China Cancels Copyright For Land Rover Evoque And Allows Clone To Be Sold

China Cancels Copyright For Land Rover Evoque And Allows Clone To Be Sold
Not long ago we reported that Jaguar Land Rover (JRL) had filed a lawsuit against Chinese automaker Jiangling Motors for copyright infringement. The subjects in question? The Land Rover Evoque and the way too similar looking Land Wind X7. At first glance it’s pretty hard to tell the two a part. Although this wasn’t the first time (and likely not the last) a Chinese carmaker has ripped off the design of a Western competitor, JLR finally decided it had enough. So it sued.
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MDarringerMDarringer - 6/22/2016 12:38:02 PM
+1 Boost
Ahh the magic of China.


jeffgalljeffgall - 6/22/2016 3:21:47 PM
-3 Boost
The Chinese and Democrats are so similar. There is no sense of pride in self accomplishment. Just let someone else do the work and sit back. It's quite sad and embarrassing.


TomMTomM - 6/22/2016 6:00:41 PM
+3 Boost
And the Republicans can be relied on for stating something meaningless. It is the Democrats who actually have the accomplishments - that they have failed to FLAUNT them to the public ALL THE TIME- is a testament to them - not a flaw.

Example - Republicans are especially good at getting the USA into recessions and depressions - and that is when the people choose a more liberal leader - to get us out of the MUCK the Republicans create.


Car4life1Car4life1 - 6/22/2016 9:38:09 PM
+3 Boost
Don't worry Tom, that's just another bitter republican trying to figure out how they let a moron like Trump get the nomination, it is quite embarrassing to say the least....


As far as that knock off Evoque up top goes...it would be interesting to see the 2 compete in a Motor Trend Head 2 Head



Car4life1Car4life1 - 6/23/2016 8:24:00 AM
+5 Boost
added 13.7 million new jobs over a 69-month streak of job growth

The rate of the uninsured in America dropped below 10 percent for the first time ever

the U.S. reopened its embassy in Cuba, the first symbolic step to normalizing relations between the two countries and the first time the American flag has flown in Havana in 54 years.

In October, Mr. Obama's legacy-defining trade deal involving 12 Pacific Rim countries was sealed, with provisions to cut trade barriers, protect labor benvironmental interests and ensure intellectual property rights.

a sweeping education overhaul of No Child Left Behind and a budget deal that avoided the threat of a government shutdown

Just to name a few...


delandelan - 7/4/2016 1:57:12 AM
+1 Boost
Wait, did he just say 95 million left the work force....a third of our population? Must be that Karl Rove math...


TheSteveTheSteve - 6/22/2016 4:43:11 PM
+3 Boost
China has a long history of ignoring foreign copyrights, environmental pillaging, etc. This specific example comes as no surprise.

And in our own capitalist, consumerist society, we are all too willing to do business with "the devil" for the sake of profit and getting the products we desire at a lower price.


MDarringerMDarringer - 6/23/2016 7:25:53 PM
0 Boost
But paying more does not make one more morally virtuous...


TheSteveTheSteve - 6/25/2016 2:31:43 AM
+3 Boost
MDarringer wrote "But paying more does not make one more morally virtuous..."

You're absolutely correct. However, a coffee lover might choose to buy only fair trade coffee, obtained in a socially and environmentally responsible manner, and in doing so, they *might* end up paying more for coffee. I've recently switched to buying raw shrimp that ISN'T harvested by slave and near-slave labor in the far east, and yes, it costs more.

BTW, I don't make claims about "morals" and what people "should" do. That's up to each individual to decide how they want to spend their money.


MorePowerMorePower - 6/23/2016 6:34:06 PM
+3 Boost
I wonder which one will have better reliability . . .


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