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SCO Group Hires Boies After All

pitr256 writes "So it seems the SCO Group has decided to hire infamous Anti-Microsoft lawyer David Boies after all. This comes upon reversal of the SCO Group statement according to Chief Executive Darl McBride of having not engaged Mr. Boies to take legal action against our fellow Linux vendors. Now, CNet News is reporting that not only is SCO Group investigating the Linux vendors but that it is also going to investigate Windows, Mac OS X, and the BSD derivatives. So if your technology can't win on price and performance, break out the lawyers and sue everyone. Does anyone else see this as the end of SCO (Caldera) like I do? I certainly will never use anything from them ever again."

444 comments

  1. Of course they hire boies by gazbo · · Score: 4, Funny

    They are, after all, not interested in girls.

    1. Re:Of course they hire boies by smell_the_glove · · Score: 1

      Nothing personal against you or your joke (which is good), but I really wish that /. had a filter to delete all posts that have been modded up because they're funny. I filter at a high level and it seems that a huge chunk of the 5 scores are just jokes, which I would rather skip.

    2. Re:Of course they hire boies by gazbo · · Score: 2, Informative
      Dude, why don't you look at your comment preferences and assign a -ve modifier to the 'funny' moderation? This gives you fine grained control over what you see, and does exactly what you want.

      Honestly, with all the hard work put into slashdot by Taco and all the others, it is frustrating to see people throwing it back in their faces; in this case they've been helpful enough to provide this control, and nobody even bothers to look!

    3. Re:Of course they hire boies by smell_the_glove · · Score: 1

      Thanks very much for the tip. I wasn't aware of this option (So shoot me). BTW when I went to my comment preferences I saw only numerical modifiers, so I'm not sure what you mean by "-ve".

    4. Re:Of course they hire boies by smell_the_glove · · Score: 1

      Oh, duh, -ve = negative.

  2. Possible outcomes by pope+nihil · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Does anyone know if they have a legal leg to stand on? Are they pursuing software patents?

    1. Re:Possible outcomes by SpazAttak · · Score: 2

      I doubt anyone can conjecture in either way at this point. All accounts have been far to vague to really say anything about.

    2. Re:Possible outcomes by Kadagan+AU · · Score: 1

      For a lawsuit in America, a party must have injury. This may be financial, physical, emotional, or social, but there must be some form of injury. You can't just sue someone because you don't like them, or you need the money. I'm not a lawyer, but I'm pretty sure this is common knowledge.

      ~Kadagan~

      P.S. These laws may not hold true in California, none of the other laws do. :-P

      --
      This space for rent, inquire within.
    3. Re:Possible outcomes by CrazyDuke · · Score: 1

      "For a lawsuit in America, a party must have injury. This may be financial, physical, emotional, or social, but there must be some form of injury. You can't just sue someone because you don't like them, or you need the money."

      You've obviously have never heard of the RIAA or the MPAA...

      "P.S. These laws may not hold true in California, none of the other laws do. :-P"

      ...or maybe you have... ;}

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.
    4. Re:Possible outcomes by Lonath · · Score: 1

      I'll conjecture. Since all software is an expression of thought just like music and sounds and pictures and movies and text and books, and since abstract thought isn't patentable, if they're suing over software then of course they don't have a legal leg to stand on. =^D

    5. Re:Possible outcomes by ninewands · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Does anyone know if they have a legal leg to stand on?

      That, my fellow /.'er is the ten megabuck question.

      The way I see it, if Caldera sues over any of their proprietary IP that they contributed to the kernel, etc., the terms of the GPL will govern (I hope ... there are still SOME areas of the kernel that are NOT simon-pure from a GPL perspective).

      Are they pursuing software patents?

      I suspect so. Caldera's active voluntary participation in development of various parts of the system, in its entirety, would probably preclude an attempt at enforcing copyrights that have become "tainted by the GPL." Here again, any IP infringement that was a direct result of Caldera's participation would carry an implied license under whatever license covered the particular system component that contained the IP.

      Now, all bets, above, are off if they are going to seek enforcement of IP governing a part of the system in which Caldera did not participate. If the contested IP is merely copyrighted by Caldera and the developers can show that they did a true "clean room" reverse-engineering job, then Caldera will get nothing but legal bills and a LOT of bad press in the community. However, if the "independently-developed" infringing IP is covered by a PATENT, there is NO protection for the developers unless they can prove Caldera/SCO contributed that IP to the project.

      Either way, I don't see how Caldera can POSSIBLY gain from this exercise. Many members of the OSS community are also in "buying official" positions out in the "meat world." Anyone want to let them know that if they pee in our Post Toasties(TM), we might just be inclined to return the favor by buying our respective companies' server software, etc, from their competition?
    6. Re:Possible outcomes by mikehoskins · · Score: 3, Interesting

      They're hosed. I personally saw Caldera/SCO as a bridge from Linux to Unix and saw them as a catalyst for change over to Linux from Unix, DOS, and oddly, CP/M.

      I personally won't buy a thing from them, again. I'm done with them. This is wrong.

      This coming from a company that not only contributed to the Linux kernel, but the same company that OPEN SOURCED SCO!!! Where's the lawsuit against them?

      Fortunately, this will bankrupt them, soon. I just hope it doesn't end up killing off Linux in its wake.

      <really_think="on">
      How can they sit on their "moral high horse" and actually have been a vendor of Linux as an OPEN SOURCE PRODUCT?!?!?!? It's pure hypocrisy, IMHO.

      I think there should be a counter-suit in the form of a class-action suit from the other vendors, plus a FUD campaign against them for this.

      I hope this doesn't do more for Microsoft against The Competition(tm) of Linux and Unix than M$ could ever do. What an opportunity for M$ to sieze upon!

      They're nuts, this late in the game. What, no finding of fact or cease-and-desist order?!?!? I hope their lawyer continues to be the loser in all of this....

      To me, this is an outrage!
      </really think>

    7. Re:Possible outcomes by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      Does anyone know if they have a legal leg to stand on? Are they pursuing software patents?

      IANAL, but (insert advice that sounds good to you).

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    8. Re:Possible outcomes by budgenator · · Score: 1

      I hope this doesn't do more for Microsoft against The Competition(tm) of Linux and Unix than M$ could ever do. What an opportunity for M$ to sieze upon!
      Oh the sweet irony of this, the first time I touch anything even remoutly like Unix it was a SCO Xenix running on a 25Mhz 80386 w/o math co-processor in an IBM ps2. Every shell script in the machine had copyright notices for both SCO and Microsoft

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    9. Re:Possible outcomes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Have you hugged your IP-destroying Viral Pac-Man license today?

      Fuck you and your anti-GPL views. The GPL does NOT destroy IP, fuckwad.
      If I write code and intend to give it away as a gift and KEEP it that way,
      the GPL is the perfect license for that purpose. If you don't like it, you
      can go fuck yourself and use something else. If you don't like it, you can
      go fuck yourself and steal somebody else's code for your proprietary shit.

      I suppose you also hate our great President, the Right Honourable George
      Williamson Bush too, eh? Fucking nazi.

    10. Re:Possible outcomes by JVBV · · Score: 1

      I don't know the specifics of what SCO might sue for, but this sounds a lot like the suit AT&T brought against all the other Unix vendors in the early 1980s. The short version of the outcome of that was they agreed to pay AT&T (then Novell) a annual fee for using the Unix code base. Except Sun, they made a one time lump payment.

      Also as I recall one of the motivations for the BSD distribution was to remove AT&T propriatary code, and since SCO inherieted AT&T's code I don't know what they would base those suits on.

    11. Re:Possible outcomes by yourmom16 · · Score: 0

      does anyone know which patent theyre using?

      --
      "We have got to make Stan understand the importance of voting, because he'll definitely vote for our guy." - South Park
    12. Re:Possible outcomes by JWW · · Score: 1

      I personally am hoping that someone like IBM gets so pissed at this as to engage in a supremely hostile takeover Caldera/SCO/Whatever. Their stock has got to be almost worthless. It would probably cost them less to take that route.

      Note to all members of UnitedLinux: Run, don't walk away from Caldera/SCO, as I and many others will never even think of buying one of your distros when you associate with these scum.

    13. Re:Possible outcomes by Lonath · · Score: 1

      Rofl. It's sarcasm. I am not sure if you're being serious or just trolling me, but if you look at my posts, like the current !sw-patent post, I am not !GPL. It's to poke fun at Microsoft FUD. Also note that I didn't mention the GPL...you did. I could have been talking about ANY IP-destroying Viral Pac-Man license for all you know. :)

    14. Re:Possible outcomes by mikehoskins · · Score: 1

      A couple of years ago, I predicted that IBM would buy Caldera, but went back on my idea and thought that it would never happen.

      Why? Caldera = Linux + SCO + Project Montery (AIX 5L) + DR DOS + business contacts (and PHB's) + some Novell.

      If they were bought and everything was "opened" up in a GPL/LGPL/BSD sense of the word....

    15. Re:Possible outcomes by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      A few years ago I purchased and restored an Altos 586 box. This wasn't a 'Pentium' machine. What the 5 in the model number meant was that it supported 5 users simultaneously. On an 8086 chip. With 512K of RAM.

      Who produced the OS that ran on it? Microsoft. It had Microsoft Xenix on it, from before they sold off Xenix.

      Yes, Microsoft produced the first Unix that ran on the x86 architecture, and it ran on the 8086, and was multi-user.

      But I guess we can continue to slag them as a company that can't do a damned thing right.

  3. Well, good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny
    Does anyone else see this as the end of SCO (Caldera) like I do? I certainly will never use anything from them ever again.

    I'm sure they are all broken up over the fact that you won't be installing any more warez copies of SCO anymore.

    1. Re:Well, good by pitr256 · · Score: 0, Troll

      I didn't know SCO nee Caldera OpenLinux Server is considered warez. Yoinks!

      Someone better alert www.linuxiso.org that they're promoting piracy. Alert the BSA!

      Good thing I removed OpenLinux from my servers and switched to Debian. Is this one warez also?

      Thanks for the heads up...

      --
      Your mom always said, a PB&J is better than nothing, and God is nothing, is a PB&J better than God?
  4. The Old Days by yamcha666 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Doesn't this entire SCO suing [insert vendor name here] for using the UNIX IP remind anyone of the days when AT&T was getting in Berkley's face over using the UNIX IP - then Berkley rewrote the entire BSD so there was no AT&T UNIX code in there?

    I don't know about Windows or MacOS, but I don't believe Linux or Open/Free/NetBSD use any copywritten UNIX IP code in their kernels. Do they?

    1. Re:The Old Days by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I don't know about Windows or MacOS, but I don't believe Linux or Open/Free/NetBSD use any copywritten UNIX IP code in their kernels. Do they?

      IANAL, but I believe the issue is with software patents, not copywrites. If they have software patents over processes that are used in other OS, it doesn't matter if the exact code was used, just the process that is patented.

      --
      Forget the whales - save the babies.
    2. Re:The Old Days by kp2sushi · · Score: 3, Interesting

      There is a fundamental difference between the AT&T days and now. AT&T was concerned over the use of of AT&T code, not AT&T features. The issue back then was copyright, now it is software patents. BSD was able to give AT&T the finger by rewriting the entire code base. Linux may be in trouble because it may violate an SCO patent. Where the kernel does this is anybody's guess; I've never heard of anyone patenting system calls, the TCP/IP stack, the VFS layer, etc. A quick search of the US patent office does not return any SCO patents. If they have a leg to stand on, I do not know. I'd like to see these patents before I believe that SCO can do anything. Oh, and I'd pass the word on never using an SCO (Caldera) product again. They just dug a very deep hole. -Kp2

      --
      Take the white suppository, and I'll show you how deep the rabbit hole goes...
    3. Re:The Old Days by questionlp · · Score: 3, Informative

      FreeBSD includes software compatibility layers (such as Linux, etc.) that also includes some System V shims and code that could be targetted by SCO. I believe the kernel module that could be in question is svr4.ko along with the stuff under /usr/src/sys/svr4.

      NetBSD and OpenBSD may also have the same code or code derivatives in their base system's source.

      I believe it was 4.4Lite that was the result of the BSD vs. AT&T court case, which in itself was a re-write to be "clean" of any AT&T source code... or at least clean enough for AT&T to allow it's distribution. I could be wrong though...

    4. Re:The Old Days by levik · · Score: 1

      So what do these patents cover? Neither this CNet story, nor any linked off of it gave any indications to SCO's actual claims of what IP of theirs is being infringed upon.

      --
      Ñ'
    5. Re:The Old Days by EricWright · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem is that no one seems to know, or at least isn't saying, exactly what routines/IP/patents are being investigated. Remember, patents only last for 17 years from issuance of patent, or 20 years from application for patent, whichever expires first. Anything patented pre-1986 (or applied for before 1983) will have fallen into public domain already.

      I'm not entirely sure what you can do if, after your patent expires, you find out that someone was violating your patent while it was still valid.

    6. Re:The Old Days by FatRatBastard · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yes it did, but as I understand it the issues was "copyrighted" code (i.e. chunks of code taken verbatim from AT&T). In this case it seems to be about patents. I.e. they don't give a shit about how you implemented something, they're only interested that you *did* implement it (assuming they own the patent).

      My prediction: all the big dogs will cross license with each other (because if you dig deep enough I'm sure SCO/Caldera is infringing on some Apple/MS/IBM/Sun patent). The only thing I worry about is Linux and *BSD since the don't have any IP to hold over SCOs head to force them to cross license (maybe IBM will bitch slap them into not persuing the free unicies)

    7. Re:The Old Days by cfulmer · · Score: 3, Interesting

      So, probably bad form replying twice on the same thread.... oh well...

      The issue is *NOT* Patents. It's all about copyright and licensing. Unix dates back to 1969 (see http://www.levenez.com/unix ), and software patents only go back to 1981.

      So, the question is whether any software written by SCO (or really, anything that SCO now owns the rights to, since it was mostly written by Ma Bell) is ending up in software that somebody else sells. If the answer to that is 'yes', and that somebody else didn't pay SCO for the right to use that software *AND* their use isn't considered 'fair use,' then SCO probably has a cause of action.

      I think this will eventually amount to not much. They're not going to go after redhat or Linus or Stallman or.... They may go after somebody who grabbed SCO source code, recompiled it for Windows and is running their app there without paying SCO for the right to copy the code. Or somebody who did the same thing for Linux.

      IANAL (yet)

    8. Re:The Old Days by FattMattP · · Score: 1
      Doesn't this entire SCO suing [insert vendor name here] for using the UNIX IP remind anyone of the days when AT&T was getting in Berkley's face over using the UNIX IP - then Berkley rewrote the entire BSD so there was no AT&T UNIX code in there?
      For those who don't remember or don't know about it, you can read the full account online.
      --
      Prevent email address forgery. Publish SPF records for y
    9. Re:The Old Days by BitterOak · · Score: 2, Informative
      The issue is *NOT* Patents. It's all about copyright and licensing. Unix dates back to 1969 (see http://www.levenez.com/unix ), and software patents only go back to 1981.

      Not true. As was pointed out in a previous post, patents expire 20 years after application or 17 years after issuance of the patent, whichever comes last.

      So you can have applied for a patent way back in 1969, but if you delay issuance of the patent until, say 2000, you can hold the patent until 2017.

      It is not uncommon to apply for a patent, and hold up the issuance by deliberately slowing down the process (lots of legal wrangling, etc.) until your methods become widely adopted, and then suddenly move to get your patent issued. This is called a "submarine patent", because the application is hidden from the general public until issuance, so your methods can become a standard since people don't know they are patented!

      One of the many problems with current U.S. patent law.

      (IANAL, but submarine patents have been discussed extensively on Slashdot before.)

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    10. Re:The Old Days by astroboy · · Score: 1
      No; most of the patents would have expired by now anway. The article seems to imply that the IP they're concerned about is definately copyrights:
      "We've been looking at this for months. Every time we turn over a stone, there's something there," McBride said. "If you pull down (Mac) OS X you'll see a lot of copyright postings that point back to Unix Systems Laboratories, which is what we hold."
    11. Re:The Old Days by imp · · Score: 2, Informative
      USL and UCB have an explicit agreement that allows for certain files to be distributed under the BSD license in 4.4-LITE and 4.4-LITE2. {Open,Net,Free}BSD distribute the code under that license, adhereing to those terms. I strongly believe that there's no violation of USL's other IP at all, unless there are patent issues that are being claimed. I suspect that somebody downloaded the source, freaked out and is trying to rewrite the settlement of the 1995 lawsuit to get more money from their revenue stream. I don't know if the 1995 lawsuit covered patents or not, but most of the core patents for Unix have passed into the public domain through explicit action, or the passage of time.

      I don't know about Windows or MacOS, but I don't believe Linux or Open/Free/NetBSD use any copywritten UNIX IP code in their kernels. Do they?
      4.4 Lite does have about a dozen files that have USL copyright notices on them. These files are explicitly covered by the USL/UCB lawsuit settlement of 1995. I don't know about Linux, but since *BSD is derived from 4.4-LITE, chances are good they all have them. I know for sure that FreeBSD has them.

      My Personal opinion is that this is a tempest in a teapot by someone who doesn't know history or the agreements that they purchased along with the IP from SCO.

    12. Re:The Old Days by imp · · Score: 3, Informative

      BSD was able to give AT&T the finger by rewriting the entire code base.

      Note entirely true. 4.3BSD NET2 had some USL code in it. That's what the 1995 lawsuit was about. The various BSD projects replaced their 4.3NET2 based code with 4.4LITE code which was explicitly covered by the AT&T/UCB agreements. Part of that agreement was that a certain number of files that were alleged to contain USL code were explicitly released under the BSD license.


      Chances are good that someone saw these copyright notices and failed to read them far enough:


      * Copyright (c) 1982, 1986, 1990, 1991, 1993
      * The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
      * (c) UNIX System Laboratories, Inc.
      * All or some portions of this file are derived from material licensed
      * to the University of California by American Telephone and Telegraph
      * Co. or Unix System Laboratories, Inc. and are reproduced herein with
      * the permission of UNIX System Laboratories, Inc.

      Notice the "reproduced herein with the permission of" in there. :-)
    13. Re:The Old Days by Aknaton · · Score: 1

      Things get interesting if you go to this page and read what Marshall Kirk McKusick has to say about this in his piece on the history of BSD:

      "The lawsuit settlement also stipulated that USL would not sue any organization using 4.4BSD-Lite as the base for their system."

      Of course, I can't tell if this would apply to this situation to SCO or not.

    14. Re:The Old Days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      maybe IBM will bitch slap them into not persuing the free unicies

      This is my prediction as well. IBM is the most prolific patenter, and since they've invested so much in Linux, they will smack SCO back to reality (reality being that SCO is pretty much dead).

    15. Re:The Old Days by Quixadhal · · Score: 1

      Quick!

      Someone go patent the idea of the # character, then the evil SCO minions will be locked out of root access to their own systems!

      Muahahahaha!

      Those that can, do;
      Those that cannot, teach;
      Those that cannot learn, sue.

    16. Re:The Old Days by Penguin+Follower · · Score: 1

      hmm in that case, a re-write would clear the violation, right? So, all the vendors can tell SCO to piss up a tree! :) (maybe... hopfully)

    17. Re:The Old Days by ninewands · · Score: 2, Insightful
      "If you pull down (Mac) OS X you'll see a lot of copyright postings that point back to Unix Systems Laboratories, which is what we hold."
      ... and therein lies the rub ...

      In order to enforce those copyrights that were originally owned by Unix Systems Laboratories, I believe SCO will have to show that they were granted an EXCLUSIVE license to the IP involved. In addition, they are going to have to show that the alleged infringing software (Linux and OS X are the only systems we've seen mentioned so far) COPIED their code.

      I have not reviewed every single copyright notice in, for instance, Debian's code base, but I'm reasonably sure that there's NO AT&T code in it. Most of it is GPL/LGPL, a little bit is the Artistic License and the bulk of that which is not GPL/LGPL is BSD licensed, none of which could apply to the original AT&T (Unix Systems Laboratories) code.
    18. Re:The Old Days by lahi · · Score: 1

      "If you pull down (Mac) OS X you'll see a lot of copyright postings that point back to Unix Systems Laboratories, which is what we hold."

      ... and therein lies the rub ...



      I doubt they can get after Apple, I'm pretty sure Apple must have some (probably expensive) license to use the original Unix System V source code from way back when AT&T still owned it. From the FAQ:

      A/UX is based on AT&T Unix System V.2.2 with numerous extensions from V.3, V.4
      (such as streams) and BSD 4.2/4.3 (such as networking, the Fast File System,
      job control, lpr, NFS with Yellow Pages, SCCS and sendmail 5.64). It also
      provides full POSIX compliance. A/UX provides SYSV, BSD and POSIX compatiblity
      switches and libraries. A/UX is fully compiant with the System V Interface
      Definition (SVID).


      A/UX 3 came with System 7, thus A/UX 2 and earlier must predate System 7, which takes it back to 1989 or so. If SCO can go after Apple, they can probably just as well go after Sun (Solaris), IBM (AIX) and Compaq/HP (HP-UX, and the ex-DEC Unix), just to mention a few systems that as far as I know are based on original AT&T licensed Unix SVRx. I guess not!

      -Lasse
    19. Re:The Old Days by AJWM · · Score: 1

      you'll see a lot of copyright postings that point back to Unix Systems Laboratories

      Meaning nothing. If you grep through the source (even /usr/include/*) of commercial Unices, you'll see copyright notices in there from everyone and his dog, including Microsoft (old Xenix stuff). Some files have a dozen different copyright statments in there -- as each contributer added his stuff, but under whatever existing licence that code was under.

      Heck, I just did
      "grep -r -i microsoft /usr/include/*|grep copyright"
      on my linux box and it turned up a whole bunch of stuff in the Xm (Motif) headers that was copyright 1988 by Microsoft -- and other dates by MIT, DEC, HP, Open Group, OSF, etc....

      Wonder how much of that sort of crap is in SCO Unlinx or whatever they're calling it this week.

      --
      -- Alastair
    20. Re:The Old Days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're assuming that Apple's AUX licence was a one-time payment. Judging by the price of the thing, my guess is that they were paying a large per-copy royalty, which they are not paying with OS X.

    21. Re:The Old Days by lahi · · Score: 1

      That may (or may not) be the case. Do Sun, SGI and IBM pay royalties to SCO for their Unix-OS'es?

      -Lasse

    22. Re:The Old Days by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      IANAL, but I believe the issue is with software patents, not copywrites. If they have software patents over processes that are used in other OS, it doesn't matter if the exact code was used, just the process that is patented.

