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by b112
1027 days ago
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Michael, my simple point was that copyright, like trade secrets, requires no validation in some jurisdictions by default. For some reason you view this as a distraction, instead, it was merely illustrative. In terms of validation, I have no idea why you think one cannot invalidate someone claiming to have a trade secret. You can literally invalidate anything, someone is trying to assert as valid. A bottle blonde could claim that is their original hair colour, and one could invalidate that claim too. You seem stuck on an internal definition of 'validate'. Your internal definition seems wrong. |
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Anyways I agree this is a tangent from the main comment chain, if that's what your implying. I included the last paragraph for that reason:
> And in any case there are many real world products which so far have not been reverse engineered to a sufficient degree to recreate, such as the fixed glass trackpad previously mentioned. If you can prove otherwise then I would welcome a link.