Ainsworth Aristocrat Slot Machine Service Manuals

New customers only, min deposit £20, wagering 35x, max bet £5 with bonus funds. Max bonus is 100% up to £100. Ainsworth Aristocrat Slot Machine Service Manuals No max cash out on deposit offers. New customers only, min deposit £20, wagering 35x, max bet £5 with bonus funds. Max bonus is 100% up to £100. Ainsworth Aristocrat Slot Machine Service Manuals No max cash out on deposit offers. Welcome bonus excluded for players depositing with Skrill or Neteller.

Newlifegames.com Newlifegames.net Newlifegames.org
New Life Games NewLifeGames NLG We Bring new Life to old Games 1-888-NLG-SLOTS
Are all Copyright and Trademarks of New Life Games LLC 1992 - 2020

FAIR USE NOTICE:

This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner.
We make such material available in an effort to advance awareness and understanding of the issues involved.
We believe this constitutes a fair use of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law.
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those
who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.

For more information please visit: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml.

If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use,
you must obtain permission directly from the copyright owner.

Ainsworth aristocrat slot machine service manuals craftsman

Ainsworth Aristocrat Slot Machine Service Manuals Pdf

NewLifeGames.net Web-Site is optimized for use with Fire-Fox and a minimum screen resolution of 1280x768 pixels.


Powered by SMF 1.1.20 |SMF © 2013, Simple Machines
Loon Designed by Mystica
Updated by Runic Warrior
Page created in 0.16 seconds with 20 queries.

Two Australian gaming companies are preparing for a massive court battle. Giant pokies producer Aristocrat Technologies Australia filed suit in federal court against Ainsworth Game Technologies for a breach of contract.

The slot machine is called Lightning Link, one that Aristocrat designed in 2014 and they claim was copied by Ainsworth in 2016 and 2017. In an effort to defend its assets and intellectual property rights, Aristocrat is suing its competitor.

News may emerge from the court in a matter of days as the first hearing is scheduled for July 17.

Years in the Making

According to Business News Australia, it all started in 2014.

That’s when Aristocrat partnered with High Roller Gaming to develop a new slot machine called Lightning Link. The machines subsequently sold well in Australia and throughout the world, becoming a staple in land-based casinos from places ranging from Macau to America.

Lightning Link offered 16 themes from which operators could choose, and all games included jackpots and bonuses. The company sold a “very substantial number” of them.

Ainsworth Aristocrat Slot Machine Service Manuals Online

Aristocrat noted in its lawsuit that Ainsworth founder Len Ainsworth commented publicly about the success of his competitor’s machine in December 2016. That’s when he apparently told a newspaper, “They struck it lucky with a game”. He went on to say that they had “things in the wings” that would beat Aristocrat. Presumably he meant in terms of sales.

Rogue Ainsworth Employee or Collusion?

Allegedly, Ainsworth began developing a game called Jackpot Strike in 2017. The game reportedly intended to be a copy of Lightning Link. Aristocrat claims that an Ainsworth employee copied everything while developing Jackpot Strike. Everything from the screen designs to animations, and even the game mathematics.

Ainsworth Aristocrat Slot Machine Service Manuals Craftsman

The employee is said to have worked as a game designer at Ainsworth from 2011 to 2016. He then worked as a designer at Aristocrat for less than a month in early 2017 before returning to Ainsworth. This timeline coincides with the development of Ainsworth’s new game. Aristocrat claims the employee went so far as to download the game’s math details from a spreadsheet onto a USB drive to deliver to Ainsworth.

This all led to some of the crimes alleged in the lawsuit, including breach of confidence and copyright infringement. Aristocrat is also suing to obtain a permanent injunction on all Jackpot Strike machines, their destruction, and payment to Aristocrat for damages.

Aristocrat Steams

The fury over the situation is evident in some of the court documents from Aristocrat. A spokesperson for Aristocrat noted:

Ainsworth Aristocrat Slot Machine Service Manuals

“It is our view that this case goes well beyond simple copyright infringement and concerns allegations of extensive and deliberate misappropriation of trade secrets, confidential information and intellectual property. Upholding appropriate standards is part and parcel of ensuring ongoing trust in our business and industry and is an important part of Aristocrat’s high compliance culture.”

With that said, the spokesperson added: “We won’t be commenting further while the case is on foot.”

The only response from Ainsworth was that it plans to “vigorously” defend itself against the claims made by Aristocrat.

Not the First Legal Action

Per the Sydney Morning Herald, Aristocrat first went to court with Ainsworth last year in the same matter. Only that time, it was to demand the right to see documents that might help prove its case.

The claim, even last year, was that Ainsworth had somehow obtained access to Aristocrat’s proprietary information for Lightning Link and used it to create Jackpot Strike. Aristocrat then demanded that its competitor turn over everything from artwork to source codes, math tables, and commercial documents – anything related to Jackpot Strike.

Some of those documents were used to file the federal court lawsuit last week.

Ainsworth

Roller Coaster Investor Reactions

The Australian Securities Exchange saw an interesting range of responses to the lawsuit for both publicly-traded companies.

Aristocrat trades as ALL.AX and took a significant dip on Friday, July 5, from $29.79 down to $29.07. By Tuesday, July 9, the stock price had gone down to $28.94. But as details of the case and court documents began to come out, the price went back as high as $29.68 and hovered in that range.

Ainsworth, trading as AGI.AX, has been on a perpetual roller coaster for quite some time. Switching from $0.69 to $0.67 on July 4, it did the same on July 5 but flew up to $0.70 on Monday, July 8. It then fell quickly down to $0.66 on July 9, and down to $0.65 on July 10, and has since been fluctuating between those low points and $68.

Look for more interesting upticks and downswings after information comes from the first hearing next week.