      Ok-- this will be unpopular here BUT--

      Patent infringement cases are not really all that good even for the plaintif-- it may cost a very high sum of money to hire the experts required to combat defences such as prior art, and what exactly a patent covers may not be as obvious just at first reading. For this reason, business process patents have not really been enforced-- often we are talking about huge sums of money to try to enforce these things. Think of all the expert witnesses you need....

      Caldera is probably hoping that people will settle rather than fight...

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    23. Re:The Old Days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IBM, SGI, and HP pay SCO in some manner. Sun bought an unlimited licence some years ago.

  5. dyslexic by greechneb · · Score: 3, Funny

    my guess is they reversed the old quote:

    "Instead of if you can't beat them, join them"

    "They view it as if you can't join them, beat them"

  6. question by tps12 · · Score: 4, Funny

    I certainly will never use anything from them ever again.

    Does that include Linux?

    --

    Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
    1. Re:question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but ... but ... Linux is a kernel. And SCO didn't make the kernel. They just like to think that the concepts involved in a kernel's functionality belong to them.

      (Of course, I didn't read the article. Whatever. :)

    2. Re:question by BRSloth · · Score: 1

      But it makes you wonder: if Caldera added some feature in their Linux kernel, that was added later in the main kernel source tree. What would happen then? They would sue Linux for a feature that was added by them?

    3. Re:question by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Isn't this akin to the stunt RAMBUS tried to pull in JEDEC? They knew they had patents on SDRAM-related technology, but allowed them to go into the standard. Then, years later, lawsuits everywhere!

    4. Re:question by GreyPoopon · · Score: 1
      But it makes you wonder: if Caldera added some feature in their Linux kernel, that was added later in the main kernel source tree.

      This is taken care of by the GPL.

      --

      GreyPoopon
      --
      Why is it I can write insightful comments but can't come up with a clever signature?

    5. Re:question by BRSloth · · Score: 1

      The code is under GPL, but maybe not the patents.

  7. the end of SCO? by bhsx · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Well, maybe, but not the end of Ransom Love.
    He'll be back in sequel after sequal that really wasn't a sequel afterall.
    (Am I the only one who thinks he's a double-oh agent for MI5?)

    --
    put the what in the where?
  8. Which Patents? by HaeMaker · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Anyone know which patents these are? SysV has been around a long time, and AT&T sold it a long time ago, the patents may not have a lot of life left in them.

    1. Re:Which Patents? by cfulmer · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I don't think it's patents, per se. Software patents just didn't exist in the days that most of what we now consider to be 'Unix' was written.

      It's likely just plain-old-ordinary copyright and licensing issues. It seems that the argument would go that some people are using SCO software outside of the bounds of the license agreement that they originally agreed to.

      I've heard some people assert that this means that SCO is asserting that they own 'ls', for example, and that nobody can use 'ls' without a license from SCO. That's only partially correct -- nobody can use *their version* without permission. But, that doesn't prevent the GNU people from writing 'ls' by themselves in a manner that behaves exactly like the SCO S/W.

      I suspect that what they're really trying to target is people who use certain SCO software outside of SCO unix and aren't paying for the right to use it.

      That being said, though, you gotta worry if a big chunk of SCO's revenue comes from lawsuits and not from new technology. It's 2003, for crying out loud -- how long can you milk 30-year-old technology?

    2. Re:Which Patents? by FAH+Q+AUSS+HOLES · · Score: 1

      how long can you milk 30-year-old technology?


      As long as people continue using it :)

    3. Re:Which Patents? by CrazyDuke · · Score: 3, Insightful

      " . . . how long can you milk 30-year-old technology?"

      Ask Disney.

      Note to readers: Don't bother trying to show off by informing me of the differences between media and technology.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.
    4. Re:Which Patents? by gillbates · · Score: 1
      I don't think it's patents, per se. Software patents just didn't exist in the days that most of what we now consider to be 'Unix' was written.

      While computer algorithm patent enforcement didn't begin until the 80's and 90's, patents on processes were being granted as far back as the 1960's. IIRC, IBM patented a file sorting algorithm in 1967. So it is very possible that AT&T patented much of the UNIX algorithms.

      --
      The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
  9. Maybe they just want to kill Unix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a microsoft conspiracy I tell you!!!!

  10. What about BE OS and Apple ][e? by Dolemite_the_Wiz · · Score: 2, Funny

    I hear they are ripe for a lawsuit from SCO?
    (/sarcasm)

    Dolemite
    _____________________

    --
    Save the World! Use a Quote!
  11. Re:ridiculous by mark_lybarger · · Score: 0, Troll

    they do?

    right, is this in the same manner that they understand the t.v. remote control. for some reason most view commercial time as an open invitation to flap their gums and not an opportunity to speed through the other 99 worthless channels on the tube...

  12. Aren't *BSDs 4.4BSD Lite-derived? by kwoo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It seems to me that OpenBSD, NetBSD, and FreeBSD are derived from 4.4BSD Lite -- which I believe is covered by the original BSD license. It would seem to me that trying to pursue something like that legally would simply be a great waste of time and money.

    That being said, it does sound a bit like SCO has given up trying to make money the honest way and brought in the land sharks...

    1. Re:Aren't *BSDs 4.4BSD Lite-derived? by questionlp · · Score: 2, Informative

      I believe that is the case, but FreeBSD (and possibly NetBSD and OpenBSD) include a System V compatibility layer that allows programs to use System V calls via shims and a kernel module. That could be the code that SCO is aiming at.

    2. Re:Aren't *BSDs 4.4BSD Lite-derived? by warpSpeed · · Score: 1
      That being said, it does sound a bit like SCO has given up trying to make money the honest way and brought in the land sharks...

      What does Chevy Chase have to do with this?

    3. Re:Aren't *BSDs 4.4BSD Lite-derived? by kwoo · · Score: 1
      I believe that is the case, but FreeBSD (and possibly NetBSD and OpenBSD) include a System V compatibility layer that allows programs to use System V calls via shims and a kernel module. That could be the code that SCO is aiming at.

      That could very well be. Wouldn't it be terribly ironic to have the Unix Wars settled by SCO? I always thought that BSD would come out on top, and if your suggestion is correct, that would pretty much assure it, at least in the open source space.

    4. Re:Aren't *BSDs 4.4BSD Lite-derived? by Arandir · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If these IPs that SCO are talking about are descended from the AT&T copyrights, than all of the BSDs are in the clear, as well as anyone else descending from 44BSD-Lite. This case has already been fought, and won by the Good Guys.

      The only rational explanation for SCO's behavior is the existance of patents heretofore unknown to the public.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    5. Re:Aren't *BSDs 4.4BSD Lite-derived? by iggymanz · · Score: 1

      Linux also has some System V type system calls (like shmat & company), some of them overlap with POSIX specs.

    6. Re:Aren't *BSDs 4.4BSD Lite-derived? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The End of FreeBSD

      [eds. note: in the following text, former FreeBSD developer Mike Smith gives his reasons for abandoning FreeBSD]

      When I stood for election to the FreeBSD core team nearly two years ago, many of you will recall that it was after a long series of debates during which I maintained that too much organisation, too many rules and too much formality would be a bad thing for the project.

      Today, as I read the latest discussions on the future of the FreeBSD project, I see the same problem; a few new faces and many of the old going over the same tired arguments and suggesting variations on the same worthless schemes. Frankly I'm sick of it.

      FreeBSD used to be fun. It used to be about doing things the right way. It used to be something that you could sink your teeth into when the mundane chores of programming for a living got you down. It was something cool and exciting; a way to spend your spare time on an endeavour you loved that was at the same time wholesome and worthwhile.

      It's not anymore. It's about bylaws and committees and reports and milestones, telling others what to do and doing what you're told. It's about who can rant the longest or shout the loudest or mislead the most people into a bloc in order to legitimise doing what they think is best. Individuals notwithstanding, the project as a whole has lost track of where it's going, and has instead become obsessed with process and mechanics.

      So I'm leaving core. I don't want to feel like I should be "doing something" about a project that has lost interest in having something done for it. I don't have the energy to fight what has clearly become a losing battle; I have a life to live and a job to keep, and I won't achieve any of the goals I personally consider worthwhile if I remain obligated to care for the project.

      Discussion

      I'm sure that I've offended some people already; I'm sure that by the time I'm done here, I'll have offended more. If you feel a need to play to the crowd in your replies rather than make a sincere effort to address the problems I'm discussing here, please do us the courtesy of playing your politics openly.

      From a technical perspective, the project faces a set of challenges that significantly outstrips our ability to deliver. Some of the resources that we need to address these challenges are tied up in the fruitless metadiscussions that have raged since we made the mistake of electing officers. Others have left in disgust, or been driven out by the culture of abuse and distraction that has grown up since then. More may well remain available to recruitment, but while the project is busy infighting our chances for successful outreach are sorely diminished.

      There's no simple solution to this. For the project to move forward, one or the other of the warring philosophies must win out; either the project returns to its laid-back roots and gets on with the work, or it transforms into a super-organised engineering project and executes a brilliant plan to deliver what, ultimately, we all know we want.

      Whatever path is chosen, whatever balance is struck, the choosing and the striking are the important parts. The current indecision and endless conflict are incompatible with any sort of progress.

      Trying to dissect the above is far beyond the scope of any parting shot, no matter how distended. All I can really ask of you all is to let go of the minutiae for a moment and take a look at the big picture. What is the ultimate goal here? How can we get there with as little overhead as possible? How would you like to be treated by your fellow travellers?

      Shouts

      To the Slashdot "BSD is dying" crowd - big deal. Death is part of the cycle; take a look at your soft, pallid bodies and consider that right this very moment, parts of you are dying. See? It's not so bad.

      To the bulk of the FreeBSD committerbase and the developer community at large - keep your eyes on the real goals. It's when you get distracted by the politickers that they sideline you. The tireless work that you perform keeping the system clean and building is what provides the platform for the obsessives and the prima donnas to have their moments in the sun. In the end, we need you all; in order to go forwards we must first avoid going backwards.

      To the paranoid conspiracy theorists - yes, I work for Apple too. No, my resignation wasn't on Steve's direct orders, or in any way related to work I'm doing, may do, may not do, or indeed what was in the tea I had at lunchtime today. It's about real problems that the project faces, real problems that the project has brought upon itself. You can't escape them by inventing excuses about outside influence, the problem stems from within.

      To the politically obsessed - give it a break, if you can. No, the project isn't a lemonade stand anymore, but it's not a world-spanning corporate juggernaut either and some of the more grandiose visions going around are in need of a solid dose of reality. Keep it simple, stupid.

      To the grandstanders, the prima donnas, and anyone that thinks that they can hold the project to ransom for their own agenda - give it a break, if you can. When the current core were elected, we took a conscious stand against vigorous sanctions, and some of you have exploited that. A new core is going to have to decide whether to repeat this mistake or get tough. I hope they learn from our errors.

      Future

      I started work on FreeBSD because it was fun. If I'm going to continue, it has to be fun again. There are things I still feel obligated to do, and with any luck I'll find the time to meet those obligations.

      However I don't feel an obligation to get involved in the political mess the project is in right now. I tried, I burnt out. I don't feel that my efforts were worthwhile. So I won't be standing for election, I won't be shouting from the sidelines, and I probably won't vote in the next round of ballots.

      You could say I'm packing up my toys. I'm not going home just yet, but I'm not going to play unless you can work out how to make the project somewhere fun to be again.

      = Mike

      --

      To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that we are to stand by the president, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public. -- Theodore Roosevelt

      FreeBSD is dying

  13. I love the irony. by ProtonMotiveForce · · Score: 0, Interesting

    David Boiieies, hero of the Linux folk! God bless him, he went up against evil Microsoft!

    Now, he's a pariah. Bad David, Bad!

    I absolutely adore this. It's quite funny.

    You're even hypocritical enough to say "if you can't compete, sue"! Nevermind that Sun, Netscape, and the various states' attorneys lived by the same mantra when they went after Microsoft.

    This is great. I love it. I hope they tear a swath of destruction across your beloved Linux vendors. It's only fair, since you all cheered him on when he went after MS.

    Where's my knife, I need to cut through the irony.

    1. Re:I love the irony. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      please mod this asshole to "troll" or "flamebait"

    2. Re:I love the irony. by Cyclometh · · Score: 1

      He may be an ass, but he's got a point. Boies was at one point the hero, now he's the goat.

    3. Re:I love the irony. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think there is anything ironic or hypocritical about noting that a hired gun is no longer working for the same interests he supported before.

    4. Re:I love the irony. by Arcturax · · Score: 1

      Well yes, it certainly is fair to judge him by his actions.

      He was the hero until he took on a case which obviously is a bad thing. So its quite fair to call him down for it.

      --

      --Won't that be grand? Computers and the programs will start thinking and the people will stop. - Dr. Walter Gibbs
    5. Re:I love the irony. by knobmaker · · Score: 1

      Your discovery of irony in this rests on the dubious device of assuming that "Microsoft" and "Linux" are ethically neutral concepts.

      "When the Soviets sent tanks to Berlin to kill Hitler, they were our noble allies. When the Soviets sent tanks to Prague to crush democracy, they were international pariahs."

      Oh, the irony.

      I don't know how to break this news to you, but persecuting bad guys is Good, and persecuting good guys is Bad.

    6. Re:I love the irony. by Arcturax · · Score: 1

      That's the same reasoning as if you said, "Well, Hitler did a lot of good things, he got the German economy working again, he made the trains run on time, never mind he started the biggest war mankind ever fought, never mind 6 million dead Jews, he did enough good things for us to ignore that."

      The point is, just because a person does good things in the past doesn't make up for turning around and doing something bad now.

      --

      --Won't that be grand? Computers and the programs will start thinking and the people will stop. - Dr. Walter Gibbs
    7. Re:I love the irony. by javahacker · · Score: 1

      You're even hypocritical enough to say "if you can't compete, sue"! Nevermind that Sun, Netscape, and the various states' attorneys lived by the same mantra when they went after Microsoft.

      Microsoft is a monopolist who has been convicted of abusing the market, using their position for leverage. Anyone who filed against them before that was an official court ruling was just ahead of the game, which is not surprising, since anti-trust actions tend to be very slow. Taking someone to court over their behavior is the only accepted way most businesses have of dealing with this kind of abuse.

      Launching an attack against all other operating systems over ancient (in computer terms) intellectual property, especially when you are a small, financially troubled unix/linux vendor, is another thing completely. This is a form of abuse of the legal system. If you pay me money, you aren't taking the chance that I will sue you over something you probably can't prove you haven't done (which does not mean you did it). Doesn't this sound like the classic protection racket? Either pay me now, or I tie you up in court. The fact that they are going with this option shows that it is time for them to get out of the business.

    8. Re:I love the irony. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't root for lawyers. They are just tools. You can root for who they represent (which obviously changes), but don't please don't root for the lawyers.

      That would be a mistake.

    9. Re:I love the irony. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyone who calls this "hypocritical" is an idiot. Judging the man by his actions is exactly what we should do, anything else is shallow pandering, just the kind of thing a Microsoft pusher would be proud to do!

    10. Re:I love the irony. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      agreed. this "let the market fix it" business that the conservanazis keep spewing out does not work. look at enron. boy, the market really fixed them... now many thousands of people's lives have been destroyed. let's all get rid of the government so that greed and corruption can run amok.

    11. Re:I love the irony. by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1


      David Boiieies, hero of the Linux folk! God bless him, he went up against evil Microsoft!

      Now, he's a pariah. Bad David, Bad!


      Bad David? Heck. Who the hell is he? Its bad SCO. The only reason David Boies is mentioned is because he's been involved in a few highly visible cases (one of which involving Microsoft).


      You're even hypocritical enough to say "if you can't compete, sue"! Nevermind that Sun, Netscape, and the various states' attorneys lived by the same mantra when they went after Microsoft.


      Competition only works in a free market. An abusive monopoly within a market changes it. And Microsoft was (is?) an abusive monopoly. The entire court battle with Microsoft was about competition; little suprise that it involved Microsoft's competitors.

      This situation is different. SCO is not joining with other industry elements to make a case against an abusive monopoly. Instead, they are taking legal action against systems that have existed for years - decades, perhapse. And they do this at a time when it can be argued that SCO is sinking below the waves for the third time.

      SCO could have valid claims. But at this point, it seems like a desperate and despicable move.


      This is great. I love it. I hope they tear a swath of destruction across your beloved Linux vendors. It's only fair, since you all cheered him on when he went after MS.


      Thanks for providing a practical example of "zealotry" not being limited only to one single vendor, technology, or platform.
    12. Re:I love the irony. by Prior+Restraint · · Score: 1

      "...[Hitler] made the trains run on time,..."

      No, that was Moussolini. (Well, he didn't make the trains run on time, either, but he was the one who supposedly did such a thing.)

    13. Re:I love the irony. by pitr256 · · Score: 1

      I hope they tear a swath of destruction across your beloved Linux vendors. It's only fair, since you all cheered him on when he went after MS.

      And they may just go after the biggest purse of all (read Microsoft) and not the other small fry Linux vendors. We're all pretty sure there's some BSD code in the TCP stack for Windows. This has the potential to affect every OS on the planet if SCO continues to pursue it.

      Be careful what you wish for...

      --
      Your mom always said, a PB&J is better than nothing, and God is nothing, is a PB&J better than God?
    14. Re:I love the irony. by karlandtanya · · Score: 1
      No, it's:

      If your mom said a PB&J is better than nothing.

      And nothing is better than God.

      Then is a PB&J better than God?

      --
      "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." - Philip K. Dick
    15. Re:I love the irony. by Strudelkugel · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is a monopolist who has been convicted of abusing the market, using their position for leverage

      I know this may sound bizarre, but could you please explain to me how M$ is a monopoly? I can buy any whitebox pc with no OS, load whatever non-M$ software I want, and never send a dime to M$. This has always been the case. The court's decision is a result of fine lawyering on the part of the plaintiffs, with a big dose of politics thrown in. (Remember this is the same system that said United Airlines and US Air shouldn't merge since they would be too dominant, now both are in Chapter 11.)

      As the Linux dollars get bigger, you can only expect people to start examining their potential for filing claims, like it or not. This is exactly what happened to M$, (and IBM, silicone manufacturers and others with deep pockets.) I personally think the SCO suit is BS, but I thought the same thing of the M$ suit. I would not care to predict how this will turn out. Like the original poster, however, I agree that this is exactly what M$ competitors did to it. Well, they set a precedent, and now it may be coming back to bite the *nix community.

      --
      Imagine how much harder physics would be if electrons had feelings! -Feynman, maybe
    16. Re:I love the irony. by pitr256 · · Score: 1

      You are absolutely correct! Thanks for catching that... I've was trying to keep it within the sig space limit, and it must got turned around during editing. I need a new QA process... ;-)

      --
      Your mom always said, a PB&J is better than nothing, and God is nothing, is a PB&J better than God?
    17. Re:I love the irony. by javahacker · · Score: 1

      explain to me how M$ is a monopoly?
      Go buy a Dell, HP, or Gateway computer without an operating system. What can you get at Best Buy? You don't have to have 100% control of a market to be a monopoly. Being a monopoly is not what got Microsoft into trouble, it was using that monopoly to kill off their competition (small though they may have been by comparison) that got them in trouble. Most people don't get white box systems, they aren't comfortable with doing that, so they have only one choice, buy a machine with Windows on it. You and I are different, we can pick computer parts, assemble the machine we want, and load whatever OS we choose, but my neighbor can't.

      P.S. The court system decided Microsoft was a monopolist, and they used that power in ways they are not allowed to, at least if they don't want anti-trust acton against them. You don't have to agree, although you may be one of the few who would dispute that decision. Everyone else thought that was a given, and the penalty phase was the only interesting part of the whole courtroom drama.

    18. Re:I love the irony. by ProtonMotiveForce · · Score: 1

      Wait, it's Dell, HP, and Gateway's decisions to include Windows (and by proxy, their customers) that decide if MS is a monopoly? Wow, that's, ummm, great.

      Our antitrust laws are stupid. If Standard Oil were selling oil below cost, and there were 20 of their competitors selling it for free there would have been no case.

      But somehow, because the market has chosen MS in the face of many, many alternatives (some even free), MS is suddenly a monopoly.

      It's patently idiotic and there is no valid argument for it other than "I don't like Microsoft tools" or "I'm a Microsoft competitor and I can't beat them".

    19. Re:I love the irony. by javahacker · · Score: 1

      Oh, get off your high horse. Microsoft was a monopoly because they controlled the market for PC operating systems. People made bad choices that let them get there, admittedly. No one voted to make Microsoft a monopoly, it was an accident of the market. Once they were there, they made deals that bundled their other software on machines at an attractive price, and made it very costly for a manufacturer like Dell to provide anything else, basically making them pay for Windows, even if they didn't put it on the machine.

      You would be annoyed if they charged you for leather seats on your car, even when you didn't get them, wouldn't you? That would be wrong, wouldn't it? How can you defend a company that would make you do that? We don't know what else might be in their contracts in the way of penalties for not shipping Windows on a computer, because the terms are secret. If anyone reveals them, they lose their licnese to sell Windows with their computers. Are you saying that is a normal business practice? What business are you in?

      You chose to ignore the multitude of reasons that caused anti-trust action to happen against Microsoft. That is your choice. I chose to see the whole picture. For years I ignored my friends who hated Microsoft, until finally the evidence of their actions was too much for me to ignore.

      I'm tired of teaching a history lesson here, especially to someone who sounds like a Microsoft employee. You will note that Microsoft is making itself less and less attractive to businesses as it moves to the annual license mode of operation. Microsoft is aiding the market for alternative operating systems by their own actions, which is only a fitting way for them to end.

    20. Re:I love the irony. by Strudelkugel · · Score: 1

      Oh, get off your high horse. Microsoft was a monopoly because they controlled the market for PC operating systems

      Please tell me how they did this? Once again, anyone can go out and buy a whitebox PC with no OS. That's essentially always been the case.

      No one voted to make Microsoft a monopoly, it was an accident of the market

      In my view, the market made a very rational choice, since M$ offered an OS that everyone supported and was cheaper than the alternatives for consumers and developers.

      You would be annoyed if they charged you for leather seats on your car, even when you didn't get them, wouldn't you? That would be wrong, wouldn't it? How can you defend a company that would make you do that?

      OK, go into a car dealer and ask to buy a car with no wheels, since you want to put on aftermarket wheels...Or no radio, or just primer since you want to choose your own custom color, etc, etc... If you think about it, it soon becomes apparent that the PC is probably the most user reconfigurable consumer product there is.

      We don't know what else might be in their contracts in the way of penalties for not shipping Windows on a computer, because the terms are secret. If anyone reveals them, they lose their licnese to sell Windows with their computers. Are you saying that is a normal business practice? What business are you in?

