As reported by Law360, US District Judge Ed Kinkeade has called for the ongoing legal battle between ZeniMax Media and Oculus to end, as the case runs into its third year.
ZeniMax has asked a court to remove Oculus hardware and software from sale or pay them 20% of all of the revenue for the next 10 years, with ZeniMax arguing that the injunction should include the Rift headset and any other hardware or software that is attached to the technology ZeniMax claims was developed under their roof. ZeniMax is also, according to documents provided by Ars Technica, asking for another $500 million USD, on top of the $500 million it has already won.
Facebook is arguing, however, that these past NDA breaches don't constitute what ZeniMax is arguing as "continuing harm," and that ZeniMax isn't offering any competitor to Oculus' VR products. According to Law360 Facebook has also asked both for the extra damages and injunctions to be refused, as well as the original verdict to be thrown out, on the basis that there's no evidence Oculus has caused ZeniMax financial harm.
Kinkeade asked ZeniMax to be more specific about the parts of Oculus that infringe on copyright, and pleaded that the pair resolve the "big, hairy fight" they've gotten themselves into.
Thanks, GamesIndustry.biz.