Then they should have their legal team pilloried and set ablaze for advising them to be this cagey.
- Go for it and see if anyone complains
- See if ignoring the complainers makes them go away
- See if bullying the complainers makes them go away
- Can it be solved with money?
- Last resort: cheat.
- If you get caught, call the lawyers; in public, whine about the raw deal you're getting.
I've never been bullish on Uber, but this is really bad.
1) If the suit is true, then it will almost certainly zero out the investors, and destroy the careers and fortunes of the executives.
2) Uber has a long history of keeping and promoting executives who lack integrity and show a willingness to break the law.
As such, it is reasonable to assume that Google is making a good faith effort to argue the strongest possible case on their side; and that Uber is likely to lie, cheat, and steal to make the strongest possible case on their side.
Knowing almost nothing about US Federal civil law, can inferences be drawn from that (and other previous behaviour of Uber)?