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More on SCO vs. IBM Lawsuit

Colin Stanners writes "SCO has held a TeleConference and put up a page with information on their lawsuit against IBM. The key phrase (from their complaint) is: 'It is not possible for Linux to rapidly reach UNIX performance standards for complete enterprise functionality without the misappropriation of UNIX code, methods or concepts to achieve such performance, and coordination by a larger developer, such as IBM.' Their page also includes a Q&A, presentation, and exhibits, although these are mostly licensing agreements and not code." Bruce Perens had an interesting comment on the situation, more than one group is trying to organize a boycott, and Newsforge has a story based on SCO's press conference this morning. Newsforge and Slashdot are both part of OSDN.

512 comments

  1. Muahaha by pkunzipper · · Score: 1

    They are in the wreong market to be suing open source companies, especially when they agree to it themselves. (ul)

  2. why? by reaper20 · · Score: 5, Funny

    more than one group is trying to organize a boycott

    The market has been "boycotting" SCO and it's crap for years, not like there needs to be a special effort.

    1. Re:why? by einhverfr · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The market has been "boycotting" SCO and it's crap for years, not like there needs to be a special effort.

      hehehehe Isn't that the truth.

      Better yet--

      Why not have everyone send them letters of complaint, requesting a response. Do this repeatedly....

      $0.37 is not much to each of us, but adding up all the postage and processing labor would likely cause a much higher cost (and lost oppertunity) to them.

      In otherwords, lets apply the principles used in DDOS to saturate their mailrooms :) And we can do this *legally* :-D.....

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    2. Re:why? by TopShelf · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Perens doesn't believe SCO realistically thinks it has a chance of winning this lawsuit. "In filing this suit they have put a gun to the head of their own software business and pulled the trigger. No one in the Linux world will ever recommend them for anything again, and other people will look at this and say 'no, this too nutty, I don't trust these guys.'"

      He hit it right on the head here. After a lawsuit like this, who'd want to work with them? It's not worth the risk...

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    3. Re:why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's boycott all of the Canopy Group companies (the vultures running SCO)!

      If SCO is going down the tubes anyway, at least this will HURT them!

    4. Re:why? by Tony-A · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The future will require a large degree of interoperability. IBM customers do not want AIX or Linux. They want AIX and Linux. This is going in the direction where I should be able to depend on IBM big iron working productively with Sun big iron. (Which has nothing to do with IBM and Sun liking each other;) There is enough force behind Linux that whatever IP SCO had, there's always another way to do things, and SCO gets cut off and isolated. It's like owning a lot of land where the railroad decided not to go.

    5. Re:why? by EinarH · · Score: 2, Interesting
      From the News.com article it seems like they don't want this case to end in the court, but rather to strike a deal with IBM.
      Quoted from the article:
      SCO also sent a letter Thursday demanding that if IBM doesn't meet various demands, SCO will revoke IBM's license to ship its version of Unix, called AIX, in 100 days.

      They _know_ that this will hurt IBM much more than getting an non-disclosure agreement with SCO over some lump of dollars.

      But their argument that Linux could not hav been developed with such a speed compared to UNIX is rather weak.

      --

      Melius mori in libertate quam vivere in servitute.

    6. Re:why? by Tim+Macinta · · Score: 4, Informative
      The market has been "boycotting" SCO and it's crap for years, not like there needs to be a special effort.
      I think that the boycotts being referred to are of the Canopy Group and not just SCO. See this reply to Bruce's comment for a nice list of companies under the Canopy Group. Unfortunately, TrollTech is in that list.
    7. Re:why? by refactored · · Score: 2, Insightful
      SCO is dead and worse than dead. You can't boycott them.

      However, this must be entirely at the behest and with the intent of their majority holding group....Canopy Group

      If someone can create a list of companies that Canopy Group has a majority stake in, then you have a focus for a boycott.

    8. Re:why? by sporty · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I live near a subway. I resent that. It gets really noisy at nite.

      --

      -
      ping -f 255.255.255.255 # if only

    9. Re:why? by intermodal · · Score: 0, Troll

      How is that unfortunate? TrollTech can suck it. If we are going to spread Linux, it's gonna have to be free to get it into business servers licensewise. Otherwise we're a UNIX with no longstanding reputation, which puts us back at square one.

      --
      In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
    10. Re:why? by 1010011010 · · Score: 1


      The Canopy Group is Ray Noorda's investment firm. Remember Ray? Netware ring a bell?

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    11. Re:why? by jbolden · · Score: 2

      I highly doubt that the licenses is revokable in any meaningful sense. Why would IBM have agreed to use SCO IP under terms which allow for SCO to revoke license?

    12. Re:why? by rambot · · Score: 0

      I've got 14 words for you...

      developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers

      http://www.ntk.net/media/developers.mpg

    13. Re:why? by LMCBoy · · Score: 1

      Canopy only owns 5% of TrollTech; hardly a controlling interest.

      --
      Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
    14. Re:why? by Vann_v2 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, IBM never makes bad decisions about how to license operating systems.

      *cough*MS*cough*

    15. Re:why? by Trepalium · · Score: 2

      TrollTech is not owned by Canopy Group. Canopy Group has merely invested in them. So has Borland (8.3%), Teknoinvest (3.3%), Orkla (3.3%), and Northzone Ventures (3.3%), for that matter. TrollTech's employees apparently hold 71% of the stock for the company, so some of that could be held by Canopy Group members that happen to be employed by Troll, but it's hard to say the same can't true about Borland, or any of the other investors.

      --
      I used up all my sick days, so I'm calling in dead.
    16. Re:why? by manyoso · · Score: 1

      Linux is free to get into business servers licensewise. I have no idea why you would think it does not. Linux is licensed under the GPL and has been widely accepted by the business community.

      I have no idea what your problem with Trolltech is. Qt is also under the GPL and has also been widely accepted by the business community.

    17. Re:why? by intermodal · · Score: 1

      well, thats true. I was thinking more along the lines of the development stuff, though. The GPL stuff isn't bringing money to Troll anyway. I should phrase more carefully.

      --
      In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
    18. Re:why? by LMCBoy · · Score: 1

      Huh? Qt is GPL'd, it's as Free as you can get. Nothing is preventing anyone (business or individual) from putting Qt on their servers.

      Are you angry because Qt isn't under some kind of BSD or LGPL license? Is that why TrollTech can "suck it"? Whatever, buddy. The Trolls made a peerless GUI toolkit that the world can use for nothing as long as they keep their derived stuff Free. All they ask is that if you want to make money from your Qt-derived stuff, they get a licensing fee. What's the problem?

      --
      Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
    19. Re:why? by guacamolefoo · · Score: 1

      Perens doesn't believe SCO realistically thinks it has a chance of winning this lawsuit. "In filing this suit they have put a gun to the head of their own software business and pulled the trigger. No one in the Linux world will ever recommend them for anything again, and other people will look at this and say 'no, this too nutty, I don't trust these guys.'"

      He hit it right on the head here. After a lawsuit like this, who'd want to work with them? It's not worth the risk...


      I think that SCO's strategy is to either:

      (1) win and get licensing fees, or
      (2) get a scared, larger company (i.e. IBM) to buy them to eliminate the risk

      SCO is cheap enough. It only has a market cap of 37 MM, even after the recent run-up:

      http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=scox&d=t

      IBM pays 50 MM to buy SCO lock, stock and barrel, and then does what with the System V patents SCO owns? Hmmm? That could be worse than SCO shaking down IBM.

      Incidentally, the SCO stock symbol is SCOX. Something about COX, but I will leave that as an exercise for the reader.

      GF.

    20. Re:why? by dolpho37 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Interestingly SCO itself appears to be boycotting SCO UNIX! Look what they're running!

    21. Re:why? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      What do you mean? IBM had an excellent licenses for DOS. To this day you can buy "PC Dos" from IBM.

    22. Re:why? by manyoso · · Score: 1
      LCMBoy, while I agree with your sentiments, it is important to be clear and precise since so many are confused about the GPL and Trolltech. This is doing a great disservice to the community.

      "All they ask is that if you want to make money from your Qt-derived stuff, they get a licensing fee."


      This is not ture. You are of course free to make money on Qt without paying Trolltech a licensing fee. Qt is under the GPL which is commercially friendly. It is not friendly to _proprietary_ developers and this is where Trolltech get's a license fee.

      commercial != proprietary
    23. Re:why? by MountainLogic · · Score: 1

      All the more reason for IBM to buy SCO. How well do you think SUN will sleap if IBM ownes Unix?

    24. Re:why? by stephanruby · · Score: 4, Informative
      "Why not have everyone send them letters of complaint, requesting a response. Do this repeatedly...."

      It's not that I'm lazy and it's not that I don't trust the company to reply to my complaint, but I think it would be easier to saturate their toll-free sales phone line, or their web form, instead.

      Caldera Product and Sales Inquiries
      1-888-GO-LINUX
      1-888-465-4689
      http://www.caldera.com/company/feedback/

      Incidently, here is the Canopy Group's contact information, but please be aware 801 is not a toll-free number, it's a Utah area code.
      The Canopy Group
      333 South 520 West
      Suite 300
      Lindon, UT 84042
      phone: 801.229.2223 (not a free toll-free number)
      fax: 801.229.2458
      e-mail: info@canopy.com
      http://www.canopy.com/aboutus/contact.htm

    25. Re:why? by u-235-sentinel · · Score: 1

      "In otherwords, lets apply the principles used in DDOS to saturate their mailrooms :) And we can do this *legally*"

      Sorry if this sounds like a poor comment but I personally am in favor of something like that. I've never appreciated the SCO products and after reading this crap I'm even less likely to support it.

      To date I've worked only on a couple of SCO servers. Now I understand why their product is soo bad. Look at the company employees and what they are doing. It explains it all.

      --
      Has Comcast disconnected your Internet account? Same here. You can read about it at http://comcastissue.blogspot.com
    26. Re:why? by u-235-sentinel · · Score: 1

      Oh my. I had no idea these guys were part of that group. I used to work for KeyLabs which was bought out by Exodus Communications (then they both went bankrupt and Keylabs spun off). I've done consulting work for Altiris (nice people) and HomePipeline.com (after 9 months of no payments I had to threaten to sue them to get paid. Can you believe that crap).

      Overall my experience with Canopy has been a good one and Ray Norda really is a nice guy. I've spoken with him during company parties/functions and found him quite personable. That was about 3 years ago. I hope he hasn't changed into this. Would be a shame. He really was a nice guy and fair businessman.

      Hell.. he was the guy who started Novell way back when it meant something. Seems when he lets go control or sells his interest in a company that it goes to hell. I've seen it happen over and over.

      --
      Has Comcast disconnected your Internet account? Same here. You can read about it at http://comcastissue.blogspot.com
    27. Re:why? by LMCBoy · · Score: 1

      Ah, jeez, you are absolutely correct. Thanks for pointing that out.

      --
      Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
    28. Re:why? by chanceH · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Another thing you can do to any company you don't like is to buy 1 share of stock. Then they have to send you reports all the time, and ballots when there are shareholder votes. The ballots come in self addressed stamped envelopes which you should always send back voting a straight party ticket against the reccomendation of the board.

      If you happen to live nearby you could probably even go to some shareholder meetings and get some free refreshments er somethin.

      I don't know if SCO is publicly traded though.

    29. Re:why? by afidel · · Score: 1

      Hehe, who wants to bet that IBM buys SCO when they enter bankrupcy court and fires and blacklists all the executive officers? Buying SCO would be small potatoes considering the $1 Billion they are sinking into Linux and it would protect AIX AND their new Linux investments. Actually they might not have to wait for bankruptcy court, just do a hostile takeover =)

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    30. Re:why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ugh, of course this should be a +5 informative. Or +5 insightful. Perhaps +5 history_repeating_learn_from_it_already?

    31. Re:why? by kfg · · Score: 1

      The difference is that if you own land where the railroad decided not to go you lose the one big killing, but the land is still useful, to everybody.

      You can still farm it, graze cattle on it, build your own private spur line to the main to get your tomatoes and beef to market, etc. All of which is being a good and productive member of the community while making an ongoing, and decent, profit.

      Caldera/SCO is, at least in part, suing because the railroad built its line without them (because they proved themselves without value as partners) and won't carry the third party tainted beef that no one was buying anyway.

      KFG

    32. Re:why? by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      Actually, it might just be easier still to go to http://www.amazon.com and write a glowing review for either Caldera's linux books/software or SCO's books.

    33. Re:why? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      QT is actually released under 4 licenses.

      1) A non commercial license
      2) The QT license which allows bundling with GPL software -- this was originally worked out to resolve problems with Debian
      3) GPL
      4) A fully commercial license

      In effect though (3) is less restrictive than (2) so (2) doesn't in practice exist anymore.

    34. Re:why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Canopy only owns 5% of TrollTech; hardly a controlling interest.
      --
      KStars [kde.org]: The K Desktop Planetarium

      Dear LMCBoy,

      I propose that everybody should boycott 5% of TrollTech. You in particular must modify your KStars program so that 1 in every 20 widgets is a GTK widget.

      - Captain Chaos

    35. Re:why? by waterbear · · Score: 2, Informative

      >Why?

      There's only one answer to 'why' that would make
      normal commercial sense to me: that SCO think
      they can prove IBM used some output X from
      the defunct Monterey project, and prove that
      the way IBM used X violated some
      obligation in the SCO-IBM agreement, and that
      SCO think they can prove this was worth
      megabucks. But then the complaint ought to make
      clear what X was and what the alleged misuse was.

      Maybe IBM will ask the court to either
      extract these details out of SCO so IBM can know
      specifically what they are accused of, or throw
      the case out.

      My guess is that if the case goes forward at all
      the area of dispute will turn out much less
      wide than it looks from the vagueness of the
      complaint and unsustainable overbroad statements
      in it.

    36. Re:why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Buy SCOX!

      Er, wait. If you had done that yesterday you would have made a 41% profit today.

      SELL! SELL! SELL!

    37. Re:why? by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      Good points. I was being unfair to ghost towns.

    38. Re:why? by kfg · · Score: 1

      I live in one. I kind of feel an obligation to stick up for them. What can I say?

      They're actually good places to live if you can find a way to extract money from the city where all the people went. And you don't have all those people around to be annoying all the time.

      KFG

    39. Re:why? by Art+Tatum · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately, TrollTech is in that list.

      Nothing unfortunate about it. Use GNUstep instead. :-) Hey, it's a much more elegant design anyway!

    40. Re:why? by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Actually interesting--

      Digital sold DR DOS to Netware, who sold it to Caldera who sued Microsoft.

      AT&T sold UNIX to Netware, who sold it to SCO who were bought by Caldera and are sueing IBM.

      Now they can buy Netware and sue Microsoft?

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    41. Re:why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless you want to code in Windows or Mac as well as Unix, which is really the whole point of using Trolls X-platform toolkit...

    42. Re:why? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      That's ironic; I remember reading quite a bit how when the American railroads went to the west coast, quite a few people were fairly upset about the railroad going through their land because they weren't paid enough: thus, it was a bad thing. Noteably, the Jessie James Gang, but quite a few others, were upset by the railroad.

      On the other hand, Jessie James' personal economics greatly improved after the railroad effectively stole his land...

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  3. This reminds me of... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Monkey vs. Robot the classic tale about the constant battle between monkeys (who live in the jungle) and robots (who work in the factory). MONKEY... VS... ROBOT...

    1. Re:This reminds me of... by jfunk · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I'd bet that 99% of Slashdotters have never heard of what you're referring to.

      I'm thinking of the soundtrack right now, as I was listening to it this morning. We're currently listening to the monkey's drum solo. A couple of songs will play, then we'll get to hear the robot's drum solo.

      I can't wait, myself.

  4. Whatever SCO by TheViffer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "It is not possible for Linux to rapidly reach UNIX performance standards for complete enterprise functionality without the misappropriation of UNIX code"

    Umm SCO is no gem in the rough. My opinion Five years ago Linux was a better choice then that of SCO.

    Sounds like Penis envy to me.

    Sorry, it was the dedication of thousands of programmers and millions of testers that made Linux what it is today.

    --
    -- Knowing too much can get you killed, but knowing who knows too much can make you rich.
    1. Re:Whatever SCO by tuffy · · Score: 2, Funny
      "It is not possible for Linux to rapidly reach UNIX performance standards for complete enterprise functionality without the misappropriation of UNIX code"

      Maybe SCO should subpoena IBM for the Linux source and find the offending code themselves ;)

      --

      Ita erat quando hic adveni.

    2. Re:Whatever SCO by TaliesinWI · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yeah, no kidding. I switched more than one client away from UnixWare to Linux back in 1997 and 1998, well before IBM was seriously involved, AND got all the legacy applications running under the SysV emulation, even back then. Some of those systems are still running (they never really needed to be bleeding edge), and their upgrade path has been made an order of magnitude easier (and cheaper) by switching.

      SCO was irrelevant five years ago. They figure that the possibility of getting any money from IBM beats killing off what little credibility they might have, because they're sinking anyway.

    3. Re:Whatever SCO by b_pretender · · Score: 1
      It's like when I used to play Euchre with my friend Ryan. Everybody would accuse us of cheating with comments such as: "You must cheat at Euchre because whenever you are partners, you always win".

      The same people who considered that to be valid logic when on to become doctors and engineers.

    4. Re:Whatever SCO by SN74S181 · · Score: 1
      Umm SCO is no gem in the rough. My opinion Five years ago Linux was a better choice then that of SCO.


      SCO the product is a seperate question from SCO the company that holds copyright on all the AT&T Legacy code.

      Unless I am mistaken, five years ago SCO didn't own the copyright on the entire AT&T Unix code base.

    5. Re:Whatever SCO by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Lots of people do cheat when they play euchre as a team. At least that's the case online at gaming sites like pogo.com, where all four players are at seperate locations playing the java-based euchre pogo offers. In a real physical euchre game the teammates can't have an Instant Message client going between each other that the other team doesn't see.

    6. Re:Whatever SCO by tomhudson · · Score: 2, Informative
      Nah, that would not only destroy any chance of a lawsuit, but, after having read the source code, if they continued with their lawsuit in bad faith, they would be open to counter-suits.
      SCO monkey:"psst - we already have the source, we've sold linux in the past."
      SCO PHB: "You're fired!"

      Mind you, just look at their stock symbol : SCOX - say it fast, it sounds like "sucks cocks", or in this case "$uck$ cock$"

    7. Re:Whatever SCO by mkldev · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and knowing IBM, I'd imagine their lawyers have already assembled a three foot tall stack of patents that SCO violates.... There's not a company in the world---MS included---that would be more suicidal to sue than IBM.

      --
      120 character sigs suck. Make it 250.
    8. Re:Whatever SCO by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      SCOX - say it fast

      Skokes.

      it sounds like "sucks cocks"

      I think you're mispronouncing "cocks."

      --

      I write in my journal
    9. Re: Whatever SCO by Black+Parrot · · Score: 4, Insightful


      > > "It is not possible for Linux to rapidly reach UNIX performance standards for complete enterprise functionality without the misappropriation of UNIX code"

      > Sounds like Penis envy to me.

      It's an incredibly stupid a priori claim to base a court case on, for sure. Do they expect the court to just accept it as a given and move directly to the penalty phase?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    10. Re:Whatever SCO by jbaltz · · Score: 1
      There's not a company in the world---MS included---that would be more suicidal to sue than IBM.


      Preach it brother!
      Just ask the US Government.

      --
      I am the Lorvax, I speak for the machines.
    11. Re:Whatever SCO by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      There's no "e" after the "x", so the preceding "o" is soft. Not like Coke.

      Damn 2-minute posting delay. Maybe Malda can change it so that people who have half-decent karma can have a lower delay?

    12. Re:Whatever SCO by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      There's no "e" after the "x", so the preceding "o" is soft. Not like Coke.

      But SCO is not pronounced "scaw." It's pronounced "skoh." So the stock symbol SCOX would be pronounced "skoh ecks," which when said fast sounds like "skokes." Or possibly "skwecks," but that's just silly.

      Unlike this thread...

      --

      I write in my journal
    13. Re:Whatever SCO by OmniGeek · · Score: 1

      Unlike this thread...

      Yeah, it is indeed all ronzelle between... ;-)

      --

      "My strength is as the strength of ten men, for I am wired to the eyeballs on espresso."
    14. Re: Whatever SCO by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      SCO may well be that stupid.
      Is SCO the only distributor to not have a patch for the sendmail thingee?
      SCO Security
      "We are aware of the CERT CA-2003-07 sendmail issue, and are currently working on fixes for our supported distributions. We will announce the fixes via our normal channels:"

    15. Re:Whatever SCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SCO did but SCO != caldera back then.

    16. Re:Whatever SCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heh - I can beat that. In the summer of 1993 I replaced a machine running SCO Xenix/386 with SLS Linux 1.01 (featuring the 0.99p8 kernel, IIRC) Granted, Xenix/386 was getting a little old by that time (SCO was transistioning everyone to their UNIX product line by then) but the customer didn't want to spend all that money on an SCO upgrade. Since this machine wasn't their main server (they had another machine running Microport UNIX - another x86 UNIX vendor from the 80's) I decided to take a big risk and do my first-ever linux install.

      I went to the local university and downloaded (painfully slowly) SLS linux 1.01 onto a stack of 1.2M 5.25" floppies (from tsx-11, one of the few linux ftp sites at the time) I remember spending a long day collecting patches to support the various hardware this machine had (QIC-02 tape drive, multiport serial...) and making a frankenkernel but it all worked and was actually MORE stable than Xenix had been (the tape driver in Xenix had been causing spontaneous reboots occasionally - the linux driver never had that problem)

      Very soon afterwards the customer started moving all of their stuff to the linux machine.

      Pretty much every piece of hardware in the machine has been replaced several times (except for a multiport serial card which is STILL in there and is still serving a couple dumb terminals) The hardware has gone from a 486/25 to a p3/650 or something like that. It's been transitioned from SLS to Slackware and later to RedHat (with an upgrade to RH8 scheduled for the near future)

      I guess this summer will mark its ten year anniversary of the SCO->linux transition. I haven't installed an SCO product since.

    17. Re:Whatever SCO by Jack+Hughes · · Score: 1
      Mmmm... I switched a 386 box from SCO to Linux back in 1994/1995. Linux was far better even way back then. I wanted "diald" to do on demand dialing and have a ppp stack instead of manually using cu and slattach or whatever - because we had just got our modem based internet connection in November 1994.