      This is a very common business practice. Almost every contract I have seen (and I've seen many) has a confidentiality clause.

      I have yet to be convinced M$ is a monopoly. Do they have a dominant market share? Yes. Did they push the envelope with it? Yes. Did the anti-trust suit have merit, or was it essentially instigated by their competitors since they were too stupid to figure out how to compete? No and yes. BTW, did the competition come up with OSS? Of course not! Also, I don't work for M$.

      --
      Imagine how much harder physics would be if electrons had feelings! -Feynman, maybe
  14. Astalavista SCO by FreeLinux · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As I stated in a post from the earlier article, this action is a serious threat to SCO's future and I am not certain that SCO has fully examined the fallout that this announcement will cause, regardless of the final outcome.

    The very fact that SCO flat out lied, yes lied, in last week's announcement will seriously impact the level of trust that any vendor or customer might have had in SCO.

    The CNet article did not discuss the audience's reaction to this announcement but, I doubt very much that it was well received. Would anyone that witnessed the announcement and the audience's reaction care to report on it?

    1. Re:Astalavista SCO by valisk · · Score: 1

      They are a gang of backstabbing fuckers.
      I emailed them to let them know that as a previous user of both Unixware and OpenLinux I would never buy anything which would give them money ever again, and today I have thrown both sets of software into the bin.
      Astalavista indeed you cunts.

      --

      Economic Left/Right: -0.62
      Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -3.69
    2. Re:Astalavista SCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Astalavista?

      Where did you learn your Spanish - JC Penny?

    3. Re:Astalavista SCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He means altavista. SCO is searching for patent infringers. It's not Spanish, but Italian.

  15. WAZAAAAAAAAP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    True!

    Terveisin: p3p3

  16. Sig File Patent Infringement by Lucius+Sour · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Persuant to the DMCA, PATRIOT act and Magna Cartman I hereby give notice of procedings for patent infringement for my 310 patents on inane sig files. All Simpsons quotes are excepted, naturally (or else I'd have no conversation).

    --

    Hands up everyone who refuses to obey orders.

    1. Re:Sig File Patent Infringement by penguinblotter · · Score: 3, Funny

      Smithers: "Mr. Burns, there is a small Linux vendor trying to make money in sector 7G."

      Mr. Burns: "Release the hounds."

      --
      Mind the gap
  17. Demand SCO stop this nonsense/Cancel contracts by nerdherder · · Score: 1

    Those of you that are SCO customers should demand they stop this nonsense or you will cancel your contracts and all other purchases with them. I know I am.

  18. Beat by MS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hate lawyers as much as the next guy, but MS beat these guys by not letting Caldera's version of DOS gain entry into the market place.

  19. Does he ever win? by nearlygod · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So he defended Napster... That ended well. He fought Microsoft... Does that count as a win? He worked on Al Gores case in the Florida voting fiasco... Good job on that, too.

    --
    The Tools Of Ignorance wanna be a tool?
    1. Re:Does he ever win? by flux · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Perhaps he was the only lawyer that would take the case?

    2. Re:Does he ever win? by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      That should have told SCO something right then and there. ;-)

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    3. Re:Does he ever win? by Cpt_Kirks · · Score: 1

      Call him David "Lionel Hutts" Boise?

    4. Re:Does he ever win? by bafu · · Score: 1

      Well, he gets paid a lot in money and publicity whether his clients win or not, and the publicity means that future schmucks will pay him a lot of money (whether -they- win or lose).

      I guess as long as there are schmucks who will pay him to fight legal battles against Reality he will soldier on and continue to lose all the way to the bank...
    5. Re:Does he ever win? by doorbot.com · · Score: 1
      His business cards must say:
      David Boies
      Failure extraordinaire - Losing your lawsuit in style!
    6. Re:Does he ever win? by SeanAhern · · Score: 1
      Or, in true Slashdot style:
      David Boies
      Failure extrordinarre - Loosing you're lawsuite in style!
    7. Re:Does he ever win? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Boies has earned a great reputation for the job he did dissecting MS in the MS-DOJ trial. Its hard to see how that trial could have come out better for the prosecution, except perhaps for the Judge keeping his well-earned opinions to himself. It was only in the appeal and re-trial of the penalty phase that the MS-DOJ trial went out of whack, when Boies was no longer involved, when the new administration apparently instructed the DOJ to roll over and play dead. Instead of blaming Boies for this, he should be recognized for the good work he did.

      In the other high profile cases, Boies was recruited because he did so well in the DOJ trial.

      As for Napster, does anyone seriousely think any lawyer could have won this one?

      And, as for Gore, there is not much you can do when the Supreme Court makes a decision that does not seem to have any legal basis. Stop the counting to provide equal protection under the law? What about the people who were turned away from the polls? Don't they deserve equal protection? What about the votes of servicemen being submitted after election day and still being counted. Isn't this a privilege that other voters were not afforded? I think it would have taken JC himself as the lawyer in order to win this one.

    8. Re:Does he ever win? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As die-hard Democrats are want to characterize it:

      I would rather have my president "appointed" by the U.S. Supreme Court than "appointed" by the Florida Supreme Court.

  20. I wonder who they'll try to scare first. by AltGrendel · · Score: 1

    If they will go after the small companies to bankroll enough to go after the larger companies, or go after the large ones first in an effort to scare the smaller ones to cave in.

    --
    The simple truth is that interstellar distances will not fit into the human imagination

    - Douglas Adams

    1. Re:I wonder who they'll try to scare first. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope Lindows. =) ooh.. and once a Slackware user was pissy to me(well he ignored me but had he given me the time of day i am sure he would have been pissy) so maybe Slackware. And all of them LFS people because they are just wrong in the head. *sigh* I have to go now to get a list together in case they call me to ask me what my whiny assed opinion is.

  21. GPL, Linux and software patents. by wayne · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The GPL requires people/companies that distrubute software under the GPL and hold patents for that software to grant royalty free use of those patents for everyone. Since SCO distributes a version of Linux, all code their distribution must be free of any problems with their patents.

    --
    SPF support for most open source mail servers can be found at libspf2.
    1. Re:GPL, Linux and software patents. by 13Echo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I was going to mention this. I wonder why they haven't figured this out already? Caldera's "OpenLinux" was GPL software.

      Another thing that got me was the article's mention of "older versions of Windows" having BSD code. If I am not mistake, isn't the current NT/XP software still running off of some BSD-based network code?

    2. Re:GPL, Linux and software patents. by davmct · · Score: 1

      the entire windows NT kernel and all libraries were completely rewritten as of NT4.0. This was specifically to work around the BSD-related licensing issues.

    3. Re:GPL, Linux and software patents. by sbuckhopper · · Score: 1

      Another thing that got me was the article's mention of "older versions of Windows" having BSD code. If I am not mistake, isn't the current NT/XP software still running off of some BSD-based network code?

      Forgive my ignorance about the differences between the different releases of ATT UNIX and BSD, but if I remember what I read in W Richard Steve's UNIX Network Programming guide ATT UNIX did not have the concept of on demand networking, instead it had UUCP in it. It was actually BSD that introduced TCP/IP into the UNIX kernel and therefore if SCO actually has a patent on TCP/IP networking, BSD's release of it should be considered prior art making it null and void.

      Please forgive me if I'm remembering this incorrectly as I do not have this book at my fingertips right now, but for the claim mentioned about the TCP/IP stack in windows is adopted from BSD then there is no System V philosophy in it.

      --
      "Everybody knows the moon's made of cheese," Wallace.
    4. Re:GPL, Linux and software patents. by jonbelson · · Score: 1

      ISTR that the NT TCP/IP stack rewrite (wasn't it licensed from another company?) was to improve support for multi-processor systems.

      --Jon

    5. Re:GPL, Linux and software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is why Microsoft calls the GPL an un-american cancer. SCO had the right to sue the bejezus out of everyone, but because they danced with the dark side, they lose out on all that potential profit.

      What a shame.

    6. Re:GPL, Linux and software patents. by GreyPoopon · · Score: 1
      Since SCO distributes a version of Linux, all code their distribution must be free of any problems with their patents.

      So, problem solved. If SCO tries to "tax" Linux users or companies, the FSF just file suit for violation of the GPL and demands payment of exactly what SCO would collect. Does it really work this way?

      --

      GreyPoopon
      --
      Why is it I can write insightful comments but can't come up with a clever signature?

    7. Re:GPL, Linux and software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      There are no "licensing issues".

      The BSD license is basically "do what you want with it, just don't claim you wrote it".

      And Microsoft adhere to this - the BSD Copyright notice appears both on their website and in some of their paper documentation.

    8. Re:GPL, Linux and software patents. by 3247 · · Score: 1
      If SCO tries to "tax" Linux users or companies, the FSF just file suit for violation of the GPL and demands payment of exactly what SCO would collect. Does it really work this way?
      Not necessarily. You never know what the FSF can demand as payment; the question here is what Open Source Software is worth? Nothing, maybe, as it's distributed freely?
      --
      Claus
    9. Re:GPL, Linux and software patents. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They should sue themselves then:)

      It'd be the proper action if their Linux distro included any proprietary moddin' they'd included on the kernel or any of the sources or libraries without granting it be GPL or LGPL (or BSD).

      - Voice of Ambience -

    10. Re:GPL, Linux and software patents. by bovinewasteproduct · · Score: 1

      I would think that the disclaimer of IP would only hold on contributions FROM SCO. What I mean is that the disclaimer would only hold for code that they had contributed to the Kernel/System. If someone else had violated their IP by contributing code, there is NO way that the infringer can grant a license to the vioated IP.

      BWP

  22. Sue everybody on the way down.... by idiotnot · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...and hope you can salvage a few dollars for your shareholders after the Chapter 7 filing.

    You could call it "Plan Be."

    Didn't Caldera already sue Microsoft and lose?

    1. Re:Sue everybody on the way down.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They sued over Dr. Dos.... and settled out of court...
      This would be another seperate suit...

      I'd love to see them sue some company in Canada. They sue, they loose, they pay the opposing parties legal costs...
      best defence against stupid suits...

    2. Re:Sue everybody on the way down.... by Quixotic+Raindrop · · Score: 1

      If memory serves, they sued Microsoft and won. Just not much.

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former. (Einstein)
    3. Re:Sue everybody on the way down.... by Cyberdyne · · Score: 2, Informative
      Didn't Caldera already sue Microsoft and lose?

      Er... half-right. Caldera sued MS and won: back in the days when you had a choice of which DOS to run Windows under, Microsoft put a lot of effort into making Windows MS-DOS specific, in order to wipe out the competition. Since doing that is illegal, Caldera got a big pile of MS cash in an out-of-court settlement.

      Having said that, Caldera split in two - one half was 'UNIX' things (their Linux distro, the bits of SCO, etc) and the other was DOS/embedded, so it seems the part doing the suing this time is not the half that beat MS previously... (Which, incidentally, seems to have disappeared; DR DOS has been sold to these guys.

    4. Re:Sue everybody on the way down.... by sjvn · · Score: 1

      Caldera sued and Microsoft settled with them rather than take it to court on Jan, 10, 2000. The exact number is under wraps but most ballpark estimates put it at at about $150 million.

      Steven

    5. Re:Sue everybody on the way down.... by andrewski · · Score: 1

      Aww shit, shareholders don't demand accountability from their officers anymore, they just want a pretty show and assurances that profits are up or losses are down.

  23. Boies & SCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, no worries, seems this guy's a spectacular failure (even when he "wins"):

    Boies is noted in the computing industry for working on the U.S. Justice Department's antitrust case against Microsoft and for defending music-sharing site Napster. He also represented Al Gore in the Florida vote-counting controversy during the 2000 presidential elections.

  24. I am sick of the idiots on this board. by bmetzler · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Does anyone else see this as the end of SCO (Caldera) like I do? I certainly will never use anything from them ever again.

    Have you ever considered legally licensing SCO's IP if you are going to use it? That's what the issue is all about.

    Why am I not hearing outrage from the crowds because Microsoft still dares license their software? Shouldn't I be able to copy Windows at will? Of course not.

    So let's adhere to SCO's licensing agreements and everything will be fine. Otherwise if you steal from SCO, I don't feel any more sorry for you then if you have stole from Microsoft.

    -Brent
    1. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by Neck_of_the_Woods · · Score: 1, Interesting


      Most people don't like the idea of what you are saying. Someone made something to make money!!!OMG!

      Just because you have been getting it for free does not make it yours to take. Apply that to mp3, software, or patents.

      God forbid your boss walk up to you and say "you know I should not pay you for your work."

      Think about all the overtime you work, do you think you should be paid for it? There ya go, someone is stealing from you and you let it happen does that make it right? Should you try to find a way to get your due money? Is that wrong?

      Sorry, I don't have a problem with them doing this.

      --
      Neck_of_the_Woods
      #/usr/local/surf/glassy/overhead
    2. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by Arcturax · · Score: 1

      Um hello? This shouldn't have been patentable in the first place. Software code should NOT be patentable. This is just another sign that the US patent system needs a MAJOR overhaul and that we need to get the laws changed so that software (which is technically a mathematical process) can no longer be patentable.

      Until that happens, lawsuits like this will continue to stifle innovation, prevent competition and hurt the economy as a result.

      What we need is a broad coalition of software developers (big names and small) to start lobbying congress to deal with this longstanding problem before it gets any worse.

      --

      --Won't that be grand? Computers and the programs will start thinking and the people will stop. - Dr. Walter Gibbs
    3. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by Wateshay · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think the issue is that SCO is taking very old patents (let's face it, there's not much new in Unix/Linux) that have remained unenforced for a very long time, and now that they are in financial trouble they're trying to create a cash cow at the expense of the entire rest of the industry. Is it really fair for a company that has created nothing (remember, they bought the IP) to set the entire computer industry back 5-10 years in order to save themselves from their own bad business decisions. It may be legal, but it sure as hell isn't ethical.

      (Let's also remember that they seem to be wanting to charge a rediculously high fee for these patents. A per processor cost of > $100 is hardly reasonable.)

      --

      "If English was good enough for Jesus, it's good enough for everyone else."

    4. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by TMKroeger · · Score: 1

      Well, if I could copy Microsoft at will I'd have fewer copies of their crap than I do now... I'm real sure it wasn't my will that put it on all the computers I've bought in recent history.

      To pull this back on topic... what IP exactly are they trying to license?

    5. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by jmv · · Score: 1

      Otherwise if you steal from SCO, I don't feel any more sorry for you then if you have stole from Microsoft.

      Actually, it even funnier. SCO is stealing from all the Linux contributors by distributing copyrighted software (Linux) while breaking the license (GPL, article 7).

    6. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I also like the way they threaten to never use SCO's stuff again. I'd say 99.9% of those people have never bought any SCO product in the first place, and as for the remainder, just picture telling your boss that, right now, you're going to unplug every SCO box in the shop and replace it with something else because SCO is "picking on Linux". I'm sure that will go over real well. You make me laugh!

    7. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by Zathrus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's not really the issue... the issue is that they are (allegedly) engaging in the scummy business of submarine patents.

      Get a patent on a business model/method... don't act on that patent until it's widely used in the industry. Then have your lawyers pop out and sue everyone.

      Exactly what choice is provided here? Most vendors wouldn't have even known about the patent, since people in the industry would assume that it's common practice and unpatented (for a variety of reasons).

      At that point you can either cease use of the patented technology (which may still leave you open to licensing fees for prior sales, depending on how a judge rules - you're not supposed to be liable, but lawyers can make IP law dance a jig), pay the extortion money, or attempt to get the patent invalidated. Good luck on the latter - if they're doing it toward the end of the patent life then you'll have a hard time getting facts for prior work 15 years ago, and you'll probably wind up paying more in lawyer fees than you would have paid in extortion.

      And yes, I do mean extortion. Submarine patents are nothing but that. It's one thing to raise a patent claim when you didn't know it was being violated. It's another thing to intentionally lie low until it's too late. IP law rarely acknowledges the difference with regards to this though.

      Of course, there is one other option, and probably one that we'll see used if SCO is stupid enough to press their case. If someone tries to blackmail you, there's always the possibility of blackmailing them back. IBM has enough software patents to make SCO (or anyone else) wonder if they actually invented anything themselves.

    8. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      The above isn't the case, though. Not only are they trying to enforce a patent YEARS after it was issued (a patent which they bought, btw, so it took no work on SCO's part to create the code/process in question), but they are violationg the GPL.

      This is nothing more then a money grab, similar to what MS is doing to local governments, schools, and libraries across the country.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    9. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by Neck_of_the_Woods · · Score: 1

      Key phrase here -> Purchased the patent.

      Patent owner...I own it, you use it, you pay me.

      Why is this hard to understand?

      If it is in violation of the GPL that will come out in court.

      So you have been using it for year for free? That gives you the right to use it for free forever?

      I use the well on next door for free. The current owners and I have a verbal agreement, but I think if someone purchased that land the well was on and asked me to pay a fee to use it every month it would be within his or her rights.

      Just my view, I have been known to be wrong.

      --
      Neck_of_the_Woods
      #/usr/local/surf/glassy/overhead
    10. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by phavens · · Score: 0
      Of course, there is one other option, and probably one that we'll see used if SCO is stupid enough to press their case. If someone tries to blackmail you, there's always the possibility of blackmailing them back. IBM has enough software patents to make SCO (or anyone else) wonder if they actually invented anything themselves.

      Also how enforcable is a patent that hasn't been enforced for a long time. If I'm not correct, patents left to laspe or aren't enforced within a "reasonable" amount of time are pretty much thrown out.

      I've got one question... Who gave SCO the trick gun that shoots them in the face?

      --
      Patrick Havens (Mr. 573333 to you.) Graphic Artist / Coder / Father / Journeler
    11. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by javahacker · · Score: 1

      God forbid your boss walk up to you and say "you know I should not pay you for your work."

      I have a contract with my company. If I do the work they request, they owe me the money, they aren't giving anything to me, we are exchanging a service for a fee. If they refuse to honor the contract, they will see me in court, and I will win.

      Think about all the overtime you work, do you think you should be paid for it?

      If your contract says they have to pay you for overtime, then they owe you the money. If it doesn't say you get paid for overtime, then they don't owe you anything (except some gratitude) for the time. If you don't like that, go work somewhere else.

      Someone made something to make money!!!OMG!

      Someone found a new scam to try to get money they aren't owed. They have a product, they sell if, their customers pay them for it. They evidently can't make a living doing that. Now they want money for something they didn't do. Something the original patent holders decided not to take any action over, if there are even any actionable patents present here.

      Your examples are all off the mark.

    12. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by bmetzler · · Score: 1
      To pull this back on topic... what IP exactly are they trying to license?

      According to the reports I've seen, SCO is going to be enforcing licenses for copies of their libraries that allow SCO Binaries to run on other Unixes. These libraries have previously been illegally copied and distributed, and that is wrong, no matter who it is that is going it.

      I'm fine with SCO licensing their libraries. Apparently others on this board are fine with tearing down companies and creating strawmen to further hurt fine technology companies.

      -Brent
    13. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      If I was aware of the agreement and the new owners didn't wait 15 years and then ask me to pay 15 years of back fee's for using it.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    14. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by bmetzler · · Score: 1
      They have a product, they sell if, their customers pay them for it.

      And if their "customers" don't pay for it? I say that they should be able to sue. You say that if something doesn't pay for you product, but just steals it, stinks to be you, I guess.

      If a company paid SCO to use see their source code and then used it in a way that was not agree on, SCO has the right to sue. If a company swipes SCO's libraries to run SCO binaries without paying, then SCO has a right to sue.

      All this talk about bad patents, bullying, and dumb IP is just absurb and is just meant to hurt a commendable company.

      Can I freely take your car for a spin if I make sure I dn't sign a contract with you? I doubt it. Is the only difference that you car is tangible?

      -Brent
    15. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by Zathrus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Also how enforcable is a patent that hasn't been enforced for a long time

      100% enforceable. It doesn't matter if you bring the violation up on the last day of the patent and it's been infringed for the previous 16 years and 364 days. A patent does not require active enforcement to protect it, unlike trademarks. Copyright is a bit murkier - generally all you can do is force them to not continue infringing (but the copyright is still in force).

      There are exceptions -- if you enter into an agreement that requires you to disclose all relevant patents that are applicable to a standard being developed and fail to do so then your patent can be rendered unenforceable. This happened to Dell a few years back, and RAMBUS more recently (not sure if that one has been played out entirely yet).

    16. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by doorbot.com · · Score: 1

      Think about all the overtime you work, do you think you should be paid for it? There ya go, someone is stealing from you and you let it happen does that make it right? Should you try to find a way to get your due money? Is that wrong?

      Just ask that question to Karl Marx and I think you'll get an earful.

      Marx might say that capitalists "steal" the worker's excess productivity and turn it into profit (for the capitalist).

      Is that evil? Read Capital and get back to me.

    17. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by javahacker · · Score: 1

      You say that if something doesn't pay for you product, but just steals it, stinks to be you, I guess.

      Their product is SCO Unix and Linux. They evidently can't make a living selling them, which suggests they are either bad at business, or technically inferior. I was not referring to any patents they hold when I was talking about their products, which everyone else probably understood!

      Can I freely take your car for a spin if I make sure I dn't sign a contract with you?

      Sure, it's called grand theft auto, and you can steal it any time I'm not looking. This is a little different. I show you a tuneup trick I invented for your car. I say it's ok to use without paying me anything. I publish a magazine article with the trick in it (they distribute Linux, which has a GPL license), without telling anyone (including the publisher) that it is patented knowledge, and I am going to one day enforce that patent. Years later I threaten to sue you, the magazine publisher, and everyone who read the magazine, if you don't all pay me for that knowledge. That is what SCO is going to do.

      is just meant to hurt a commendable company

      From the sounds of what they are proposing, we are saying that they will become anything but a commendable company if they go forward with this. We would rather see them close their doors than become another parasite company, providing nothing of value, and taking advantage of a loophole in patent law to rob others.

    18. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by curious.corn · · Score: 1

      > Sorry, I don't have a problem with them doing this.

      Here goes the M$ groupie... man you'd better check software update, there might be a service-pack (oh, but a hotfix will do too) for your brain...

      --
      Mi domando chi à il mandante di tutte le cazzate che faccio - Altan
    19. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you're missing the point. Linux, GPL etc are strongly against software patents and refuse to put anything into it that hasn't been freely licensed. SCO sayas that they have patents on something from years ago and are now trying to money gouge the community. If they had announced at the beginning that they had patents on a particular piece of software it would have never have made it into Linux int the first place.

