From: Firingsquad
Hot News: Infinium Labs threatens HardOCP
Infinium is going to court over some of Kyle's statements about Infinium. Apparently, having a healthy dose of skepticism is slanderous, or libelous, or whatever you want to call it, is illegal. Very entertaining read, if a bit scary. It's too bad Kyle will have to undergo the expenses of a legal defense over this.
Hot News: Infinium Labs threatens HardOCP
Infinium is going to court over some of Kyle's statements about Infinium. Apparently, having a healthy dose of skepticism is slanderous, or libelous, or whatever you want to call it, is illegal. Very entertaining read, if a bit scary. It's too bad Kyle will have to undergo the expenses of a legal defense over this.
More than once during the phone-in press conference, Kevin Bachus called Bennett an "amateur." The above statement proves that Bachus knows what he is talking about. Aside from the obvious fact that no mere owner of a small-time Web site -- even one who owns a pricey Hummer, as Kyle does -- should ever question the word of a man who lives in a $1,250,100 house, Bennett received not only the lawyer-letter quoted above, but another, similar one from a firm called Icard, Merrill, Cullis, Timm, Furen & Ginsburg, P.A. that is apparently representing Tim Roberts personally. No professional journalist would ever say anything negative -- even if it were true -- about a company and man represented by not one but two law firms, one of which has six names on its letterhead.
Being thoroughly cowed by this array of legal might, I will not now mention that a threatening letter from an attorney (or two or six or eight) is not exactly the same as "taking legal action" against someone, which is what the press conference was supposed to be about. Or perhaps I heard that phrase wrong, not only when Infinium's PR rep called to invite me to the press conference, but again when I called him after it was over to confirm those words.
Being thoroughly cowed by this array of legal might, I will not now mention that a threatening letter from an attorney (or two or six or eight) is not exactly the same as "taking legal action" against someone, which is what the press conference was supposed to be about. Or perhaps I heard that phrase wrong, not only when Infinium's PR rep called to invite me to the press conference, but again when I called him after it was over to confirm those words.
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