      Moral: It was the internet that did for SCO. Linux is a child of the internet - the perfect internet operating system - developed on, with and for the internet.

    18. Re:Whatever SCO by mandolin · · Score: 1
      AND got all the legacy applications running under the SysV emulation, even back then

      Heh. The SCOsource guys might actually want to talk to you, if your "legacy" apps aren't statically linked (ie you're using sysv shared libs to run 'em). I don't know what the rules for static linking are.

    19. Re:Whatever SCO by deaddrunk · · Score: 1

      This is even sillier than Lihnux vs Linnux pronunciation arguments.

      --
      Does a Christian soccer team even need a goalkeeper?
    20. Re:Whatever SCO by b_pretender · · Score: 1

      I guess that I should have been more clear. I was play Euchre in the real world (aka Meat-space). I've played online with other people when my teammate and I sat on computers right next to each other. We could see each other's screen.

  5. In other words... by GeckoX · · Score: 2, Redundant

    In other words SCO appears to believe that fair competition is unfair...to them anyways ;-)
    It must be anti-competitive than right? heh, what a joke.

    SCO -> Flames -> Crash -> Burn...bubye, don't let the door hit you on the way out...

    --
    No Comment.
  6. Harsh link! by TopShelf · · Score: 4, Funny

    The lawsuit information found from the SCOSource link is an audio recording - it'll take about 1/10th of a normal /. effect to bring that to its knees!

    --
    Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    1. Re:Harsh link! by TheViffer · · Score: 1

      I bet you a maxed out IBM Blade Center running Linux would be able to handle the load. :-P

      --
      -- Knowing too much can get you killed, but knowing who knows too much can make you rich.
  7. However it turns out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    you have to admit that SCO is the better platform for rapping, because SCO rhymes with "fro", "dough", and "blow".

    1. Re:However it turns out by Garfunkel · · Score: 0, Funny

      yeah, but linux has:
      sucks
      bucks
      ducks
      fucks
      trucks

      You can make a pretty good rap out of that :)

      --
      -jay
    2. Re:However it turns out by JimDabell · · Score: 4, Funny

      Not to mention the all-important "yo".

    3. Re:However it turns out by Homebrewed · · Score: 4, Funny

      You left out the most important one-- "slow."

    4. Re:However it turns out by Dr+Caleb · · Score: 4, Funny
      So?

      --
      "History doesn't repeat itself, but it does rhyme." Mark Twain
    5. Re:However it turns out by krahli · · Score: 0

      You left out the most important one- How about "ho"?

    6. Re:However it turns out by TheViffer · · Score: 3, Funny

      Oh no ...
      Here we go ..

      --
      -- Knowing too much can get you killed, but knowing who knows too much can make you rich.
    7. Re:However it turns out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aw shucks.

    8. Re:However it turns out by FPCat · · Score: 1

      How about: SCO wants IBM to be its Ho?

    9. Re:However it turns out by Ozric · · Score: 1

      and schmo...ho ho ho.

    10. Re:However it turns out by jsupreston · · Score: 1

      gi...Yogi! I know it's flamebait, but I finally saw the commercial for the first time the other day.

      --
      "It's a dog eat dog world out there, and I'm wearing Milk-Bone underwear."- Norm (from Cheers)
    11. Re:However it turns out by RadioTV · · Score: 3, Funny

      Stop it now - I mean it
      Anybody want a peanut

      --
      I have great faith in fools - self confidence my friends call it. - Edgar Allan Poe
    12. Re:However it turns out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      you have to admit that SCO is the better platform for rapping, because SCO rhymes with "fro", "dough", and "blow".
      Karma ho.
    13. Re:However it turns out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So...

      Yo..Ma ho had to blow some dough on SCO for her main bro wid da' fro.

    14. Re:However it turns out by furiousgeorge · · Score: 1

      In my old office, whenever one was forced to deal with a Sco box you were expected to yell out SCO!!! (Rhymes with DOH!!)

    15. Re:However it turns out by Jester99 · · Score: 1

      Word.

    16. Re:However it turns out by alonsoac · · Score: 1

      d'oh!

    17. Re:However it turns out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SCO is trying to make IBM its HO!

    18. Re:However it turns out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh! Doh!

    19. Re:However it turns out by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      how can you forget Tux, the mascot?!??

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  8. Upside by skroz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Interesting thing... if/when this resolves itself, and it's shown that SCO's allegations are false, and Linux DID scale to those performance levels in such a short period of time, this will weigh extremely favorably on the side of the effectiveness of the open source model.

    --
    -- Minds are like parachutes... they work best when open.
    1. Re:Upside by pla · · Score: 4, Insightful

      this will weigh extremely favorably on the side of the effectiveness of the open source model.

      As much as I would like to agree with your sentiment, unfortunately, it doesn't hold true. As the result of defeating a strawman, you get... A pile of straw.

      I personally find it amazing that SCO would even suggest this as a reason to sue for IP violations. The speed of Linux development has NO connection whatsoever with SCO, aside from what code they VOLUNTARILY added to the open source community. And, even if their claim did have even a hint of validity (which it does not), UCB, AT&T, and DEC (aka Compaq) would all have just as much, if not more, right to sue by that logic.

      Sad.

      But, just to save people the trouble of rumblings of a boycott... What exactly would folks boycott? This suit comes as an end-of-life move by a defunct company, apparently looking to utterly destroy their once-good reputation to toss a few bucks to their stockholders. They just don't have anything (of relevance in the past decade) to boycott About the only thing that might get the message to them consists of those same stockholders waking up, realizing that, regardless of the outcome of this frivolous suit SCO will no longer exist, and dumping their shares as fast as physically possible. Perhaps killing SCO before this all goes through would remedy the situation, but nothing else will.

    2. Re:Upside by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      I dont see it that way. If SCO loses, then everything is pretty much the way it was.

      If SCO wins (even if IBM settles), linux kernel hackers are instantly a bunch of hacks who stole someone elses code.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    3. Re:Upside by pyrrho · · Score: 1

      Perens was mentioning that they are run by the "Canopy Group", meaning actually micromanaged as well as owned.

      I'm just repeating here, I don't know the details myself, but Canopy Group has investments in many companies, including TrollTech.

      ?

      --

      -pyrrho

    4. Re:Upside by fanatic · · Score: 1

      a defunct company, apparently looking to utterly destroy their once-good reputation

      Say what? SCO has sucked for years. Their tech support totally blew (AFTER charging serious money). (This was partially offset by one of their tech guys, Bela Lubkin, spending gobs of time on Usenet. I hope he had the chance to move on to greener pastures, thopugh google shows him recently posting from the caldera.com domain.)

      If you wanted UNIX on Intel, it was at one point the main choice. Linux and *BSD ended that. They've been dead meat for years. This is their death rattle. Good riddance.

      --
      "that's not encryption - it's a new perl script that I'm working on..." - from some Matrix parody
    5. Re:Upside by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      I dont see it that way. If SCO loses, then everything is pretty much the way it was. If SCO wins (even if IBM settles), linux kernel hackers are instantly a bunch of hacks who stole someone elses code.

      There is one other option: IBM buys SCO for current value, around 35 million, and GPLs it. They already are developing a great reputation in the Linux community for contributions (I have run Linux on IBM dual cpu servers for years, love them). This would generate a TON of good will, would publicly release some decent code to the community, and increase their business.

      IF they did that, they would be smart to KEEP the name UNIX proprietary itself, just releasing the source. Then they could use the Unix brand for marketing purposes, to make their offerings 'look' better, or they COULD even sell SCO for $9.99 just to drive down the perceived value of it (what they are accused of). Either way, Sun ain't gonna like it, HP either.

      I think SCO wants ibm to buy them out and be done with it. (From Novell paying 750mil in "92 to 35mil market cap. now) If you read the full complaint, it may LOOK weak to us, but to the average juror, it would be confusing. And since its civil (win on preponderance, not 'beyond a reasonable doubt') its a gamble that could cost more than the 35 mil anyway. Even if not, it has enough to complain about to cost several million in legal fees, not counting customers worried about IBM.

      1. Buy it, GPL it, bathe in the glory.
      2. Be the #1 source for Linux/SCO/Unix in sales and development. They already make kick ass hardware to go with it.
      3. Profit. No ??????? step necessary.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  9. Isn't SCO under a de facto boycott? by pete-classic · · Score: 4, Interesting
    more than one group is trying to organize a boycott


    Everyone who has installed SCO (any type or version) in the last year raise your hand.

    I don't think there is much of a point in boycotting a company who has clearly turned away from producting anything and now simply exists to litigate based on its IP.

    -Peter
    1. Re:Isn't SCO under a de facto boycott? by sweetooth · · Score: 1

      Read the Bruce Perens comment posted above and then the list of companies that the Canopy Group is a part of in a post below his. There are plenty of ways to hurt the Canopy Group through boycotts.

    2. Re:Isn't SCO under a de facto boycott? by Tool+Man · · Score: 1

      re: "I don't think there is much of a point in boycotting a company who has clearly turned away from producting anything and now simply exists to litigate based on its IP."

      Can anyone say "divine"? Of course, they just filed Chapter 11, but they were trying much the same with IP they acquired.

    3. Re:Isn't SCO under a de facto boycott? by thesolo · · Score: 1

      I don't think there is much of a point in boycotting a company who has clearly turned away from producting anything and now simply exists to litigate based on its IP.

      While I agree with this, there is real damage to be done by boycotting everything under The Canopy Group, the venture capitalists behind SCO. Guess who falls under their umbrella? Troll Tech.

      That's right, a boycott of The Canopy Group is a boycott of QT and their derived products. So does this mean that KDE now has to be boycotted?? Well, I'm not the one to answer that. But it does show you how far-reaching a full-on boycott could be.

  10. Hey SCO! Fix the sendmail exploit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Maybe SCO/Caldera could hire some technical people to fix serious security exploits instead of spending money on lawyers. Instead, what does SCO post a week after the exploit on their security site?

    We are aware of the CERT CA-2003-07 sendmail issue, and are currently working on fixes for our supported distributions. We will announce the fixes via our normal channels:

    Maybe I can sue SCO for $1B when my sendmail gets hacked. SCO SUCKS!
    1. Re:Hey SCO! Fix the sendmail exploit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hahaha amazing. thanks for bringing that to light. I'm sure youre probably the only one visiting the SCO website anyway so nobody else is apt to notice.

    2. Re:Hey SCO! Fix the sendmail exploit! by cd_pub_more_beer · · Score: 1

      SCO = Suckass Computer Organization IMHO

      --
      Getting into a fight on the Internet is like winning 1st place in the Special Olypics, when its all over your still reta
    3. Re:Hey SCO! Fix the sendmail exploit! by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      We are aware of the CERT CA-2003-07 sendmail issue, and are currently working on fixes for our supported distributions. We will announce the fixes via our normal channels:

      What!!!??? Incredible. I didn't believe you, so I checked and there it is.
      SCO Security

      I thought that thingee was coordinated so everybody could release the patches all at the same time, with nobody even breaking a sweat. (instead of the usual melee;)
      Either SCO has no one semi-competent left, or they are already "out of the loop". (for a definition where OpenBSD and RedHat are in the same loop;). Incredible!

    4. Re:Hey SCO! Fix the sendmail exploit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They can't afford anyone compotent. They spent it all on lawyers. Maybe when they get that cool $1B from IBM they will be able to afford some help.

      This is the final straw... Time to move to Linux.

  11. wtf? by Visaris · · Score: 1, Troll

    It is not possible for Linux to rapidly reach UNIX performance standards for complete enterprise functionality without the misappropriation of UNIX code, methods or concepts to achieve such performance, and coordination by a larger developer, such as IBM.

    Of course! Nothing can possibly be as good as your product unless they steal from you! I mean, after all, your product is perfect isn't it? If the person who made that comment meant it, I can't understand how they came to be in such a profession when they are clearly clueless. If they didn't mean it, I'm not so surprised. Liars are successful these days.

    --

    I am a viral sig. Please help me spread.
    1. Re:wtf? by anon*127.0.0.1 · · Score: 1

      They're not saying "it is highly unlikely", or "it would be extremely difficult"... they're flat out calling it an impossibility. Maybe there's some obscure law of physics involved here, or perhaps SCO has some elegant mathematical proof for this whole statement.

      --
      I am NOT a man!
      I am a free number!
    2. Re:wtf? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If the person who made that comment meant it, I can't understand how they came to be in such a profession when they are clearly clueless.


      I guess you've never had the opportunity to work with engineers and managers from SCO. I would guess "clueless". Pretty lame bunch overall, in my experience. Every tried to teach a monkey to play a Mozart sonata on the piano? That's analogous to working with SCO.


      Golly, that was a childish, vile rant, wasn't it? Better post anonymous.

    3. Re:wtf? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah...There's no way they'd be able to fund the research :)

  12. Ha ha! You beat me to it! by Praxxus · · Score: 4, Funny
    How do you boycott a product that nobody is using, anyway?

    Does SCO even care that they:
    1. Look like big, broke whiny crybabies
    2. Are shooting themselves in the feet, knees, hips, spines, etc. and can kiss any business (save for the Rambus business model) goodbye for the rest of their pitiful existence??

    I hope IBM bitchslaps them. Litigiously speaking, of course.

    --
    --
    Okay, I got Linux installed. So where's the free beer everyone keeps talking about??
  13. GPL in court by watzinaneihm · · Score: 3, Insightful

    From bruce perens article:
    SCO is also party to the GPL, which invalidates their patent portfolio for any of their patents that happen to have been used in a Linux system that they distributed. Under the GPL terms, if you distribute your patented practice in GPL software, you must grant a license to everyone to make use of that patent in any GPL software, for any field of use.
    Would be interesting if it comes to court, if nothing else, just to see just how enforcable GPL is.

    --
    .ACMD setaloiv siht gnidaeR
    1. Re:GPL in court by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 1
      With Big Blue behind it, it WILL be enforceable :)

      --
      Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
    2. Re:GPL in court by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 1
      But it turns out that SCO owns very few patents, and no significant ones.

      Bruce

  14. FYI: press release by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    I don't know if anyone posted this yet, but the official press release is here.

  15. Boycott SCO! by sulli · · Score: 1, Funny

    But I already don't use SCO! Nonetheless I'll use them even less!

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
    1. Re:Boycott SCO! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Nonetheless I'll use them even less!

      Is less more than more?

  16. Valetine's Day Masacre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    1. Re:Valetine's Day Masacre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $$$$$exyGal ignored my Valentine day request for a date

      Aww, and you have so much in common, too..

      You both like computers,
      You both troll /.
      You both have a penis.

  17. What a tacky way to extort money... by KCardoza · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's fairly obvious to me what this is all about; Linux is stealing UNIX marketshare, so SCO is going to do everything it possibly can to discredit it's competitior. It's typical FUD. Unfortunately for SCO, they're too late. IBM has made too much money from linux to allow a little gnat of a company like SCO push it around. Even if this lawsuit isn't thrown right out of court, it'll be proven in short order that none of the code to the linux kernel comes from SCO's IP. ipso facto, IBM can countersue SCO into oblivion.

    At least, that's how I see it.

    --
    Despite millions of years of evolution, human beings, taken as a group, are still stupid, panicky animals.
    1. Re:What a tacky way to extort money... by benzapp · · Score: 1

      ipso facto, IBM can countersue SCO into oblivion.

      Non sequitor

      Perhaps IBM can prove SCO's allegations are false, but fail to see how it is a self evident fact that IBM can countersue. On what grounds? Even if they could countersue for SCO making a frivolous claim, all they could recoup is their court costs. I highly doubt that will destroy them.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    2. Re:What a tacky way to extort money... by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      IBM owns several thousand patents on all sorts of OS components. They don't enforce most of them, but they are there just for cases like this.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    3. Re:What a tacky way to extort money... by jedidiah · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You don't need any real reason to sue. SCO's case clearly demonstrates this. SCO is weak and dying, they don't need to recieve a judgement against them to be done in. IBM could simply bury SCO in a sea of paper.

      Think CivCTP here: the lawyer unit.

      SCO is playing dirty against an enemy that has ample resources to retaliate in kind.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    4. Re:What a tacky way to extort money... by back@slash · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Exactly. Ordinarily you wouldn't throw stones from a glass house, but if your house is about to be run over by a bulldozer you'll be more inclined to chuck away.

      --
      This comment was generated by a Squadron of Ultra Ninjas
  18. I asked this before, answer this time by stratjakt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What if SCO ends up being right in court?

    Why would they poke the T-Rex that is IBM with a stick, unless they think they can bring it down?

    We can sit around laughing or bitching or whining or moaning, but what will happen if there turns out to be code in Linux that we dont have the rights to, either by way of trade secrets or patents?

    Can all the SysV and other SCO stuff be removed without killing Linux? Would a setback be weeks, months, years, or would it be the end?

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    1. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by Scarblac · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We can sit around laughing or bitching or whining or moaning, but what will happen if there turns out to be code in Linux that we dont have the rights to, either by way of trade secrets or patents?

      They distribute their own distro of Linux, Caldera Linux. So all the code there is in Linux, they have distributed themselves under the GPL. So we have the rights to it. This is really quite funny :-).

      --
      I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
    2. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      We can sit around laughing or bitching or whining or moaning, but what will happen if there turns out to be code in Linux that we dont have the rights to, either by way of trade secrets or patents?

      And if Caldera has included those binaries, we still have rights to it :-D

      So they could get damages from IBM, but this still looks like a derivative words lawsuit, and it s very murkey territory. But Linux Users will be unlikely to be affected.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    3. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      We're all too busy slagging SCO to answer that. It does bring to mind the question of wether IBM is at fault for corrupting the Linux source by bringing in dubious code. Could it be IBM hasn't been as good for Linux as many have been implying?

      Just some thoughts for discussion.

    4. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by SquadBoy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Simple answer (Stolen from someone much smarter than me)

      This is suicide by cop[1].

      Or it's something similarly twisted. SCO is simply dead. The back
      story may be interesting though.

      The news.com story notes that SCO may be pissed over the failure of
      Project Monterey, which was aimed at reimplementing GNU/Linux as a
      proprietary Unix for the Itanic (that's just so wrong so many ways I
      won't even start).

      Just a few off-the-cuff observations.

      - You don't launch a land war in Asia.

      - You don't launch a billion-dollar patent battle with IBM, if your
      strategy is in fact to win that battle.

      - Corrolary of the above is that you're either trying to lose, you're
      not calling the shots, or you're aiming to win another battle.
      These are not mutually exclusive, though options 2 & 3 are the most
      likely pairing.

      - Aside: IBM generates over $1b (approaching 1.5b IIRC) annually in
      patent licensing revenues. Their patent portfolio numbers over
      22,000. IBM is the single largest holder and recipient of US patent
      grants.

      - Theory: somebody's trying to sow patent problems for IBM, and/or
      tie up IBM legal in a suit, while somebody else pulls a fast one.

      - Theory: Caldera wants to prod IBM into reviving the DR-DOS suit (or
      something similar) against Microsoft (or other parties). I find
      this unlikely, but mention it for completeness.

      - Theory: Caldera's management is trying to avoid breach-of-
      fiduciary-interest or other similar charges, while disposing of the
      company while putatively pursuing a fiduciary interest of the
      company.

      - Theory: This is Wang v. Netscape again. In that case, Microsoft
      bought a significant interest in the dying Wang corporation, and
      Wang pursued patent suits against Netscape. The patent was
      eventually invalidated, but such battles are costly.

      - Theory: (left field variety) LFP or similar[2] have corraled
      Caldera into making a blatent demonstration of just how broken the
      patent system is by going after its (the patent system's) largest
      beneficiary.

      Watch this space, things got interesting.

      Peace.

      --------------------
      Notes:

      1. If you're not familiar with the term: a perp assaults a police
      officer, in such a way that the cop has to use deadly force. This
      being the apparently desired outcome of the perp.

      2. LPF: League for Programming Freedom, an anti-patent group associated
      with Richard M. Stallman.

      Credit to Karsten on this one. This is good enough that it needs to be posted here.

      --

      Cypherpunks: Civil Liberty Through Complex Mathematics. Those who live by the sword die by the arrow.
    5. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Can all the SysV and other SCO stuff be removed without killing Linux?

      Yes

    6. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      slackware doesnt have the sysv style init, but it does have other SysV stuff, like SysV IPC.

      This suit is about a little more than the order your startup scripts run in.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    7. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You don't launch a land war in Asia.

      Yup, file that bit of wisdom between "The Brutal Afghan Winter" and "The Graveyard of the Soviet Union".

      Forget Afghanistan, haven't these people heard of the Mongols?

    8. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by SN74S181 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not necessarily.

      If the code they are claiming infringes on their rights is new code that isn't in any of their distributions, they're not sucked into a GPL vortex retroactively. If that were the case, and in fact if it proves to be the case, I can see all sorts of businesses taking another look at the risks of releasing GPL'd code.

    9. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by loucura! · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, since the code in question they distribute in Caldera, it means that we -do- have the right to distribute.

      It's in the GPL, section 7.

      They cannot restrict the patent to GPL'ed software that has only been released by them. If they do so, they cannot distribute under the GPL, which means they cannot distribute the code at all, and they cannot make it a part of their Linux Distribution.

      --
      Black and grey are both shades of white.
    10. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      The simple fact of the matter is that Linux was a superior "enterprise OS" to SCO even before IBM considered contributing to the kernel. When considering this sad fact, it's hard to believe that there was any intellectual property available for IBM to contaminate the kernel with.

      You have to have something worth stealing before somehone can steal from you.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    11. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by Zathrus · · Score: 5, Informative

      Why would they poke the T-Rex that is IBM with a stick, unless they think they can bring it down?

      Because, as Mr. Perens points out, they don't want to bring it down. They want to be bought out. Again.

      You'd have an amazingly hard time proving infringement in court by IBM -- the bits that are most worrisome (such as SysV IPC) were in place long before IBM touched Linux or viewed SCO source. They were implemented because they were widely documented in Unix manuals, books, and taught in schools.

      SCO's legal brief has quite a few sections that are laughable:

      82. Linux started as a hobby project of a 19-year old student. Linux has evolved through bits and pieces of various contributions by numerous software developers using single processor computers. Virtually none of these software developers and hobbyists had access to enterprise-scale equipment and testing facilities for Linux development. Without access to such equipment, facilities, sophisticated methods, concepts and coordinated know-how, it would be difficult or impossible for the Linux development community to create a grade of Linux adequate for enterprise use.

