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by f1shy
1027 days ago
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Not a lawyer, but as part of my degree, I had to study the relevant parts of the law for an engineer.
The one thing I learned, and the teacher (lawer) was very clear about: “all is a contract”.
Event two people agreeing something with a handshake, if witnesses are present, can be enforced like a written contract.
So I’m extremely uncertain of the assertions made there. Also the AGPL was written with lawyers involved in the process… |
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Which is super-helpful only if you never intend to leave the US.
Most software has users in 200+ jurisdictions, and you can get sued in almost any of them. A court in the Maldives or New Zealand might have a very hard time enforcing a judgment if your legal presence is only in the US, but outstanding judgments can mean:
1) A cap on growth (you can never establish a presence in those jurisdiction until / unless you've resolved you ballooning liabilities)
2) A cap on acquisitions (you can never be sold to or buy an organization with a legal presence there, again, without work)
3) In a worst-case, if the liability is bad, being personally thrown in prison the instant you step off of a plane in a jurisdiction where you have outstanding liabilities.
... and other badness.
It, therefore, often make sense to avoid walking along the edge cases of the law.