Overseas game company that sued the nuclear site and was accused.

Aim junkies, a nuclear site that was accused by Bungee, sued the bungee in reverse.

The case is like this. US game developer Bung has been suing a number of nuclear sharing sites of his game Destiny Guardians since 2021.

On January 21, he sued Gator cheats with the Raion Games, and in July 2021 he sued Ring-1 with Ubisoft. In 2022, after a year of workshops, he received about 17.5 billion won in damages from Elite Boss Tech, one of the nuclear sharing sites.

Aim Jungles was also one of the nuclear sites sued on June 21. At the time, the Aim Jung Kissed in the court that infringed the copyright and trademarks and violated the right to use the software contract. Bungee's argument includes unauthorized copying and distributing code of Destiny Guardians and violations of DMCA (Digital Millennium Copyright Law).

However, contrary to the previous case, the legal dispute with Aim Jungles faced an unexpected phase. Aim Jungles claimed that four copyrights were infringed, two of which were made after November 10, 2020, after the development of the cheat program, so it was not a violation of copyright.

The court lifted some of Aim's hands. The judge dismissed the claim of copyright infringement, saying that Bungee did not offer the basis for stealing its work.

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However, not all charges were dismissed. The judge saw that the bungee could proceed with the claim for infringement of the trademark rights, and the bungee submitted a revised complaint. The request of Aim Jung Kiss to withdraw a lawsuit was also dismissed. The judge sees that he has fully suggested the basis for copyright claims at the revised complaint.

Aim Jung Kiss filed a lawsuit (a lawsuit filed by the defendant against the plaintiff while the lawsuit is in progress). Aim Jungles insisted that Bungee had invaded their computers from 19 to 21 years, collecting information, and purchasing its own work, 'Cheat Program', and preventing them from applying them to the game without permission.

To buy a cheat program of Aim Jung Kiss, you must agree to the Service Terms. Aim Jungles reversed Bungee's first lawsuit, and claimed that Bungee violated the agreement that he agreed to download the DMCA's bypass and software.

In addition, Aim Jung Kiss argued that its program helped to hit Destiny Guardians and is not much different from Steam Overlay. Aim Jung Kiss's parent company Phoenix Digital Group also proposed to cooperation to solve the problem.

The trial is in progress, and the court's response to Aim Jung Kiss's opinion has not yet come out.

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