      84. Prior to IBM's involvement, Linux was the software equivalent of a bicycle. UNIX was the software equivalent of a luxury car. To make Linux of necessary quality for use by enterprise customers, it must be re-designed so that Linux also becomes the software equivalent of a luxury car. This re-design is not technologically feasible or even possible at the enterprise level without (1) a high degree of design coordination, (2) access to expensive and sophisticated design and testing equipment; (3) access to UNIX code, methods and concepts; (4) UNIX architectural experience; and (5) a very significant financial investment.

      Section 82 is humorous. Section 84 is downright absurd. Point by point:

      1) It's called a mailing list and revision control. The very same methods that are used in a vast amount of corporate development.

      2) What expensive design and test equipment? Earlier in the brief SCO admitted that x86 hardware was vastly less expensive. The design and test equipment is these very same inexpensive boxes.

      SMP wasn't that absurdly uncommon in the early 90s, and lots of people had access to large scale equipment, especially at a university. I know people who had unfettered access to early 90s supercomputers (Crays, etc), as well as SP-2s. Or built a cluster of SMP boxes running on Linux for PhD projects -- all of this in the early to mid 90s.

      3) Code? No need. Methods and concepts? Sure. They're documented in man pages, thousands of books, and taught as part of most university CS curriculums. They're not difficult concepts really, and re-implementing them may not be trivial, but it's not impossible either.

      4) Yes, because nobody knows the UNIX architecture except SCO. Uh huh. It's not in the very same books and courses mentioned previously.

      5) There is a large financial investment - look at Redhat, Slackware, FSF, or just start counting man-hours donated to the kernel. If volunteer efforts were incapable of accomplishing anything then Habitat for Humanity would've gone belly up over a decade ago.

      To top it all off there's a good bit of questioning with regards to Caldera Linux, the GPL, and SCO. If SCO knew that there were IP violations in the Linux kernel then it willfully violated the GPL in distributing them in Caldera Linux. That doesn't mean that those IP rights suddenly get lost, but it does mean that their legal case becomes a whole lot more hairy.

    12. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I read the case. The answer is they didn't do anythign wrong. The examples cited in the case are nonsense. We are talking summary dismissal territory. If you do a search for jbolden1517 I have a earlier posting in this thread where I mention a few examples.

    13. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by pyrrho · · Score: 1

      because they don't seem to be really putting forward a patent suit... they are relying on their license aggreement and NDAs. They say IBM violated a deal. They can't go after people they havn't licensed to because the Unix patents are mostly expired and they have obliterated their claims by releasing the code themselves under GPL, which requires you to give a free licence to use your patents should you distribute patented code.

      --

      -pyrrho

    14. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by GrenDel+Fuego · · Score: 1

      If the code is new, then we don't have to worry about it breaking distributions. If the code is old, then they've been distributing it themselves under the GPL.

      I don't think it's going to be that big of a deal.

    15. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by thrillseeker · · Score: 1
      Why would they poke the T-Rex that is IBM with a stick, unless they think they can bring it down?

      Because judges and juries are often technically ignorant - and for every expert that can be hired to say one thing to sway them there's another expert that can be hired to say the other. They likely believe that IBM will find it easier to buy them or settle for a large fee out of court - indeed it may be easier in the short term immedidate cash department - but IBM didn't get to be the gorilla by taking the easy route - they are just as likely to draw the line and say prove it knowing they can outlast the suit. Having the suit eventually thrown out would be the better long term solution for IBM because of their Linux focus. Once SCO is no mo, IBM can buy whatever pieces of it they want for a song.

    16. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by Zak3056 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Just a few off-the-cuff observations.

      - You don't launch a land war in Asia.

      - You don't launch a billion-dollar patent battle with IBM, if your
      strategy is in fact to win that battle.


      - NEVER go against a Sicilian when DEATH is on the line!

      --
      What part of "shall not be infringed" is so hard to understand?
    17. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1

      >Why would they poke the T-Rex that is IBM with a stick, unless they think they can bring it down?

      If a T-Rex was about to bite your head off, wouldn't you want to get one last punch or kick in?

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    18. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by sepluv · · Score: 1
      And if Caldera has included those binaries, we still have rights to it
      Where does it say this in the GPL? In fact it says the complete opposite (i.e.: one cannot distribute code which is subject to patent(s) under the GPL if the owner of the patent(s) does not license everyone to use their patent indefinitely and freely).

      It may be true that the GPL could be interpreted as also being a patent license but this is definitely questionable. It is also true that SCO would be admitting to commiting serious IP piracy, but if they are going bankrupt they do not care about that (unless the directors can be prosecuted for that - i am not sure).

      Below is the section discussing patents:

      7. If, as a consequence of a court judgment or allegation of patent infringement or for any other reason (not limited to patent issues), conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not excuse you from the conditions of this License. If you cannot distribute so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you may not distribute the Program at all. For example, if a patent license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the Program by all those who receive copies directly or indirectly through you, then the only way you could satisfy both it and this License would be to refrain entirely from distribution of the Program.

      If any portion of this section is held invalid or unenforceable under any particular circumstance, the balance of the section is intended to apply and the section as a whole is intended to apply in other circumstances.

      It is not the purpose of this section to induce you to infringe any patents or other property right claims or to contest validity of any such claims; this section has the sole purpose of protecting the integrity of the free software distribution system, which is implemented by public license practices. Many people have made generous contributions to the wide range of software distributed through that system in reliance on consistent application of that system; it is up to the author/donor to decide if he or she is willing to distribute software through any other system and a licensee cannot impose that choice.

      This section is intended to make thoroughly clear what is believed to be a consequence of the rest of this License.

      8. If the distribution and/or use of the Program is restricted in certain countries either by patents or by copyrighted interfaces, the original copyright holder who places the Program under this License may add an explicit geographical distribution limitation excluding those countries, so that distribution is permitted only in or among countries not thus excluded. In such case, this License incorporates the limitation as if written in the body of this License.

      --
      Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
      [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
    19. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by sepluv · · Score: 1
      [1] they cannot distribute under the GPL, which means they cannot distribute the code at all, and they cannot make it a part of their Linux Distribution.
      [2] it means that we -do- have the right to distribute.
      2 does not follow from 1. In fact they may be considered contradictory.

      SCO cannot distribute the code if they have not freely licensed the (hypothetical) patent(s) to everyone. I agree. Nor can anyone else distribute the code. (Therefore, assuming SCO have patents which are infringed by the kernel, Linux, all distributions including Linux which have been produced by SCO have been knowingly and blatantly mass-pirated by SCO, but they probably do not care as they are going down in flames.)

      --
      Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
      [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
    20. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by nutznboltz · · Score: 1
      SCO complaint #51 is completely on drugs.
      51. Prior to this time, IBM had not developed any expertise to run UNIX on an Intel chip and instead was confined to its Power PC chip.
      EXCUSE ME? AIX version 1 was running on Intel iron in 1986.
    21. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by nutznboltz · · Score: 1
      Because judges and juries are often technically ignorant
      It's so true, the legal system is composed of people who's job is to judge a world they don't understand. Sad.
    22. Re:I asked this before, answer this time by gandy909 · · Score: 1

      "... Having the suit eventually thrown out ..."

      The word 'eventually' is the problem with that theory, as I see it. While I have little doubt that IBM can outlast, or outright win, Linux itself will not be served well at all if this thing drags out. Right now we are on the edge of a mass migration to Linux on the server as well as possibly on the desktop. While the publicists will tell you that any publicity is good publicity, it is a whole different animal when you are thinking of spending gobs of money on something that suddenly might look like it has a rather large, unfixable problem...

      --

      (Stolen sig) Remember: it's a "Microsoft virus", not an "email virus", a "Microsoft worm", not a "computer worm
  19. Beating a dead horse... by Randolpho · · Score: 1

    Lovely. Once again, I have to say that IP rights should not be assignable to corporations.

    It is quite clear to me that SCO is only suing to get money from a cash cow / destroy a competitor (IBM) by leveraging IP rights that it should not be allowed to own in the first place.

    --
    "Times have not become more violent. They have just become more televised."
    -Marilyn Manson
    1. Re:Beating a dead horse... by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      If you worked for McDonalds, and signed an NDA saying that you will not disclose the contents of the secret sauce, and then your sister opens up a burger stand that just happens to have secret sauce on all the burgers, McDonalds would drag you into court for violating the NDA, and they would have to prove it's more likely you told her the recipe than that she figured it out herself.

      This is the premise here, except you=IBM, secret sauce=SysV code, and sister=Linux kernel developers.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:Beating a dead horse... by Randolpho · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The key word you used was "recipe". If your sister follows the same recipe, exactly, then yes, you are in violation of your NDA. If, however, your sister has a different recipe that just happens to taste similar, then you are not in violation of your NDA.

      Except the recipe is the source code. :)

      --
      "Times have not become more violent. They have just become more televised."
      -Marilyn Manson
    3. Re:Beating a dead horse... by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      No, if you tell her 'the ingredients are mayo, sweet relish, and ketchup' you've possibly violated the NDA, without specifying quantities or the order they're mixed in.

      And remember this is civil court. SCO only has to show they're more likely right than wrong, they dont have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt or any of that criminal court stuff.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    4. Re:Beating a dead horse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh shit! I just had sex with your sister! I feel so dirty!

    5. Re:Beating a dead horse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Randolpho St. John?

    6. Re:Beating a dead horse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anonymous Stalker?

  20. SCO to IBM by L7_ · · Score: 3, Funny

    "We know your develoers and they are not competant enough to do that. So obviously you ripped it off of us."

    1. Re:SCO to IBM by Xformer · · Score: 1, Funny

      Unless they honestly believe that every developer that has worked on the Linux kernel is on IBM's payroll, that's completely ludicrous. No, wait... it still is.

      --
      All I want is a kind word, a warm bed and unlimited power.
  21. 'shared source' comment over at lwn.net by dd · · Score: 5, Interesting
    One of the best comments that I've read about this lawsuit was made by "josh_stern" over on LWN.net, and I quote:

    But I hope Bruce and others won't lose time pointing out the implications for people who want to participate in programs like MSFT's "shared source". They open themselves up to later lawsuits if they later develop or distribute anything technologically related, even if it isn't textually derived from the original.

    It is an interesting counterpoint in case Microsoft wants to use the lawsuit in any anti-linux campaign ...

    1. Re:'shared source' comment over at lwn.net by TheViffer · · Score: 1

      "It is an interesting counterpoint in case Microsoft wants to use the lawsuit in any anti-linux campaign"

      Don't think so. If I remember correctly DOS, the base of MS was based off a stripped down version of UNIX. So in essense they would be sueing a product they based there own OS from.

      Its like saying "Hi, were M$ and have created Windows 2000 based off NT based from Windows based from DOS based from UNIX. We are now sueing UNIX because it is copying us."

      Isn't that like going back in time and shooting your mother before you were born?

      Just screwy stuff to think about.

      --
      -- Knowing too much can get you killed, but knowing who knows too much can make you rich.
    2. Re:'shared source' comment over at lwn.net by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DOS is a rip-off from CP/M, or its 16-bit incarnation if you want. It has nothing whatsoever to do with UNIX.

    3. Re:'shared source' comment over at lwn.net by jmauro · · Score: 2, Interesting

      No, Windows is not based on Unix. Microsoft has tried to stay away from Unix ever since their Xenix experiment didn't go so well. The Windows NT family does borrow from the lessons learned from VMS, the first DOS was a clone of CP/M, and the windowing system is sort of derived from OS/2 (from being inspired by Apple who licenced the tech from Xerox PARC). Maybe we can all just admit, no one does anything really original anymore.

    4. Re:'shared source' comment over at lwn.net by jackjumper · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No no no.

      I think the point is that if you've seen MSFT's source code you can no longer participate in developing anything related to a MSFT product; you'd be vulnerable to accusations of learning something from seeing that code and using the knowledge in your product.

      Whether or not anything of value can be learned from viewing MSFT code is a different matter...

    5. Re:'shared source' comment over at lwn.net by MeanMF · · Score: 1

      I think the point is that if you've seen MSFT's source code you can no longer participate in developing anything related to a MSFT product; you'd be vulnerable to accusations of learning something from seeing that code and using the knowledge in your product.

      I think it's even deeper than that - if you have seen the Windows source code and then work on ANY operating system, browser, minesweeper implementation, etc. you could be in trouble.

    6. Re:'shared source' comment over at lwn.net by brianvan · · Score: 1

      Hey... you have to admit, the "blue screen of death" is pretty original. :)

  22. What kind of argument is that? by mebon · · Score: 1

    So their argument is that Linux has grown so quickly and effectively that Linux must have stolen code? Somehow I can't see that argument standing in court. Unless they have specific copywrited code that Linux has stolen, they won't have too much of an chance. And if they did find stolen code, they would have to prove that IBM as a company is responsible for it being there in order to be awarded money.

    1. Re:What kind of argument is that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Considering how often BSD headers and code gets merged into Linux (with the BSD headers/copyright deleted), it's not too much of a stretch to believe a lazy/ignorant coder has submitted patches or full code they shouldn't have.


      Anyhow, the complaint doesn't depend on finding SCO code in linux, it could be as simple as IBM employees that signed SCO NDAs/NCAs working on Linux code. Remember when compaq made a clean-room BIOS? Same issue. If someone that disassembled IBM's Bios wrote the new one, they would have been nailed.

    2. Re:What kind of argument is that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't imagine that anyone in the history of Linux has ever submitted a patch based on code from the AT&T "earlier than 4.4BSD"

  23. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 0

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  24. The boycott page is a little over the top by scenic · · Score: 1
    They're a little nuts... They suggest that IBM should buy SCO, release SCO's IP into the public domain, and then fire all the SCO employees... that seems a bit harsh to employees that probably had about 0 part in the decision to pursue this IP strategy.

    I live in Boston where the job market is tough even with a zillion computer-related companies around. I can't imagine how rough finding a job must be in Utah. It seems unfair to fault people for keeping a job in these tough times.

    sujal

    --

    politics, food, music, life: FatMixx

    1. Re:The boycott page is a little over the top by Gojira+Shipi-Taro · · Score: 0

      I don't find holding people responsible for their ethical choices at all unfair, to be perfectly honest. If they know what kind of business they're working for, and they haven't spoken out, well... "I was just following orders" isn't really a proven defense...

      --
      "Oh my God. This is terrible. This is the end of my Presidency. I'm fucked."; ~ Donald J. Trump
    2. Re:The boycott page is a little over the top by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >that seems a bit harsh to employees that
      >probably had about 0 part in the decision to
      >pursue this IP strategy.

      If it's credible, it should be enough to prompt each and every one of those employees to start asking questions about what their company is doing. Same goes for stockholders. Sure, most of the employees may be completely unaware of the case. But if any of them are stockholders, being unaware is not the same thing as not being responsible.

      If someone in their corporate Counsel or senior management had to respond to questions from every employee about this case, or if it became a major topic of discussion at a stockholder's meeting, they'd notice, and they'd realize they might not be making the best move.

      I read the complaint, and it's horribly written as legal briefs go. You do not want your lawyers writing things like "Prior to IBM's involvement, Linux was the software equivalent of a bicycle. UNIX was the software equivalent of a luxury car". (False Analogy). Would you rather have Lance Armstrong's bicycle or a 1973 Cadillac?

      This is the core question of the complaint:

      "It is not possible for Linux to rapidly reach UNIX performance standards for complete enterprise functionality without the misappropriation of UNIX code, methods or concepts to achieve such performance, and coordination by a larger developer, such as IBM. "

      All IBM needs to do, is show how it is possible for Linux to reach the performance standards it currently has, without IBM's help.

      Personally, I hope SCO gets slapped hard for this, just because allowing some people in Utah to call themselves "Santa Cruz" anything, tends to devalue Santa Cruz itself.

    3. Re:The boycott page is a little over the top by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      steal what customers they have left.
      they still have a bunch of people left over from
      the old sco channel days.
      bring em all over to any flavour of unix but
      sco.
      no revenue to sco.

    4. Re:The boycott page is a little over the top by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I am correct then the phrase "I was just following orders" was used by nazi war criminals at Nuremberg. How can you compare lowly $14 an hour geeks switching backup tapes and fixing outlook w0rm infections to fucking nazi war criminals? These SCO employees are just normal guys and gals trying to feed their families. If you want to punish someone punish the decision makers at the top not the serfs at the bottom of the shit heap...

      But I guess you think that the ethical thing for these SCO employees to do would be to quit their jobs and let themselves and their families end up homeless and hungry.

    5. Re:The boycott page is a little over the top by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      The problem is that they didn't even KNOW their employer was going to engage in such activity. Punish those responsible, absolutely. The grunts at the bottom of the company aren't the ones responsible. It's not like holding nazis responsible for attrocities they committed in death camps - it's like holding Joe-average German citizen responsible when he didn't even know what was going on.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    6. Re:The boycott page is a little over the top by Gojira+Shipi-Taro · · Score: 0

      The entire purpose of the SCOSource division is this kind of chicanery. I'd be willing to settle for their wholesale dismissal. Particularly McBride.

      --
      "Oh my God. This is terrible. This is the end of my Presidency. I'm fucked."; ~ Donald J. Trump
  25. Tell sco what you think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    www.sco.com/company/feedback/index.html?ref_dir=

    1. Re:Tell sco what you think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Lets try this again

      http://www.sco.com/company/feedback/

    2. Re:Tell sco what you think... by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      I did: Quote:

      Can you please let me know what, if any, violations there are of your intellectual property in GNU/linux (with references to patent or copyright numbers) so that I may build a version that does not violate your intellectual property?
      -Tom Hudson

      Here's what came up after I clicked on "submit":
      You will be hearing from us soon.

      Sounds ominous :-)

  26. I regret... by xaoslaad · · Score: 1

    ...ever buying a SCO Unix learning bundle. Granted it was 3 or 4 years ago, and only for the puposes of learning about UNIX, but I still regret it.

    It was disregarded for the trash it was and I moved onto Linux, BSD, and Solaris x86 in more recent times to give myself an ongoing *nix education.

    It sickens me to think 20 or 30 or 40 (whatever is was) dollars went to a company that openly wants to butcher the open source software movement; something that genuinely has the potential to help the world at large; and if not that then at least allows me to run more than one PC without paying taxes to 50 different software vendors & retailers, like SCO.

  27. Flimsy by 4of12 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    It is not possible...

    That doesn't seem like the firmest ground on which to base a lawsuit, as I'm sure other posters have noted earlier.

    It's tantamount to saying

    You're doing too well. You must have cheated.
    Well, it's always possible. There are anecdotal examples where success has been built upon a foundation of misdeeds.

    But in this case, that's a far-fetched possibility and I think any investigation in the facts supporting the allegations will soon bear that out.

    --
    "Provided by the management for your protection."
    1. Re:Flimsy by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      >> That doesn't seem like the firmest ground on which to base a lawsuit

      Not a trial, but a lawsuit, sure. You're "innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt" in criminal court, but "innocent until proven guilty by a preponderance of the evidence" in civil court.

      So the judge is supposed to ask himself "Is SCO more likely right than wrong?"

      I don't think it's entirely far-fetched that SCO may be right.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  28. Linux. New and improved? by term8or · · Score: 2, Insightful

    'It is not possible for Linux to rapidly reach UNIX performance standards for complete enterprise functionality without the misappropriation of UNIX code, methods or concepts to achieve such performance, and coordination by a larger developer, such as IBM.'

    So how long has this linux thing been going on, then? A mere day and a half, from the sound of things. And there aren't tens of thousands more programmers available for linux than any other O/S, are there?

    --



    "As a writer / novelist you might want to spellcheck your sig. :) " - AC
    1. Re:Linux. New and improved? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Seems fairly simple to disprove that IBM stole "Unix performance" from SCO. Demonstrate that SCO doesn't perform. Actually, I think the marketplace already demonstrated that.

  29. There's nothing more to say. by buffer-overflowed · · Score: 1

    Bruce already summed it up above, and a reply to the first thread I started on the original article posted by big_groo here and reformatted for easy reading by Jah-Wren Ryel here sums up what happened in the AT&T vs BSD court case.

    They're highly informative in case you missed them in the last article.

    --
    The key to the enjoyment of pop music is to replace any instance of "love" with "C.H.U.D."
  30. SCO is and has always been MSFT's Trojan Horse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bill Gates owned SCO for years and used it as hedge in case windows failed.

  31. IBM's position? by Consul · · Score: 1

    I already asked this question on Newsforge, but...

    Does IBM have an official position statement, or any kind of response to this, available yet? I would very much like to read it.

    Thank you for any help...

    --

    -----

    "You spilled my egg... I needed that egg."

    1. Re:IBM's position? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They will, as soon as the execs can stop laughing...I could imagine the sheer disbelief in the boardroom "no, seriously, we are being sued...not it's not april yet"

    2. Re:IBM's position? by cdc179 · · Score: 1

      IBM statement on SCO lawsuit

      The SCO Group, the owner of the UNIX operating system, has filed a complaint against IBM in a Utah court. IBM has just received a copy of the complaint and is reviewing it now. We have released the following statement to the press on this issue:

      * We received a copy of the complaint this morning and have not had a sufficient opportunity to study it. However, based on a quick read, the complaint is full of bare allegations with no supporting facts.
      * SCO never approached IBM to raise this complaint. Nor did they inform us in advance of filing the lawsuit.
      * As you know, IBM has been openly supporting Linux and open standards for several years -- and neither SCO nor any of its predecessors ever expressed these concerns to us.
      * IBM is extremely committed to AIX and to its thousands of AIX customers worldwide.

      We will share any additional information as it becomes available.

  32. It's copyrighted, not copywrited.... by HotNeedleOfInquiry · · Score: 1

    Now right it 10 times on the blackboard.

    --
    "Eve of Destruction", it's not just for old hippies anymore...
  33. SCO's boardroom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Board: "We must sue these bastards that are undercutting us!"
    -"But boss Linux is open source and the companies dont really have all that much"
    Board: "Well dammit we need to sue someone with money then! Howabout Microsoft?"
    -Well boss I don't think they really fit in here, maybe if we stretch it it could somehow concievably be IBM's fault (and they still have money).
    Board: "Thats it! The long sought after 'Step 3:' We're geniuses!..."

  34. Trade secrets only as good as their protection by ryants · · Score: 1
    Correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure that trade secrets, which seems to be the basis of this action, are only as good as you're trying to enforce them.

    IBM has been interested in Linux for some time, and Linux has been around for even longer; if there were trade secret problems, SCO should have complained immediately, back then. Waiting until now may provide IBM with a lot of ammo.