      An Analogy: I give you a Toaster as a present (Happy Birthday!). 5 years down the track I announce to you that I own a patent on the Pop-up mechanism and that you owe me back royalties. Does that seem fair?? If I had told you that I had a patent and that I will be expecting royalties down the line, would you have accepted the gift in the first place?? Not likely.

    20. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by Neck_of_the_Woods · · Score: 1


      That is the best you have?

      Please, crawl back behind your linux box and cry about not having all your games ported or something.

      I think maybe your the biggot here bub.

      Hugs and kisses...xoxo

      --
      Neck_of_the_Woods
      #/usr/local/surf/glassy/overhead
    21. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by sjvn · · Score: 1

      > That's not really the issue... the issue is that they are (allegedly) engaging in the scummy business of submarine patents.

      First, it's not a patent, it's a copyright issue. There's a big difference and the rules on how they're handled are as different as Greek and Latin.

      Next, submarine? Look at your OS, chances are you'll find AT&T and USL mentioned prominently. Some companies, like IBM, have always paid the current owners, SCO, of this IP. Others... well, that's what all the fuss is about, but it's no more a submarine issue than the USS Nimitz is a submarine.

      Steven

    22. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by curious.corn · · Score: 1

      Uh, sorry no games on my box, I enjoy /.much more... Oh, btw no box here (macs don't classify as boxes).
      Last (promise), I'll be fine as long as the virii aren't ported

      --
      Mi domando chi à il mandante di tutte le cazzate che faccio - Altan
    23. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by aanantha · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but you are the idiot. No code was "stolen" from SCO at all.

      USL (then owned by AT&T GAVE the code away to Berkeley and other universities almost 30 years ago. In 1995, USL (then owned by Novell) settled its lawsuit with Berkeley. They expressly gave permission to use all the code that is in BSD as long as the USL copyright was in the code. This is all BSD licensed code. And USL agreed never to sue anyone for using that code. So they did more then allow people do use their patented ideas. They allowed people to use the actual code. Think about that.

      Linux doesn't even use that code. It uses the ideas. And many many other operating systems (probably all) use the same ideas. They were given the right to do so.

      And USL got plenty back in return. Berkeley implemented and contributed all the networking code in UNIX. The UNIX Filesystem was designed and implemented by BSD. USL never paid for any of that stuff.

      SCO uses Linux under a license (GPL) which says they cannot sue Linux for violating their patents. By enforcing patents on UNIX, they are violating the GPL for Linux and the GNU tools.

    24. Re:I am sick of the idiots on this board. by bmetzler · · Score: 1
      Linux doesn't even use that code. It uses the ideas. And many many other operating systems (probably all) use the same ideas. They were given the right to do so.

      None of the articles I've seen about this story claim that this was the issue. The only people claiming this was the issue is people on this board trying to tear down SCO.

      The only issues that I've seen that are involved are licensing SCO's binary libraries, and signing contracts to see their source code. These have nothing to do with the "ideas" that you mentioned.

      -Brent
  25. Ways to Shoot Yourself in the Foot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    SCO: Here hold my beer while I show 'ya somethin'. Hey, everybody watch this!
    BLAM!
    SCO: Damn, I missed my foot. Here, lemme try that again . . .
    BLAM! BLAM! BLAM!
    SCO: There, that's better. Now I'll never be able to walk again!

    1. Re:Ways to Shoot Yourself in the Foot by nomadic · · Score: 4, Funny

      If they win:

      Slashdot poster: You, sirs, have soiled the UNIX world with your money grubbing!
      SCO: one million, one million one hundred, one million two hundred, oh sorry did you say something?
      Slashdot poster: I SAID--
      SCO: One second. Bob! You want to bring those bags over here, the ones with the dollar signs on the front? Alright, go on.
      Slashdot poster: Your business will suffer because of the bad will in the open source community!
      SCO: Are you a SCO user?
      Slashdot poster: Well, no, I use linux.
      SCO: So the court decision means you won't buy an operating system that you weren't going to buy in the first place?
      Slashdot poster: But previously I would never buy SCO. After your court action, however, I'l never EVER buy SCO.
      SCO: Riiight. I hope you'll excuse me, I have to stop at the Mercedes dealership before they close. That nice security guard over there will show you out.

    2. Re:Ways to Shoot Yourself in the Foot by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 1

      SCO sells Linux, pal. You might have heard of "OpenLinux" and "UnitedLinux."

    3. Re:Ways to Shoot Yourself in the Foot by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      And they have the rights to do so, because they own the patents/copyrights hypothetically in Linux.

      Other distros (let's say Red Hat) violates these patents by distributing Linux. But they don't.

  26. Is the threat real? by Maimun · · Score: 1

    I was asking the same question
    last time this news came up.
    *Precisely* which patents do
    SCO have in mind? Does anyone
    know? The article mentions
    nothing concrete, just like last
    time. Hmmm... FUD?

  27. Gee thanks. by nlinecomputers · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    While you off killing yourself please put a new monitor and keyboard in your will for me. I'm still trying to clean the Diet Coke out of mine.

    --
    Slashdot, home of supporters of free software, free music, and free speech.Except for Moderators that disagree with you.
  28. Oh brother by jav1231 · · Score: 1

    The sad thing is I like SCO OpenServer. I ditched Caldera primarily due to poor support and a seemingly "go away, ya bother me" attitude. Then all the licensing hooplah. Not this? Someone must plan on profitting from their failure. This is just rediculous. Evidently Randsome Love is not too far removed from SCO or he's clean and it was someone else in the company all along. This, in mind opinion, also taints United Linux. >

  29. "never use anything from them ever again" by Karamchand · · Score: 1

    By doing so you support what you criticize: So if your technology can't win on price and performance, break out the lawyers and sue everyone.

    If you are really against this then continue using what's best suited for your needs.

    Cheers everyone.

  30. System V init by FreeLinux · · Score: 4, Informative

    SCO owns the IP for System V. Linux uses several concepts from the System V design, not the least of which is the Linux init system which is a direct take off of the System V method.

    1. Re:System V init by kaisyain · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Except for those Linux systems which don't use sysvinit, I guess you mean. I think Gentoo, for instance, uses something other than sysvinit. There's no real reason other distributions couldn't as well. sysvinit isn't part of the linux kernel, it is just a piece of software; you can put anything you want in /sbin/init.

    2. Re:System V init by b1t+r0t · · Score: 3, Informative
      Linux uses several concepts from the System V design, not the least of which is the Linux init system which is a direct take off of the System V method.

      <PEDANTIC>Linux is just the kernel. Linux does not use the System V init; though various distrubtions do.</PEDANTIC> In particular, Slackware does not use the SysV init, though it has a compatibility program available.

      Also, OS X does not use SysV init; it has its own method which I presume was inherited from NeXT, and is much closer to the old Mac OS startup, with the SysV-style start/stop parameter added.

      --

      --
      "Open source is good." - Steve Jobs
      "Open source is evil." - Microsoft
    3. Re:System V init by siskbc · · Score: 0, Troll

      Slackware does not use the SysV init, though it has a compatibility program available.

      Reason #69 for using Slackware: telling those SCO lawyer maggots to take their lawsuits and shove 'em up their asses!

      I can't wait -- bring 'em on!

      --

      -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    4. Re:System V init by shepd · · Score: 1

      >Linux uses several concepts from the System V design, not the least of which is the Linux init system which is a direct take off of the System V method.

      Thank God that my slackware will be left unscathed then!

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
    5. Re:System V init by Thrakkerzog · · Score: 2, Funny

      I told you BSD style init scripts were better! :-)

    6. Re:System V init by McGarnacle · · Score: 1

      Except for those Linux systems which don't use sysvinit, I guess you mean. I think Gentoo, for instance, uses something other than sysvinit. There's no real reason other distributions couldn't as well. sysvinit isn't part of the linux kernel, it is just a piece of software; you can put anything you want in /sbin/init.

      That's right. For instance Slackware uses BSD-style init. If that is what all the excitement is about, who knows?

      --

      I disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to tell such LIES!

    7. Re:System V init by thogard · · Score: 1

      Sys V R 4 or Sys V R 3? They are vastly different things. Sun owns a major chunk of the Sys V R 4 IP and has rights to all of it under their joint development agreement.

      Modern Sys V init is very little like the sys v r 2 stuff which took a bunch of bsd like scripts and ran them out of the very old init program.

      "kill -9 them all and let init sort them out" is at least a 20 year old quote

    8. Re:System V init by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Linux is a trademark of Linus Torvalds for computer-related products. If Linus Torvalds wants to licence his trademark to someone so that they can call their product/service/company "Linux", then that thing is accurately called "Linux".

      Linus Torvalds has licenced his mark to numerous operating systen companies who call their product "Linux".
      </PEDANTIC>

  31. threats to boycott Caldera by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Many posters to the original story and even the submitter of this story say something to the effect "I won't use their products! Take that Caldera!!!" Let me point out before we get a million more similar posts that Caldera doesn't care. Their business model is screwed and they know it. So they won't be caring at this point if they lose customers or goodwill. The only way they can now dream of making cash is to try and bully people who run unices or unix related technologies into paying a settlement or royalties. So they don't care. There is little you could do to them at this point that would make them care. Sure, ATT lost to BSD in a similar suit...but that was over copyright issues. Caldera could muddle the IP argument long enough to get some people to pay them of rather than fight themf. That's their goal. It sucks but this is a typical business tactic by a market loser.

    1. Re:threats to boycott Caldera by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somebody feel that this also reflects on Suse (their partner in United Linux)?

  32. ugh.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    your incorrect use of quotation marks is going to make me dyslexic

  33. Seriously! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sux my dix0r!!!!!!!1111111

  34. Whats To Worry About? by Steve+Cox · · Score: 5, Funny

    Lets look at this guys track record:

    Defending Napster: Failure
    Representing Al-Gore: Failure
    Anti-trust Against Microsoft: Failure

    I'm shaking in my boots :)

    Steve.

    1. Re:Whats To Worry About? by Beatbyte · · Score: 1

      Yes but imagine a beowulf cluster of lawyers...er

      on a serious note, win or lose, it costs companies money to defend themselves. so if they just sue the hell out of one company, it could tip their financials into the drain and kill the company. ...and given this turn of tides by SCO, it sounds like its the last battle before the white flag goes up. I wonder how many exec's are selling their stock ;) Is Martha Stewart involved in SCO!?

    2. Re:Whats To Worry About? by terrymr · · Score: 1

      Actually he won the case against microsoft, however Bush ordered a surrender in the microsoft case after it had already been won. It was also reported at this time that Microsofts donations to the Republican party "made enron look like amateurs". (Microsofts decision to support bush wasn't political they also threw a lot of money at the democrats too).

    3. Re:Whats To Worry About? by tsg · · Score: 1

      "After spending millions on the lawsuit, SCO is expected to ask for an apology and a promise never to do it again."

      --
      People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
    4. Re:Whats To Worry About? by Shabazz · · Score: 1

      Whether you want to believe it, he's one of the nation's top litigators. Napster and Al Gore were doomed to failure. Microsoft was inevitable, and I hardly think the blame falls on Boies. Believe me, he's not the guy you'd choose to go against if given an option.

  35. Alternatives by ZX3+Junglist · · Score: 1

    Well I guess it's back to MS-DOS for me. Oh wait, that's sorta similar to Caldera's DR-DOS isn't it? There's another lawsuit. Maybe I can hop to OS/2 and hope that I can keep out of SCO's crosshairs there..

  36. not everyone cheered attacks on Microsoft by timothy · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "This is great. I love it. I hope they tear a swath of destruction across your beloved Linux vendors. It's only fair, since you all cheered him on when he went after MS."

    No, not everyone.

    I think that the DOJ case against Microsoft was motivated mostly by envy, greed, misunderstanding, spite and grandstanding. I think it sets a horrible precedent for allowing the government to decide matters which should be left to the market. (Trivial example: like whether and to what degree a web browser should be entangled with an operating system). I am not a fan of Microsoft software, and I don't think tax dollars should be used to pay for source-secret software, but I don't think Microsoft is evil.

    Microsoft has done some things I think are bad, some of which are worthy of legal remedies, but that's beside the point I'm making here, which is that there is no single "pro-Linux" viewpoint on the Microsoft persecution / prosecution in which Boies was involved.

    timothy

    --
    jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
    1. Re:not everyone cheered attacks on Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One more thing. MS's legal opponents left themselves wide open as a result of attacking the sleeping giant when it came to government lobbying and filing lawsiuts. Microsoft has more money than their legal opponents to lobby politicians and to pay lawyers to litigate.

      Not only was the DOJ case against MS immoral (for the reasons Timothy explained), but it was a HUGE tactical blunder that may very well end up costing Sun & Netscape their existences.

    2. Re:not everyone cheered attacks on Microsoft by Khalid · · Score: 1

      So basicaly what you are saying is that Microsoft is allowed to integrate whatever it suits them into their dominant OS and bastardised it the way they want !? because the mighty market will sort this out !?

      That what's the antitrust case was about !

    3. Re:not everyone cheered attacks on Microsoft by timothy · · Score: 1
      Khalid wrote: "So basicaly what you are saying is that Microsoft is allowed to integrate whatever it suits them into their dominant OS and bastardised it the way they want !? because the mighty market will sort this out !?"

      Well, Yes, sort of -- but not because it's Microsoft, just because software makers should be free to include / exclude what they'd like. If Microsoft (or Apple for that matter, who do a better job of it) want to include movie-editing software (or a copy of The GIMP) along with their OS, then Great, Fine, Lovely, as long as they respect the wishes of the coders who made the software they include. If Sun were the dominant player, and they decided that an automatic solar horoscope generator was an important part of their OS, same thing. Red Hat, ditto.

      If the U.S. government would like to do something about fairness wrt Microsoft (and they should), I propose that the government declare that they will not trade coercively collected public (tax) dollars for software from which the public cannot fully benefit, nor audit for efficiency, security and other concerns. That is, I suggest we require that publically bought software be made available under licenses which require available, reusable source code. (GPL works, so does BSD or a number of others.) The U.S. federal government is the largest single customer that Microsoft has, and iirc the various states (as a group) together make up the 2nd-largest.

      "That what's the antitrust case was about !"

      Well, among other things. I don't have to agree with the DOJ case, though. I have my own reasons for disliking certain Microsoft software, and I don't like all of their business practices -- but I don't want bureaucrats of any stripe deciding what's "appropriate" for Microsoft or anyone else to provide me in a piece of software, or under what terms.

      timothy

      --
      jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
  37. Face it by ceswiedler · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's entirely possible that SCO's claims are accurate. If they inherited valid software patents on some of the basic designs of UNIX, then they have a government-granted right to sue any company which uses those designs.

    We all view UNIX as being freely copyable in its design, because traditionally it has been. Linux shares no code with the original UNIX, but it does share both design and interfaces such as syscalls. This is not a copyright issue, it is a patent issue. If the patents are valid, then it's possible Linux is infringing by its very existence. The BSDs are in a different camp, because of their heritage and the previous agreements between Berkely and AT&T, but possibly they're infringing as well.

    Of course, it's also possible that there is no actual patent infringement going on. But that depends on what AT&T decided to do back in the day regarding patenting UNIX. I know that IBM's standard policy is to patent *everything*.

    (cue Gary Oldman at the end of The Professional: "EVERYTHING!" )

    1. Re:Face it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Before sometime in the 90s patents expired in 17 years (now its 20 years). UNIX was invented in the mid-60s which means all patents through the mid-80s should be expired. What the heck can they claim to own??

    2. Re:Face it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought Gary Oldman says "bring everyone"
      then the stooge asks "everyone?"
      then as eyes roll back into skull "EVERYONE!" ...
      basic design patents? WTF.
      I want to patent the design of failures
      so that everytime somebody fails, I can sue...

    3. Re:Face it by javahacker · · Score: 1

      but it does share both design and interfaces such as syscalls

      This begs several questions. Were parts of the design of Unix patented? Have those patents that exist already run out? Is an interface, like syscalls, even patentable (even with our current broken system). Certainly many elements of Unix can be demonstrated as prior art in places such as other operating systems that existed when Unix was created.

      This is not a copyright issue, it is a patent issue.

      Part of the issue is a copyright issue. Caldera is/was a Linux vendor. GPL, the terms under which Linux is distributed, requires that Linux (and the parts within it) not be encumbered by patent restrictions. In selling Linux, Caldera certainly implied that any patents they may have held through purchasing SCO were either not applicable, or that they were not going to enforce them, in accordance with the GPL license. Does their agreement to these copyright terms defeat the legal case for any patent claims they may have?

      SCO (Caldera) needs to say something substantial about this. What patents exactly do they feel have been violated, and need to be enforced?

    4. Re:Face it by brer_rabbit · · Score: 1
      cue Gary Oldman at the end of The Professional: "EVERYTHING!"

      More like, cue Gary Coleman from any Diff'rent Strokes episode, "Whatch you talkin' bout SCO?"

    5. Re:Face it by crawling_chaos · · Score: 1
      I know that IBM's standard policy is to patent *everything*.

      Yep. And I wonder how many IBM patents SCO is in violation of? That's one of the reasons that Big Blue is so aggressive in its patenting policies. They like to be able to counterstrike when threatened.

      --
      You can only drink 30 or 40 glasses of beer a day, no matter how rich you are.
      -- Colonel Adolphus Busch
    6. Re:Face it by liquidsin · · Score: 1

      I have no idea of how the law works on this, so it's an honest question. If a patent holder allows others to use their patents royalty free for quite a while (I'm assuming the patents in question have been in linux for a good 10 years or so...) and then sells their IP, what's involved with the new patent holder making claims?

      --
      do not read this line twice.
    7. Re:Face it by Eric+Smith · · Score: 2, Informative
      If they inherited valid software patents on some of the basic designs of UNIX,
      They inherited expired patents on some of the basic designs of Unix. Completely useless for litigation.

      Apparently the problem is the copyright on some libraries used for the SCO Xenix/Unix emulation. Which are no longer present in most Linux distributions.

      These libraries might have been used in Windows NT. But even if they were, MS had probably had the right to do so, since they owned Xenix and licensed it to SCO.

      I suspect that the real agenda here is to manipulate their stock price by convincing investors that they're going to get a bunch of licensing revenue. The fact that the licensing revenue will never actually be recognized is irrelevant to such a plan.

    8. Re:Face it by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Ok, when was any of the AT&T code patented... I hope it was after 1982 as your patent is 100% null and void after 20 years.

      SCO has nothing, they know it.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    9. Re:Face it by benjamindees · · Score: 1
      a government-granted right

      Rights come from god, not from government. A "government-granted right" is more correctly termed a priviledge, since it is granted only at the expense of others' rights.

      --
      "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
    10. Re:Face it by Charm · · Score: 1
      German soldiers

      That dangerously close to a hitler comparison. You know what that means don't you?

      --
      -- RTFM:Slackware::Beer:Saturday
    11. Re:Face it by smallfries · · Score: 1

      Errr, so if this is true, then really its just a US problem isn't it? AFAIK, the rest of the world doesn't enfore software patents. We certainly don't over here in the UK. Would this mean that linux was freely distributable and usable in the rest of the world but not over there?

      Boy, that would suck for you guys huh?

      --
      Slashdot: where don knuth is an idiot because he cant grasp the awesome power of php
    12. Re:Face it by haggar · · Score: 1

      Just, case in point, Slobodan Milosevich and German soldiers did things that were completely legal in their countries.

      I actually lived in Serbia during the Balkan wars, and can tell you that waht Milosevic did was ILLEGAL in Serbia. It's just that people didn't know what he exactly did, and when they would get some info from western media, the government-controlled TV and newspapers dismissed it into oblivion.

      But no, gang-raping and murdering little girls and gouging people's eyes out is definitely not legal in Serbia.

      --
      Sigged!
    13. Re:Face it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They inherited expired patents on some of the basic designs of Unix

      I don't know why you assume these patents are expired.

      UNIX was under very active development by many many parties until about 10 years ago, and my guess is that many patents were filed.

      Note that these patents might not even say "UNIX" in them, so you would have difficulty locating them.

    14. Re:Face it by Eric+Smith · · Score: 1
      Patents on the "basic designs of Unix" are long since expired since the basic designs of Unix haven't changed since the early 1980s.

      Certainly there may be patents on newer stuff, but that wouldn't be "basic designs of Unix".

    15. Re:Face it by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      You know what that means don't you?


      Umm, it means that if this were Usenet, and this was one of those discussion threads that goes on for weeks and weeks, that the thread would be over.

      However, this is slashdot, where no thread lasts longer than 3 days.

      I think we need a 'slashthread law'- 'Anytime anybody tries to apply 'Godwins Law' to a slashdot discussion thread, they should be sent excluded from the discussion.'
  38. If he lives up to his track record... by jj_johny · · Score: 1

    Then we don't have anything to worry about except the large legal bills that everyone on the other side will have. After all he did such a great job with MS that they have been broken up and are now several companies that compete with each other. (oh yeah that was how it was supposed to end.)

  39. T�� on t�rke�� by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imekää mun pippeliä!

    huom:ei typoja!

  40. But wait... by Fizzlewhiff · · Score: 1

    I certainly will never use anything from them ever again.

    If they are right and they win, then you are already using their stuff. :)

    --

    'Same speed C but faster'
  41. caldera has been dead by dextr0us · · Score: 1

    caldera has been dead since after redhat 5 came out. i used to use caldera, but then i switched to deb and have loved it ever since. caldera hasn't had a damn chance ever, so i guess they need to recoup their investment, and suing everyone that "has your technology" seems like a good idea.

    --
    "Martha Stewart can lick my Scrotum......do i have a scrotum?" -- Sharon Osbourne
  42. BSD's safe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    All the BSD's based upon 4.4BSD-Lite (which is all of them) are safe from any action by SCO....UCB was sued by AT&T in the mid '90s....the lawyers went through the code and the BSD's have the legal documents to demonstrate that they dont have any SCO code. Windows and Linux and others may have some issues here.

  43. My very first PC based *NIX was SCO.... by GeneralEmergency · · Score: 1

    ...and damn you SCO, and your smelly IP lawyers, for soiling that fond memory.

    --
    "A microprocessor... is a terrible thing to waste." --
    GeneralEmergency
    1. Re:My very first PC based *NIX was SCO.... by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 1

      At the risk of sounding AOL, "Me too!"

      I had a 10MHz AST 286 (with a whopping 8MB RAM) running Xenix SysV/286 (2.3.2). Served a small workgroup of about 8 people.

      Later, we used ODT 2.0, ODT 3.0 and OSR5. The ODT2 system ran for 7 years straight with a single reboot (hardware upgrade -- added a second internal SCSI drive).

