I don't think you're in a position to judge who owns what. I'm certainly not - and in contrast to you I speak German and are actually able to read the judges's decision and reasoning.
So just like that you assume that I'm not capable of reading German, huh.
I'm not a Hyperion spokesperson, so I can't answer that. I was just trying to point out that m68k-amigaos might not be as abandoned as you think.
I didnt say it was abandoned, I'm saying the rights have vaporized, and with that I mean that noone really knows who owns what anymore. There's heaploads of "object code" in 3.1, 3.5, 3.9 and even 4.0 that is lots older than 3.0 - who owns those? OS 3.5 CD contains 3.1 in full, and 3.9 contains 3.5. Hyperion now claims rights on 3.1, but has it been verified that Amiga Inc. had those to license away in the first place?
Perhaps you should reread it? Especially the part that grants Hyperion the rights to prosecute IP infringements on their own?
I have read it, and if I remember correctly, it says that Amiga OS up to 3.1 is owned by this weird entity that we know as "Amiga Inc.", and that Hyperion is sole owner of AmigaOS 4. It also says that Hyperion is granted a worldwide royalty free, transferable rights to 3.1, to do whatever they like with it.
However, all this is based on the assumption that Amiga Inc. had ownership in the first place.
That's wishful thinking, nothing else. You don't get rid of the (quote) "piracy stigma" just by pretending it's not there.
There's just one way to find out, isn't there? Standing around doing nothing wont do any difference. Earlier people have tried to distribute kickstarts with updated scsi.device and fastfilesystem for large disks, and they have not been stopped by Hyperion or Amiga Inc., but by Cloanto - how whack is that?