    On the other hand, I may be confusing trade secrets with trademarks... little help?

    --

    Ryan T. Sammartino
    "Ancora imparo"

    1. Re:Trade secrets only as good as their protection by term8or · · Score: 1

      It is an intellectual property complaint and would have to be either a copyright complaint or a software patent complaint (under those strange american patent laws).
      For copyright, under American law, you need to enfore it as soon as you are aware of the breach if you are going to claim damages. Patent law, AFAIK, does not require this.

      --



      "As a writer / novelist you might want to spellcheck your sig. :) " - AC
    2. Re:Trade secrets only as good as their protection by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 2, Insightful
      No, it's not a copyright or patent case. SCO's filing is on their web site. It's a trade-secret case. And we know that Unix has been available to college students in source form since the early '70's, and there were shelves of books on it in any technical bookstore, and a government standard (POSIX) that defined how it would work. So, the trade secret argument is specious.

      Bruce

    3. Re:Trade secrets only as good as their protection by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      For copyright, under American law, you need to enfore it as soon as you are aware of the breach

      It's trademark violations that you must pursue as soon as it's discovered. Copyright and patent can wait a while.

      Although, the longer you wait, the more sympathy the jury will have for the accused. In court, it's best if you can prove that you warned him early and often, before bringing suit.

  35. Fighting Back! by codepunk · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How about someone setting up a list for Linux Hackers willing to spend time migrating SCO customers to the linux platform for free. To fight back I am willing to spend some of my time.

    --


    Got Code?
    1. Re:Fighting Back! by dbc · · Score: 2, Funny

      Great idea! And cheap, too! Should only take 4 or 5 guys a couple of weeks.

    2. Re:Fighting Back! by Angry+White+Guy · · Score: 1

      My SCO supplier is seriously considering it's next move. Incidentally, they are also an IBM Service Partner, but only for Hardware.
      If IBM does buy SCO, then there are certain issues which will have to be addressed.
      Licensing of SCO software: Who do you buy user licenses from?
      Continued Support: What happens when SCO stops supplying patches (even though they have been really horrible about this in the past.
      Migration: Will any of the SCO products be migrated, or will they have to /can be run using the SCO binary compatibility of Linux?
      Retraining: Who will become RedHat certified? Will they start pushing RedHat? Provide MS solutions?

      This is not a light issue for any SCO partners out there, and anyone who can make it easy to move from SCO, providing documents, coding, expertise, whatever, will help out both the Linux cause, and business alike.

      --
      You think that I'm crazy, you should see this guy!
    3. Re:Fighting Back! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about someone setting up a list for Linux Hackers willing to spend time migrating SCO customers to the linux platform for free. To fight back I am willing to spend some of my time.

      Uhhhh - then how 'bout setting up the list.

    4. Re:Fighting Back! by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 2

      How about someone setting up a list for Linux Hackers willing to spend time migrating SCO customers to the linux platform for free. To fight back I am willing to spend some of my time.

      It could work out nicely for you too, if the company you help then decides to come back to you for some paid work. Feel the quality of the goods and all that.

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
    5. Re:Fighting Back! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, we do no need a coordinated effort migrating people off SCO.
      SCO is dead anyway so there is nothing to migrate and it will not acheive anything.

      If you are serious in slashing back, who you sholc go after is the owners of SCO, they are responsible.

      The owners, Canope (spelling?) has investments in a lot of other companies as well.

      The only language they understand is profit/loss.

      To strike back, set up website where all holdings of that firm is listed and organize mass telephone calls to sales/support during officehours. arrange boycotts, ec etc.

      Pick one of the companies and hit it, then report back on the success to slashdot regularly to keep interest in participating up.

      Drive them and all their companies into the ground, except TrollTech, since they are good guys even if they are owned by a bunch of bastards that we should make bancrupt.

  36. What if SCO kicks the bucket? by CoolVibe · · Score: 5, Interesting
    What's going to happen to all that old UNIX licensing stuff that they do? AFAIK, I've used their ancient unix archives to play with a pdp-11 emulator. Heck, it was a great quick place to get a real UNIX from quickly that would boot on it.

    What's going to happen to SCO's intellectual property when it croaks? Who will buy it? I think the ancient unices that they own are of great interest. I'd love to see those in the public domain, but that's probably wishful thinking.

    1. Re:What if SCO kicks the bucket? by jhh09 · · Score: 1

      A bigger question is, what would happen if Microsoft bought SCO's unix patents?

    2. Re:What if SCO kicks the bucket? by gorilla · · Score: 1

      The rights to the Unix source code have been sold many times over the last few years, with AT&T selling it to Novell, who sold it to SCO afaik. I'm sure that if SCO was to go bust, it would be sold as an asset just like everything else.

    3. Re:What if SCO kicks the bucket? by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      The AT&T UNIX code base has been passed from company to company in the last decade. It'll probably end up at some new company.

      It would be nice if it became public domain, but as long as it has value (i.e. as long as it can be used for projects like suing IBM, the same way Ray Noorda purchased DR-DOS solely to sue Microsoft) there will be suits who want to 'own' it.

    4. Re:What if SCO kicks the bucket? by andyveitch · · Score: 1
      t IBM's revenue from our Edinburgh, Scotland (our local office) are higher than SCO's global revenues and given that these cases are won by the company with the bigger financial muscle my guess is that IBM will win the legal action.

      There's very little chance that SCO will be able to pay the costs which will bankrupt them and result in all of their assets being passed to IBM (unless they owe secured creditors but I don't think they do).

      I bet Boies demanded his fee up front...

      --
      Open Source Email Response Management http://www.logicalwa
    5. Re:What if SCO kicks the bucket? by zentigger · · Score: 1
      If everyone kicks a couple of bucks into the pot we could probably pick SCO's IP up pretty easily and then release it into the public domain. I think the biggest argument though would be which license to use...

      --

      the above is my personal opinion and does not necessarily reflect that of the little voices in my head

    6. Re:What if SCO kicks the bucket? by g4dget · · Score: 1
      There is no such thing as "UNIX" patents; any patents that there might have been would have expired by now, and the only one that I know of that there ever was was the set-uid bit.

      If SCO has patents related to SCO UNIX, they are either invalid, or they have nothing to do with what makes UNIX UNIX.

    7. Re:What if SCO kicks the bucket? by iocc · · Score: 1

      Maybe the bootup in Linux will include this in the future:
      Linux is Unix. Unix is Linux.

    8. Re:What if SCO kicks the bucket? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're probably wrong on that point. SCO owns and licences "UNIX System V", and they get to decide which IP is UNIX-related and which isn't.

      Then IBM, HP, and other UNIX licences get to follow SCO's rules on the use of that IP.

      That is, even if IBM did all of their AIX & Linux work independantly of SCO UNIX (which they didn't, see "Project Monterey"), they are still party to the agreement they signed with SCO.

  37. What about Solaris? by MrTilney · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From the complaint:

    Except for SCO, none of the primary UNIX vendors ever developed a UNIX "flavor" to operate on an Intel-based processor chip set. This is because the earlier Intel processors were considered to have inadequate processing power for use in the more demanding enterprise market applications.

    What about the x86 version of Solaris?

    1. Re:What about Solaris? by kerskine · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sun purchased a paid-up right-to-use from AT&T before AT&T sold UNIX to Novell (which subsequently sold it to SCO, which got acquired by Caldera, which then changed its name to SCO)

      --
      ****

      "I'd never want to join a club that would have me as a member" - G. Marx
    2. Re:What about Solaris? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Nevermind Solaris, what about QNX?

      QNX ran on the 286. Compared to QNX, SCO is a childs toy.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    3. Re:What about Solaris? by MrTilney · · Score: 1

      I understand that, but the complaint says that no other intel flavors were produced.

    4. Re:What about Solaris? by Angst+Badger · · Score: 1

      What about the x86 version of Solaris?

      There was also Coherent, and there's still QNX. Even Microsoft had a Unix offering at one point, a 16-bit OS called Xenix, which SCO should know, since Microsoft sold it to them.

      --
      Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
    5. Re:What about Solaris? by bhurt · · Score: 1

      I'm trying to remember all the Unix variations that ran on the x86 before 1998 (when IBM took a major interest in Linux). A partial list is:

      -Solaris x86 (SysV) and SunOs (BSD) (anyone remember the Sun-386?)

      - Minix

      - Linux

      - Several BSDs

      - Xinu (same idea as Minix, not as popular a book: see http://public.ise.canberra.edu.au/~chrisc/xinu.htm l)

      - Xenix

      - NextStep 386

      - Gnu/Hurd

      - There was a DOS extender whose name I was forgetting which implemented most of Unix at one point (started with a C?).

      There are probably more, but that's all I'm remembering.

      Brian

    6. Re:What about Solaris? by Darth · · Score: 1

      Well, i just took a cursory look at the solaris on x86 product page at Sun's website and i didnt see the term UNIX on it.

      They probably are ignoring Solaris because Sun doesnt license the term UNIX to apply it to Solaris.
      Therefore, Solaris isnt a UNIX "flavour" on intel-based systems. It's a Unix-like os.

      --
      Darth --
      Nil Mortifi, Sine Lucre
    7. Re:What about Solaris? by sailesh · · Score: 1

      There was also an IBM internal version of AIX that ran on x86. It was never shipped, and was discontinued after first done (like so many other IBM software projects !)

    8. Re:What about Solaris? by tjrw · · Score: 1

      And Interactive Systems who ported System V release 3 and release 4. And, with a much closer relevance to the case, Sequent, who had 30-processor machines, that were totally Intel based and weren't running SCO. The complaint is tissue of lies. A lot of the code that has been accepted from IBM is either stuff from OS/2 (the Linux IBM JFS is derived from the OS/2 version), or in the case of things like read-copy update, Sequent technology, which IBM is entitled to since they bought Sequent.

  38. IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by gosand · · Score: 4, Interesting
    From Bruce's comments: So, I think the claims I've heard are specious, and not enforcible in court. Why, then, is SCO doing this? They want to be purchased. This is the exit strategy for their investors, Canopy Group. IBM can buy them just to shut them up. Or Microsoft can buy them to use them to FUD Linux. And Canopy Group management figures they'll play the two against each other to drive up the price. But IBM management is smart enough to poison this particular well, by bringing counter-claims against SCO. SCO is also party to the GPL, which invalidates their patent portfolio for any of their patents that happen to have been used in a Linux system that they distributed. Under the GPL terms, if you distribute your patented practice in GPL software, you must grant a license to everyone to make use of that patent in any GPL software, for any field of use.

    Why would IBM *buy* SCO? If they released their product under the GPL, couldn't IBM just take a distro and re-release it as "SCOSUCKS" under the GPL? Couldn't anyone? What would burn the top brass at SCO if after this lawsuit (clearly aimed at them just trying to cash in), someone took their distro and made it successful.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  39. Shouldn't there be more? by invisik · · Score: 0

    It sounds to me SCO is mad that IBM helped Linux along. Should they also be suing Silicon Graphics, Sun and other UNIX-type companies that contributed to Linux?? Like that's ever going to fly.

    -m

    --
    http://www.invisik.com
  40. I hope that... by Znonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

    IBM buys SCO and flushed it's UNIX IP down the toilet.

    SCO is dead.

    --

    Karma: The shiznight, mostly because I am the Drizzle.

    1. Re:I hope that... by TaliesinWI · · Score: 1

      Which is probably precisely what Canopy/SCO hopes happens, because otherwise Canopy has a very big, very dead albatross hanging around its neck. Seriously, is SCO actually making money from new product sales anymore?

  41. Best line from the suit by Scarpux · · Score: 1

    "Prior to IBM's involvement, Linux was the software equivalent of a bicycle. UNIX was the software equivalent of a luxury car." Cute. Then why are you selling Linux SCO?

    --
    -- This is not a sig
    1. Re:Best line from the suit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do they have against bikes?! Now I'm really angry.

  42. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  43. "Wired" magazine on drugs by nutznboltz · · Score: 1, Insightful
    http://www.wired.com/news/infostructure/0,1377,579 55,00.html

    AT&T's Unix Systems Laboratories developed Unix in the 1960s.

    UNIX was developed by Ken Thomson in the 1960's. There was no AT&T USL in the 1960's.

    More
    1. Re:"Wired" magazine on drugs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      UNIX was developed by Ken Thompson in 1969 while he was employed at AT&T Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey, if I am not mistaken.

      - Jason Terlecki

    2. Re:"Wired" magazine on drugs by lspd · · Score: 1

      "In January SCO hired David Boies, the attorney who prosecuted the U.S. Justice Department's antitrust case against Microsoft and defended Napster..."

      Add to this the Gore recount, and you've got one hell of a resume. Why do people keep hiring him for these high profile cases?

  44. But they sell the Linux they're suing over by MrTilney · · Score: 1

    Let me make sure that I understand this.

    SCO, I mean Caldera, sells Linux (and Unix). They claim that IBM improperly added their Unix technology to Linux. However, it didn't bother them when they sold Linux, with those improvements, for years. So they're suing IBM for improperly modifying a product that SCO is selling, and has known about for a long time.

    1. Re:But they sell the Linux they're suing over by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Possibly they are talking about recent improvements to Linux, like the stuff IBM has done in the last year or so.

      Caldera Linux is old and dated.

  45. I so love you guys by Czernobog · · Score: 1

    I have been looking for an excuse to get rid of Caldera 2.3 from our desktops for ages.
    Thanks to your suit against IBM and our illiterate management, I can now install any distro other than Caldera....

    --
    /. Where the truth
    1. Re:I so love you guys by netengr1024 · · Score: 1

      Caldera gave me my excuse. I won a laptop (drawing) from their booth at Networld+Interop a couple of years ago, but the laptop came with Win98 pre-installed. I asked the guys if they'd give me a copy of Caldera to install on it and they said no, I'd have to pay for it!

      Thanks for the laptop, but my time and money's worth more than that cheap nonesense.

  46. Seems straightforward to me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    SCO is basically claiming, much like AT&T did Long Ago WRT BSD, that the AIX source code is wrought with a mix of SCO's licensed code, as well as IBMs internal AIX code.

    Based upon statements by IBM executives, IBM seems to be, essentially, raiding AIX to implement high end features into the Linux kernel. If they do so, then any SCO IP within AIX may be transferred into the open license of the Linux kernel.

    IF THIS IS THE CASE, the SCO may very well have a valid claim here. The facts on whether SCO is a good Unix, bad Unix, good company, successful company etc, is irrelevant.

    So, SCO is taking this claim to court to clear it up. IF SCO is correct, then further erosion and disclosure of their IP MAY harm SCO, so that's why they want to slow or stop the process quickly.

    IF SCO is incorrect, then it's all a waste of time, but it does give IBM a clearer path to help Linux move forward using legacy techniques and technology already developed for AIX.

    1. Re:Seems straightforward to me... by urbanski · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "IF THIS IS THE CASE, the SCO may very well have a valid claim here. The facts on whether SCO is a good Unix, bad Unix, good company, successful company etc, is irrelevant."

      So far I have yet to see how this could be the case, considering that IBM has succeeded in getting virtually NONE of their "enterprise" contributions into the kernel!

      Multi-queue scheduler? Looks interesting, but we'll use Ingo's instead?

      EVMS? Looks interesting, but we'll use Sistina's LVM!

      Posix threads? Looks interesting, but we'll use Redhat's!

      JFS? Prefer ext3. Maybe it will make it into the kernel in 2.6.

      I'd like to see WHAT exactly is in Linux that IBM contributed that supposedly made it "Enterprise ready"? A few printer drivers??

    2. Re:Seems straightforward to me... by schon · · Score: 1

      If they do so, then any SCO IP within AIX may be transferred into the open license of the Linux kernel.

      Yes, and since the source code for Linux is freely available, SCO can look to see if any of the SCO "IP" got transferred.

      However, they aren't saying "here is proof of our IP being in the Linux kernel", they're saying "Linux is successful, so they must have stolen our code!"

      Your usage of the term "IP" is pretty nebulous. Unless I'm mistaken the only thing this "IP" can be is copyrighted material, trade secrets, or patents. (Trademarks don't really apply here.)

      If it's trade secrets, SCO themselves distributed (for free, and to the world at large) the "trade secrets" themselves, in their own Linux distribution. So they're obviously not secrets anymore.

      If it's patents, SCO has given the world at large a free license to use them, by distributing a GPL'ed product that contains them.

      So the only thing that the "IP" could possibly be is copyright - and if this was the case, they'd be able to provide concrete proof of infringement, by providing examples of the code.

      IF THIS IS THE CASE, the SCO may very well have a valid claim here.

      yes, and IF I THINK HARD ENOUGH, I might believe that monkeys flew out of my ass yesterday.

      The simple fact is that if SCO's case had any merit at all, they'd provide proof of it, instead of some "we think we've been robbed because someone else is successful" BS.

    3. Re:Seems straightforward to me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assuming the post above correctly outlines their case:

      AS AN ACTUAL IBM EMPLOYEE, I *can* categorically state that this charge is ludicrous.

      In order to either *use* OR *release* Open Source code, an IBMer MUST:
      1. Attend a class outlining the open source licenses (with a special emphasis on GPL).
      2. Describe precisely what code is to be used or released, *ahem* TO:
      a. Their 1st-line manager
      b. An intellectual property lawyer
      3. Be able to PROVE that the source is already licensed under a compatible license (which usually translates to Public Domain or BSD for commercial code).
      4. Approval is required from at least the 2nd-line manager, perhaps higher.

      I know, because I used a Public Domain Java library (http://www.gjt.org/pkgdoc/com/ice/tar/) to implement support for TAR files in our product.

      Posting anonymously because I'm lazy: Kevin Lamonte kedlam17@us.ibm.com

    4. Re:Seems straightforward to me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's trade secrets, SCO themselves distributed (for free, and to the world at large) the "trade secrets" themselves, in their own Linux distribution. So they're obviously not secrets anymore.

      Perhaps, but a) They would have been SCO's secrets to give away and b) there's nothing that says that whatever SCO may have given away is in fact the same parts that they claim IBM is in the process of giving away. Same goes with patents. Just because I may give away my stuff doesn't mean that you can give away my stuff.

      The simple fact is that if SCO's case had any merit at all, they'd provide proof of it, instead of some "we think we've been robbed because someone else is successful" BS.

      If you go on the basic assumption that they do have some proof, perhaps SCO has decided that the Court is the venue for them to provide the proof. Perhaps they already approached IBM and IBM told them to pound sand. The fact of IBM telling them so does not mean that SCO is wrong. It also doesn't mean that their claim is even valid.

      However, regardless, SCO has chosen the Court, at the Trial should it get that far, to demonstrate their case. That's what the courts DO.

      SCO may certainly be pulling this solely to get IBM to buy them out so they'd Go Away, or whatever. They're not doing it for the money, because we all know that cases like this drag for YEARS, and basing corporate cash flow on lawsuits is simply not good business. Should they win, it'll be a great windfall...in 5 years, after the trials, judgments, appeals, etc.

      If SCO has no case, then IBM simply won't bite as they can afford to put attorneys on the suit and camp out while bleeding SCO dry.

      The fact that SCO went to the top of the food chain may suggest that there is some merit to the case. Who can say, the licensing agreements between these companies are probably pushing 10 years old, at least. LOTS of discovery to go on here.

    5. Re:Seems straightforward to me... by schon · · Score: 1

      a) They would have been SCO's secrets to give away and b) there's nothing that says that whatever SCO may have given away is in fact the same parts that they claim IBM is in the process of giving away.

      Who "gave it away" is not the issue. The key word is secret. You do know what a secret is, don't you?

      If SCO put a trade secret in a public place, then it's no longer a secret, it's public knowledge. Ergo, by definition they can't claim the "IP" is a secret, because it ceased being a secret when SCO released it.

      Same goes with patents. Just because I may give away my stuff doesn't mean that you can give away my stuff.

      If you give me permission to give away "your stuff", then I most certainly can give it away. Read the GPL. (I covered this in my earlier post.)

      If you go on the basic assumption that they do have some proof, perhaps SCO has decided that the Court is the venue for them to provide the proof.

      Huh? So if (as you assume) they've decided that the court is proper venue, why didn't they provide it? They've filed their brief (which is where the proof would be). Where's the proof?

      Perhaps they already approached IBM and IBM told them to pound sand.

      Completely irrelevant. Read the brief filed by SCO. NOWHERE did they say that they have any proof, whatsoever. None. Nada. Zip. Elvis has left the building. All they said was "it's impossible for Linux to be good".

      The fact that SCO went to the top of the food chain may suggest that there is some merit to the case.

      And the fact that I had burritos for lunch may suggest that I'm mexican. You wanna bet on my nationality?

      More likely, it suggests that SCO is just self-destructing, and hopes that IBM will just buy them out to avoid a lengthy lawsuit.

  47. Oh, they're a hardcore Unix companyn all right... by bratgrrl · · Score: 1

    ... that distributes documentation in Windows Media Player, PowerPoint, .pdf...

    http://www.sco.com/scosource/

    Yeah, I'm whining and nitpicking. This is a stupid lawsuit.

    --

    ---

    SCO is weenies
    Gator is Spyware
    Microsoft is thugs

  48. McBride needs new board members by pkunzipper · · Score: 2, Funny

    And yet, SCO still offers products named OpenLinux. Is that going to change to ClosedUNIX or OpenLinuxfor$100.

  49. Slashdot must be full of pervs... by BgJonson79 · · Score: 1

    to be talking about eunichs all the time.

    --

    There are four boxes used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order.

  50. Clean! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Welp, I'm pretty sure there's no SCO code in this Linux distro's version of csh. Because && and || are the right way around.

    (of course, to get this joke you have to admit to using both SCO Xenix, and the csh ;)

  51. SCO's claims by dspeyer · · Score: 3, Interesting
    As near as I can make out from their site, SCO is claiming that Linux is derived from Minix (which is sort of true) which was derived from BSD (again, a stretch) which came from AT&T Unix (true for once) which SCO now owns. Of course, no Minix code is present in Linux, so they're not claiming actual piracy (besides, with Linux's code available, they can hardly claim secret violations!), but maybe some mystical Unix-essence.

    They're probably hoping IBM will buy them out for a couple million dollars in an effort to avoid bad publicity, and then the SCO managers can retirs in luxury. The sad thing is, it might even happen

    1. Re:SCO's claims by pmz · · Score: 1

      As near as I can make out from their site, SCO is claiming that Linux is derived from Minix (which is sort of true) which was derived from BSD (again, a stretch) which came from AT&T Unix (true for once) which SCO now owns.

