Guys, those that need the OS for their current projects are being very, very careful to do so legally without stealing Amiga Inc IP. A bunch of gullible fools? I think not. Yes, McEwen has quite a history of dishonesty, but that's beside the point. T-shirts, hockey stadium, etc. are quite funny, but the craziest thing of all would be if Amiga Inc doesn't actually own the IP. That would dwarf everything else. Anything is possible in the world of Amiga, but c'mon. :-)
I see your point, but then see it this way:
Does anyone know with certainty who owns the, lets call it original AmigaOS?
No, not really. But then, there is a company that is named Amiga Inc. that is the only one that is claiming that IP is theirs, and is even considering granting some licenses for a fee.
So, in the worst of scenarios, you pay money to that company for this license, and then if they really, legally dont own it, and somebody steps in as the legit owner, we can allways pledge that we were inocently fooled by Amiga Inc, but that we acted in good will by buying those alledged rights.
So, no charges may be filled against us, only an order to cease and desist from the rightfull owner, and maybe even an offer from them for a real license.
So, it is not so stupid, you see, it is in fact, a good business tactic when you want to make businesses with IPs apparently no one is interested in enforcing/marketing them. At the end, the company granting those licenses takes the blame, and not the one that was "fooled" into this scheme.