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Activision sued a plug-in company to prevent its illegal infringement

Recently, Activision Blizzard's subsidiary Activision Publishing officially filed a lawsuit against a company called EngineOwning, which specializes in selling a number of popular FPS game plug-ins, including Activision's Call of Duty IP, accusing the German company of selling illegal software, deliberately disrupting market relations and unfair competition.

Activision sued a plug-in company to prevent its illegal infringement

Activision said: "Activision intends to prevent an organized illegal act through this lawsuit, EngineOwning has given its customers a non-par advantage in FPS games such as Call of Duty by selling offending malware, and the company's behavior has damaged the game industry and the player experience of the Call of Duty community." "

Activision sued a plug-in company to prevent its illegal infringement

EngineOwning's plug-in sales are based on a subscription system, and players can enjoy common plug-in tools including self-aiming, blowing up, bullet tracking, assisted shooting, closing recoil and bullet spreading, fast shooting, and methods to avoid triggering anti-plug-in mechanisms as long as they subscribe to members at all levels of the site.

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