      Yeah, and like, me and Kevin Bacon are like brothers, man!

    2. Re:SCO's claims by SN74S181 · · Score: 3, Informative

      SCO is claiming that IBM has recently merged code into Linux from their AIX codebase, which has licensed code from AT&T UUNIX, which they own.

      It isn't a matter of 'lineage' going back through the decades. It's a matter of new code submissions by IBM that IBM doesn't have the right to pass along freely.

      That's their claim, anyhow. We'll see how it turns out in court.

    3. Re:SCO's claims by jbolden · · Score: 1

      The suit itself doesn't say that. In fact it deliberately hides this chain at a crucial point. I haven't seen the website but assuming your post is correct it appears that the website is more honest than the sworn statement. In any case that's not the chain they are claimling for the breach. They claim the breach occured during Monterey.

    4. Re:SCO's claims by nathanh · · Score: 2, Interesting
      SCO is claiming that Linux is derived from Minix (which is sort of true) ... Of course, no Minix code is present in Linux, so they're not claiming actual piracy

      It's not "sort of true". Though you know the truth (there is no Minix source code in Linux and never was) unfortunately there are people who honestly believe that Linux is a Minix derivative. They point to minix.c as proof! These people don't need encouragement in any form. I know that you meant Linus used Minix as the development environment and Linux orignally used the Minix filesystem, but there are plenty of people who don't understand this subtlety. So please say "not even remotely true" instead of "sort of true".

  52. boycott shmoycott by wfmcwalter · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Boycott SCO? That's not going to be hard...

    SCO is in the same position as Intergraph before it, and is trying the same gag. They're a formerly large and influential company, fallen to the point of minnowhood. They have no prospect of growing significantly, have no revenue, and no significant human capital. So they've gone the patent litigation route.

    There's no obvious "strikebacks" at such a company (they're a lot like a "litigation proof" private citizen). Consumer actions or intensified competition won't work, as that is intended to interfere with revenue streams they don't have in the first place. Large tech companies (particularly IBM) might normally unleash a broadside of retaliatory IP lawsuits, but again SCO won't care much - that would interfere with revenue they don't have or enjoin actions they aren't taking. Their current claim is huge, but they'll try to negociate a more "reasonable" sum with IBM - one that would probably be less than the cost to IBM of the litigation.

    Intel wouldn't roll over for Intergraph, and I'd guess IBM won't for SCO.

    --
    ## W.Finlay McWalter ## http://www.mcwalter.org ##
    1. Re:boycott shmoycott by JivanMukti · · Score: 1

      This is like the movie The mouse that roared with Peter Sellers. A small dot on the map country needs money so it declares war on the US, expecting to lose quickly and get war reparations.

      Hey, when you've got nothing to lose...

  53. Dr Evil's new job by Spamhead · · Score: 1

    ... is working in the SCOsource division of SCO.

    "Hmmm. I believe we'll be suing them for (Long pause)

    1 BILLION DOLLARS!"

    --
    Everybody Wang-Chung tonight!
  54. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    If IBM bought SCO, they would have the IP rights to the original code, plus the name "UNIX" which is trademarked.

  55. No Problem See press release by bstadil · · Score: 1
    --
    Help fight continental drift.
  56. Throw out their case by cyclist1200 · · Score: 2

    I think legal arguments should have to be logically sound. This one is clearly begging the question. "It's not possible for them to be as good as we are unless they stole from us. So we're suing them for theft."

    Cripes, sounds like 5-year-old whining to me.

  57. Better than a boycott? by ctid · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've never seen SCO Unix (is that what it's called) anywhere. I wonder if it would be better for our community to kill SCO with kindness? I'm considering writing to SCO (in my own name) asking for information on their products. I won't put anything in my letter about a protest or about this issue at all. I will just ask them to send me some details. I wonder what the effect of hundreds of thousands of people doing this would be. At the very least it might make it difficult for them to identify real would-be customers.

    Is this legal? Is it a good idea? Would it have any effect at all?

    --
    Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    1. Re:Better than a boycott? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      They already have difficulty identifying their real would-be customers (there aren't any left).

    2. Re:Better than a boycott? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing you are kind of young. "Back in the day" when the 386 came out Motrolla was already supporting several Unixes. Microsoft had there own Xenix but that was 286 based. The 386 could support a Unix and SCO invented one. It some really neat features for the time. At that point dropping a $1k for a Unix and then a few more K to make it useful was standard fare. Dell for example sold a rebranded version of SCO as "Dell Unix".

      Anyway it had some very cool technologies. For example it support the Haupauge 486/i860 dual chip motherboard which had some really Fortran vector calculation libraries.

      So around '92 it was a really good product. The problem is that in last 11 years they've made virtually no progress as far as features. So what they ended up doing was:

      in the early days being feature rich but a little too expensive for the scientific market, and a little unreliable for the workstation / server market. (the hardware wasn't really good enough for workstation).

      Then they spend about 6 years adding almost no features but getting the reliability up so by the late '90s they were reliable but too feature poor.

      At this point there is no comparing a SCO to a Linux. In every area Linux has them beat. Unless you need to run a SCO application you don't run SCO.

    3. Re:Better than a boycott? by ctid · · Score: 1
      I'm guessing you are kind of young.


      Why? What has SCO's product in the early 90s got to do with this issue?

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    4. Re:Better than a boycott? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      You started by saying you had never heard of SCO Unix....

    5. Re:Better than a boycott? by ctid · · Score: 1

      Ugh! I worded that badly. I meant I've never seen it running. I'm 39 years old!

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    6. Re:Better than a boycott? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their Unix products are now called UnixWare and OpenServer.

      I used SCO Unix SVR3.2 (as it was called then)back in '90 - '92 after Interactive Unix proved to be not quite up to the task at hand. There were actually a number of i386-based Unixes; the only ones I can think of now are Interactive and SCO.

      Now I'm working at McDonald's Corporate; here, as mentioned in the actual lawsuit, OpenServer is used on the back office systems in many (but not all) US restaurants.

  58. Bandwidth is Expensive by Fished · · Score: 3, Funny

    I just LOVE listening to the audio broadcast of this on SCO's site. I think I'll listen to it again, and again, and again. Maybe I could listen to it on every computer in my house...

    --
    "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
  59. Linux alternative? by ArkiMage · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Argh.. We still sell and use SCO OpenServer 5.0.x in many customer sites. We integrated Cleo's SNA/SDLC/3270/HLLAPI/??? product into ours on SCO years ago and it's hard to move away from it now. Can anyone suggest a good Linux alternative? Our application runs fine on Linux without the SNA integration. So if we can do it some other way, no more SCO! That would have made me happy before they went and did this :)

    Cleo SNA product:
    http://www.cleo.com/products/gateway.asp

    1. Re:Linux alternative? by TaliesinWI · · Score: 1

      Want to do it for free? Here you go. (Note: site seems to be down, no idea why, but I've been there before and the Internet Wayback Machine has copies of the old pages.)
      GCom and TPS Systems both have products that might do what you need on Linux.
      There's also the IBM Communications Server but I don't think it's what you're looking for.

  60. 5 steps to a successful business. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1) Buy up old ancient patents 2) Hire big shot lawyer who is 0 for 2 in his last at bats 3) Sue IBM 4) Hope that hell freezes over 5) Profit^H^H^H^H^H.. Bankrupt.

  61. Anyone remember this? by Beatnick · · Score: 1

    I thought I remembered something regarding MS and SCO IP rights.

    Microsoft-SCO 1997 Settlement

  62. Better yet by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    Call them. Fax them. Write them and send by post.

    Lets organize and by doing so, we can effectively deny non-complaint-related traffic from getting processed effectively :-)

    Sort of how Code Red and NIMDA DDOS'd Microsoft technical support ;-)

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  63. List of Engineers by bstadil · · Score: 1
    Anyone that works in a shop with technical openings, try and see if an engineer from SCO would be willing to bail.

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
  64. This is retarded by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I do not even pretend to know the legaleze behind all of this but what I can comment on is IBM's interaction with the Linux kernel and library code. I worked for IBM in one of their linux units and at great pains, IBM keeps the AIX and Linux source very, very well seperated. An example of this was with network adapters... We had a particular network adapter that was running very poorly under Linux. Under AIX however, that network adapter's performance was great. IBM would not even allow us to speak to the AIX driver developer to find ideas on improving performance for fear of situations like what SCO is now suing about. Believe me. They are very strict about these things at IBM. At the time, I thought it was a little silly the lengths they went to but I can see now that it wasn't silly at all.
    In closing...F**K SCO. F**K Caldera. I hope we see some good boycotts cropping up out of this.

  65. Side point by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 1
    Perhaps offtopic to the current story, but here goes...

    I grew up in the town where SCO (hint: Santa Cruz Operations) started and I remember them making news even as a teen. Back in the late 80's or early 90's there was a big frenzy in the local media after one of the female employees came forward claiming that SCO's CEO at the time had fondled and/or harrassed her. Several other women came forward with similar claims and there was a flourish of publicity until a "settlement" was reached and the story went away. I cannot remember the names of the parties or even the final disposition of the CEO ('twas a long time ago in a land far, far away), but I do remember some of the stories made the company sound pretty nutso, such that it had a pretty bizarre corporate culture. This was further reinforced by folks my parents knew who interviewed there.

    Long story short, they've been nuts for awhile.

    Guess I was ontopic afterall!

    --
    If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
    1. Re:Side point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure much of the eccentricity in their corporate culture would have been eradicated by their move to Utah.

  66. What's with "shared libraries" in the complaint? by dr2chase · · Score: 1

    The complaint spent some time on the subject of SCO's could-not-possibly-be-reproduced shared libraries, but then I saw no more mention of it.

    Any idea what's up with that?

    They'll also have an interesting time proving that their "trade secrets" are still secrets. There are many books on OS design now available that have been influenced by Unix over the years. If they're looking to demonstrate an actual infringement, they'll have better luck showing that IBM propagated a boneheaded mistake, rather than a Good Idea essential for high performance.

  67. More about AIX than about Linux? by Florian+Weimer · · Score: 1

    It seems that this more about AIX than about Linux. Linux is just being added for the sake of publicity, but the real attack vector against IBM are the contractual obligations under the System V source code licensing for AIX.

    So much for the GPL virus. Looks as if proprietary license agreements can be pretty viral, too. So beware of Shared Source! You might walk into the System V trap!

  68. exit for sco by BlokkieX · · Score: 1

    or ibm buys sco or sco loses either way .. linux wins

    --
    -beer
  69. I know it's gratuitous and old, but... by halivar · · Score: 1

    David Boies's firm is trying a new four step litigation process:

    1. Sue mega-corp for success where self fails.
    2. Present no evidence but swear you would have made ONE BILLION DOLLARS.
    3. ???
    4. Profit!

    1. Re:I know it's gratuitous and old, but... by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      We liked David Boies when he represented Netscape against Microsoft.

      We liked David Boies when he represented algore against the Supreme Court.

      Now I guess we don't like him anymore.

    2. Re:I know it's gratuitous and old, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least he has plenty of experience in losing. That'll come in handy.

    3. Re:I know it's gratuitous and old, but... by WCMI92 · · Score: 1

      "We liked David Boies when he represented Netscape against Microsoft."

      He lost. The only time I've wished he'd won.

      "We liked David Boies when he represented algore against the Supreme Court."

      Lost again. Thank GOD...

      "Now I guess we don't like him anymore."

      No, the thing you should MOST like about our side's chances in this case is that they hired the highest profile, higest paid LOSER of a lawyer.

      No WAY this suit succeeds. IBM=BORG when it comes to IP.

      --
      Corporatism != Free Market
    4. Re:I know it's gratuitous and old, but... by cacav · · Score: 1

      You're forgetting when Boies helped defend IBM from an antitrust lawsuit years ago. That lawsuit dragged on for something like 13 years, and in the end IBM won. Hell, I can remember when (the now named) IBM Global Services had to be spun off as "Integrated Systems Solutions Corporation" to avoid the antitrust lawsuits. Right after IBM won, ISSC quickly got renamed IGS and folded back into the company.

      I almost wonder if they picked Boies just for that reason. Maybe they figure 13 years defending IBM will give him an edge trying to tackle IBM with a weak lawsuit.

    5. Re:I know it's gratuitous and old, but... by WCMI92 · · Score: 1

      "I almost wonder if they picked Boies just for that reason. Maybe they figure 13 years defending IBM will give him an edge trying to tackle IBM with a weak lawsuit."

      Actually, if that is true, it's called "conflict of interest" and Boies should be DQ'ed immediately.

      An attorney cannot breach attorney-client priveledge, hence the conflict of interest. If he represented IBM, he CANNOT oppose them.

      --
      Corporatism != Free Market
  70. Note by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    They have phone and fax numbers there :) This could get fun. We can now /. their phone lines *grin*

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  71. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by term8or · · Score: 1

    If they released their product under the GPL, couldn't IBM just take a distro and re-release it as "SCOSUCKS" Er, there are laws against that kind of thing. SCO is a trademark.

    --



    "As a writer / novelist you might want to spellcheck your sig. :) " - AC
  72. Anyone also note that by einhverfr · · Score: 3, Funny

    Their sales line is 1-888-GO-LINUX.

    Please MR Linus--

    Please make them license the trademark from you! ;)

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:Anyone also note that by RJ277 · · Score: 1

      I called the number and you are correct sir. Does anyone know the reasoning behind this? Perhaps SCO at one point (but now dead in the water) was going to start offering their own version of AIX/Linux. I don't think this could just be a freak event that their sales line is 1-888-GO-Linux which is 1-888-465-4689, which spells nothing else out that I can see off the top of my head besides Go-Linux.

    2. Re:Anyone also note that by sweetooth · · Score: 2, Informative

      You have to remember that Caldera and SCO are one and the same now. Caldera used to sell their own version of Linux. Now SCO is a part of United Linux. I would guess the number came from Caldera but still sticks because of their involvment in United Linux.

    3. Re:Anyone also note that by Stonent1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Weren't they trying to help IBM port AIX over to x86 or Itanium (forget which) at one point? The project was called Tarantella before the name got dumped onto another project.

      Also they just got certified for IBM DB2 on sco recently so they need to be careful or IBM might just forget to ever certify them again.

    4. Re:Anyone also note that by Jon+Abbott · · Score: 1
      Please MR Linus--

      Please make them license the trademark from you! ;)
      Yes, to the tune of about 1 billion dollars... :^)
    5. Re:Anyone also note that by jaavaaguru · · Score: 1

      offering their own version of AIX/Linux

      SCO == SCO Unix, Unixware
      IBM == AIX

      No?

    6. Re:Anyone also note that by beevan_jedi · · Score: 1

      The project was called Monteray. Tarantella was completely different, and was all that the old SCO had left after jetisoning the Unix and Professional Services bits of the business to Caldera. Hence the company name change to Tarantella.

    7. Re:Anyone also note that by kiggs · · Score: 1

      SuSE is reevaluating its relationship (via UnitedLinux) with SCO.
      http://linuxtoday.com/news_story.php3?ltsn=2 003-03 -07-023-26-NW-CD-SS
      So companies may have also joined the boycot

    8. Re:Anyone also note that by mink · · Score: 1

      IBM had AIX on x86 at version 1.2 before the RS/6K line existed.
      I have the disks and manuals to prove it.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  73. Boycott? by nsayer · · Score: 1

    So in a Boycott, we stop buying SCO products whereas, um...

  74. Note: It's not about patents, SCO has none by jeremy_white · · Score: 1

    Don Marti did some great research on this subject here:
    http://www.ssc.com/pipermail/atc/2003-March/000034 .html

  75. Waitaminute...doesn't SCO SELL Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So you can purchase Caldera Linux from their website...but SCO is SUING IBM for disclosing secrets on a product that existed for YEARS before they had an agreement?

    Riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiight.

  76. Even better .... from the complaint by taniwha · · Score: 1
    The primary purpose of the GNU organization is to create free software based on valuable commercial software. The primary operating system advanced by GNU is Linux.

    RMS's gonna be pissed not only isn't it GHNU/Linux but they forgot Hurd IBM's involvement, Linux was the software equivalent of a bicycle. UNIX was the software equivalent of a luxury car.

    in general the document keeps confusing AIX the OS (unix derivitive) and AIX the software suite full of apps etc .... and tries to imply that by giving away usefull parts of AIX written by IBM that IBM might also be giving away trade secret Unix sources.

    Of course there is the possibility that IBM slipped up and did somewhere include some source from Unix in stuff that it has released ... but that's one of the great things about Open Source .... it's all there for anyone, including the SCO lawyers to read - if there's a SMOKING GUN THRY PROBABLY WOULD HAVE FOUND IT BY NOW

  77. Interesting clause in exhibit C by isn't+my+name · · Score: 5, Interesting

    IANAL. However, I am trying to read through the exhibits SCO provided on its website. I have not looked at all of them, but I couldn't resist passing this on. Their exhibit C is a letter of understanding between AT&T and IBM which re-writes some of the clauses of the contract and license in an earlier exhibit.

    I would point people to the 4th page of the pdf file, which addresses clause 7.06a of an earlier agreement. It reads in part:

    "LICENSSE agrees that it shall hold SOFTWARE PRODUCT subject to this agreement in confidence for AT&T. . . . Nothing in this agreement shall prevent LICENSEE from developing or marketing products or services employing ideas, concepts, know-how of techniques relating to data processing embodied in SOFTWAR PRODUCTS subject to this agreement, provided that LICENSEE shall not copy any code from such SOFTWARE PRODUCTS into any such product or in connection with any such service and employees of LICENSEE shall not refer to the physical documents and materials comprising SOFTWARE PRODUCTS subject to this agreement when they are developing any such product or service or providing any such service. If information relating to a SOFTWARE PRODUCT subject to this agreement at any time becomes available without restriction to the general public by acts not attributable to LICENSEE or its employees, LICENSEES obligations under this section shall not apply to such information after such time."

    Now, I've not glanced at exhibits D and E and have not read completely exhibits A,B and C. However, this clause, if not overridden in D or E, would seem to me (remember IANAL) to give IBM the right to use IP embedded in licensed code to produce other code or services. It would even seem to allow people who have worked with licensed code to work on the new project so long as they do not refer to licensed code or documentation while working on the new project.

    So, even if IBM took SCO intellectual property and placed it into Linux, so long as they didn't copy SCO owned code or look at while working on the Linux code, it seems to me that it would have been perfectly legal under the contracts for IBM to co-opt SCO owned IP and place it under the GPL in Linux.

    Anyone read it differently?

    1. Re:Interesting clause in exhibit C by Piquan · · Score: 1

      Well, look at the phrase, Nothing in this agreement shall prevent.... IANAL, but I think this is saying that the license doesn't prevent IBM from using AT&T's concepts... but I don't see anything that permits it in your quote. So AT&T isn't giving up their patent rights here.

    2. Re:Interesting clause in exhibit C by isn't+my+name · · Score: 1

      OK, folks. Relevant material from exhibit D.

      IARNAL (I am REALLY not a lawyer) and this starts to get into conflicting clauses. In my comments below, I will try to separate what it says from what I think it means. I will not, however, be typing in large portions of the relevant agreement. Go check out SCO's pdfs for that.

      Here goes:

      Exhibits A and B represent signed licensing agreements between AT&T and IBM from the mid-80's. Appendix C is a letter of understanding between IBM and AT&T from the same period that both changes some clauses and further elucidates the exact meanuing of exhibits A and B.

      Exhibit D is the licensing agreement between SCO/Novell and IBM from 1996.

      Exhibit E is the letter from 6 March 2003 from SCO to IBM indicating the specific violations of the agreements and invoking a 2 month notice to terminate IBM's license. THIS IS REALLY WHERE SOMEONE SHOULD START READING IF YOU WANT TO WORK THROUGH THIS.

      Relevant material in Exhibit D:

      Page 5, item number 6.

      WHAT IT SAYS: This item is titled "Restriction on Fully Paid up License." (Exhibit D is an agreement whereby IBM makes a $10 million payment to SCO in exchange for being fully paid up on all royalties due under the original AT&T agreements. It doesn't give them carte blanche. It merely states that assuming the numbers of licenses, etc. . . agreed to in the mid-80s are adhered to then IBM has fulfilled all monetary obligations.) Anyway, item 6 states that for a 5 year period starting 1 Jan 1996 the grant of license only applies to AIX on the "Power, PowerPC and Power2 architectures." After that 5 year period the royalty relief applies to anything IBM releases. This paragraph also removes the provision I mention in the parent post that states "employees of LICENSEE shall not refer to the physical documents and materials comprising SOFTWARE PRODUCTS subject to this agreement when they are developing any such product or service or providing any such service"

      WHAT I THINK IT MEANS: I'm not completely sure. This defitely would seem to preclude IBM from offering AIX on Intel. Or from offering another Unix operating system on another CPU architecture, assuming that Unix system was basically derived from AIX/AT&T Unix. However, the removal of the clause not allowing employees to refer to source code or documentation when using material to create "products or services employing ideas, concepts, [and] know-how" would seem to imply that IBM could use the IP contained in it for other products as long as it wasn't based on AT&T Unix. I'd say you can clearly argue that Linux isn't based on AT&T Unix. However, the question is whether any of the IBM contributed code based on that. This paragraph 9 *may* be read to preclude IBM from contributing that code to Linux--again assuming it is contributing code developed by AT&T. I am not a kernel hacker, but I find this unlikely.

      Page 12 (section 3.04 and 3.06). This comes from the relevant "Reference Source Code" agreement between SCO and IBM. Section 3 relates to the confidentiality of the code and is thus the NDA.

      WHAT IT SAYS: 3.04 reads in part "YOUR obligations under this section shall not apply to a particular portion of the REFERENCE SOFTWARE PRODUCT which . . . (v) is independently developed by you with the use of the REFERENCE SOFTWARE PRODUCT or SOFTWARE DERIVATIVE.

      WHAT I THINK IT MEANS: This would seem to state that IBM can use concepts embodied in the software to create other software. It can even refer to the relevant SCO software in doing so. Again, we seem to have some conflicts between various clauses of agreements. I suppose this boils down to whether Linux code as contributed by IBM represents a Unix operating system on non PowerPC architectures.

      WHAT IT SAYS: 3.06. Not going to give a full quote here, but it basically says that IBM employees that have viewed source code can use that general knowledge when working on other projects so long as the employee doesn't review SCO code while working on other projects and doesn't take notes or attempt to memorize code or concepts when he is working with SCO source code. However, this paragraph ends with this ominous phrase "However, nothing in this paragraph shall affect SCO's rights under patent or copyright laws."

