Whether or not they're a sovereign nation has no bearing on how much they suck at being a sovereign nation, thank you very much. Regardless of your objections the point still stands.Gilhelmi said:See, Greece is a sovereign nation. As such, they have the right to protect their military secrets.
It's very easy to prove this. You just provide employment records indicating that you work for Bohemia Interactive and were there on BI's orders and that's all the proof that you should need for a functional court to declare you innocent. It's not really that hard to back up a claim that you are at a place as part of your employment with a private corporation; just give a testimony from your boss telling you to go there, and the employment records proving you work for that company. There's all the evidence you need to disprove Mens Rea beyond a reasonable doubt if the prosecutor offers NOTHING whatsoever as counter-evidence or counter-argument.Gilhelmi said:Can the developers prove this in court? That will remain to be seen. I suspect the trial out-come is 70-30% odds against the developers.
Now you might bring up the possibility that they were secretly paid off by some malicious organization, or that BI is just a front for a government PsiOp, or any other sort of objection. In which case I would respond quite simply: wouldn't the Greece government actually have to prove a claim like that in court for it to be a valid objection or counter-argument? Since when is "well gee maybe they could be guilty" a valid argument in a court of law by itself?
The chances that such a thing is true is astronomically low, of course. And the chance of Greece being able to prove it is equally low. So to actually prove them guilty in a real court of law would be practically impossible. As such the only way you could make that statement is if you assumed Greece "couldn't get it right"... or was a corrupt fascist hell-hole like one poster put.
Last I checked, "this knife you manufactured might some day be used to stab someone by somebody with malicious intent" wasn't a valid reason in and of itself to throw you in jail for making and selling knives.Gilhelmi said:That is a point against them as well because that "realistic war games and simulators" might be being developed, or used by, a non-friendly nation (to NATO, UN, US does not matter).