      So much for those memories... Of course, I think that the SCO that we knew died when it was bought by Caldera.

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    2. Re:My very first PC based *NIX was SCO.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SCO Xenix a former Microsoft Product, I think they even owned the patents at one time but spun off Xenix and created SCO (Not sure on this)

    3. Re:My very first PC based *NIX was SCO.... by JoeF · · Score: 1

      Same here, but the memories aren't that good.
      I had a lot of problems trying to compile gcc on the old SCO 386 Unix system. But then I discovered Linux (version 0.12), and it already had gcc ready to go.
      I switched to Linux and never looked back.

    4. Re:My very first PC based *NIX was SCO.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually SCO created Xenix for Microsoft (at that time SCO was a small UNIX contract outfit).

      After Microsoft failed to sell Xenix to IBM and got bored of it, they sold it back to SCO.

    5. Re:My very first PC based *NIX was SCO.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Me too too. Learnt Awk on SCO, which meant I could pretend I knew Perl...

      Why do decent American tech companies always have to have shitty, sneaky lawyers behind them ?

      Sniff, sniff.
      Cunts.

  44. Lawyer Karma by Prohest · · Score: 1

    ..In my next life I want to be a lawyer in the US.

    I don't know what my problem is but I'll bet it's hard to pronounce!

  45. poor SCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Didn't they know that if they broadcast their IP they might be subject to attack?

  46. Which company is the most hated by geek? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MS or SCO?

  47. From what I gather... by Interrobang · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...(IANAPL, and I'm not an expert on US patents) they may be able to get any UNIX-like system on that pesky "prior art" provision, not necessarily because it specifically violates any putative patents by reusing code. After all, as the other poster (and anyone who cares to do a little research) knows, both Linux and BSD originate from independent, non-UNIX codebases. The ideational structure, the "Unix-like-ness," however, that makes these OSes what they are, may be the problem, in fact (actually, de facto AND de jure). And that's a big problem, since it's utterly impossible (?) to get around.

    1. Re:From what I gather... by mlyle · · Score: 5, Informative

      You might be able to make some far-fetched trademark argument about Unix look-and-feel, but what a patent covers is a set of succinct (or sometimes not-so-succinct) claims. Ie, "A system, with provision for input and output to a terminal, that ...."

      I'm unsure of what exactly SCO's patents cover, but many of the fundamental characteristics of unix look and feel are more than 20 years old, e.g. the patents would be expired by now.

      We might have to worry about some things, like System V-style shared memory, possibly being infringing. But it's not really possible to get a patent on the concept of a "unix-like" OS.

    2. Re:From what I gather... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      many of the fundamental characteristics of unix look and feel are more than 20 years old, e.g. the patents would be expired by now

      right, but now they've added some starch to the kernel to make a "sustained release" version and have a patent on that.

    3. Re:From what I gather... by winchester · · Score: 1

      So if i implement a new accounting system, i can get sued by every other vendor of such a system, because my system looks very name-your-favorite-acoounting-software-like?

    4. Re:From what I gather... by gorilla · · Score: 2, Informative

      There was one patent on the original AT&T unix, and that was over setuid mechanism, #4,135,240. At that time software patents were explictly not allowed, and therefore the whole patented mechanism is described in mechanical terms. This patent has of course now expired.

    5. Re:From what I gather... by Ambush_Bug · · Score: 1

      A wise one once said.. "Those who don't use UNIX are doomed to reinvent it"

  48. Weird thought ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Didn't SCO used to have close ties with old MS? Maybe there's
    some under the table stuff going on and is one of MS' way to
    attack linux. Just a thought. A weird one at that.

  49. It's Like Recycling by Googol · · Score: 5, Insightful


    Think of the internet as a big dump filled with potential, er, recycling materials. A lot of it is trash but there is some good stuff there. Anyone can go out and pick up stuff and build stuff with it. Only, digital copying and transmission technology means that if someone happens to throw away a split-level ranch house we can all live in nice houses.

    So how do you keep this from happening if you are in the business of selling houses? (1) control the real estate market [hardware] so you can have a nice house but no place to put it; (2) cut off access to the dump; (3) make recycling illegal; (4) claim you own the stuff in the dump.

    So SCO wants #4 today. What else is new. They'll all be tried. They're all a problem.

    The real problem is not today's battle on thus-and-such a front. It's that there are a *lot* of people out there who have it out for recycling of *anything* that people can live in.

    =googol=

  50. Dr DOS, M.D. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does anyone else see this as the end of SCO (Caldera) like I do? I certainly will never use anything from them ever again.

    The good news is that you can keep on using Dr DOS, as it is now the property of DeviceLogics, Inc.. You can download it from their web site without a cash payment.

  51. Press Release by palp · · Score: 1

    SCO has a press release about this on thier site, mostly the same info in the article, but worth a read to see their "spin" on it.

    SCO Establishes SCOsource to License Unix Intellectual Property

    --
    -palp
  52. SCOX is dead meat. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Caldera/SCO chart doesn't look very good.. They've alread flirted with getting de-listed and must maintain a per share stock price of over $1. They are hemmoraging money, losing almost $2/share. These guys are history. Chapter 11 filing. They know that geeks will boycott them but their only asset is the ownership of the "UNIX" trademark. So just sue everyone on the way down. Historicly, SCO was Bill Gates' trojan horse into the Unix community. This suit is just a continuation of the tradition.

    1. Re:SCOX is dead meat. by glenstar · · Score: 1
      They know that geeks will boycott them but their only asset is the ownership of the "UNIX" trademark.

      Actually... quite a few manufacturing firms still use SCO and there is quite a bit of EDI software that runs under SCO. I can't pretend to say that I like it, but one of my clients (dental supply company) has been running the same SCO box (sitting under the CEO's desk for christ's sake) without a reboot or any maintenance for the last several years and rely exclusively on it as a terminal server for 20+ EDI terminals. Not one person in the company knows how it works, or exactly what it does, but whatever it does it does well.

    2. Re:SCOX is dead meat. by iggymanz · · Score: 1

      nevertheless, they had a net LOSS of $2.7M last quarter, they've gone from over $110 a share to $1.44 in the last 2 years, even after a REVERSE split of 4:1 to keep the share price up (without that it would be 36 cents a share)........as the hecklers & bashers on the popular stock message boards would say "THIS PIG IS GOING DOWN!!!!"...or "STICK A FORK IN IT, IT'S DONE"

      It is a good solid Unix for 386 machines, but of course Linux and FreeBSD and Solaris x86 is eating its lunch.

  53. Some clarification please!! by binner1 · · Score: 1

    In all of these SCO is (not) going to sue stories, the jist is the same. Linux (and now apparently other OS's) are using some SCO IP somehow. What any of these stories fail to mention is which SCO IP this is.

    SCO would like us to 'license' this IP from them, and that's all fine and good. Personally, I'd rather remove the code, give SCO the big FU, and carry on.

    Does anyone know which libraries are being contested here? Just curious.

    -Ben

  54. sco feedback form address by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hey let them know- here's the url: http://www.sco.com/company/feedback/index.html?ref _dir= and a sample (not very good) comment I dashed off- Just wanted to write a letter to let you know that because of your legal actions via David Boies against other Linux vendors (posted on Slashdot and exposed to millions of potential customers etc. this morning), I am going to make sure that I don't purchase anything or use anything from you guys ever again, and I will endeavour to make sure to let others know about this as well. I'm a lab computer administrator at a large research university, and a lot of people get in touch with me to ask about these sorts of decisions. I'm not sending a rant or trying to vent, but I thought if you could forward this to someone who might be able to see the volume of comments like this one and realize that they're going to go out of business and put you out of a job if they pursue this course I thought it might be constructive. Thanks a lot for your time.

  55. I wouldn't be too worried.. by jmscott42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    As everyone else is saying, look at his track record. His cases seem to be presented with questionable tactics, not fully exploring the ramifications of what he is arguing for, and attacking the case on one tiny point, missing a bigger picture. I remember reading a lot about his work for Gore, that he was so focused on certain demands in the case that he missed arguing for other things he could have won. For the Microsoft case, he was obsessed with the browser issue, missing many points related to Microsoft's behaviour in the bigger picture.

    For such a hugely hyped lawyer, he manages to make swiss cheese of the most open-and-shut cases. Now if they had hired Johnny Cochran, I'd be concerned...

    1. Re:I wouldn't be too worried.. by Cpt_Kirks · · Score: 1

      And God forbid them having Johnny Cochran armed with a picture of Chewbacca...

  56. Re:ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My girlfriend channelsurfs, and codes Java, Perl, and a bit of PHP. I'm hoping she wasn't previously a guy.

  57. Re:I love the irony and the smell of doo-doo by gosand · · Score: 1, Insightful
    You're even hypocritical enough to say "if you can't compete, sue"! Nevermind that Sun, Netscape, and the various states' attorneys lived by the same mantra when they went after Microsoft.

    Ahh, the standard techique of misquoting and then using that as a basis for an argument. See, on a fair and level playing field, such as the Linux market, everyone should be able to compete on their own merits. However, when one company can leverage their monopoly power to maintain it illegally, it is a different story. That isn't fair, moral, or legal. You are simply showing your ignorance of the business model, and comparing apples to turds.

    Where's my knife, I need to cut through the irony.

    It is probably stuck in the backs of all the companies that Microsoft stole their "intellectual property" from, or ran out of business, or sabotaged. It amazes me that some people still defend their actions.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  58. So, what should we be boycotting? by autopr0n · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Obviously SCO, but who uses that? More to the point, I think it would be in our best interests to avoid using (and especially paying for) any products from their parent companies and the parent's subsidiaries. In other words, we should avoid the whole corporate tree.

    Caldera is the owner, right? And what about it's subsidiaries? Don't they have an embedded Linux biz, Lineo or something?

    What these guys are doing is way worse then Amazon, and we (well, some people, not me personally) are boycotting them.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  59. Am I reading this right? by Rocko+Bonaparte · · Score: 1

    We do have concerns about our intellectual property in general," McBride said in an interview. "To us, it's not an issue of: Is Linux violating (SCO intellectual property)? It's an issue of: Is anybody violating it?"

    So it's OK if Linux uses their technology, as long as nobody uses Linux?

    --
    No I'm not trolling.
    1. Re:Am I reading this right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they're expanding from the specific "is Linux infringing?" to the general "is anyone infringing?".

    2. Re:Am I reading this right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      No.

      He's saying they'll go after anyone and everyone that is/might be violating their IP.

      If one of those happens to be Linux, well, no special treatment there. But he's also saying it's not directed specifically against Linux, but rather against anyone allegedly in violation.

  60. Duh.... by zjbs14 · · Score: 1
    The new move, however, could alienate companies, including SCO customers, according to Giga Information Group analyst Stacey Quandt.

    You think so? I mean if I were evaluating technology to purchase, I know I always want to select the company that appears to be ready to sue anything that moves since that's the only way they're going to survive.
    </sarcasm>

    --
    No sig, sorry.
  61. Re:Revenue by tomhudson · · Score: 1, Informative
    From their site: (SCOx plan)

    Join the SCOx program now and start taking advantage of the Xtreme Rewards Option:

    1. Join the SCOx partner program.
    2. Become authorized to sell SCOx products and services.
    3. Begin selling SCOx products and services. Reach your revenue objectives.
    4. Sell your SCOx business to SCO.
    5. Have a great time with your money!
    Methinks they've been reading to many slashdot Profit! postings. They callit SCOx. Their SCOx Sux. Just shows that they can't think of anything new to bring to the table.
  62. What a lying sack of SHIT! by Newer+Guy · · Score: 1

    "This comes upon reversal of the SCO Group statement according to Chief Executive Darl McBride of having not engaged Mr. Boies to take legal action against our fellow Linux vendors. Now, CNet News is reporting that not only is SCO Group investigating the Linux vendors. How do you spell: "Lying scak of shit?" D A R L Mc B R I D E

    1. Re:What a lying sack of SHIT! by DogIsMyCoprocessor · · Score: 1
      How do you spell: "Lying scak of shit?"

      I spell it "lying sack of shit".

      HTH

      --

      "And this is my boy, Sherman. Speak, Sherman." "Hello." "Good boy."

    2. Re:What a lying sack of SHIT! by jpetts · · Score: 1, Funny

      How do you spell: "Lying scak of shit?" D A R L Mc B R I D E

      Err, shouldn't that be: D R A L Mc B R I D E>

      --
      Call me old fashioned, but I like a dump to be as memorable as it is devastating - Bender
    3. Re:What a lying sack of SHIT! by IIRCAFAIKIANAL · · Score: 1
      How do you spell: "Lying scak of shit?"


      Well, not like that. Try again dude.
      --
      Robots are everywhere, and they eat old people's medicine for fuel.
    4. Re:What a lying sack of SHIT! by WetCat · · Score: 1

      [lain' skak of ...] :)

  63. I lied by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fuck you. I have nothing other to say!

  64. Buy them. by dmw · · Score: 5, Interesting

    According to Yahoo Finance, SCOX has a market cap of 16.4M. Can't the FSF try to buy them and then release the IP to the community?

    It seems to me that this is an opportunity for us open-source geeks to put our money where our mouths are.

    1. Re:Buy them. by Gogo+Dodo · · Score: 1

      You'd have to pay more than the market cap. With buyouts, you're really buying the company and future profits, so you have to pay more than the going price. Additionally, people who have bought SCO shares might want to cash out at closer to the price the originally paid.

    2. Re:Buy them. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that SCO only has future loses to look forward to, so it ought to be cheaper than marketcap to buy them out...

    3. Re:Buy them. by ausoleil · · Score: 1

      I missed your comment and posted nearly the same thing.

      Actually, IMHO, this is what they want. 16 million won't begin to pay for the ironing of Boies' boxer shorts while he's working on this much less run the company. FUD flaks aren't cheap, there's a lot of competition from Microsoft.

      I bought 100 shares a little while ago. Do I have to pay a license fee now that I have equity in these grubbers?

    4. Re:Buy them. by schnell · · Score: 2, Informative

      According to Yahoo Finance, SCOX has a market cap of 16.4M. Can't the FSF try to buy them and then release the IP to the community?

      Unfortunately, it doesn't necessarily work that way. Market capitalization (cap) is what it would cost at present values to purchase every share of the company that is publicly traded. In a perfect world, you would just buy up all those shares at that price. You then own the company, call for a new election of board members, vote your shares (your vote's weight = your percentage of ownership) for new board members who then order the CEO to change what he's doing or get fired.

      However, there are a couple of snags to that plan. One is that once people know that you're trying to buy up the whole thing, they start demanding more money for their shares because they know you want them badly. That's why takeover attempts are always launched quoting a price higher than current market value.

      More important is that the # of shares on publicly traded markets doesn't necessarily equal the number of shares in the company. A company can make some small minority of the company's total shares (say, 25% publicly traded) in their IPO and keep the rest in the hands of private investors (or owned by the company itself). So if this is the case, you can buy up every public share of the company, but you still don't control it. You'd have to examine the company's SEC filings to get the answer, but I'm guessing only a minority of SCO's shares are public.

      It seems to me that this is an opportunity for us open-source geeks to put our money where our mouths are.

      I think we open-source geeks are, in general, badly in need of a few "gut-checks" to see if we are willing to put our money where our Slashdot flames are. ;-) Sadly, this doesn't appear to be a good opportunity.

      --
      "95% of all Slashdot .sig quotes are incorrect or completely fabricated." -Benjamin Franklin
    5. Re:Buy them. by sjvn · · Score: 1

      It may be more than those libraries. I'll be writing up more of the story for my newsletter, which will then see print on the Website next week.

      The Final story will take a while as everyone, including SCO, vets their code.

      Steven

    6. Re:Buy them. by sql*kitten · · Score: 1

      So if this is the case, you can buy up every public share of the company, but you still don't control it.

      And if you do own it, you're also liable for its debts. That's why some companies are so cheap. Barings Bank was sold for 1 British Pound to ING for this very reason.

  65. Check info first by DesScorp · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Love is no longer WITH Caldera/SCO, and hasn't been for months now. SCO's abrupt change of strategies (including emphasizing Unix rather than Linux)is the direct result of their new president.
    And as lame as we might think this move is, I don't think (yet) that they really intend to try to collect direct payments. I think they'll use this as leverage in future negotiations with other software companies. If it stands up in court, you can't deny that it's a nice carrot AND stick to have when dealing with partners.....and competitors.
    That said, if they really DO try to collect revenue, then yes, there should be some kind of market retaliation against the company. And parts of Linux would simply have to be re-written (using different concepts) to replace the infringing IP.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    1. Re:Check info first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the simple fact that SCO hasn't bothered to enforce their patents for the entire life of Linux will scuttle this whole shouting match in a hurry.

    2. Re: Check info first by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > That said, if they really DO try to collect revenue, then yes, there should be some kind of market retaliation against the company.

      I think the market's "pre-retaliation" is what left them needing this new source of income.

      How do you threaten a company that's already bound for the crapper?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    3. Re:Check info first by austus · · Score: 1

      I can see using Gentoo init or *BSD init which do not offend poor SCO. Purging all things SCO such as emulation wouldn't make anyone lose sleep. System 5 init is needlessly complex anyway. It would be a good thing to see that go away.

      Personally, I think we should wait this out. My prediction is that the result will be another nail in the coffin of software patents. Not that software patents weren't DOA anyway. Accepting the validity of software patents is akin to accepting the patenting of things like say, "object oriented" programming is ok. That's patently absurd!

  66. NetBSD: yes / OpenBSD: probably not by questionlp · · Score: 1
    I just dugged through the OpenBSD and NetBSD websites to see if there are any mentions of SysV or SCO and it looks like NetBSD does provide binary emulation/compatibility for IBCS2 systems (including SCO Unix and SCO Xenix) under the i386 section on this page.

    I didn't see anything for OpenBSD, but OpenBSD developers and users can feel free to pipe in on this matter.

  67. It is only about 2 libraries. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 5, Informative
    According to the article I have read, SCO is only concerned about two libraries that they wrote that are not Free software. These libraries are ABI's used in UnixWare and OpenServer. The libraries are not integral to Linux or the X window system.

    SCO is not going after every Linux vendor, only those distributing the two libraries without SCO's permission.

    To me, this is all just FUD, and is being blown WAY out of proportion.

    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    1. Re:It is only about 2 libraries. by mandolin · · Score: 1
      From that article:

      What it may mean is that SCO might charge Unix users who have moved to Linux from Unix but are still using a pair of old Unix ABI software libraries found in UnixWare and OpenServer to run Unix binaries on Linux. ... On Linux, these libraries can be used to run some SCO Unix binaries.

      .. When my old company was moving from SCO to linux, we experimented with the iBCS linux module to run some SCO OpenServer binaries. It basically worked for simple command-line progs but we could never get dynamically-linked X programs to work (because of the library dependencies). We ended up ditching all the SCO stuff.

      I wonder if SCO wants to grab license fees only from people who copy SCO libraries onto their linux platforms, or even from people who run statically-linked SCO apps on Linux, which would be a different thing.

  68. A quick course in Finnish: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ime = suck (imperative)
    mun = my (slang)
    pippeliä = peepee (partitive)

  69. Not if Marybono has her way by yerricde · · Score: 3, Informative

    patents only last for 17 years from issuance of patent, or 20 years from application for patent, whichever expires first.

    Actually, it's whichever expires last according to 35 USC 154(c)(1).

    But if Rep. Mary Bono has her way, she'll probably introduce a bill like this to "harmonize" patent terms with copyright terms.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:Not if Marybono has her way by EricWright · · Score: 1

      Wasn't sure if it was first or last... that's strange. I guess you get more protection for your patent if it takes 3+ years from application -> issuance.

      As for the corporate whore, why am I not surprised? Let's rape the entire public domain so I can continue making money off my dead husband's estate.

      I didn't just say that, did I?

    2. Re:Not if Marybono has her way by dcgaber · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually it is strictly 20 years from filing for any patent filed now. A few years ago, Congress changed the terms from 17 years after grant to 20 years after application, but grandfathered the older patents in, so they would not all of a sudden receive less protection (that would be if the patent was granted more than 3 years after its application. Otherwise, people who were expecting a protection of 17 years after the patent was granted would not all of a sudden get 20 years minus the pendancy time, and in a lot of cases, a patents pendancy (time for the application to issue) can be more than 3 years, though the PTO is trying to keep pendancy times lower than that).

      This was done over 3 yrs ago, so for any new patent application, the term of protection is 20 yrs from application.

    3. Re:Not if Marybono has her way by gilroy · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth the poster:

      I guess you get more protection for your patent if it takes 3+ years from application -> issuance.

      Isn't that the rationale behind so-called "submarine" patents ... to keep running the clock, so that your protection never expires? (And so you can broaden the patent to include new technologies along the way...)
    4. Re:Not if Marybono has her way by rnturn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If Lord Kelvin was alive today he might say something like:

      ``There is nothing new to be invented now. All that remains is more and more patent infringement lawsuits.''
      --
      CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
    5. Re:Not if Marybono has her way by ninewands · · Score: 1
      But if Rep. Mary Bono has her way, she'll probably introduce a bill like this [link omitted] to "harmonize" patent terms with copyright terms.

      It matters not what Mrs. Bono wants, it is settled law (according to the Supremes) that Congress lacks the Constitutional authority to extend the terms of existing patents. Don't ask me WHY they didn't follow that precedent in the Eldred case.
    6. Re:Not if Marybono has her way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, whatever: Sonny was a schmuck too!

    7. Re:Not if Marybono has her way by Losat · · Score: 1
      I guess you get more protection for your patent if it takes 3+ years from application -> issuance.

      Isn't that the rationale behind so-called "submarine" patents ... to keep running the clock, so that your protection never expires?

      The 20-year from application law is intended to block submarine patents.
      (For patent applications filed before June 8, 1995, the patent term is the longer of 20 years from the application date or 17 years from issue date.)
      However, there is still a possible 5 year extension for pharmaceutical patents to compensate for required approvals (such as FDA) before the product can be marketed.
      Thus, the maximum submarine life seems to be 20 years for most non-drug patents.
      (There's always the chance that a submarine was filed before the 1995 law change, though; such applications are grandfathered.)
      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on Slashdot.
  70. sco stock by jirka · · Score: 1

    what I really want to know is when they are planning to do all this so that I can short their stock

  71. Great... by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 1

    Anybody else in room hearing Bill Gates laughing?

    Bill: Steve, Guess what?
    Steve: What Bill...
    Bill: Guess who SCO is suing now?
    Steve: Let me guess... Us?
    Bill: Nope!
    Steve: Wow, somebody not suing us, that's odd..
    Bill: Yeah, I guess their going to sue a whole bunch of linux companies
    Steve: Hmmm, that seems odd... On what pretense?
    Bill: I guess their contending that everybody stole their IP...
    Steve: HAHAHA, this'll be good... for profits...