      WHAT I THINK IT MEANS: Here SCO has specifically written in a reservation of patent and copyright ownership. However, it only applies to this paragraph. The paragraph in question, 3.06, would seem to directly contradict and further restrict an employees ability to examine source code while working on other products.

      In conclusion, I do not have any answers. There seem to be conflicting clauses relating to IBM's ability to use concepts derived from looking at SCO code. There also appears to be an explicit reservation of patent IP rights under this agreement. That seems to be the strongest leg that SCO has to stand on. Conversely, there are also multiple references to the ability of IBM to use concepts contained in the code in other products. I don't know what the answer is, but I hope my two brief summaries here can help enlighten the debate.

  78. Geek Community by tokki · · Score: 1

    SCO has effectively alienated the geek community, which means they are either incredibly stupid (similarly business decisions have been made by smarter companies before) or the comments about their ultior motives are definately true.

    The geek community made Linux, it made FreeBSD, and it makes or breaks the companies involved. Alienating them is business suicide.

  79. They've committed one of the classic blunders! by douglips · · Score: 3, Funny

    The most well known of which is "Never get involved in a land war in Asia." But only slightly less well known is "Never go up against IBM, when Intellectual Property is on the line!" A ha ha ha! A ha ha ha! A ha ha...
    (thud)

    1. Re:They've committed one of the classic blunders! by ryanvm · · Score: 1

      You forgot the tags.

    2. Re:They've committed one of the classic blunders! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      does anybody want a peanut?

  80. Re:This is the end of SCO, for sure. by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

    One point:

    Linux doesn't follow Minix in any way implying there's Minix code in the Linux kernal. Linus was part of the Minix hacking community for a time and he decided to stop messing around with Minix (the 'ensigns training ship' of OSes- truly a pedagogical work for students to learn from) and create something new.

    The early Linux system used the Minix filesystem structure. That's about it.

  81. 1 Billion??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They claim they have 30000 licenses, and want $1 Billion in damages. Do they really think they can somehow prove that a license for Unix on Intel processors is somehow worth $33333 ?
    I think that is a pretty steep price. They would not be able to sell it to any sensible person for that price, let alone prove that IBM's business is damaging them to that amount.

  82. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by watzinaneihm · · Score: 1

    If SCO is trying to get them bought atleast somebody is biting, if not IBM. Share pices are up 50%

    --
    .ACMD setaloiv siht gnidaeR
  83. wow that's funny by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 1
    You know, for some reason, I think IBM has been in the business long enough and has enough disciplined developers that they don't need to "steal" SCO's "intellectual property" in order to help improve Linux.

    Besides, IBM has done far less for Linux than the Linux hacker community at large has. I've been using Linux for over 6 years, before IBM had any investment in Linux at all, and it wasn't THAT far behind where it is today. After all, I chose Linux over SCO back then.

    SCO is really leveling a huge insult towards all the dedicated kernel developers who are the real reason Linux is doing so well today. Without IBM, Linux wouldn't be far behind, if at all, where it is today. No, IBM didn't make Linux great, thousands of independent developers did, and SCO just insulted every last one of them.

    Fuck SCO. Fuck them up their stupid fucking asses.

    --
    Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
  84. Correct me if I'm wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But when Caldera released Linux, that was GPL. Therefore when SCO released a version of Linux or joined and contributed to the OpenLinux movement without complaint, didn't they acknowledge that it is free based on the GPL?

  85. +1 funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    please mod up, +1 funny.

  86. If I wanted to boycott... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How do I know what companies SCO owns? How can I make sure I am not buying one of their products or giving them my money?

  87. Doing the math by linuxwrangler · · Score: 1

    As Bruce Perens and others have pointed out, SCO just wants to get bought. They are suing for (raising pinky to side of mouth) "one billion dollars". But their market cap is 25 million dollars so they are suing for 40 times their current market value. Even adjusting for today's stock price their market value is less than $40 million. Most recent quarter per-share data: cash on hand=$0.92, earnings=-0.26. They better get bought quick.

    --

    ~~~~~~~
    "You are not remembered for doing what is expected of you." - Atul Chitnis
  88. please explain us system by lfourrier · · Score: 1

    why :
    CALDERA SYSTEMS, INC.,
    a Delaware corporation d/b/a THE SCO GROUP,
    Plaintiff,

    vs.

    INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation,
    Defendant.

    take place in THE THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF SALT LAKE COUNTY
    STATE OF UTAH
    ?

    why not in Delaware?

    1. Re:please explain us system by janda · · Score: 1

      You incorporate in deleware for tax reasons.

      You get venue in other places for other reasons. For example, the SCO lawyers might have their office there.

      It's incredibly stupid and convuluted, like most US law.

      --
      Karma: Food Fight (Mostly affected by Date Plate).
    2. Re:please explain us system by youngsd · · Score: 2, Informative

      Because Caldera is located in Utah. State of incorporation is not the same as location of the business. Many (perhaps most, not sure) corporations incorporate in Delaware (I've done it myself, though I have never been to Delaware), because of that state's well-developed body of commercial law. Attorneys (I am one) tend to be conservative, and selecting Delaware as the state of incorporation is sort of like picking Microsoft or Intel -- there is a perception that no one can fault you for making the "safe" choice.

      --Steve

      --
      Democracy is a poor substitute for liberty.
    3. Re:please explain us system by technomom · · Score: 2, Informative

      Caldera does its Unix business in Utah.

      Delaware is a handy place to incorporate $-wise. A lot of corporations are "Delaware Corporations".

      Here's why.

      JoAnn

  89. The FreeBSD alternative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SCO can't win, because even if they shut down Linux, we'll all just move over to FreeBSD, which has already won a lawsuit against USL and is truly free and unencumbered.

  90. Boycott? by Rinikusu · · Score: 1

    Boy, this outta work great.

    Who are you going to organize it with? People who already don't buy SCO (and no one is buying SCO it seems..)?

    The best the boycott can do is raise up a stink that the public, who doesn't understand or probably care what UNIX is (but they know what Britney Spears and Disney are, which is why those kind of boycotts are actually more successful. The problem there is that no one can get past the "Boycot the MP--OOO! New DVD! SHINY!" stage..). It's useless to talk about boycotting a sinking ship. It's like the passengers on the Titanic saying as it's going down "Why, I don't like what the Cap'n says, so by golly I just won't abide by it! I'm gonna sit here and drink myself silly...."

    --
    If you were me, you'd be good lookin'. - six string samurai
  91. Re:SCO is and has always been MSFT's Trojan Horse by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

    SCO was a division of Microsoft. Microsoft's Santa Cruz Operation produced Microsoft Xenix, a System 3 variant based on licensed AT&T code. It was the first UNIX Operating System to run on the Intel 8086.

    'Bill Gates' did not "use SCO as a hedge in case windows failed." Windows itself didn't exist until after Microsoft had divested themselves of SCO and Xenix. The word is (**) that Gates wanted to be rid of Xenix because all they were doing was reselling something and paying substancial royalties for each sale to AT&T.

    (** I belive the place I read it may have been from a post by Linux Zealot 'Rex Ballard' on the linux.advocacy newsgroup, so take it with a grain of salt!)

  92. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by tsetem · · Score: 1

    The idea is it's easier (and cheaper) for IBM to spend the $20 Million or so to buy SCO, than spend time litigating, or possibly losing a $1 billion lawsuit.

    The alternative thought is to have Microsoft buy SCO, and keep on sticking IBM & Linux with the pointy lawsuit stick, adding to FUD and distracting IBM from Linux.

    This could certainly be a tactic. Everyone knows their product sucks, they have no product or market share, and it just comes down to cashing out. The question may be who will buy them and for what purpose?

  93. IBM's Intel expertise by rgmisra · · Score: 2, Informative

    From SCO's complaint:

    "51. Prior to this time, IBM had not developed any expertise to run UNIX on an Intel chip and instead was confined to its Power PC chip."

    IBM had a version of UNIX on Intel, AIX-PS2. And don't forget OS/2's (albeit limited) POSIX layer. And IBM was involved with Linux before Project Monterey began.

  94. Go figure by lamename · · Score: 1

    Well, it seems there are some speculators out there that think this is a good deal for SCO. There stock has hit a 52 week high today, on ten times the normal volume. Hope this doesn't indicate SCO has a chance of getting anything but thumped out this deal.

    1. Re:Go figure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those are the people hoping that IBM goes for the buyout option.

    2. Re:Go figure by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Well too late to do anything about it now, But I've got a short for Monday if this keeps up.

  95. They are eating their own pie... by stienman · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Trolltech, front page: "IBM Pervasive Chooses Trolltech's Qt/Embedded and Qtopia for its New Embedded Linux Reference Platform"

    So, let's get this straight.

    1. Canopy invests in SCO
    2. SCO is suing IBM over Linux stuff
    3. IBM is using Trolltech's Linux stuff
    4. Canopy invests in Trolltech


    So either Canopy doesn't know what's going on, or is pretty hands-off, or they have no qualms about using one business in a way that would hurt or kill off one or more of their other viable businesses. Either way, they aren't a good company to work with.

    Kind of like the dilbert comic, "The net-net at the end of the days is we owe ourselves 3 billion dollars."

    -Adam
    1. Re:They are eating their own pie... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Canopy is "pretty hands off." It's the Mormon Mafia, but incompetent.

    2. Re:They are eating their own pie... by conan_albrecht · · Score: 2, Informative

      I know canopy group well. I've worked with them on several projects. They are very hands off, but they are not the "Mormon Mafia". They are a company just like any other, just a little incompetent in the SCO case.

  96. Trolltech by csguy314 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Hmm, with this boycott, does this mean IBM will drop Trolltech and QT for their embedded GNU/Linux needs? Trolltech is also owned by Canopy Group. So is a company called Tuglet which looks like it produces spamware.

    --
    This is left as an exercise for the reader.
    1. Re:Trolltech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Trolltech is not owned by Canopy group. It has a 5% stake. No, IBM will continue to use Qt for embedded.

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

      they are not owned by Canopy.
      Canopy has an investment in Trolltech, ie
      a non-controllng one.

    3. Re:Trolltech by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Wow.

      So we need to boycott KDE now.

      Gee, that's going to work well.

    4. Re:Trolltech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you don't need to boycott KDE. Many companies/projects are affiliated with have worked for and with in the past and continue to work with. SCO works with SuSE on UnitedLinux. SuSE just signed an agreement with Ximian to distribute there proprietary connector. Ximian is a GNOME company.... but you don't need to boycott GNOME for this.

      Let's try and stop feeding on hate foreach other and our projects and concentrate and realize that we are all on the same team people!!

  97. Obsurd! by tmasman · · Score: 1

    The compaint read more like a SCO advertisement than a caomplaint versus IBM. All they are doing is crying about how Linux didn't used to be a big deal.

    It also sounds like they are trying to say that if IBM didn't get involved in Linux, it wouldn't be a viable operating system? WTF! Linux is what it is today because of the blood sweat & tears of programmers around the world offering their talent & time to build it up.

    Sure alot of things are going to be base off of the "concepts" & "ideas" from Unix, but that's just because those concepts & ideas work! Why would we build on new concepts that aren't proven to work & work well?

    Give me a break! I think SCO needs get the pool stick out of their @$$ & learn to play nice. (instead of griping that they didn't properly foree the future of Linux.)

    ~ tmasman
    "Force always attracts men of low morality."
    -Albert Einstein

    --
    Oh! And this one time, at band camp...
  98. Appropriate by cloudscout · · Score: 1

    Right after reading this story, my login fortune was as follows:

    IBM:
    [International Business Machines Corp.] Also known as Itty Bitty Machines or The Lawyer's Friend. The dominant force in computer marketing, having supplied worldwide some 75% of all known hardware and 10% of all software. To protect itself from the litigious envy of less successful organizations, such as the US government, IBM employs 68% of all known ex-Attorneys' General.

  99. No. by burgburgburg · · Score: 3, Funny

    Yao. Can I write a check?

  100. Don't forget your friend and mine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "ho"

  101. A plot to get themselves bought out? by technomom · · Score: 1

    I seem to recall that Microsoft got rid of a lawsuit brought by a the company that did disk compression (Stac?) by buying the company outright.

    Perhaps, what's left of SCO (the lawyers and bankers) are hoping to prod IBM into buying them!

  102. The case is really weak by jbolden · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The case is worse than you think. There are all sorts of factual inaccuracies in the filling.

    For example they make a great deal out of the fact that Linux = Linux + Unix; to show that the intent was to steal Unix intellectual property. As a side note Linux is a pun on Linix which was an abbreviation for Linus' Minix and SCO owns no Minix intellectual property.

    They refer to Stallman as a former MIT professor.

    Where it is not just factually untrue they often are highly misleading. For example they talk about SCO intellectual property as part of the Monterey project and then have quotes from IBM indicating the version of JFS in Linux is from Monterey project. The clear intent is to leave the reader with the impression that JFS came from SCO and was stolen by IBM.

    Unlike the other two mistakes (which might just show negligence is preparing a court filing) this one is clearly an attempt to mislead the court.

    Similarly they have multiple sections outlining the fact that the probability of someone randomly creating libraries compatible with the SCO OpenServer Shared Libraries are close to 0; which hints but never states that Linux is compatible with the SCO OpenServer Shared Libraries.

    I think a very good case can be made for summary dismissal. As for IBM winning in court there won't be a problem. If this is the best claim Caldera has they really are in deep trouble.

    1. Re:The case is really weak by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 1

      Also they claim all commercial UNIXes are SYS5, I'm guessing to show that if you want a real UNIX, you need SYS5. BSDI is/was a commercial BSD UNIX vendor, just to show there are a bunch of ways to get UNIX. Possibly the court would also find relevant that SunOS4 (I refuse to call it Solaris 1, no matter what Sun says) was BSD for years and a lot of people only moved off of it, kicking and screaming, because of Y2K issues, not that it wasn't commercial grade UNIX.

  103. Dying company by sward · · Score: 1

    This has got to be the last gasp of a dying company ...

  104. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by gosand · · Score: 1
    If IBM bought SCO, they would have the IP rights to the original code, plus the name "UNIX" which is trademarked.

    In both cases, whooptie-doo.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  105. Re:Ha ha! You beat me to it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Ransom Love is a greedy fucking moron.

  106. Can't wear my SCO shirts anymore... by ryanwright · · Score: 3, Funny

    This is horse shit. I picked up some nice long sleeved shirts at SCO's booth @ LinuxWorld in January. They're great looking, comfortable shirts, and now I can't wear them...

    SCO, you bastards.

    --
    -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
    1. Re:Can't wear my SCO shirts anymore... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      funny. I would give you a 5

    2. Re:Can't wear my SCO shirts anymore... by Bull999999 · · Score: 1

      Wear them if you ever find a need to shovel manure.

      --
      1f u c4n r34d th1s u r34lly n33d t0 g37 l41d
    3. Re:Can't wear my SCO shirts anymore... by altstadt · · Score: 1

      Sew a circle and diagonal line over the logo.

      Instant topical shirts.

  107. boycott Canopy by bunnie · · Score: 1

    Many have observed that SCO is pretty much dead, so why boycott it?

    Instead, boycott Canopy, the VC firm that is in part responsible for SCO's strategic business practices. Don't do business with Canopy, or any of their holdings. SCO is listed bottom center on Canopy's front page.

    1. Re:boycott Canopy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does that include TrollTech and, thus, by extension KDE and all other QT apps?

  108. Re:Welcome to the future... by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 1

    5 types of people in North America - Politicians, Laywers, Marketers, Coders, Labourers.

    A long time ago I remember someone stating that one measure of a society is the ratio of number of engineers thinkers and artists (those who create new things) and the number of managers, accountants and lawyers (those who don't create but manage, count, and redistribute wealth based on those creations). If so, thats one ratio we'd be on the lower scale of.

    As far as North Americans go, I think the lawyeritis is a disease of us U.S. of Americans, I'd leave the Canadians and Guatemalans out of it. For some reason, Americans don't believe in personal responsibility anymore; it's always someone else's fault. SCO kept the old Xenix code cranking for years, not too many new features, it was very expensive and a wealth generating cash cow. When someone came out and did essentially the same job for cheaper, they called foul. I looked at the complaint, and it seems that they're saying "if you match this API, you must have stolen the code". Ummmmm....

    I first worked with SCO OpenServer in 96. Even at that time I thought "this has no added value, they're going to get their ass kicked by Linux or FreeBSD". I don't see anything compelling from SCO to make me change my opinion of it's value as an OS.

    I wonder if they're going to sue FreeBSD? Silly Linux/FreeBSD flame wars aside, in some ways it has more "enterprise" things than Linux. Yes, it doesn't have the device driver support and some of the bells and whistles, but it has a more mature VM, more mature scheduler. How did FreeBSD get these without help from IBM? Here you have this Linux with all this enterprise support, and here's FreeBSD that can go toe to toe with it in many spaces, and the selection often comes to personal preference. I know SCO can't sue BSD (the outcome of the great lawsuit that stymied FreeBSD development for years) but FreeBSD has no AT&T code, yet does many of the same things. Maybe aliens did it; far be it for us mortal programmers to understand this UNIX thing.

    SCO forgot that as much as anything, UNIX is now an API. A guaranteed featureset, with the implementations at least at some level irrelevant. If they have no value add over the standard UNIX API (and in some respects Linux is lacking; I hate the way Linux and FreeBSD 5 do threads) then they will be selling to a shrinking locked in marketplace.

    Last random point; how is it they're only guessing Linux got these things from UNIX? Can't they just look at the code and say "oh, thats from us"?

    BTW: In contrast one of their statements, BSDI is a commercial UNIX, and it's BSD based, not SysV based. It also runs on Intel.

  109. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by gosand · · Score: 1
    Er, there are laws against that kind of thing. SCO is a trademark.

    Ok, how about "5c0 5uX0r5" :-)

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  110. SCO a puppet of Microsoft?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Thought you all might be interested in this article.
    http://www.sourcemagazine.com/articles/v iewer.asp? a=695

    "In 1979, brothers Doug and Larry Michels founded the Santa Cruz Operation (SCO) as a UNIX porting and consulting company using venture capital from Microsoft..."

    "Microsoft acquired a 25 percent share of SCO, which at the time gave it a controlling interest. While SCO handled the actual development and added some enhancements of its own, Microsoft handled the marketing of the product, which it touted as the "Microcomputer Operating System of the Future!""

    1. Re:SCO a puppet of Microsoft?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think MS sold their take years ago, since in the '80's they started thinking about DOS/Windows native networking, which is what they were using their "Xenix" unix-like product for (which at some point they sold to SCO).

  111. UNIX History by ebresie · · Score: 1

    While reading up on this SCO article, I noticed the following diagram. Isn't this diagram derrived from another source? Does that mean they are doing something against copyright or some such matters?

    I know there was an article about this history diagram some time back but can't find it at the moment...

    --

    Eric B
    ebresie@gmail.com
    1. Re:UNIX History by Maserati · · Score: 1

      At the bottom of the chart:

      "Original UNIX history chart created by Eric Levenez. Copyright (C) 1996-2003, Eric Levenez. January 2, 2003. Used with permission."

      They're fine on this one.

      --
      Veteran, Bermuda Triangle Expeditionary Force, 1992-1951
  112. Re:This is the end of SCO, for sure. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice try troll, but POSIX is an IEEE standard, not a US gov't standard.

  113. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bruce is typically, off the mark.

    Of course IBM isn't going to buy SCO. SCO is worthless. Grinding them to paste in public in front of others on the other hand, has great value to them.

  114. Caldera/DR DOS, SCO/Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has it occurred to anyone that Caldera's suit against M$ over DR DOS was just a dress rehersal for this one? The tactics are identical. They're just looking for a cash infusion through a settlement. Let's hope IBM and any other targets don't give it to them.

  115. they've lost before they start by tomhudson · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Quote from the complaint:
    Shared libraries are by their nature unique creations based on various decisions to write code in certain ways, which are in great part random decisions of the software developers who create the shared library code base. There is no established way to create a specific shared library and the random choices in the location and access calls for "hooks" that are part of the creation of any shared library. Therefore, the mathematical probability of a customer being able to recreate the SCO OpenServer Shared Libraries without unauthorized access to or use of the source code of the SCO OpenServer Shared Libraries is nil.

    Aside from the insult proffered to programmers everywhere (calling our decisions "random"), there's the real problem that it IS possible to duplicate functionality in shared libraries without the source code. Check out WINE as an excellent example.

  116. So sad by dokhebi · · Score: 1

    I've been using SCO Unix/OpenDeskop/OpenServer for about 10 years now. It's never been cutting edge or 'sexy' but it has worked for me. This is just going to make the few supporters SCO has left leave and it gives a case of ammo to Microsoft...

    So sad.

  117. I have a question: by Bendebecker · · Score: 1

    Can anybody list some well known products SCO sells so I can boycott them?

    --
    There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
    most of us won't be able to afford it.
    -- Lemmy
  118. my uninformed thoughts by Molius · · Score: 1

    given that SCO is attacking IBM, what is to stop IBM from making the same claims of SCO? SCO is saying that IBM is helping linux, but doesn't SCO own Caldera, which is a part of UnitedLinux? what's stopping them from using the same unix code to help move UnitedLinux along?

    this could make things interesting for companies like Sun, who is supposedly developing their own linux distro (i read it here a while back).

    i wonder which sold more last year. SCO or Caldera...

    1. Re:my uninformed thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Caldera Systems bought SCO, then renamed themselves to SCO Group. So, a company that started out making its livelyhood from open source purchased a company that made its livelyhood from proprietary Unix, then did a turncoat maneuver.

  119. How does this play out for Microsoft? by pkunzipper · · Score: 1

    I wonder what Microsoft's managers have to say about this irrational, or tactical move by SCO, especially due to their recent plans to spread their product to "open source heavy" China. see http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/02/28/163921 6&mode=thread&tid=109

  120. IBM has a lot of OS expertise.... by hughk · · Score: 1
    IBM's has some of its own Unix expertise from AIX, which has very little relationship to AT&T Unix and only a marginal relationship to BSD. OTOH, IBM has been writing operating systems for 'big-iron' mainframes, like for ever. I would guess they would have picked up something on multiprocessing.

    Look at some of the other contributors to the Linux game. Many of them have expertise on multiprocessing. The point is rather than hide the expertise in their propietary binaries, thjey chose to contribute.

