Yokemate of Keyboards
Posts: 12157 from 2003/5/22
From: Germany
> TopWare is not the "legal successor" [...] you say?
Yes, TopWare is not the legal successor of Metropolis, the legal entity that Hyperion negotiated the license with. I already provided source for the information on who is the legal successor of Metropolis.
Metropolis' legal successor sells the game there:
http://www.gog.com/game/gorky_17> whatever you mean by that
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22legal+succession%22> Is that something you just invented yourself
No, legal succession is an existing juridical concept, also existing in Poland (both Metropolis and CD Projekt were/are Polish companies):
http://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sukcesja_%28prawo%29> som kind of "teh reeel!!1!" ownership as opposed to "normal" ownership?
Legal succession is not a kind of ownership but can be the cause for ownership. And ownership can indeed be partial between legal entities.
> I would actually presume they have their paper work in order
They can't even find Hyperion's address on their website, so... ;-)
>> The publisher claims it owns Gorky 17 lock, stock and barrel. This would mean the
>> developer's legal successor owns nought of it. We don't know whether this is true.
> Exactly.
Indeed :-)
> If Hyperion had a deal concerning this particular IP with an entity that no longer exists
...and got bought by another entity...
> ...or aren't the owners anymore
Then the question would be how they lost (partial) ownership.
> and the legal owners of the IP
Sole owners? (I know they claim it, but this doesn't automatically mean it's true.)
> I would bet my money on the IP owner winning...
...unless Hyperion's license is still valid. Temporally unrestricted licenses or licenses before expiration date do not simply go up in smoke when the licensor is bought by another legal entity.