The maker of the party game Cards Against Humanity has sued Elon Musk’s SpaceX accusing it of trespassing on and damaging company-owned property in Texas.
The lawsuit, filed Thursday in Texas court, asks for $15 million to cover damages including what the company calls the destruction of natural vegetation.
The company also said it would “accept Twitter.com as compensation">
Lol
Seems generous.
I think Twitter got loaded up with billions of debt during acquisition, so I’m not sure you’d actually want it.
I think they mean just the domain name, but not positive.
I guess you could build something on top of that. Install a Mastodon server, push a rebranded Mastodon client to the app stores and you’re in business.
Or they just wanted it being called Twitter in legal papers targeted at Musk to enrage him once more.
it bought the land to interfere with former President Donald Trump’s plan to construct a wall along the Texas-Mexico border.
Won’t work, they can use eminent domain.
But the land is near SpaceX’s operations, known as Starbase, and according to the lawsuit, SpaceX has been using the land without permission for about six months as a staging area for construction: clearing vegetation, parking vehicles, storing gravel and running generators.
Sounds like Elon.
*I keep the same thing about 1sq ft so here’s the reply:
like 1ft sq, and give it to customers
Funny thing is courts see through shenanigans like this and really don’t like being yanked around. This would probably hurt them if anything.
*Who split it into 1 sq ft? I highly, highly doubt any land office would accept that. That would be an obviously unusable plot. No road access, no utility access, any of that.
As someone else said, eminent domain is a legal process, and thus time consuming. If I remember correctly, CAHs plan or gimmick was they were going to divide up the land into very small pieces, like 1ft sq, and give it to customers. I think it might have been a black Friday sale gimmick. The idea being there would be hundreds of thousands of people with ownership of border wall land, requiring hundreds or thousands of eminent domain lawsuits to be filed. Not a ironclad solution but, in theory, an impressive way to jam up the wall project. I assume the land in question is part of this gimmick.
like 1ft sq, and give it to customers
Funny thing is courts see through shenanigans like this and really don’t like being yanked around. This would probably hurt them if anything.
*Who split it into 1 sq ft? I highly, highly doubt any land office would accept that. That would be an obviously unusable plot. No road access, no utility access, any of that.
Ok, that’s gooood. 2 thumbs for inventiveness and dumbfuckery extraordinaire.
They bought it, split it up, and gave a piece to everyone that donated/funded. So like 10,000 individuals. The government can always take it, but it wasn’t intended to prevent that entirely. The intention was to make it time consuming and difficult to build the wall there, which in turn would likely prevent building starting in the first place.
Is this like the one public domain picture of Musk or does he just always wear that coat? That’s the real question.
Fair point. Here’s an alternative.
“Alleged”? How could you accidentally leave heavy equipment on someone else’s property? They trespassed.
Sounds like someone messed with Texas.
Build a fence around it, on the land CAH owns, and when they try to get their shit, they can explain why they put it there and handle paying for the illegal land use.