    --
    See my journal, I write things there
  121. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  122. Re:Ha ha! You beat me to it! by supremebob · · Score: 5, Insightful

    SCO might have written their own death warrant by suing Big Blue. IBM has more software patents than Microsoft and Oracle combined, and probably has enough legal firepower in their patent portfolio to countersue SCO out of existance.

    I doubt that anyone will miss them once IBM is finished mopping the floor with them.

  123. Applicable? by poteet · · Score: 1

    It is not possible for Linux to rapidly reach UNIX performance standards for complete enterprise functionality without the misappropriation of UNIX code, methods or concepts to achieve such performance, and coordination by a larger developer, such as IBM.

    What if this applied in other areas of creative work?

    The Tolkien Family's lawyers:

    "It is not possible for Robert Jordan, George R.R. Martin, Terry Brooks, Terry Goodkind, or any other well-regarded fantasy writer to reach acceptance as credible authors of the fantasy genre without misappropriating methods and concepts from J.R.R. Tolkien such as good vs.evil, elves, magic, dragons, and also the coordination of a major fantasy publisher, such as Tor.

    Sheesh.

    --
    "Sometimes nothin' is a pretty cool hand." - Cool Hand Luke
  124. It's true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I wrote the sound driver for Linux on the Dreamcast I ripped off SCO's Unix driver.

  125. Um, sorry, Linux supports 32 proc. SMP by elan · · Score: 1

    "For example, Linux is currently capable of coordinating the simultaneous performance of 4 computer processors. UNIX, on the other hand, commonly links 16 processors and can successfully link up to 32 processors for simultaneous operation. This difference in memory management performance is very significant to enterprise customers who need extremely high computing capabilities for complex tasks. The ability to accomplish this task successfully has taken AT&T, Novell and SCO at least 20 years, with access to expensive equipment for design and testing, well-trained UNIX engineers and a wealth of experience in UNIX methods and concepts."

    1. Re:Um, sorry, Linux supports 32 proc. SMP by be-fan · · Score: 1

      And what the hell does processor scalability have to do with "memory management performance?"

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
  126. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by Dalroth · · Score: 1

    Why would IBM *buy* SCO? If they released their product under the GPL, couldn't IBM just take a distro and re-release it as "SCOSUCKS" under the GPL? Couldn't anyone? What would burn the top brass at SCO if after this lawsuit (clearly aimed at them just trying to cash in), someone took their distro and made it successful.

    Yeah, that works great for Caldera Linux (or United Linux or I can't tie my own shoe Linux or whatever the hell they want to call it today). Problem, it doesn't do squat for SCO Unix which is a completely seperate closed source product.

  127. Re:Ha ha! You beat me to it! by fault0 · · Score: 1

    Ransom Love left Caldera^H^H^H^H^H^H^HSCO many months ago.

  128. SCO, the horse is dead by greenalbatros · · Score: 0

    stop flogging it. people in the front row are getting spatterred with blood

    --
    this sig steers like a cow. and i can prove it
  129. raising hand by jbolden · · Score: 2, Funny

    OK I'll hide my head in shame. Oce printing uses a SCO solution for their postscript control center:
    (individual systems -> SCO master -> ?SCO slave? -> Postscript rip -> SCO slave/master -> ?IOCA RIP? -> Printer. Its switching to Linux but it isn't converted yet (since it works and scales big enough).

    [Screams of "but its not my fault" in the background]

    1. Re:raising hand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What an, erm, reliable system.

  130. SCO Stock is up by pkunzipper · · Score: 1

    So back to my above comment about SCO making a tactical move: Does it bother anyone that their stock has soared 52% since this morning's open (to 3.29)??! This gives the stockholders a chance to either stick with this rollercoaster or SELL, SELL!

  131. Linus + UNIX = Linux by CrudPuppy · · Score: 1

    they claim Linux is a combination of the word UNIX and the name Linus.

    I think Linus should stand up and tell them that he just replaced the "s" at the end of his name with an "x" and tell them they can keep their crappy trademark <g>

    s#s#x#

    --
    A year spent in artificial intelligence is enough to make one believe in God.
    1. Re:Linus + UNIX = Linux by netsharc · · Score: 3, Informative
      To Quote the Linux Anecdotes,
      The name Linux was not coined by Linus himself, strange though that may seem to people familiar with his self-esteem. It was coined by Ari Lemmke, the administrator at ftp.funet.fi who first made Linux available for FTP. Ari had to coin a name since Linus had failed to give a proper one, so Ari invented one and it stuck.
      --
      What time is it/will be over there? Check with my iPhone app!
  132. Say what you want about the lawsuit by BeBoxer · · Score: 1

    Say what you want, but it appears that for SCO shareholders it's already bearing fruit. Their stock is up ~50% today (A whole dollar!). While I expect that fruit to quickly rot, right now the stock appears to be trading at an all time high. So if you sell right now you might actually make some money out of it.

  133. Looks like they swiped the unix family tree.. by chuckfee · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It appears that SCO has helped themselves to
    Éric Lévénez's unix family tree, possibly in
    violation of the "you can freely use this diagram
    for non-commercial purposes" line at the bottom
    of the page.

    compare http://www.levenez.com/unix/

    with

    http://www.sco.com/scosource/unixtree/unixhistor y0 1.html

    http://www.sco.com/scosource/SCOsource_Presentat io n.ppt (slide #4)

    I guess "What's mine is mine, and what's yours
    is negotiable" rings true at SCO.

    --chuck

    1. Re:Looks like they swiped the unix family tree.. by chuckfee · · Score: 1

      My bad on this one. I just got an email from
      the creator of the unix family tree saying
      it's all on the up and up. They asked for and
      were given permission to use the unix family
      tree (which btw is super cool and totally worth
      checking out.

      I didn't see any notice and assumed the worst.

      --chuck

  134. Lament by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The lament of a dying dinosaur.

  135. Think! by nrdlnd · · Score: 1

    There is so many good things coming out of the US but also a lot of bad. Just now the US is trying to go to war against a poor country in the "third world" just to get contol of their oil. It doesn't matter how they try to disarm themselves.

    Now your laws of "intellectual property" tries to destroy the efforts of a whole world to develop something that can make us to communicate freely with each other.

    Now - communicating freely with you - how can you let this happen?

    Per

  136. Um... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    when did MS buy SCO?

  137. SCO - contact number is 888-GO-LINUX :-) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone see the phone number on their contact page -
    1-888-GO-LINUX -- Is this a joke!!!

  138. Not possible by borwells · · Score: 1

    'It is not possible for Linux to rapidly reach UNIX performance standards for complete enterprise functionality without the misappropriation of UNIX code, methods or concepts to achieve such performance, and coordination by a larger developer, such as IBM.'

    Which is why we use Linux to host our website. http://uptime.netcraft.com/up/graph/?mode_u=off&mo de_w=on&site=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sco.com&submit=Exami ne
    --
    "We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them."
  139. The lies continue by Sevenfeet · · Score: 1

    If you read the SCOSource Q&A document from their site, it explains when SCOSource was created in the first place (January 22nd, 2003) and why ("As a publicly held corporation we have an obligation to our stakeholders - our investors, customers, resellers, developers and our employees - to manage these important assets responsibly and to derive value from them.")

    Read further and it gets interesting. Quote:

    Is SCO going to sue Linux vendors?

    SCO is a Linux vendor and a member of United Linux. We have no interest in suing Linux vendors. While we haven't formulated the details of our new SCOsource effort, we're confident that we can work together with other vendors to clear up IP issues in a fair and amicable way.

    Two weeks ago an industry publication headlined a story saying SCO was threatening to sue Linux vendors.

    The story was wrong. SCOsource is now one day old. We haven't made any plans to sue Linux vendors, and we certainly haven't threatened any vendors. This story was damaging to the Linux community and made assumptions that were incorrect.

    Unquote. So much for not threatening any vendors. They claim to have been in discussions with IBM, but IBM probably recognized a shakedown early and promptly laughed at them. I'm sure that they recognized the threats of a dying enterprise with few cards to play.

  140. The meat of the complaint appears to be pts. 50-55 by Troy+Baer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Here's the relevant section:

    Project Monterey

    50. As SCO was poised and ready to expand its market and market share for UnixWare targeted to high-performance enterprise customers, IBM approached SCO to jointly develop a new 64-bit UNIX-based operating system for Intel-based processing platforms. This joint development effort was widely known as Project Monterey.

    51. Prior to this time, IBM had not developed any expertise to run UNIX on an Intel chip and instead was confined to its Power PC chip.

    52. In furtherance of Project Monterey, SCO expended substantial amounts of money and dedicated a significant portion of SCO's development team to completion of the project.

    53. Specifically, plaintiff and plaintiff's predecessor provided IBM engineers with valuable information and trade secrets with respect to architecture, schematics, and design of UnixWare and the UNIX Software Code for Intel-based processors.

    54. By about May 2001, all technical aspects of Project Monterey had been substantially completed. The only remaining tasks of Project Monterey involved marketing and branding tasks to be performed substantially by IBM.

    55. On or about May 2001, IBM notified plaintiff that it refused to proceed with Project Monterey, and that IBM considered Project Monterey to be "dead." In fact, in violation of its obligations to SCO, IBM chose to use and appropriate for its own business the proprietary information obtained from SCO. (emphasis mine)

    That's all well and good, but it blatantly ignores a couple hard truthes of the marketplace at the time:

    • The architecture of the Itanium is so different from x86 that SCO's knowledge of previous Intel architectures was either useless or an active hinderance to development.
    • By May 2001, it was obvious to anyone paying attention to that Linux was going to be the OS of choice among the early adopters of Itanium. A significant percentage (20% at least) of all Itanium-1 processors produced were going into compute clusters at academic HPC sites like NCSA and OSC (my employer), and those sites were all using Linux on their Itaniums. (NCSA bought their Itanium gear from IBM, IIRC.)
    I think this suit is going to come down to SCO needing to prove the sentence italicized above, including identifying the trade secrets that IBM supposedly misappropriated. I have to think that's going to be extremely hard to prove, especially given that IBM wasn't even substantially involved in the Linux/ia64 port. (HP did most of the heavy lifting there, I think.)

    Personally, I think Bruce Perens is right -- SCO is trying to get someone with deep pockets to buy them, whether that's IBM, MS, or somebody else.

    --
    "My life's work has been to prompt others... and be forgotten." --Cyrano de Bergerac
  141. Validity to Sue by bazmonkey · · Score: 1

    And, even if their claim did have even a hint of validity (which it does not), UCB, AT&T, and DEC (aka Compaq) would all have just as much, if not more, right to sue by that logic.

    Well, SCO now technically owns UNIX, so they're suing as the body that issued the license, not just another licensee.

  142. Read the claims - oh my by Sabalon · · Score: 1

    I just read (most of) the claims they make.

    In there, they are talking about how in the early 80's, they saw that the intel processor, while not as powerful as the IBM, Sun and other processors, could be used to run Unix on, and basically claim that they provided Intel with a market for the chip - never mind the whole DOS thing going on.

    They go one about how disorganized Linux is/was and that basically it could not have moved to where it is now without UNIX's help - gee...I didn't know that SCO could help organize a group of developers from around the world - powerful stuff that.

    What's next? Without SCO, there would be no Internet? Perhaps SCO should claim that it laid birth to Apache and it should be named SCO/Apache...because we know that Apache could not have been created without the help of UNIX.

    Now I need to go fix a leak in my roof and I hope that UNIX can come over and help me.

  143. SCO - The North Korea of IT Companies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They have obviously been isolated for way too long.

  144. Maybe "The Mouse that Roared", maybe not... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The prevailing view here seems to be that in attacking Big Blue first, SCO is figuring IBM will buy them out to eliminate what for them is basically a nuisance.

    The more paranoid among us can't escape another possibility. Has anyone got a run-down on just who currently owns SCO's stock? It wouldn't surprise me to find a morass of interconnected hedge funds and holding companies with ultimate ties to Redmond. Combined with the chunk that The Beast owns directly, it may give them ultimate controlling interest in SCO, and thus Unix itself.

    Beyond this, if SCO manages to make this thing stick, it sets a horrendous precedent for claims against any look-alike or work-alike products. Micosoft could go after anything that even vaguely resembled Windows or Office (and certainly kill off Samba), Adobe could stamp out GIMP, and General Motors could even go after anyone they don't already own who builds something with four wheels and a gasoline engine.

  145. Different company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "My opinion Five years ago Linux was a better choice then that of SCO."

    Just for the record, the company called SCO five years ago was a different company. Caldera purchased the IP when the original SCO ("Santa Cruz Operation, Inc.") died. (The rest of the old SCO is now Tarantella, Inc., which is struggling, but still around, and still occupying the old SCO headquarters in Santa Cruz, CA.)

    When Caldera realized they weren't making any money off of their Linux products, they revived the old SCO trademark as "SCO Group".

    So, while I agree with the sentiment of your post, I think your comparison of this SCO to the SCO of 5 years ago is meaningless. They're two different companies. The only thing they have in common is the name and ownership of the System V source.

  146. All your kernel belong to us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hehehe. Immitation/Art/Flattery - all bullshit when you have a bad ass IP lawyer.

  147. Scarlet Letter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Post summaries:

    Who would want to do business with SCO?

    We should boycott them!

    We should shun them from the community!

    As an outsider, I have to wonder why I would want to become part of your beloved community. It is hard to imagine a complete and thorough analysis of the details and facts associated with this lawsuit within in one day of the filing. And yet, many of you are ready to burn SCO at the stake.

  148. Technically oriented people don't know marketing. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1


    Technically oriented people are sometimes amazing for their lack of insight into marketing.

    It's, "Work hard for years, destroy it all in an afternoon with bad public relations."

  149. SCO has some misconceptions about Linux/GNU by einnor · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The SCO lawyers seem to have quite a few misconceptions about Linux, and especially GNU, in their brief. Is the FSF gonna file a friend of the court brief? Someone should correct them.

    Here's some of the misconceptions they have:

    In their brief, one of the points they make is that Linux was originally created for not-for-profit uses:

    76. The initial market positioning of Linux was to create a free UNIX-like operating system to be used by developers and computer hobbyists in personal, experimental, and not-for-profit applications. As such, Linux posed little, if any, commercial threat to UNIX.

    I don't know for sure about what Linus was thinking, but I know for certain that GNU was intended to be used in commercial, for-profit applications. Stallman has repeatedly stated that people can GPL stuff and sell it. His analogy was with legal help: you pay a lawyer to write up a contract, but then you can give the contract to a friend in a similar situation. You pay once for the lawyer to write up the contract; the lawyer doesn't get royalties every time you use it. OTH, your friend would be wise to at least run it by a lawyer before using the contract to make sure it fits his/her situation. You can produce GPL'ed software that way, too. You can offer custom GPL'ed programs for a fee. The GPL has ALWAYS been intended to be applicable to for-profit programs.

    79. In order to assure that the Linux operating system (and other software) would remain free of charge and not-for-profit, GNU created a licensing agreement entitled the General Public License ('GPL').

    Free of charge, yes. Not-for-profitt, no. I can sell GPL'ed code for a gazillion dollars if I want. Of course, the first person who buys it can then put it on an ftp site and distribute it to the world...

    80. Any software licensed under the GPL (including Linux) must, by its terms, not be held proprietary or confidential, and may not be claimed by any party as a trade secret or copyright property.

    All GPL'ed software is copyright property. That's the only way the GPL works.

    And then they go on to claim that IBM is trying to "destroy the economic value of UNIX (paragraph 90)." Um, guys, Stallman's intent at the outset was to destroy the economic value of all proprietary software.

    I just hope that IBM's lawyers don't let them get away with such huge misconceptions. I really hope IBM can squash this suit like a bug (oh, wait, is that a good analogy? IBM... squashing bugs...infinitely growing bug lists... hmmm...))
    --
    Acronyms Obfuscate
  150. GPL and court-mandated discovery processes? by Doctor+Hu · · Score: 1
    Well, assuming that
    "It is not possible for Linux to rapidly reach UNIX performance standards for complete enterprise functionality without the misappropriation of UNIX code, methods or concepts to achieve such performance, and coordination by a larger developer, such as IBM.
    actually is somewhere near the heart of the complaint, it should be relatively easy to assess the argument. According to the GPL, the code of Linux is readily available for examination, from which it is possible to assess the methods and the concepts as well. Since SCO/ Caldera claim ownership of UNIX(tm) they should be able to point to specific examples of the misappropriations that they have in mind... and be able to demonstrate to the satisfaction of a court of law that the same methods and concepts could not have been independently rediscovered and reimplemented by others, despite the fact that Unix(tm)-like systems have been the academic world's basic teaching-and-basic-research OS of choice for, oh, more years than SCO has held title to the Unix "tm"?
  151. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bruce is typically, off the mark.

    Nope. You are typically, pretty damn stupid.

    Of course IBM isn't going to buy SCO. SCO is worthless.

    This is pretty much exactly what Bruce said.

    He said that "SCO wants to be bought", not "IBM wants to buy SCO".

    Next time, please pull your head out of your ass long enough to read the post, before you respond.

  152. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I don't think it's in IBM's interest to actually win the case, because that would poison any chance of IBM's bringing similar claims against other companies. It's better for them to buy the company and leave the case unresolved.

    But then, I'm Machivellian. Most corporations are too. But are we the same Machievellian? :-)

    Bruce

  153. Cut cash flow. by bstadil · · Score: 1
    Much better approach is to swamp them with request for service calls if you have a contract with SCO.

    When they are unable to comply with contractual response time, have your account payable department withhold payment until problem has been resolved.

    If invoice gets to you for authorization of work done, delay. Throw it out and request a new by snail mail. Repeat.

    Ask your system house vendor for a review of SCO licensing. Withhold payment until done. DElAY everything you can. In a few weeks their cash is below required minimum and the banks etc. will call their loans.

    Noting kills a company quicker than a cash crunch, NOTHING. It's like a run on a bank. End of SCO.

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
  154. Compliant is full of incredible holes.... by einhverfr · · Score: 4, Interesting

    From the compaint:

    Except for SCO, none of the primary UNIX vendors ever developed a UNIX "flavor" to operate on an Intel-based processor chip set. This is because the earlier Intel processors were considered to have inadequate processing power for use in the more demanding enterprise market applications.


    Hmmm.... I guess that Solaris x86 doesn't count?

    Prior to IBM's involvement, Linux was the software equivalent of a bicycle. UNIX was the software equivalent of a luxury car.

    And SCO UNIX was the equivalent of that Mercedes Sportscar until you discover that it had a really cheap transmission in it and 2 cycle lawn-mower engine....

    Nother interesting point which regardless of accuracy should give Shared Source advocates pause is:

    Based on other published statements, IBM currently has over 7,000 employees involved in the transfer of UNIX knowledge into the Linux business of IBM, Red Hat and SuSE (the largest European Linux distributor). On information and belief, a large number of the said IBM employees currently working in the transfer of UNIX to Linux have, or have had, access to the UNIX Software Code.


    It seems to me that this suit is interesting because as a derivative works suit... This is very dangerous for Microsoft and its shared source initiative. So the idea that this is good for Microsoft is actually very misleading. Normally, lawyers will usually take a "play it safe" mentality where unless victory is quite likely, suits are often discouraged. Particularly in expensive areas like copyright or patent laws. So the fact that SCO has moved into the DMZ of copyright law is significant and could redefine where the DMZ is. In fact their presence there, if they lose would be a severe blow to their ability to pursue other suits. So if IBM wins, this is a victory for all of us.

    Now as to what can be done:
    1: Can the FSF get involved?
    2: If so, cvan we all donate to them?

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:Compliant is full of incredible holes.... by JordanH · · Score: 1
      • 1: Can the FSF get involved?

      IANAL, but I think the only possible role for the FSF would be to file a 'friend of the court' brief.

    2. Re:Compliant is full of incredible holes.... by Cinabrium · · Score: 1
      Hmmm.... I guess that Solaris x86 doesn't count?


      Neither do:
      Dynix/PTX (Sequent)
      MP/RAS (NCR/Teradata)
      Reliant (Siemens Nixdorf)

      What kind of moron wrote the technical parts of their complaint?
    3. Re:Compliant is full of incredible holes.... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      IANAL, but I think the only possible role for the FSF would be to file a 'friend of the court' brief.

      Hmmm....

      What about an anti-defamation counter-suit.

      From the complaint:
      The primary purpose of the GNU organization is to create free software based on valuable commercial software. The primary operating system advanced by GNU is Linux.

      In the context of the suit, it might be possible to get them to ammend their complaint by threatening to sue over arguing that they are essentially accusing GNU of copyright violations.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    4. Re:Compliant is full of incredible holes.... by Gerry+Gleason · · Score: 1
      Hmmm.... I guess that Solaris x86 doesn't count?

      Well, actually, Interactive UNIX was a SCO competitor from way back. The OS part of Interactive was merged with Sun in the early 90s. The main reason for wanting Interactive was for the driver library, as the core of Solaris x86 was no doubt pretty much pure Solaris.

      But, it is pretty funny to see SCO claim to be the *only* x86 based UNIX. That may have been true for a year or two with XENIX in the 286 days, but I doubt even that. I dare say that IBM has way more patents relating to running all sorts of OSs very fast on all sorts of multi-processing architectures. They don't even know all the patents they have, but their lawyers can certainly find a few for this and similar situations.

      And I agree that when IBM wins this, a line will be drawn that makes people a lot less nervous about reading someone elses code before implementing something. This also points to something about Free/Open Source. Almost nobody would try to keep you from reading a Free/Open Source program and creating your own version under any license you want. The principle is that it is all about sharing ideas, and freeing them up to be widely applied.

    5. Re:Compliant is full of incredible holes.... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      But, it is pretty funny to see SCO claim to be the *only* x86 based UNIX. That may have been true for a year or two with XENIX in the 286 days, but I doubt even that. I dare say that IBM has way more patents relating to running all sorts of OSs very fast on all sorts of multi-processing architectures. They don't even know all the patents they have, but their lawyers can certainly find a few for this and similar situations.

      You mean when it was a Microsoft product?

      This is a very interesting case and has a lot of very useful implications.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    6. Re:Compliant is full of incredible holes.... by Darth · · Score: 1

      >Hmmm.... I guess that Solaris x86 doesn't count?

      I mentioned this in another post, but it bears repeating.

      Solaris for x86 is probably ignored because Sun probably didnt license the term UNIX from SCO for use with Solaris for x86.

