to the nonmoving party' (pg 5, lines 14-17) that I am missing? The jury had before it evidence (albeit from an expert) that the games were 'essentially the same' (pg 14, line 3) and it seems that this would (when construed in the light most favourable to Antonick) allow the jury (properly instructed) to come to the conclusion that the games were essentially the same and, therefore, that there were substantial similarities between them. (leading to the conclusion judgment as a matter of law should not have been given).
Regards,
A bemused practitioner from another common law jurisdiction
I wager, if your dad's patent was ever violated by a large company. His chance to defend his patent is extremely slim. Even if he manages to fight in court and win, the settlement, will likely be far less than the benefit said large company derived by violating his patent.
It is not impossible for an individual small time person to purchase a patent. It is just extremely hard and nigh impossible for said individual to substantially defend and benefit, from said patent.