    --
    Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
    1. Re:Great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes very good for Microsoft. They own something like 25% of SCO. Remember xenix. That was Microsoft's Unix back in the 80's. SCO evolved from xenix

    2. Re:Great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the really funny thing is that Xenix, which was Microsofts version of Unix, ended up with SCO which was bought by Caldera and then Caldera renamed itself SCO.

      It might just be that Microsofts Unix kills off Linux. Or at least makes it "not free".

  72. Boies in action - check this out by BenJeremy · · Score: 1

    Flash animation featuring Mr. Boies:

  73. Duurrrr by mao+che+minh · · Score: 3, Insightful

    People were rooting for the cause, not the person. If motives change, so does opinion. DUH. Welcome to humanity.

  74. SCO = M$ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Last I knew M$ owned about 20% of SCO

  75. domain available for .com and .org by kyoko21 · · Score: 1

    I just checked network solutions and it appears that scosucks.com and scosucks.org are both available for registration. Any takers to start an anti-sco website?

  76. does anyone else see this as the end... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    of the source forgerIE? does va lairIE hold the keys to the saykrud kode? if his payper keeps going pottIE, what will become of the loyAL forgerers?

    will linus/stallman have to pay royaltIEs to ransom their love?

    stay tuned, as the wall street of deceit debacle .continues to unfold. there'll be more indictments. anybodIE whois wearing soiled skirts, should fess up. they only tolled you nobody would ever fined doubt/get caught.

    1. Re:does anyone else see this as the end... by MrJerryNormandinSir · · Score: 1

      This is just the beginning of the end of SCO.

  77. Press Release from SCO by buzzsport · · Score: 1

    http://ir.sco.com/ReleaseDetail.cfm?ReleaseID=9996 5

  78. Truly bizarre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I find it simply amazing how many companies don't have the brains God gave cottage cheese, i.e. they can't evn understand the notion of enlightened self interest well enough to keep from doing something this stupid.

    If Ransom Love and Co. were any more myopic and arrogant they could be working in the Bush administration, ignoring Osama and N. Korea and sabre rattling over Iraq.

  79. It's not irony, it's hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just thought you'd like to know

  80. Fitting end... by Craig+Maloney · · Score: 0
    I can't think of a more suitable company to sacrifice to determine that software patents are ludicrous. i

    Bye Bye SCO, it sure wasn't a pleasure.

  81. I Hota puta!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Vio con dios mother fuckers I'm desperate for some little pinky pussy for some raving in the middle of night with some garlic on the side and some other fumes of tomato and basilica. Please give me a call if interested +358405718655

    1. Re:I Hota puta!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Old MacDonald had a farm
      Ee i ee i o
      And on his farm he had some chicks
      Ee i ee i o
      With a pippeli-pippeli here
      And a pippeli-pippeli there
      Here a pippeli, there a pippeli
      Everywhere a pippeli-pippeli
      Old MacDonald had a farm
      Ee i ee i o

    2. Re:I Hota puta!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hint: if you don't want to be IP-banned, just post a lot of random posts. Moderators won't bother. They think they're wasting their mod points.

  82. In other news: by llamafresh · · Score: 2, Funny

    Caldera sues itself over code contained in OpenLinux and UnitedLinux distributions!

    David Boies of course loses the case.

    we're still not sure WHAT that means though... film at 11

    --
    I couldn't find a long little dogie, so I got two short ones and spliced 'em...
  83. Re:ridiculous by Angry+White+Guy · · Score: 1

    That's a bullshit mod, and if the guy who did it would have checked the time of each post, he would have seen that your post was at MOST 1 minute 59 seconds later. How a bout a bit of leeway here mods?

    --
    You think that I'm crazy, you should see this guy!
  84. Hung by a jury of themselves... by jlk_71 · · Score: 1

    It is pretty funny to watch someone tie their own noose, but it is even more hilarious when you watch a company like SCO actually put the noose around it's own neck and jump.
    This can only end up bad for them in the end, in my opinion.

    jlk

  85. BSD includes an implicit patent guarantee by yerricde · · Score: 1

    which I believe is covered by the original BSD license.

    Good news: The three-clause BSD license may include an implicit guarantee of license under applicable patents licenseable by the copyright owner: "Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met" (my emphasis).

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  86. SCO is dying! [was Re:SCOX is dead meat.] by grub · · Score: 1


    The Caldera/SCO chart doesn't look very good. [...] They are hemmoraging money [...] These guys are history [...]"

    Wow, that reads almost like the *BSD is dying troll. All you needed to add was a line about a "charnel house".

    Well done!

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:SCO is dying! [was Re:SCOX is dead meat.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're BSD hero's chart doesn't look to good either. Never paid a dividend. Relies on the graces of Microsoft. Thin earnings. These guys could be the next gusy to start suing everybody.

      Oh wait, they already tried that.

  87. No Mo Sco! by hbean · · Score: 1

    My company still has a few hundred clients on SCO. Everyone that gets a new system, or a new server gets linux. With this news we're looking into getting rid of SCO altogether. Good thing to, because half of our time is spent fixing stupid little problems with SCO, and we're stuck w/out an OO compiler because of it.

    --
    "Give someone a program, frustrate them for a day... Teach someone to program, frustrate them for a lifetime."
    1. Re:No Mo Sco! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I will recommend to my boss to get rid of this Caldera/SCO crap, too. It was always a bit strange to have such an "alien" PC with Caldera Linux, but now I have a reason to kill it.

  88. SCO: The Banana Explanation (or WHY SCO LOSES) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Caldera/SCO don't have a chance.

    Microsoft: 800 lb gorilla.
    Linux: 350 lb orangutan.
    Apple: 250 lb chimpanzee.

    -all vs.-

    SCO: 40 lb monkey.
    Caldera: 0.04 oz sea monkey.

    The industry will not let this happen.

  89. Don't Patents Expire. by Ugmo · · Score: 1

    Honest question. I thought patents expire after 15 years or so. Wasn't much of the Unix design done more than 15 years ago?

  90. Just tell Bush that SCO's headquarters is in Iraq by multiOSfreak · · Score: 1

    That should take care of them and their greedy little lawsuit.

  91. Re:ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Java is a chick language. So no worries.

  92. Deep pockets get sued first by dcavanaugh · · Score: 1

    The decision to hire Boies is consistent with a "deep pockets first" strategy. Others have posted concerns about SCO's alleged GPL violations regarding patents, and besides, the Linux vendors don't really have the assets to make a lawsuit worthwhile. I predict that SCO will go after Microsoft. Either SCO wins big, or M$ prevails and the patent issue is dead. Either way, why should they bother with the Linux vendors and deal with the GPL issue? As an investment, a proposed lawsuit against Linux vendors fails to meet any reasonable risk/reward criteria. From a customer relations point of view, if SCO were so lucky as to drag M$ down the toilet, who would complain? On the other hand, using GPL and then attacking Linux -- that's a friendly-fire scenario they could do without.

    1. Re:Deep pockets get sued first by curious.corn · · Score: 1

      I wonder if they want to go after Apple... After years of self-confinement in irrelevant niches osX teleported the company to a leading position. After the recent slappings they've delivered to Redmond (safari, keynote, QuickTime against WinMedia, iLife) I wonder if some private fund investor (read M$ in disguise) of SCO called for such action. It's a shitstorm (for me @ least, I've just started enjoying my apple) and might be a threating suggestion to go back to the system9 caves.
      Unfortunately, by the time M$ is dragged back to court we could have yet another Netscape; and another GOP whoring administration.

      --
      Mi domando chi à il mandante di tutte le cazzate che faccio - Altan
    2. Re:Deep pockets get sued first by dcavanaugh · · Score: 1

      Your theory about M$ influencing SCO to initiate this little adventure is interesting. It's easy enough to tell: If M$ is a named defendant in the first lawsuit, then they probably did NOT orchestrate this action. On the other hand, if everyone except M$ is named, then we know who is pulling the strings.

    3. Re:Deep pockets get sued first by curious.corn · · Score: 1

      Be paranoid; it'll be named, possiblty for that Xenix thing they used to make. The press will have their cover story and Ballmer, Gates & Co. a new virginity. Some months later some NDAd extra-judicial settlement will part M$ from some millions (those the California citizens won't have claimed, just to stick a finger) and everybody will live happily ever after... just in time for longhorn ;)

      --
      Mi domando chi à il mandante di tutte le cazzate che faccio - Altan
    4. Re:Deep pockets get sued first by kubrick · · Score: 1

      from Wikipedia...

      Xenix was Microsoft's version of Unix released in 1980 for microprocessors. It was originally based on code licensed from AT&T. It was targeted at users outgrowing MS-DOS. Microsoft later sold it to the Santa Cruz Operation

      Is that last name familiar? BTW, if the code was originally licensed, they don't need to worry about possible patent or copyright infringement.

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
  93. Loser Tech Companies use Lawsuits (common pattern) by dananderson · · Score: 1
    It's a common pattern for loser/dinosaur technology companies to use their bag of "patents" in lawsuits to try and make money. Examples:
    • UNISYS and the GIF/LZW compression patent
    • NCR (National Cash Register) and untold number of patents
    • Caldera/SCO and DR-DOS (not a patent, but still a lawsuit)
    • Caldera/SCO again on all things UNIX
    Others, I'm sure can add to this list.
  94. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 0, Troll

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  95. How very ironic. by elbuddha · · Score: 4, Funny


    From the CNET story:
    • "We've been looking at this for months. Every time we turn over a stone, there's something there," McBride said. "If you pull down (Mac) OS X you'll see a lot of copyright postings that point back to Unix Systems Laboratories, which is what we hold."

    From Twenty Years of Berkeley Unix by Marshall Kirk McKusick:
    • The University's suit claimed that USL had failed in their obligation to provide due credit to the University for the use of BSD code in System V as required by the license that they had signed with the University. If the claim were found to be valid, the University asked that USL be forced to reprint all their documentation with the appropriate due credit added, to notify all their licensees of their oversight, and to run full-page advertisements in major publications such as The Wall Street Journal and Fortune magazine notifying the business world of their inadvertent oversight.
      ...
      The result was that three files were removed from the 18,000 that made up [BSD 4.4] Networking Release 2, and a number of minor changes were made to other files. In addition, the University agreed to add USL copyrights to about 70 files, although those files continued to be freely redistributed.
      ...
      The lawsuit settlement also stipulated that USL would not sue any organization using 4.4BSD-Lite as the base for their system.
    So, in other words, Mr. McBride - PPPPHHHTTTT!!

    Oh, and might want to make sure you are providing due credit to the University of California at Berkeley before you cast the first stone, eh?
  96. microsoft/sco connection by werd+life · · Score: 1

    slightly off topic, but interesting and not too well known, so i'll give it a shot.

    back in the day, microsoft actually had their own unix,
    called xenix, which later became SCO unix.

    link

    yeah

  97. Re:ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If she sucks dick, then she was either born a woman, or a gay man. Either way, you're alright.

  98. Boies stars in his own movie by BenJeremy · · Score: 1

    It's an oldie, but a goodie featuring David Boies in the starring role.

  99. Are licenses available? by yerricde · · Score: 1

    Have you ever considered legally licensing SCO's IP if you are going to use it?

    Does SCO even offer licenses for use of SCO's patents in free software as defined by the FSF or in open-source software as defined by the OSI?

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:Are licenses available? by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      They don't have to offer licenses.

      It's like the case of an artist who creates lithographs. He can print as many copies as he wants, and distribute them tho who he wants.

      He can refuse to produce them and distribute them to anybody who he wants.

      His right to his work is NOT invalidated if he doesn't happen to choose to sell a copy to you.

  100. Re:I love the irony and the smell of doo-doo by tsg · · Score: 1

    Its a big assumption to assume MS is a monopoly.

    Um, no. The Federal Government determined in a court of law that Microsoft is a monopoly and they are guilty of anti-trust violations. There's no assuming involved.

    --
    People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
  101. A poor man with a chest of gold by karlandtanya · · Score: 1
    Social power has a tendency to concentrate itself. While concentrated power is not necessarily evil, a good analogy is that of a steamroller. It doesn't care about the ant. But if the ant gets in its way it'll get squashed.

    Let's assume an entity with little or no power which does not wish to become part of the local powerful entity. Non-Windows OSs, users, vendors, etc make good examples.

    Most have become part of the Microsoft Collective. They have the Collective's lawyers vigorously defending their rights to use licensed installations of the Collective's product on their machines. Those outside of the Collective do not.

    What can those outside do to protect their rights--from the Collective as well as from marauding elements outside of the Collective? Some possibilities:

    Not be noticed.

    Join the collective.

    Remain outside of the Collective, but bind their interests to its interests.

    It appears that SCO has chosen the last option for us--in that they are suing *everybody*.

    IANAL, so I don't know if these patents actually affect *nix et. al. It's unlikely that SCO will find a much profit in pursuing anyone but the Collective for infringement--blood from a stone and all that. If this happens, then the users of those OSs can continue to "not be noticed".

    However, if it turns out that we are all using SCO-infringing patents (M$, and the rest of us), we need to present our use--in a legal context--as similar to that of M$. Co-defendants.

    M$ will fight the battle for us. Hee Hee.

    Unfortunately, that's not really what's going to happen. If SCO proves a crucial and defensible patent, the Collective will buy it up with their big ol' sack of money. Then their lawyers will come after those who are not "of the body".

    Other OSs may have excellent code and design, but the Collective has excellent lawyers and politicians. We will find ourselves in the position of a poor man in a lawless country who finds a chest of gold. Sure, it's his. But can he hold onto it?

    --
    "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." - Philip K. Dick
  102. Completely Off-Topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    copyright (n) The legal right granted to an author, composer, playwright, publisher, or distributor to exclusive publication, production, sale, or distribution of a literary, musical, dramatic, or artistic work. (dictionary.com)

    Past tense: copyrighted.

    What the hell do copywrite and copywritten mean?

  103. can you avoid sco? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "I certainly will never use anything from them ever again."

    Hmmm. Let's say they are going after patent infringement and were to be successful on all fronts (M$, BSD, Linux) then the only way you can use something not "from them" is possibly Old Line Unices or maybe VM or maybe VMS or some rather Siemens offering. A small and clique-laden market.

    Anybody know if SCO owns a piece of the action on any closed Unices? VM is possibly safe, I don't recall SCO ever playing with Big Blue. What about VMS... was the SCO influence at DEC restricted to just their 'nix?

    Could it be "you can run but you can't hide?"

  104. Wishing For Revised GPL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you familiar with the proposed enhancement to the GPL? Bet everyone wishes that it was in place on the *nix now.

    It says something to the effect -- if you sue someone over copyright/patent in a GPLed product, you are banned from using all GPLed software. Period, amen, you're done, go away.

    I would like to see SCO market a Linux product under those terms!!

    No more SCO products!!

  105. Re:I love the irony and the smell of doo-doo by Serapth · · Score: 1

    Did you read a different post then me? Never once did he defend Microsofts actions, or even make a comment to that effect. The main point of his comment was, when Bois was targeting Microsoft he was the second coming of Jebus. Now that he is in attacking Linux companies (potentially anyways) he is the great Satan. Just look now at all the posts already in here about how many cases Bios has lost. Did you seem him being critic'd that way when he was going after MS? The poster makes a very valid point.

  106. Do I have this straight? by Whispers_in_the_dark · · Score: 1

    SCO is suing only to protect the ABI libraries? Is the only purpose of these libraries to run SCO Unixware software unmodified?

    What software will I, as a Linux user, not be able to run if I want to avoid the IP problems here. Do I need to recompile my kernel, delete some packages, what?

    (BTW: there seems to be much FUD on this and I would like the straight skinny on what I can't use anymore that I may or may not have used in the past.)

  107. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  108. Indeed. by raehl · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The whole point is no one is using their stuff, ergo they've got nothing to lose.

  109. Re:I love the irony and the smell of doo-doo by elvum · · Score: 1

    A monopoly doesn't necessarily mean 100% of the market. And since one of the findings of fact in a certain court case you may have heard of was that Microsoft *does* have a monopoly (in the desktop operating systems market, which they used to give Internet Explorer its current prominince), I think it's a reasonable accusation to make. :-)

  110. Don't forget - The BSD's went to court already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And has a document saying 'if you do these things, you are not infringing' Hence all the BSD's going back to 4.4-Lite.

    Now, *Linux tries to be a SYSV rip-off.

  111. Can someone please stop the world ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... I wanna get off!

    This is all becoming plainly ridiculous. What next? Tarrif on two-ply toilet papaer?

    "Excuse me sir, but have you licenced that sheet of bog paper?", "No!", "I see you have 3 sheets there, so please hand over your left testicle before utilisation of said ass wiping media." "No left testicle? ... hmmm"

  112. It's funny... laugh by pro-mpd · · Score: 1
    So if your technology can't win on price and performance, break out the lawyers and sue everyone. Does anyone else see this as the end of SCO (Caldera) like I do? I certainly will never use anything from them ever again.
    Incidentally, they also sue for criticism. You will be served next Tuesday.
  113. You said a mouthful! by MamasGun · · Score: 1
    You don't root for lawyers. They are just tools.

    Heh. Lawyers are tools. Truer words have never been said.

    --
    "But you've already got a DVD. It lasts forever....In the digital world, we don't need back-ups..."
    -- Jack Valenti
  114. Not surprising, considering who their CEO is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Darl McBride has a long history of suing people who were once his friends. See http://www.thecopiernetwork.com/forums/roadhouse3/ messages/589.html.

  115. Guilt by association by PurpleBob · · Score: 1

    Of course, this certainly puts Caldera and SCO on the community's shit list. Caldera can no longer consider itself a Linux distro any more than LinuxOne could.

    SCO is also responsible for UnitedLinux, though. Now, I always thought that was a dumb idea anyway, but other Linux companies went along with it. I hope the legitimate distributions like SuSE pull out of UnitedLinux as soon as possible.

    --
    Win dain a lotica, en vai tu ri silota
  116. Here's a fix, throw out SCO and don't buy anymore. by MrJerryNormandinSir · · Score: 1

    I work as a Unix Consultant for several State Agencies. I am responsable for AIX, HPUX, Linux and SCO servers. I always try to migrate the agencies on SCO to Linux. The truth is most tools that the state
    uses are already ported to Linux. Oracle (most of the Oracle servers are HP 9000 series boxes like the
    L and N series) Anyway It's time to fight fire with fire. I encourage all of you to educate your coworkers and DUMP SCO, Unixware, and anything to do with Caldera now!

  117. beware of contamination by g4dget · · Score: 1
    One particular area of concern is with companies that signed agreements to see proprietary SCO source code and whose programmers now are working on different projects that could use that proprietary code, McBride said. He declined to comment on who could be contributing that code.

    In fact, a number of companies believe that if you have seen their proprietary source code and then work on another implementation, the presumption is that you are violating their copyright. Of particular concern to me in that regard is Sun Java: Sun has, in the past asserted such contamination clauses against other companies. There is a strong possibility that any open source Java project is contaminated if the people as much as looked at any of the source code that Sun makes available. And similar concerns exist for other projects.

  118. Boies wasn't a hero.... by siskbc · · Score: 1

    ...MAYBE his client was. The lawyer is just the mouthpiece - he likely would have defended MS had they approached them first.

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    1. Re:Boies wasn't a hero.... by Cyclometh · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree with you- but to many, he was a hero, the knight in shining armor who came along to lead the charge against the Evil Microsoft Monopoly. Now, to many of those people, he has betrayed them. So the original poster was an ass, but had a good point. Those aren't mutually exclusive. ;)

      You're right- he isn't in the game for some ideal; he's here to make money, and that means fighting for whichever cause can pay him the most.

  119. So what is the GNU people going to do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Forbid SCO from using GPLed code?

  120. Boies is a great attorney by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What are you on, David Boies is a corporate lawer while jonny cochran is a criminal defense attorney. We all no the cases that were lost were going to be lost at the begining it is the american justice system, politically these cases were decided. Boies has had considerable success in the past such as DOJ vs IBM which he won at a time when IBM was very possibly a monopoly.

  121. I Could not agree more by CryptoMate · · Score: 0

    I have experimented almost every UNIX like OS on the market and SCO was the worse of them all. I could not even believe how crap their products are.

    Actually who would use SCO for any new deployments? They are resorting to this legal attempt as their last leg, which will leave them bankrupt. They can only survive, if they build their own Linux distro with easy-special & free migration tools of their previous UNIX OSs.

  122. Make an online fund by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you could get a $10 donation from all the users of free software you could buy it. I would gladly pay.

  123. Re:Here's a fix, throw out SCO and don't buy anymo by datadictator · · Score: 1

    The old SCO used to hand out a free version (which could only handle two simultaneous incoming network connections) of UnixWare 7 at trade shows.

    I think I got about six copies. Then I installed one, played with it for a week. Decided it totally suxored in it's inadequacy and stuck debian back on the box.

    Somebody should suggest to them that the reason they are not making money is not that other people are using the same ideas they had, but that other people actually use it to DO SOMETHING.

    Stupid Corporate Operations.

  124. A note on history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the article:

    Words of SCO's intentions first were reported Friday in the LinuxGram newsletter, which said SCO is considering charging Linux users $96 per processor for rights to Unix software. In a response Monday, SCO said unspecified portions of the story speculated in areas where the company had not made final decisions.

    It should be noted that linux is just a kernel, and not a complete OS by itself. By comparison, FreeBSD includes user-land applications, their own libc and a kernel. It should also be noted that while Linux was just getting started in the .9 days and early 1.0/2.0 kernels, BSD was getting its ass sued off by AT&T (the former owner of SCO, and once the largest legal monopoly on the planet.) As a result of the lawsuit, BSD created a new set of clean-room source codes. Thus, BSD should be immune to any SCO licensing attacks. Linux, however, has escaped paying the cost (either by defending lawsuits, or paying for IP it uses)... at least until now, it seems.

    A simple solution is to ditch the GNU sources that rely too heavily on AT&T unix, and instead port over BSD's libc and other code routines. (This has already been done to some extent, since the original BSD tcp/ip stack is used in Mac, Windows, AND Linux, along with many other OS.)

    You'll have to choke down some BSD license, however. But this is only fair. Commercial companies should be entitled to make a profit off of linux code, seeing as how linux has made a profit (without paying royalities) for using AT&T code.

    I'm sure this post will get a low mod because it doesn't take the "rah rah, free software for all; let's pirate and steal" approach. But this comment is based in reality. And the reality is that one of the best IP lawyers on the planet is comin' to getcha, linux! Get ready to get a new code base for some (but not all) distros, and some (but not all) libraries.

