The ugly court battle between Activision and its former employees has gotten even uglier.
https://lastchance.cc/activision-pays-ex-call-of-duty-developers-42-million-5910281%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
According to documents obtained by The Los Angeles Times and released today, Activision hired a man named Thomas Fenady to ādig up dirtā on Call of Duty creators Jason West and Vince Zampella so the company could build up a case to fire them. The newspaper reports that Fenady was asked to hack into West and Zampellaās voicemail, e-mail, and computers in an operation code-named āProject Icebreaker.ā
Sounds like a spy movie, doesnāt it? As the Times writes:
Fenady testified that he expressed concern about the project but was told, āDonāt worry about the repercussions.ā Fenady found an outside company, InGuardians, who also balked at the task because of ālegal hurdles.ā Stymied, Fenady approached the companyās Facilities Department and talked about staging a āfake fumigationā and a āmock fire drillā in order to get West and Zampella away from their computers long enough to copy files on their computers.
Ultimately, Activision did none of those things. Activision declined to comment on the documents, as did attorneys for the developers.
According to the Timesā Ben Fritz, Activisionās request to delay the court trial was denied and it will proceed on May 29
https://lastchance.cc/activision-wants-to-delay-the-big-call-of-duty-lawsuit-5910631%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Check out the Timesā piece for the original documents.
Key documents unsealed in Activision Call of Duty trial [LA Times]
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