It appears they are suing the US entity. They do not say if they commenced actions overseas. If they only use the US entity then only that one will be affected.
They are HQ in Hong Kong and fortunately, still do have robust enforcement of copyright laws. You can enforce foreign judgments, particularly American ones through reciprocal enforcement arrangements. This is complicated and depends on which entities they sue.
Presumably their lawyers would have advised them on this properly and know the situation better than we do.
Headquartered in Hong Kong, where a separate intellectual property regime that closely follows the English model is in place, different from mainland China.
Hong Kong law means nothing anymore. The judges have all already been carefully picked and those they don’t like have been kicked out a long time ago. There is no rule of law in HK, the CCP will decide the outcome.
Gosh there it is again, the inevitable comment every time Hong Kong is mentioned on Reddit. I know the city I’m born and living in well enough to tell others about how it is. And before you ask, i was there on June 12th and 16th, 2019.
Do they even have a chance at winning considering casetify is from China and they do not care about copyright infringement?
It appears they are suing the US entity. They do not say if they commenced actions overseas. If they only use the US entity then only that one will be affected.
They are HQ in Hong Kong and fortunately, still do have robust enforcement of copyright laws. You can enforce foreign judgments, particularly American ones through reciprocal enforcement arrangements. This is complicated and depends on which entities they sue.
Presumably their lawyers would have advised them on this properly and know the situation better than we do.
Try clicking the above link and reading the contents of the linked website.
I guess Wikipedia lied then
https://preview.redd.it/1k92m3ult52c1.jpeg?width=960&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=22103411a94969e742b5318c674189b2d799a749
Headquartered in Hong Kong, where a separate intellectual property regime that closely follows the English model is in place, different from mainland China.
https://law.asia/intellectual-property-protection-hong-kong/
Hong Kong law means nothing anymore. The judges have all already been carefully picked and those they don’t like have been kicked out a long time ago. There is no rule of law in HK, the CCP will decide the outcome.
Gosh there it is again, the inevitable comment every time Hong Kong is mentioned on Reddit. I know the city I’m born and living in well enough to tell others about how it is. And before you ask, i was there on June 12th and 16th, 2019.