  125. good luck collecting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    any mail (email/snailmail) from SCO or Caldera will meet the bin if I ever see any of it.

    Although I initially started using Caldera Linux and have some boxes that still run Caldera I am now working to replace these with another distro - likely Debian.

  126. Infamous? by Paul+Johnson · · Score: 2, Insightful
    infamous Anti-Microsoft lawyer David Boies

    Famous perhaps, but why "infamous"?

    Is it because he is not on Our Side this time?

    Paul.

    --
    You are lost in a twisty maze of little standards, all different.
  127. Re:Revenue by SubtleNuance · · Score: 1

    So SCO's plan is to allow hordes of Creepy Sales Guys to hock SCO -- when they reach the "target" they get a SCO buyout..?

    Hm, are they going to put SCO in Amway magazines..? is my wife going to be invited to one of her bored-housewife friends' "SCO Party"?

    sheesh.

  128. Don't forget Aimster! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Boies Schiller was also enlisted to save the evil Aimster/Madster from the wrath of the RIAA.

    AKA another colossal failure for Boies.

  129. Coincidence? .. I don't think so! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At the end of that page:


    About SCO

    ... Based in Lindon, UT, SCO has ...

  130. Lawyers are hired guns by alispguru · · Score: 1
    There is nothing 'ironic' about thinking a lawyer is a good guy when he's working for someone you like, and thinking he's a bad guy when he's working for someone you dislike. Good lawyers, especially from big firms, will argue either side of a case, as long as the firm gets paid.

    All this is quite consistent with typical Slashdot views on these subjects:

    Illegal extension of monopoly power is bad, so fighting it is good.

    Software patents, especially old ones that claim to cover common techniques, are bad, and supporting them is bad.

    --

    To a Lisp hacker, XML is S-expressions in drag.
    1. Re:Lawyers are hired guns by geekee · · Score: 1

      The irony is in the fact that slashdotter's are posting that SCO is using the law because they can't compete, and Bois is their lawyer. Bois was also attacking MS, for Sun, Netscape, AOL, etc., who are also used the law because they can't compete. But was Bois or these companies considered bad? No, they were heroes to slashdot. Using terms like monopoly or software patent doesn't change the essence of the irony. It only show how stupid antitrust legislation is when compared aginst patent legislation. One grants a monopoly, the other punishes a monopoly, even if it wasn't granted, but earned.

      --
      Vote for Pedro
  131. Anyone Got a Patent Reference? by Greyfox · · Score: 1
    I went poking around for patents owned by SCO (Or "Santa Cruz Operation") and only found two, both relating to compressing display information for display on remote terminals. While both might be bothersome to the Low-Bandwidth X guys, they were also issued in the '98-'99 timeframe, so finding prior art in X, LBX and Citrix shouldn't be too hard. I'd love to get references to what patents they might be considering so the community could get out its prior art guns. Given the UNIX system venerability, finding prior art to anything SCO coughs up shouldn't be particularly difficult. Should they actually have something truly unique, it should be pretty straightforward to eliminate it from the code base.

    It's a pity you can't go through a company's patent pool and pre-emptively scuttle patents they own on prior art and triviality. The effects of an entire community doing that to a company a few times might convice others that they don't want to bother with this particular bunch of people.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  132. Boies was the guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    who fucked up Al Gore's chances in the Florida recounts.

    He's the unsung villian who turned Al into a laughingstock. If Boies had advised a statewide recount of ALL counties even a week after the election, he would have got it, and would have turned the election. Instead, he wanted just a few handpicked counties, something no one could go along with.

    Of course, Al did follow his advice. For the want of intelligent legal advice, a kingdom was lost. Just in case you go through a divorce, don't sign until you're released from the debts (credit cards you don't want to pay. Boies isn't the only stupid lawyer admitted to the bar.

    1. Re:Boies was the guy by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      Actually you are wrong. The press eventually did a full hand recount and Al Gore still lost in Florida. Get over it.

      I won't hold it against you that you didn't know about the recount though, it isn't like the press put the story on page one or anything since it didn't yield the result they were looking for.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    2. Re:Boies was the guy by LamerX · · Score: 1, Informative
      Yeah and you know why he lost? Because Bush's best brother had the state patrol place road blocks in an area where more than 1/3 of all black voters in the state of Florida go to vote. Read here.

      By him blocking off black voters, who would statistically have voted for Gore, he offset the vote. So no wonder the recount by the media showed that Bush won. Also, since "Dubya" is the media's best friend, I wouldn't trust thier fucking vote recount as far as I could throw it.

      Before you go telling people to get over it, why don't you learn the facts.

    3. Re:Boies was the guy by isdnip · · Score: 1

      No; the previous guy was right.

      Some of the press, in their post-9/11 fealty to King George the Commander-in-Thief, reported in headlines that "Bush won the recount". But the fine print said that it was his *if* they followed Boies'/Gore's recommendation of recounting Democratic counties, or following certain standards. Had the entire state been recounted by a common standard, as the Republicans had originally seemed to accept but Boies didn't, then Gore would have won.

      Yes, confusing. I am going by memory but mainly the point I remember was that the Democrats guessed wrong what strategy would have won.

    4. Re:Boies was the guy by LamerX · · Score: 0

      Or you know what, you could talk to the thousands of black people who got blocked. I'm sure they'll tell you it wasn't a mirage, you redneck asshole.

  133. Unix software patents considered harmful by watchful.babbler · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The issue is *NOT* Patents. It's all about copyright and licensing. Unix dates back to 1969 (see http://www.levenez.com/unix ), and software patents only go back to 1981.

    Actually, there are patents open on *nix: the famous example is patent no. 4,135,240, the setuid patent (this link may work), filed 1973, granted 1979.

    I don't know if there were any post-assignation grants of ownership to the patent, or if Lucent (nee Bell Labs) still owns it.

    A press release from SCO states that Boies, Schiller and Flexner has been retained in an advisory capacity, which isn't unusual when a company is trying to determine an IP strategy. We often forget that lawyers are often used for things other than suing people (such as, uh, determining under what statutes one may sue, who one may sue, contracts to enforce terms over which one may sue ... I'm not helping my case here, am I?). The press release (and this story) indicates that the UnixWare and OpenServer libraries are affected. Unfortunately, their "Intellectual Property Pedigree Chart" is one of the least useful displays possible, since it appears simply to be the "History of UNIX" chart with some colored lines added. Hopefully, a full clarification by SCO will be forthcoming.

    --
    "Freedom is kind of a hobby with me, and I have disposable income that I'll spend to find out how to get people more."
    1. Re:Unix software patents considered harmful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Actually, there are patents open on *nix: the famous example is patent no. 4,135,240, the setuid patent (this link [uspto.gov] may work), filed 1973, granted 1979.

      And expired in 1999...

  134. Nothing new by GreatBallsOfFire · · Score: 0

    Nothing new. Caldera was a real bitch with FreeDOS . They wanted OpenDOS to be what the open source world flocked to, but had an agreement that wasn't even close to being open. They just wanted to rape people by getting them to work on their stuff for free while they lined their pockets.
    SCO (Caldera) sucks and the best thing that could happen is if they just folded after this desparate attempt.

  135. They're just trying to get IBM to buy them out. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nothing to see here. They are just trying to get IBM , or someone else to buy them out so that they will go away. Pretty hard to unilatarily change the conditions on a license after it is issued. SCO is not going to win this.

  136. i think it's obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SCO has been irrelevant for years. Who really gives a damn about the latest lawyer war brewing?
    Nobody in their right mind wants to use SCO UNIX, and only retards buy into the GNU communal groupthink - what, you REALLY think that everything should be free? Sorry people. Time to wake up and get a life.

  137. Mr Boies? by caluml · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Is he this sk8ter boi I keep hearing so much about?

  138. This is SCO's way of saying... by tkrotchko · · Score: 1

    This is SCO's way of saying:
    "We're going down and taking you all with us"

    Thanks, SCO!

    --
    You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
  139. How long do they hold the rights? by SuperFrink · · Score: 1
    Is there a time limit on IP rights? Eventually will we be able to say "Well no we didn't write the original Unix but the code is over 50 years old so we are free to use it?"

    On a lighter note I found this on a Solaris machine:

    $ cat /usr/bin/true
    #!/usr/bin/sh
    # Copyright (c) 1984, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989 AT&T
    # All Rights Reserved

    # THIS IS UNPUBLISHED PROPRIETARY SOURCE CODE OF AT&T
    # The copyright notice above does not evidence any
    # actual or intended publication of such source code.

    #ident "@(#)true.sh 1.6 93/01/11 SMI" /* SVr4.0 1.4 */

    I wonder if I'll get in trouble for that. I'm sure it's been mentioned before. Is the the stuff SCO is worried about?
    1. Re:How long do they hold the rights? by praksys · · Score: 1

      From the article it appears that the IP claims are based on copyrights rather than patents. If that is the case then the IP will probably never expire (see the postings on Eldred vs Ashcroft) and in any case will not expire for many decades (most likely 95 years from the date that the copyrighted code was first writen).

      On the other hand copyrights protect only the code itself, and not the ideas or methods that the code embodies. So in principle someone could write new code that does exactly the same thing as the old code, so long as they show that they made no use of the old code when producing the new code. This is actually a lot harder than it sounds.

    2. Re:How long do they hold the rights? by iggymanz · · Score: 1

      Is the the stuff SCO is worried about?

      No, Sun paid for their System V R4 license (as has IBM, HP, SGI, DEC before they were bought, etc.etc.) I've been trying to search for a list of ALL the Unix vendors that bought it from AT&T or Novell or SCO....

  140. I am less of a lawyer, But by tkrotchko · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't these claims predate the era when software patents were allowed?

    Can software patents be applied retroactively?

    --
    You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
  141. Parent needs a mod-up... by Wntrmute · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...Since it makes a lot of things clear.

    From the CNET article: "If you pull down (Mac) OS X you'll see a lot of copyright postings that point back to Unix Systems Laboratories, which is what we hold."

    From the O'Reilly link in the parent post: Soon after the filing in state court, USL was bought from AT&T by Novell. The CEO of Novell, Ray Noorda, stated publicly that he would rather compete in the marketplace than in court. By the summer of 1993, settlement talks had started. Unfortunately, the two sides had dug in so deep that the talks proceed slowly. With some further prodding by Ray Noorda on the USL side, many of the sticking points were removed and a settlement was finally reached in January 1994. The result was that three files were removed from the 18,000 that made up Networking Release 2, and a number of minor changes were made to other files. In addition, the University agreed to add USL copyrights to about 70 files, although those files continued to be freely redistributed.

    Meaning: The reason why those USL copyrights are in OS X is because the code was taken from FreeBSD, which took the code from 4.4BSD-Lite, which had permission to do so from Novell, the owner at the time of the copyrights. That settlement is still legally binding, even if the ownership of the USL code is now SCO. Looks like SCO has no case against the BSDs (nor against MS or Apple, who use BSD code in accordance with the BSD license.) Linux, I wouldn't be sure about, but I always thought Linux never had any AT&T/USL code.

    1. Re:Parent needs a mod-up... by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      The reason why those USL copyrights are in OS X is because the code was taken from FreeBSD, which took the code from 4.4BSD-Lite, which had permission to do so from Novell

      I do not agree. FreeBSD is allowed to use this code (They had the permission) but Apple is *not*: They don't have the permission, right ? Code rights are still owned by SCO!

  142. Never using SCO again... by rnturn · · Score: 1

    Apparently others feel the same way. The following is a great rant that I snagged a copy of from an online forum a few years back:

    ``SCO should do the industry a favor and disband, pausing only to bulk-format all their drives so that none of the evil source code can inadvertently escape into the world. Their marketing people and their tech support people should be sent to camps to be retrained for professions more suited to their skills and their buildings should be torn down and burned.''

    (My apologies to the originator of this as I didn't get your name -- I was laughing too hard at the time -- so if you see this and want to claim it, let me know.)

    --
    CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
  143. Put Your Money Where Your Mouth Is by ausoleil · · Score: 1

    Caldera Stock Is Dirt Cheap. Buy Them!

    Perhaps it is time for those who disagree with the policies of the board and management of SCO to do the all American thing: buy shares, form a voting bloc, oust the board, end the policy and make SCO release their "patents" into public domain once and irrevocably.

    While you or I as your friendly neighborhood geeks might not be able to pony up the smads to buy a company outright, if enough people who disagree with this so-called "tyranny" did, then the owners of the firm can decide policy by sitting board members. Richard Stallman lives just up the coast and it would certainly be amusing to read THOSE board-room minutes!

    On the other hand, it is entirely possible that those with the most to lose might band together and do something similar...namely, IBM, HP, Red Hat and others. If IBM stood to lose millions, they certainly could adsorb these miscreants and forever end the issue.

    And that, ladies and gentlemen, is precisely the outcome SCO wants. Pump up the stock in an acquisition and call it the end of the day.

    1. Re:Put Your Money Where Your Mouth Is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bad strategy. Ransom Love and Paul Allen, a
      Microsoft behind the scenes inside investor,
      probably have millions of shares of options that
      may or may not be affected by reverse stock splits. Say they have 10 million shares of stock
      split but have not excersized them yet. They as
      board members and leaders, along with co-conspirators on the board pass a stock re-combination order (in order to not be delisted..
      or any such fig leaf of an excuse)...say 4 to one.
      Now every four of your shares is replaced without
      your consent by one share of 'new issue'. This
      dilutes the influence of your stock. Now they go
      ahead an use an option for say 4 million shares.
      This means that if the new stock was selling for
      4 dollars a share, they will buy the stock for
      one dollar a share per previous agreement.
      What, you say the options should be recombined
      too.......no fool, they do not. By their own
      actions they can run the value of your stock down
      to nothing, then recombine it, then buy it all
      back for next to nothing....wash...rinse....repeat.
      How do you think they make money? And they
      will still be able to out proxy vote you. Most
      of you sign proxies when you sign up for brokerage
      houses, meaning you have no voting rights any more
      as you signed them away. Those of you that did not are far, far outnumbered by those fools that
      did, and our capitalist systems use fools for
      fuel. Now be a good sheep and go back to work
      for walmart...scrimp and save some more...and
      bring some money back to us real soon now....
      ya hear!

  144. CALDERA NOW SUX by jamej · · Score: 1

    I'll never touch Calsera again. These tactics are the last refuge of a depleted loser.

  145. Don't trash your archives. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At that point you can either cease use of the patented technology (which may still leave you open to licensing fees for prior sales, depending on how a judge rules - you're not supposed to be liable, but lawyers can make IP law dance a jig), pay the extortion money, or attempt to get the patent invalidated. Good luck on the latter - if they're doing it toward the end of the patent life then you'll have a hard time getting facts for prior work 15 years ago, and you'll probably wind up paying more in lawyer fees than you would have paid in extortion.

    Some of us geeks (like me) are packrats. Several years ago, Wang hit Netscape and AOL with a look-and-feel related patent infringement suit, and Netscape appealed to the Mozilla development community for further evidence of prior art. Netscape's legal team was quite interested in, and I quite happy to lend them an old IBM RJE manual.

    The suit was dismissed not long afterwards.

  146. Re:I love the irony and the smell of doo-doo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Danny boy,
    Haven't we had this conversation about ten times already? Your arbitrary definition of "monopoly" has as much relevance to the real world as your arbitrary definition of "hung."

  147. What the fuck do we care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Any excuse to mod down a known troll is good enough for me. Now if only the morons here would stop falling for the troll and modding them up.

  148. Well... by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 1
    I think you hit it right on the head with this statement:

    I certainly will never use anything from them ever again.

    Nobody's been buying their stuff for a while now... and their busy blaming linux...

    Which may or maynot be true. SCO was a pain in my ass long before I discovered linux...

    --
    Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
  149. Re:I love the irony and the smell of doo-doo by geekee · · Score: 1

    The playing field was level to begin with. MS won the market, and were subsequently penaized for business practices which would not be illegal, but for antitrust legislation.

    It's ironic that you're ripping on MS for supposed IP theft, when no case has been won proving this, and meanwhile the article claims linux is guilty of the crimes that you infer makes MS evil.
    In short, the original poster is correct in pointing out how hypocritical slashdotters are, or at least how inconsistent their arguments are.

    --
    Vote for Pedro
  150. At least they're realistic by imbezol · · Score: 1

    SCO Unix IP

    ROFL

    What do you want to do today Pinky?

  151. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  152. The real story by Error27 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The real story is that Maureen O'Gara and LinuxGram deliberately spread the false rumour about SCO. The only reason I can think of is that they must dislike SCO.

    If you read O'Gara's article carefully she says that she presumed that SCO was going to go after Linux users. She only talked to one person at SCO who thought the idea was retarded. He said going after Linux users would be "suicide." After that most people would probably decide they had presumed incorrectly but O'Gara likes to go with the most damaging thing she can presume even if it's wrong.

    The day after the article SCO said: "SCO has no desire to take legal action against fellow Linux vendors."

    But the rumour had already spread. Stupid reporters took O'Gara's speculations and said, "It was reported that SCO was planning to sue Linux users."

    Here is a factual article:
    http://www.practical-tech.com/business/b01162003.h tm

  153. I know this Darl McBride guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I'm posting as anonCow for obvious reasons:

    I knew this guy when he "worked" for Franklin Covey (see bio here: http://www.sco.com/company/execs/dmcbride.html ). He ran the e-Planning group, trying develop things from online planners to FC's desktop planning software.

    I should say, "ran into the ground." Everything he did sounded nice on the long project plans that he and other around him made, and were full of COMPLETE FREAKING BULLSHIT, every time.

    Darl McBride is a total symbol of all that is wrong with the tech world, especially during the dot-bomb era.

    He knows dick-all, but sounds real good and smooth to other suits.

    He was really hot on WAP (if that tells you anything!) and thought that people would pay to be able to check www.franklinplanner.com (FC's online planner - seemingly now not working) via their cell phones.

    Dumb!

    By the way, he also bought that technology (for the online planner) from two guys who were basically Cold Fusion script kiddies for $10,000,000 ... I spent some time talking to the guys who had to rewrite all the crappy code (non-componentized, no db abstraction, etc. etc. non-optimized). Those script kiddies must have laughed all the way to the bank.

    I mean, can you believe it - buying an online planner! A good coder can whip up a basic one in a week solo!

    Then they spent $250,000 - a cool quarter of a mill US - turning it into a Flash planner ... so it would feel like a desktop app on the web.

    Maybe not such a stupid idea, but they executed it as a total one-off, again with no componentization, etc., so that their strategy (to customize this calendar for big corporate clients) was totally impossible.

    Then his big plan was an app that aggregates all your data (mail, web, documents, contacts, etc.) into one big portal-on-the-desktop application. I forget the name of the company that he did this with, but again it was a total freaking failure.

    FC stock, which had been trading at about $30 in the '98, '99 years, dropped like a stone ... not just because of Darl, of course, but almost certain contributed to by his total freaking cluelessness about anything technical that could actually make (as opposed to burn) money.

    The one group of people that did get rich while Darl was at FC was the lawyers ... they had an insane contract with some top firm, running at something like $15,000 monthly retainer.

    For what is anyone's guess.

    But this really makes sense when I see he's now running SCO. Those dolts are so far gone their exit strategy is to sue the whole world. Maybe they invented the if statement or something, too.

    Rest assured: with Darl McBride at the head of SCO they won't make anything innovative, new, good, or money-making.

    But I supposed the lawyers are still going to be fine.

    Unbelievable ... I never expected him to turn up there.

    1. Re:I know this Darl McBride guy by Bernie+Fsckinner · · Score: 1

      It took me a second read to realize that FC stood for Franklin Covey and not F*cked Company.

  154. Boycott by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Speak with your wallet: Let the boycott begin...

  155. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  156. Apple already lost the "look and feel" issue... by Starrider · · Score: 1

    Likeness is irrelevant, as long as the codebase is different. Remember when Apple sued M$ for infringement? Apple said that M$ stole the look and feel, but M$ was able to prove the underlying code was different. The court sided with M$ (and this is back in the day when M$ wasn't all that gigantic)

    1. Re:Apple already lost the "look and feel" issue... by pediddle · · Score: 1

      Copyright, patent, Copyright, patent, Copyright, patent, ... COPYRIGHT!

  157. End of SCO? by photon317 · · Score: 1
    Does anyone else see this as the end of SCO (Caldera) like I do? I certainly will never use anything from them ever again

    IMHO, Caldera, like their father SCO before, have always sucked. It was probably a good business move for them to start litigating, as it's the only shot they have left at turning a buck. I don't know too many people who ever respected them enough to buy their products anyways.

    --
    11*43+456^2
  158. Apple still has a target on its forehead by larsl · · Score: 1

    I told you so seems the phrase most apropos. The BSD code has made it through the courts as free from Unix copyright, not patents. Apple's vast cash reserves make it a very attractive target for litigation.

  159. True... by siskbc · · Score: 1

    ...but I would argue with the conclusion of hypocrisy (turning on Boies) - I would accuse Boies' fans of being particularly naive. No offense to anyone who has a David Boies Fan Club sticker on their car.

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

  160. On the bar or drinking at it? by DysonSphere · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Boies is noted in the computing industry for working on the U.S. Justice Department's antitrust case against Microsoft and for defending music-sharing site Napster. He also represented Al Gore in the Florida vote-counting controversy during the 2000 presidential elections. "

    With a track record like that, we don't have a thing to worry about...

    --
    Mommy. What's a karma whore?
    1. Re:On the bar or drinking at it? by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Boies has sure come down in the world.

      Why, back in 1998 or so, he was the golden boy who could do no wrong.

      Now it's clear that he's a darling of the press, nothing more. Probably never has been anything more.

  161. brilliant plot by bill... by hpo · · Score: 1

    or is it?

  162. Read what's NOT being said by Black+Copter+Control · · Score: 1
    This comes upon reversal of the SCO Group statement according to Chief Executive Darl McBride of having not engaged Mr. Boies to take legal action against our fellow Linux vendors.

    BZZZ! Rong!

    When reading either a diplomatic or a PR statement (really the same thing), you have to pay attention to what is not said in the statement.

    In the statements by both companies, they made it clear that Boies had not ((YET)) been employed by SCO. They never denied being in negotiations. From those omissions, I figured it was reasonably likely that Boies would be hired in relatively short order (anywhere from days to months).

