Feb 22 2010

R4 card provider ordered to pay Nintendo over $500,000 in damages

It may only amount to a drop in Nintendo’s pockets, but an Australian provider of R4 cards used to copy Nintendo DS games has now been ordered to pay Nintendo $620,000 Australian dollars (or about $556,822 US dollars) in damages, and destroy all its remaining stock for good measure. While that company, GadgetGear, doesn’t seem to be commenting on the matter itself, Nintendo says that GadgetGear has “now acknowledged that game copying devices infringe both Nintendo’s copyright and Nintendo’s trademarks and that they are illegal circumvention devices,” adding that “GadgetGear and the directors have agreed to permanently refrain from importing, offering for sale and/or selling game copier devices.” Of course, it is just one provider of R4 cards that’s affected by the case, but Nintendo is no doubt hoping that the hefty fine will be enough to at least act as a deterrent to others.

R4 card provider ordered to pay Nintendo over $500,000 in damages originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 22 Feb 2010 06:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Jan 26 2010

DOT bars bus drivers and commercial truckers from texting while driving

It’s coming. And soon. Of course, you know darn well we’re referring to the day where no human in any nation can text and drive legally, and we’re seeing the US Department of Transportation get us one step closer with its latest mandate. Effective immediately, bus drivers and interstate commercial truckers are disallowed from texting while operating a motor vehicle, and should they choose to send that one last SMS anyway, they’ll be hit with “civil or criminal fines of up to $2,750.” Needless to say, the Advocates for Highway Safety are pretty stoked about the notion, but they confess that this isn’t taking things far enough. And for anyone who has been sideswiped by someone special telling someone more special “I LUVRZ U XOXO LOL” while doing 80 on the I-15, well, they’d probably concur.

DOT bars bus drivers and commercial truckers from texting while driving originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Jan 2010 17:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Jan 12 2010

Google imposes $350 early termination fee for subsidized Nexus One in addition to carrier’s own ETF

Here’s another reason to consider going the unlocked route with the Nexus One, in addition to having the AT&T (non-3G) and international GSM option. As a number of people have noticed, Google’s got its own Early Termination Fee (ETF) equivalent, here called the Equipment Recovery Fee, in the terms of sale, to the tune of $350 if you cancel within the first 120 days. Sound familiar? It’s because we saw it in a leak just before the new year. Here’s the kicker, though: this is in addition to any fees imposed by the carrier — not necessarily a problem on its own, but we just glanced at T-Mobile’s terms of sale, and sure enough, there’s an associated ETF up to $200. If we’re reading this right, Nexus One owners who decide to end their service after the 14-day trial period is over but before four months have passed will be hit with upwards of $550 in fees — more than if you bought the phone outright from the start, especially when you factor in the upfront $180. There hasn’t been enough time for someone to tempt fate, but who knows — come January 20th when early adopters’ trial period ends, there might be some interesting stories abound.

Google imposes $350 early termination fee for subsidized Nexus One in addition to carrier’s own ETF originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Jan 2010 07:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nov 25 2009

EU closes antitrust investigation into Qualcomm, doesn’t levy fines

Qualcomm has spent an awful lot of time over the past few years dealing with lawsuits and nastygrams, but it looks as if things will be totally different in the new decade. Just months after Qualcomm and Broadcom settled their differences, the European Commission has agreed to drop a four-year antitrust investigation without levying the first fine or absolving the company. The reason? The entity stated that “companies that objected to Qualcomm’s pricing for its technology have all withdrawn their complaints or are planning to withdraw them.” Sounds like a reasonable reason to let bygones be bygones, no?

EU closes antitrust investigation into Qualcomm, doesn’t levy fines originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Nov 2009 23:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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