    If the two companies had never even been in negotiations I would have expected the denials to have been more sweeping -- if only by Boies' organization.
    ___

    If Russia were to launch an ICBM at Washington, they would still have 12 minutes during which they could truthfully say:

    "Russia has never dropped a bomb on an American city. If they had, I think that you would be the first to know"
    Or consider the (true) straight-faced comment by a French diplomat:
    " It's not a bomb! It's a device that explodes."
    --
    OS Software is like love: The best way to make it grow is to give it away.
  163. SCO Group Hires Boies After All by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe those that Caldera/SCO sue would like to
    know that Caldera itself has been the target of
    numerous lawsuits because of its insider trading.
    Seems that a certain Ransom Love, head of Caldera,
    and another man who may be one of Bill Gates
    co-financiers in the Microsoft Corp, Paul Allen, quite literally took Caldera minority interest stockholders for a real cleaning near the peak of
    the dot bomb bubble just before it burst. They
    engineered an initial public offering about April
    of 2001, but the offering was not public. Only
    a few execs could stuff their faces at the table
    of the stock that opened for about 8 dollars a
    share or so. By the time the public was allowed
    to buy, the stock was going for 26 dollars a share
    and being hyped by professional shills. The stock
    hit a high of about 30 bucks a share before going
    into a steep, neverending decline. Along the
    way down, these execs profited from the stock all
    the way down, as periodically they exercised
    unfair options to by tens of thousands of shares
    of stock then valued variousely from 14 dollars
    a share down to less than 2 dollars a share for
    the bargain price of ONE dollar a share. The
    stock so bought was immediately sold, earning the
    insiders a fat profit and accelerating the decline
    of the stock for the rest of us. When the stock
    hit under a dollar a share and was in danger of
    being delisted, they had another trick. Still
    holding many shares, they engineered a 4into1
    reverse split and thereby diluted the remaining
    interests of the minority shareholders to the
    vanishing point. I was one of the suckers that
    wanted to get in on the ground floor. My broker
    was crooked too. I put in an order for the stock
    at 10 per share, but my broker held the order and
    ran it when the stock was 26 per share....against
    my orders. My 1200 dollar investment is now worth
    less than a bucket of KFC Chicken. If and when
    Caldera goes down, I am sure that Love and Allen
    and company will get off scot free and richer yet!
    Maybe that is why they really hired Boies! To get
    them out of all the stockholder lawsuits that i
    am certain are still active.

  164. Facts by Euphonious+Coward · · Score: 1
    The responses to this report are unusually poor, even by Slashdot standards.

    First, nobody said SCO were enforcing patents. They said they were enforcing copyright on certain libraries they publish. There's nothing wrong with that, except it may be stupid if it drives customers to way-cheaper alternatives.

    Second, even if they were enforcing patents, and even if the patents have run out, that doesn't keep them from collecting from anybody who agreed, before the patents expired, to continue paying afterwards. Such a provision is very common in patent license agreements.

    Third, BSD didn't re-implement Unix. Discovery revealed that Bell Labs had stolen lots of BSD code (deleting the copyright notices), which terminally weakened AT&T's case. If the adversaries had been evenly matched, UCB would probably have got the whole shebang free and clear, but as it was they had to let the AT&T lawyers save face by pulling out five of the thousands of files as uniquely AT&T property.

    It's fun to speculate what we would all be running if the case had been tried more quickly, or if the five files had been re-written sooner, or if the BSDs hadn't had their little fratricidal wars before they finally learned to get along, more or less.

  165. I farted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has anybody patented that yet? I'd like to collect royalties from everyone on earth for basically doing nothing....

  166. MOD PARENT DOWN!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    -1, Not Funny

  167. Please help if you can. by PyroX_Pro · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I know this is offtopic, but its the fastest way I can think of. Will everyone be so kind as to beat the hell out of my server:

    [pyroxpro.com]

    so I can get a quick stress test? I have no paid ads, or popups, or crap like that, just want slashdot effect stress tested. *PLEASE*

  168. Old SCO horror stories by CustomDesigned · · Score: 1
    We ditched SCO way back in the days of Xenix. (We switched to Motorola, which was a great Unix vendor). Initially, we had standard tech support. The problem was, that whatever problem we had (for example 'tar' sends error messages to stdout, corrupting our archives!), their answer was always "Reformat your disk and reinstall Xenix". (Thankfully, we were able to replace tar with GNUtar. Thank you, thank you, Richard Stallman. We bought a tape!)

    My boss said that we just needed to pay for the premium tech support to get real help. So we paid $1200 for one year of premium support. The next problem we had involved a system with brand new ESDI drives. ESDI was the Next Big Thing after ST506 for inexpensive disk drives. The problem was that Xenix would crash while formatting the ESDI disk when it encountered a bad sector, requiring a reboot (from floppy, since the system wasn't installed yet). So we called premium tech support, figuring that at least they couldn't tell us to "Reformat the disk and reinstall Xenix".

    You can probably guess what their suggested solution was. When I tried to explain why that solution was impossible, the tech person replied haughtily that *he* was the tech person and if I wanted his help I would have to follow instructions. That finally convinced my boss that it was time to find another Unix company.

    A bit later one of our clients ordered an SCO system against our advice because they claimed to support SMP. It turned out that most IPC did not work between processors (not even shell pipelines!). The fork() call would always create a processor on the same processor, so that login shells would mostly work. But IPC based servers (such as a database server) would fail whenever the client was on a different processor.

    We called our clients premium tech support, and were informed that their system could not possibly be as broken as we described, and we would have to hire a certified SCO consultant at our (clients) expense to verify the problem. So we hired the consultant, and he came out and verified that yep, IPC only works on the same processor, and you can use a special API to assign a process to a particular processor to access a service that happens to be running on that processor.

    The consultant called SCO, and SCO insisted that that was the way it should work, and it was not broken. So we disabled all but one CPU so the system would at least run.

    After this, my bosses theory was that all SCO employees were stoned.

  169. Or if M$ bought them... by femto · · Score: 1
    Now that would be scary.

    Ask yourself why Microsoft hasn't already done this. They would have lots of fun harassing the Linux community. Perhaps it's because they can see that SCO don't have a leg to stand on and it would be $16M wasted.

  170. SCO may have a patent for /proc by thogard · · Score: 1

    Anyone up for some research?

    One of the big ideas for sys v r 4 was the /proc file system and SCO may have the patent for it. It was done in the early days of software patents and either AT&T or Sun or both might have a patent on it. It would be good to find out for sure since I do know some people that might have prior art.

  171. Do you agree with this chart? by JavaJoint · · Score: 1
    Go check out:

    Intellectual Property Pedigree Chart

    Does it seem accurate? (aside from the interesting Copyright on the bottom: "Copyright © 1887-2003, Eric Levenez." ,,,uh, 1887?)

    Somewhat Crazy Orangutans :-(
  172. fa! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Grrrrr!

  173. Caldera Strategy by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    Ok, this will be modded down as troll BUT--

    Caldera has been very fishy for a while-- they have become a relatively minor player in the market though they used to be far more important than they are now. My own viewpoint is that they never really "got it" and tried to pull stupid tactics like this. Look at what Randsome Love has said about the GPL....

    So, I think that thier main strategy right now is this-- buy product lines, sue people, sell the product lines. THey already did this with DR-DOS (somebody had to sue Microsoft on that one, but I wish it was someone else...), and now they are doing this with SCO. Look at DR-DOS for a moment--
    Caldera DR-DOS buys from Novell
    Caldera sues Microsoftg
    Caldera settles suit
    Caldera sells DR-DOS to Lineo

    Caldera buys SCO
    Caldera is looking for people to sue.
    Caldera sues-- who? Microsoft? RedHat? BSD?
    Caldera sells SCO?

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  174. pitr256 is CIA agent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you ever wonder how pitr256 found out about this since he doesn't provide any links?

    Lets assume he is a reporter curious about it. He would not post anonymously if that were the case.

    What if he worked for the law firm? He would not post at all.

    What about if he worked for SCO. He would know that SCO is not going to try charge everyone $96 dollars. (That would be stupid).

    The fact he gave no reason why he should know this information means that he has something to hide. (How he found out).

    The only possible conclusion is that he works for the CIA.

  175. Boycott SCO! by halfelven · · Score: 1

    (the subject says it all)

  176. Windows uses BSD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft Windows uses BSD code. Infact, as I understand it, Windows NT/2000/XP borrows alot of code from BSD. I could be wrong though.

  177. A sign of things to come? by kien · · Score: 1
    I fear that this could be just that.

    In order to help the employees of Linux companies, I have composed this list of

    The Top Ten Signs That Your Linux Company Will Fail
    • 10. Management announces a "wonderful new automation process"...that is written in Visual Basic.
    • 9. You send out an email describing a problem where you had to kill -9 a hung process and the police show up.
    • 8. Overheard at the water-cooler: "Huh? Who is ESR?"
    • 7. Overheard at the water-cooler: "Huh? Who is RMS?"
    • 6. Overheard at the water-cooler: "Yeah, Linus. I remember him...kid with the blanket. I love Peanuts."
    • 5. Management announces a move to Exchange servers for email and IIS for the corporate website because "that other stuff is just too hard!".
    • 4. Overheard at a board meeting: "GNU?? Isn't that like...some kind of llama or something?"
    • 3. You get an email asking for help with a "Pearl scrip".
    • 2. You ask the CEO which desktop (s)he prefers and they answer: "Well, Windows 95 was better than 3.1 but I like XP best."

      And the number one reason to bail from a Linux company is:

    • 1. Official budget for the year: 5% R&D, 5% salary, 10% training, 80% Boies, Schiller & Flexner.


    --K.
    --
    Sig: Bad people happen. Try to avoid being one of them.
    1. Re:A sign of things to come? by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 1
      You mean:
      • 8. Overheard at the water-cooler: "Huh? Who is ESR?"
      • 7. Overheard at the water-cooler: RMS

      *G*

      (disclaimer: actually I like RMS a whole lot, I'm just not at all sure I'd want him on the payroll in corporate-land ;) )

    2. Re:A sign of things to come? by kien · · Score: 1
      LOL!

      actually I like RMS a whole lot, I'm just not at all sure I'd want him on the payroll in corporate-land ;)


      I wouldn't hire him for an authoritarian position, but he's definitely a guy I'd hire to be part of an innovative team. I like free (as in speech ;) thinkers.

      Thanks for the chuckle!

      --K.
      --
      Sig: Bad people happen. Try to avoid being one of them.
  178. Remember the license Caldera issued one year ago by Gunnar+Ritter · · Score: 1

    Exactly one year ago, the late Caldera company made most of its pre-1979 Unix code Open Source, see http://www.tuhs.org/Archive/Caldera-license.pdf. This means that even large parts of the AT&T Unix code are free today - explicitly made free by them. Thus they can (and will) hardly claim that anybody violates their rights concerning basic Unix concepts now.

  179. Gore had *crap* for a case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    And he shot off his own foot, too, by going for a selective recount outside of FL law, instead of following FL law and challenging the result. Gore then would have been able to argue for anything since under the pre-election FL law the court could order any remedy it saw fit. And there would have been time then to do the recount. The FL law had been thought out with the presidential election timeline in mind.

    Gore probably made a political decision that he did not want Bush to be declared the winner and have to challenge that result, but his strategy left him no time to effect a legal challenge to the certification of Bush as teh winner.

    As for the various court decisions, it was the Florida Supreme Court that was acting outside the law in changing the rules of the election after the fact (look up a US Supreme Court case Blacker v. ? or ? v. Blacker to see the case law on that!), and if you ever bothered to read the US Supreme Court decision from the 2000 election you'd know that SEVEN justices voted to end the recounts and kill Gore's chances - not the much-ballyhooed five. Besides, if 5-4 decisions are useless we need to toss out Roe v. Wade and Brown v. Board of Education.

    Boies had shit to work with from the start, then was hamstrung by Gore's political decision to do all possible to prevent any certification of Bush as the winner, even though a quick certification would have given Gore the time needed for a full recount, and would have been following FL law to boot.

    But I guess facts mess up your rallying cries, now don't they?

    1. Re:Gore had *crap* for a case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact is that the supreme court voted along political lines to make sure a republican was elected as the president. The decision had nothing to do with the law or the facts. They in fact admitted as much when they said that their decision should not be used as a precedent from now on.

  180. SCO hires lawyer... by sixtysevenfordpu · · Score: 1

    Any one remember WANG, sued all PC MB manufacturers because they were using "WANG's Proprietry" SIMM holder? Where are they now? Where is Centronics? Can't think of modem company that created "AT" command set but they are no longer around either. This looks like death throes of Caldera/SCO.

    I used to support SCO UNIX, back when they bought "UNIX" name from NOVELL, as far as I can remember back then that's all they bought. As far as I remember HP got some part of that purchase as well, I believe HP got the smarter UNIX engineers.

    I believe that SCO also put into public domain older SCO UNIX about 3 years ago. Also SCO started as a company that Licensed XENIX from Microsoft and went on from there. When I worked at SCO Microsoft owned about 15% of SCO. What was weird was prior to SCO purchasing UNIX, SCO had to pay Microsoft a licensing fee for XENIX source code in SCO Enterprise UNIX. Since Microsoft owned XENIX, and XENIX was derived from UNIX, Microsoft had to turn around and pay licensing fee to UNIX group Licensing for UNIX code in XENIX. What is wierd is that once SCO purchased UNIX, SCO was paying Microsoft for use of XENIX code, Microsoft was paying UNIX for use of UNIX code in XENIX code which then filtered back to SCO.

    I have supported MS-DOS, MS-WINDOWS, APPLE/MAC, SCO Enterprise UNIX, SCO UNIXWARE and IBM AIX, my belief is that "What works, sells".

  181. Playing into Microsoft's hand by beldon · · Score: 1

    Maybe this was all part of the secret deal that Microsoft and (then) Caldera had as part of their settlement two years ago. In the original Haloween Documents, Microsoft mentions using IP as a potential weapon against Free Software. However, if Microsoft were to pursue this line of attack, it would be exposing itself directly to more accusations of anti-competitive practices. However, if it could use some sort of leverage to get SCO/Caldera to do it for them-- especially at a time when Microsoft is making somewhat half-hearted gestures toward cooperating with Free and Open Source software projects-- it would be a different story. By SCO, a Unix vendor, attacking BSD, OS-X, Linux and who knows what else, it looks more like infighting in the Unix world and allows Microsoft to spin the whole thing as just another example of the kind of fragmentation that has hindered Unix in the past.

    Mind you, a lawsuit doesn't have to be succesful-- or even viable-- in order to disuade people from investing in a product. Even the threat of possibly being sued would be enough-- no matter how specious the case.

  182. Software Companies pay attention! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hire only inexperienced kids straight out of college (like me) so you won't have to worry about invading anyone's IP!! If you hire someone experienced they might actually try to use what they've learned at other companies and then you'll get sued!!

  183. DON'T BUY CALDERA/SCO!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Caldera/SCO are so screw! Buying IP to charge/sue their own kind. I mean I've never bought anything from them, since I've always felt that their stuff sucked. But now, I'm definitely going to let possible buyers know what I think. This is so unbelievable.

    DON'T BUY CALDERA/SCO!!!
    DON'T BUY CALDERA/SCO!!!
    DON'T BUY CALDERA/SCO!!!
    DON'T BUY CALDERA/SCO!!!

  184. I agree with them, they are due some bucks . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As I read it, they are sueing over the use of SCO emulation in linux. This allows you to physically take the libraries off a SCO machine (you know THEIR licensed libc and friends) and have linux run programs written for SCO unix and xenix on your box. Now this is blatently stealing the core libraries off a commercial system. I did basically the same personally to run digital unix programs on linux on my alpha, but I also have a licensed copy of tru64 that came with that computer (and I could dual boot it) so I already had the right to use them on that machine.

    If you have a free copy of unixware or the open sco systems that they gave away for personal use, then I would think you have every right to run those libraries on your linux box since you are already licensed for it, but only for PERSONAL use (install a copy of sco on a lil partition and mount that drive and use it directly if your scared).
    Also if you have a licensed copy of a commercial sco for a server machine and you just converted to linux cause you wanted to, you can do the same for commercial use and avoid the issue.

    The rub comes when you get the libraries and just install them without ever having a license for those libraries, which is perfectly understandable.

    Remember everyone, if you dont have any sco programs you need to run, you dont need the darn libraries so what would it matter. After all what still runs on it except crap like medical/dental billing programs and terminal word perfect for sco that anyone would even care about. ie, if you need this, you probably can afford the $150 per server 1000-10,000 times over.

  185. Why don't we just put them out of their misery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Another poster writes:

    OTOH, I doubt it will actually get out of hand, considering our friend IBM's ability to bury annoying IP pranksters like SCO under a ton of patent infringement suits.

    --
    IMHO, we don't need IMB to bury them. At last count, the SCO Group stock (SCOX) is worth $1.51 per share. How about the OSS community getting together to form a consortium (yes, it's not that expensive, if 10 000 people each contribute $1000, you have a fortune) and make SCO's shareholders an offer they can't refuse, ie, buy it for 3 times what it's worth. Hostile takeovers are nasty, but it would give such a consortium full controle over the board, which would let them, say, waver all the company's IP rights and license everything under a BSDish license, and, maybe, force all their employees to do honest work again, maybe on some OSS projects, and, if they file like it, fire McBride, just for the sweet taste of revenge. Who knows?

  186. sigh - no one gets it :)) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    LINUX==Linux Is Not UniX

    http://linux-abi.sourceforge.net/
    anyone know if this is relevant?

  187. Actually, Very very Funny!!! by AmbyVoc · · Score: 1

    "IS there Anyone we can sue?? We are in a desperate need of cash? Please sir, can we sue you for patent/copyright infringements?"

    - Voice of Ambience -

    --
    - Voice of Ambience -
  188. SCO BLOWS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I say we ban anything that SCO offers!

    Wasn't the guy who started Novell also started Caldera. And wasn't it Novell that first sued all these open source projects like FreeBSD, NetBSD, etc... even though they did not contain original UNIX code. All they contained was BSD Lite.

    Caldera bought SCO; and Caldera changed its name to SCO. Same ole crap different name.

    It seems the same greedy blow farts are at it again - trying to sue everybody for the UNIX name.

    Oh, its good they changed there Linux product from OpenLinux to SCO Linux to show how "closed" their version of Linux is. It should be renamed SCUZZ or CLOSED Linux.

  189. Legal Fund for BSDs and Linux by danmorg · · Score: 1

    If SCO decides to prosecute the open source software projects, such as, Darwin, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, or Linux; I suggest we start a legal fund to hire legal counsel to defend these open source software projects from SCO. Maybe, we could even get help from that famous FSF lawyer. What's her name?

  190. Re:I love the irony and the smell of doo-doo by gosand · · Score: 1
    The playing field was level to begin with. MS won the market, and were subsequently penaized for business practices which would not be illegal, but for antitrust legislation.

    That is like saying speeding would not be illegal, if it weren't for speed limits.
    The playing field WAS level, and MS did win it. However, they used the OS market, which they held a monopoly on, to maintain that molopoly and to illegally push into other markets. That is what the DOJ found, and everyone else knew for a long time. What is ironic is that everyone who is pro-MS are saying "hey, that is fair", when in reality all that is wanted is a truly fair playing field.

    It's ironic that you're ripping on MS for supposed IP theft, when no case has been won proving this, and meanwhile the article claims linux is guilty of the crimes that you infer makes MS evil.

    They buddy up to small companies, promising them their "friendship", get on their board, run them into the ground (because they can), and buy up all of their assets. I call that stealing.

    In short, the original poster is correct in pointing out how hypocritical slashdotters are, or at least how inconsistent their arguments are.

    Well, yeah. But in this case, you can't compare the two things directly. In general, the /. crowd (and many others) don't like the idea of "intellectual property". MS uses that concept all the time to strangle whatever they feel like strangling at the time, and now that someone else is trying to play the IP card, it is just as unpopular. The fact that it comes from "within" makes it a little more disgusting.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  191. You best look out! by fruity1983 · · Score: 1

    You didn't close your tag correctly.

    You don't want to hurt yourself.

    --
    I am a viral sig. Please copy me and help me spread. Thank you.
    1. Re:You best look out! by mikehoskins · · Score: 1

      You're right!

      "really_think" != "really think"

      It's almost like running with safety scissors in one hand and a razor in the other! :-O

  192. Speaking of SCO... by crudeboy · · Score: 1

    What ever happened to UnixWare? As I remember it was a quite competent flavor of unix.

  193. Way off topic.... by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

    No depending on how what was recounted and how, the margin of victory changed. All recount methods that limited themselves to counting marks on actual ballots had Bush winning. "Reimagining" the admittedly odd Buchanan votes would have yielded a Gore victory but you just can't do that sort of thing and still call it an election.

    --
    Democrat delenda est
    1. Re:Way off topic.... by kkt44444 · · Score: 1

      That turns out not to be the case. Depending on the exact criteria for counting, either Gore or Bush could have won, with various margins of victory. But if you keep reading way down to the end you find that the absentee ballots from overseas military personel were counted in all of the scenarios, even though most of them lacked postmarks and were actually cast the day after the election. There were enough of those illegal absentee ballots that should not have been counted to change the result to Gore no matter which criteria you use for counting the punch-card votes. The Gore campaign decided not to challenge that issue, but you can't really call it an election if some voters get a second chance to go to the polls after they discover that the election turns on a handful of votes.

  194. Patents can be broader than copyright by yerricde · · Score: 1

    It's like the case of an artist who creates lithographs. He can print as many copies as he wants, and distribute them tho who he wants.

    Lithography, like almost all markets for copyrighted works, is a market characterized by monopolistic competition (many differentiated products that are imperfect substitutes for one another, and no small group of sellers dominates the market price). Because copyright covers expression not ideas, a copyright on a particular lithograph is quite narrow. Some patents are about as narrow as a typical copyright, covering only one process to make a given product, but patents can be much broader and can bring about a real monopoly by themselves.

    If it turns out that SCO does hold broad patents on operating system technologies, then SCO may hold "market power" under the antitrust act and would thus lose the protection of 35 USC 271(d).

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  195. Defend Open Source Against SCO by lrosen · · Score: 1
    This potential threat by SCO is another reason to encourage licensing of Linux under a license containing the Patent Mutual Defense provision that OSI has proposed in the Academic Free License and the Open Software License:

    "Mutual Termination for Patent Action. This License shall terminate automatically and You may no longer exercise any of the rights granted to You by this License if You file a lawsuit in any court alleging that any OSI Certified open source software that is licensed under any license containing this 'Mutual Termination for Patent Action' clause infringes any patent claims that are essential to use that software."

    If this provision were in the Linux license, then Caldera would be unable to sue for patent infringement unless it was willing to forego its license to use and distribute Linux. :-)

    This addresses the potential problem of patent infringement, but it wouldn't help if someone infringed a copyright. That's still a bad.