      Their statement is probably technically accurate but completely ignores the existance of Unix-like operating systems that are equivalent to UNIX, but do not license the term UNIX from SCO.

      --
      Darth --
      Nil Mortifi, Sine Lucre
    7. Re:Compliant is full of incredible holes.... by sailesh · · Score: 1

      Well, actually, Interactive UNIX was a SCO competitor from way back. The OS part of Interactive was merged with Sun in the early 90s. The main reason for wanting Interactive was for the driver library, as the core of Solaris x86 was no doubt pretty much pure Solaris. When I was a full-time IBM'r (still am an employee) I remember a lunch-time conversation on the purported existence of an AIX version for the x86 .. never worked out.

    8. Re:Compliant is full of incredible holes.... by ModulusFree · · Score: 1

      All I can add is; Watch out! Here comes the GNU/Hurd

    9. Re:Compliant is full of incredible holes.... by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      Well, then AIX will do it!!

      They can't claim it's not unix, it's what's the case is based on!!!

      And I remember using an AIX on a 386 5 years ago!!!

    10. Re:Compliant is full of incredible holes.... by mink · · Score: 1

      Yall left out AIX 1.2 for PS/2 (x86).

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    11. Re:Compliant is full of incredible holes.... by mink · · Score: 1

      "When I was a full-time IBM'r (still am an employee) I remember a lunch-time conversation on the purported existence of an AIX version for the x86 .. never worked out."

      It exists.
      Looking at the IBM aix 1.2 for PS/2 (x86) binder on the shelf at my home. contains the OS on floppy, and typical (numerous and big) IBM manuals to go with it. Seems quite real to me.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  155. Re:Let SCO know what you think of them: by josh+crawley · · Score: 1

    Their email send doesnt accept mails from postmaster@localhost, but does like postmaster@127.0.0.1 ;-)

    hehe heee

  156. Linux beat SCO at least by '95 by RoboProg · · Score: 1

    I started using Linux (Slackware) in March 1995, and it was already better than the SCO system I sometimes used at work then. At least in terms of developer-friendly tools, and the performance / reliability was reasonable on a single CPU.

    Doubtless, many people learned this much before I did...
    .

    --
    Yow! I'm supposed to have a plan?
  157. Why is it wrong for what SCO doing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    SCO maybe wrong in term of the allegation, however, owning a property and enforce it, is not wrong.

    Can I take all the linux code, and make it mine? Change all the copy right message and make it mine?

    SCO is a member of open source, does that means that they can not suit someone who kill their president and also an open source member?

    Think. The world has turn upside down. The thinkers have gone mad.

    What does IBM violation allegation has anything todo with open source?

    Would I take Netbeans code, and change to whatever I want, and also takes some of Sun's java code, and some of their propritary code, then put together, and claim it's mine, and sell it with my hardware, and not get sue because Sun contribute to open source, and so am I?

    So if anyone sue some open source company automatically be a criminal and shame, and whatever people already say about them? I disagree. You can sue anyone as the spirit of openness, freedom, and liberty of property (liberty to share or not to share your property).

    Redhat is open source company, but they have the right to retain some of their property, and they have the right and the ethic to sue someone who violate their property.

  158. Re:Welcome to the future... by The+Bungi · · Score: 1
    North Americans [...] I'd leave the Canadians and Guatemalans

    Luv yer first-world tunnel vision there. Guatemala is not in North America, but Mexico is.

  159. Here is some info on SCO's products by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    In their compliant we read:

    "31. The simplicity and power of this "UNIX on Intel" business model helped SCO grow rapidly. SCO gained other large enterprise customers such as CitiGroup, K-Mart, Cendant, Target Stores, Texas Instruments, BMW, Walgreens, Merck, Sherwin Williams, Radio Shack, Auto Zone, British Petroleum, Papa John's Pizza, Costco and many others."

    I work for one of these companies in the pharma industry.
    The number servers we run SCO Linux is 4 (four), 3 of them are test and dev.
    The only reason for it is Volution which wi currently use to deploy RedHat to our servers.
    Frankly, Volution doesn't work the way we want it to (maybe I'm being too polite here) and we are looking at replacing it in a near future, so there goes SCO.

  160. Re:What's with "shared libraries" in the complaint by jbolden · · Score: 1

    I take it as similar to the whole JFS claim, where they hint at something which is an out and out lie but don't say it. In the case of the JFS they hint that IBM stole JFS from SCO. In the case of SCO libraries they hint that Linux has these libraries but never say it.

    I mean this lawsuit is really shockingly bad.

  161. Rife with errors by ExileInParadise · · Score: 1

    It seems that SCO has missed a few facts on their stampede to litigation: Except for SCO, none of the primary UNIX vendors ever developed a UNIX "flavor" to operate on an Intel-based processor chip set. Guess they never heard of Solaris x86? What else are the mistaken about along the way? A lot it seems... perhaps we should take score? 1 pt for each marketing hype disguised as legal verbiage. 2 pts for each plain old mistake 3 pts for each sneaky misdirection (i.e. that Linux could not run on more than 4 CPU's without massive help from a big vendor) Anybody want to total up this mess? At least we all get to see how afraid of Linux the actual UNIX holder is. Interesting stuff.

  162. So Unix is indeed (finally?( dead by Rykky · · Score: 1

    I guess, while Unix is in the hands of a company line SCO, that finally Unix is dead. Sad..

  163. Interesting little tidbit from Netcraft.... by Malor · · Score: 3, Informative
    Per Netcraft:

    The site www.sco.com is running Apache/1.3.14 (Unix) mod_ssl/2.7.1 OpenSSL/0.9.6 PHP/4.0.3pl1 on Linux.

    Looks like they started to switch in August of 2002, had some problems and switched back to SCO for a few days, and then completed their switch on August 14, 2002.

    You KNOW a company is dying when they don't eat their own dog food.

  164. Isn't AIX still non-GPL? by siskbc · · Score: 1
    From bruce perens article:

    "SCO is also party to the GPL, which invalidates their patent portfolio for any of their patents that happen to have been used in a Linux system that they distributed. Under the GPL terms, if you distribute your patented practice in GPL software, you must grant a license to everyone to make use of that patent in any GPL software, for any field of use."

    Maybe. But, from their complaint, it seems that what they're complaining about is the possibility that IBM may GPL the AIX code in the future. Unless I misread the complaint, IBM hasn't done that yet, meaning no AIX in Linux, meaning no AIX released by SCO.

    That would mean two things: 1) Linux distros aren't in danger if they don't accept IBM's unwitting potential AIX trojan, and 2) SCO hasn't unwittingly GPL'd their own patents.

    Am I missing something? Has AIX/Monterey code been incorporated into Linux distros already? Because if SCO does shoot themselves in the foot by GPLing themselves out of a lawsuit, that would be pretty damned funny.

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

  165. Re:Ha ha! You beat me to it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    y'know ^W is just so much more efficient

  166. SCO Doesn't Have The Money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With SCO losing millions every quarter and having less than $10 million in cash, I think IBM can ask for a continuance a couple times and watch SCO run out of money.

    1. Re:SCO Doesn't Have The Money by bstadil · · Score: 1
      Good point and we can help.

      Make sure everyone that has dealings with SCO calls in ANY service owed. From Bug fixes to service calls etc. Make sure reasonable payment to SCO is withheld until the owed service is rendered.

      No company can respond to a huge sudden increase in service demands. Make sure it is demands covered under already existent and "paid for" service contracts.

      SCO only has $10M in cash and nothing will sink them faster than a cash crunch.

      --
      Help fight continental drift.
  167. Re:Welcome to the future... by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 1

    Check a map. Guatemala, a neighbor of Mexico, is in North America. You may say "central America" but that's not a continent. It's in North America.

  168. What about the BSD's? by queenb**ch · · Score: 1

    They are true Unixes as well. NetBSD, FreeBSD, and OpenBSD as well as some others are still alive and well and UNIX.

    Queen B.

    --
    HDGary secures my bank :/
  169. Re:Seems not so straightforward to me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SCO distributes Caldera Linux, which likely contains code on which the suit is based. Linux is GPL, if they've distributed SCO IP themselves under this license they're left with two choices: fully grant GPL status to the code or, under the stipulations of the GPL, halt distribution of the offending product immediately. They've done neither and are also therefore in contravention of a software license they use. Isn't IP wonderful?

  170. The patents are probably about to expire, or have by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

    Considering that Unix was a beast created in the 70s and that its been over 20 years then any patent awarded before 1985 has expired. Beyond that I wonder what patents SCO still has that are still valid?

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
  171. As a professional short seller ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If SCOX hits $5 I will be short-selling with both hands.

    I read the complaint. As other posters have pointed out, there are logical gaps. SCO needs to show specific instances where SCO proprietary technology appears in unauthorized IBM products.

    On the other hand, keep in mind that Caldera took $200 million out of Microsoft's hide with an IP lawsuit, so it's not like Caldera has never played -- and won -- the sue-the-gorilla game before.

  172. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by Asprin · · Score: 1


    Who cares about all the irrelevant patent-expired-15-years-ago intellectual property? If IBM bought SCO, they could issue a memo cancelling the lawsuit. Let's not beat around the bush here, what SCO is perpetrating here is extortion by lawsuit, and nothing more.

    --
    "Lawyers are for sucks."
    - Doug McKenzie
  173. Microsoft is not the first there. by g4dget · · Score: 1
    This has been a continuing problem with Sun's Java source code, where Sun for years has made noises that if you look at their source code, they have rights to any Java implementation you work on in the future. Microsoft wasn't even original in the area of obnoxious shared source licenses.

    The first rule of thumb should be: if it doesn't come with a well-known open source license, don't look at the source code; if you do, you may find yourself in a world of legal trouble and cause pain not only for yourself but also for your employer or the open source projects you are working on. Occasionally, one can make an exception to this rule, but it needs to be carefully thought through.

  174. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by dmaxwell · · Score: 1

    A sun becomes a red giant before turning into a white dwarf ember. This would have been wittier if it Sun in SCO's place.....

  175. Did you Listen to this guy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This guy sounds like a drunkard...

    For a CEO I would expect he would know something about his company, other then that they were suing sombody... He had nothing to offer but "uhs" and "wells" and "let the court answer the questions".

    To those at IBM... Dump the code, give it back. Let the whiners have their crappy 1985 OS back and then OBLITERATE THEM WITH LINUX.

    AIX is old and too proprietary for a newbie to the IT world to consider learning (unless it just happened to be in the buisness one worked for, and they were stupid enough to let them monkey around with it).

    Linux and Free/Net BSD on the other hand allows the common grunt to get acquainted with the os, actually get a chance to like it, get certified in it, and be prepared to enter the jobforce with true understanding for it...

    AIX you just gotta know... You were either there when IBM Put it in your buisness, or you were forced to work around it and eventually some dumbass entrusted their entire buisness infrastructure to your lackluster AIX skills... Now that's smart, especially when a lot of the old IT staff is considering other job oppertunities, like gardening, and sunbathing, and no one knows AIX.

    In addition, IBM is much in the same boat as Apple has been since its inception... its very tough to support a platform and an os... Better to let the load be spread, As you generally get better and more flexible software in the long run and the cost of support gets spread too (not to mention the more people are familiar with an OS the less cost of support in the first place).

    The best thing IBM did was outsource the OS duties to an outside company for the x86 platform. This put support in the hands of that company, and so long as the hardware was good, IBM was essentially off the hook... For a hardware company, this just makes sense.

    I'm not a Windows zealot, but my feeling is that the OS is way more flexible and tunable then IBM ever would have made it (Warp O/S zealots commence flaming). Such shall be the case if IBM embraces Linux for its servers.

    Commercial Unix IS DEAD. Long Live Linux (and Low Cost / Free Unixes).

    Note to SCO: Make Caldera worth a shit, and you wouldn't have been in this boat in the first place. If you have such good technology, then you had the power to make IBM favor you instead of RedHat... You had fair warning, ITS YOUR OWN DAMN FAULT! Stop whining and get crackin.

  176. Confusion about copyright versus license by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I find that it's a common mistake among people who don't understand law very well to confuse the copyright status of a work with its license terms.

    For an expensive IP lawyer to make this mistake in a complaint shows lack of attention. My guess is that SCO can afford only so many hours of the high-priced David Boies, and they ran out of their legal budget before Boies got to that part. So they got some cheap clueless intern to fill in the part about "GPL software cannot have a copyright owner."

    If they are producing shoddy work like this in the complaint, then IBM will overwhelm by sheer force of numbers if nothing else.

    1. Re:Confusion about copyright versus license by crusher-1 · · Score: 1

      I have to agree. This will be a case of "my lawyers are bigger than your lawyers". I didn't see the statements in the breif that point out the misconceptions of the GPL, but I had already come to the conclusions that this is a money play by SCO. The problem with this angle is that before SCO gets any money they will have to pay alot first. And I dare say the IBMs pockets are considerably deeper than those of SCO.

      Just using the old standard "file motions 'till you puke" will bury them in legal fees alone if they're not careful. IBM will most likely chew up every bit of SCOs money it can by dragging out the proceedings as far as possible. Then, I don't care how good Mr Bioes feels he is, as you said, the sheer wieght of numbers may be crushing.

      All this will do is alienate SCO, damage any hope of further trust amonst their peers, and drive their business into the ground.

      Frankly, I can't escape the feeling that there are ulterior motives behinds this outside of just filing a tort. Perhaps this is a way to force a hostile takeover, buyout, or something along those lines.

      I just don't understand the logic behind this, but given SCOs track record of late - it does stay in character.

  177. Re:Welcome to the future... by The+Bungi · · Score: 1
    Check a map.

    OK, if you must. Every geopolitical reference I have ever seen refers to Mexico being part of "North America" while Belize, Guatemala and points south are considered "Central America" until you get to the border between Panama and Colombia, south of which everything is "South America".

    I'm sure someone can chime in and correct me as to whether or not Guatemala is part of North America. I say no.

    Or did you just decide to get rid of Central America to make a point? "Check a map"?? Hey, how about we make Morocco part of Europe? After all, it's just a hop away from Spain!

  178. Re:The meat of the complaint appears to be pts. 50 by uweber · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Never mind the fact that in the days of IBM's PS/2 systems (no not the sony toys - the 80386 era) you could get AIX for PS/2 so IBM had indeed prior knowledge to run UNIX on Intel CPUs.

    --
    --Ulrich
    On no accounts allow a Vogon to read poetry at you
  179. trying to scare people to unitedlinux? by wfrp01 · · Score: 1

    Anyone else wonder if part of the motivation behind this asinine behaviour might be to scare people to use UnitedLinux? With Caldera having an interest, they may be the only distro immune to these kinds of frivilous lawsuits.

    I bet we'll see a campaign along the lines of "UnitedLinux is better, because UnitedLinux is the only Linux incorporating proven UNIX technology." ... or some such bullshit.

    Ransom Love is a wanker.

    --

    --Lawrence Lessig for Congress!
    1. Re:trying to scare people to unitedlinux? by gmuslera · · Score: 1

      Maybe for this that SuSE is now reevaluating their relationship with SCO

  180. Licensing IP for GPL programs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's pretty clear that SCO does have much of a case, but assuming they did and they had IP in the form of patents that were central to Linux, wouldn't that effectively halt the distribution of Linux?

    Could IBM license this mythical IP so that it can distribute a GPL program? Assuming IBM does license the IP from SCO for $1 billion, IBM would still not be able to distribute Linux. Because, according to the terms of the GPL, you can only distribute a program if the parties you distribute to can also freely distribute the program.

    If IBM licensed SCO's IP and then distributed Linux to me, I would not be able to redistribute because I didn't own a license. Thus, IBM would have violated term 7 of the GPL.

  181. Solution: IBM buys 51% SCOX stock by PB8 · · Score: 1

    Easy way out for IBM, just buy controlling interest, 51% of their $2 stock--before someone else does. That 51% of the shares of SCOX can't be worth a $Billion. Give shareholders a slightly dignified price a little above $2. Give employees option to join IBM or affiliate, swap 401K SCOX stock for IBM stock, allow early retirement. Add a few more patents to their legal patent hanger. Give Mr. Gates reason to reconsider selling off his SCOX a couple years ago...

  182. Boycott? Kind of un-American if you ask me by du5z · · Score: 1

    If what SCO says is true than IBM did screw them and they deserve to pay SCO some cash. You can't just take someone's code and then use it in open source without their knowledge, especially if that person expected to make money off that code. If what SCO charges is false, which is what many people seem to believe, then IBM will win the case, SCO will get nothing, and they will probably go out of business shortly after that. Why is a boycott required? And who uses any of SCO's products anyway?

  183. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by Basje · · Score: 1

    The other suggestion by Bruce Perens is just as unlikely: Microsoft buying SCO.

    If Microsoft acquires:
    a. the rights to Unix, they'll be slaughtered in court again.
    b. a Linux vendor, be it a small one, they'll lose a lot of credibility with their customers

    Incidentally, when they buy SCO, they do both. Don't think they'll bite.

    --
    the pun is mightier than the sword
  184. didn't novell opensource unixware? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought at some point of time novell made unixware source open, is that not true? I remember reading some press releases on this, never actually checked if they really made it opensource.

  185. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by afidel · · Score: 1

    It IS a whopptie-doo since one of SCO's tactics is to revoke IBM's liscense to the UNIX mark and code within 100 days if they do not meet SCO's demands. Basically IBM should buy SCO because the $25 million(SCO's market cap) would be small change to insure the $1 Billion Linux investment and the umpteen Billion US$ they have invested in AIX. Heck just the lawfirms bill for this suit may run over a million.

    --
    There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
  186. Less Annoying Newsforge link by webmaven · · Score: 1

    Try this link if you want to read the NewsForge article and all the comments in nested mode, to minimize click-throughs:
    SCO follows David Hannum's 'sucker' theory in lawsuit against IBM

    --
    The real Webmaven is user ID 27463. I don't rate an imposter, because my ID is such a lame-ass high number.
  187. Bear in mind that we're dealing with Intel here by kfg · · Score: 1

    The claim is that SCO had technology that allowed a UNIX workalike to run on commodity consumer class Intel CPUs.

    In other words, this isn't about UnixWare per se, ( which they got from Novell), it's about *Xenix* (which they got from Microsoft) and we all know how technologically advanced Xenix is/was.

    And that's without even getting into the fact that they also sell Linux (which they got off the internet for free. Do these people do *anything* on their own?).

    So, lets see what we've got here. Their claim seems to be that they *purchased* failed technology, or just plain downloaded the successful bits of it, and this is proof that the R&D might of Linus, GNU, Damned near everyone who programs and has internet access AND IBM combined couldn't have possibly matched their failed technology in only 10 years?

    Right Bob. Bite me.

    KFG

    1. Re:Bear in mind that we're dealing with Intel here by Penguin+Follower · · Score: 1

      (which they got off the internet for free. Do these people do *anything* on their own?).

      Yeah, unoriginal bastards... Kinda reminds you of MS doesn't it? :)

  188. Control Data whipped IBM in court. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At the time (1968-1970) they were much smaller than IBM. They won. They walked off with a very profitable chunk of IBM. It wasn't over patents, it was over unfair trade practices. I don't know if anyone's ever won a patent battle with IBM. I believe nobody's won a patent battle against Microsoft since Stacker and their victory was pyrrhic.

    SCO seems to be in a situation where they've got very little left to lose. They'll be the first company that widespread Linux sucess will eliminate. Sun will be one of the next companies eliminated by Linux success. Only after Linux takes out those guys will it seriously threaten Microsoft.

  189. for partners like that... by ochnap2 · · Score: 1

    We have that:

    (1) SCO is suing IBM.
    (2) SCO is part of the UnitedLinux effort.
    (4) IBM is one of the owners of SuSE [1].
    (3) SuSE is part of UnitedLinux, too.

    They seem love each other like a family...

    [1] from SuSE website (look into the "investors" section):
    http://www.suse.com/us/company/press/se rvices/info rmation/company/factsheet.html

  190. It looks like SCO has a case. by igotmybfg · · Score: 1
    Consider:

    SCO owns the rights to Unix. They licensed these rights to HP (HP-UX), Sun (Solaris), and IBM (AIX) among others. The license agreement that IBM signed specifically prevents them from disclosing Unix's source code. Now, consider:

    "...In a news article issued by e-Business Developer on or about August 10, 2001, the following conduct was attributed to IBM regarding participation in the open source software movement: ' IBM's AIX contributions were integrated into the standard Linux source tree, a win for open source.' "
    That's a license infringement, clearly. Consider:

    December 20, 2000, IBM Vice President Robert LeBlanc:

    "We're willing to open source any part of AIX that the Linux community considers valuable. We have open-sourced the journal filesystem, print driver for the Omniprint. AIX is 1.5 million lines of code. If we dump that on the open source community then are people going to understand it? You're better off taking bits and pieces and the expertise that we bring along with it. We have made a conscious decision to keep contributing."
    Again, clearly a license infringement - SCO's license agreement, which IBM signed when they licensed Unix, in fact explicitly prevents IBM from open sourcing any of SCO's IP, which AIX is clearly a derivative of.

    Although I agree that unix/linux should be open, it looks like SCO has some solid legal footing here. I'm just surprised that it took them this long to file the lawsuit...

  191. You may be buying SCO without knowing it: Phones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    I think their major market is in PBX software. Make sure your next PBX purchace has no SCO inside.

  192. Here's a link to SCO by volkerdi · · Score: 1

    http://www.sco.com/company/feedback/index.html

  193. Xenix by gotr00t · · Score: 1

    As much as I am ashamed to bring this up, Micro$oft themselves have made a flavor of UNIX from way before SCO even entered the UNIX field. It's Xenix, and it's designed to use the x86 platform because there was great promise in it, even in the 80's.

  194. What is their angle? by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

    I don't get it. What is the actual alleged IP they claim IBM stole? There seemed to be some implications not actually said that I missed. The only thing I can think of is:

    1 - IBM licenses the UNIX name, and agrees to some NDA about it.
    2 - IBM implements AIX, under the UNIX name.
    3 - IBM later on ends up getting behind Linux.
    4 - Some of Linux's development is now coming from IBM employees.
    5 - Those employees probably previously worked on AIX.
    6 - Thus IBM may be taking AIX techniques and putting them into Linux, which violates their agreement #1 at the top of this list.

    I think that's SCO's angle, maybe. It's hard to tell from their press release. Of course those of us in the know understand that licensing the right to use a name has nothing to do with copying the technology. Linux is as UNIX-compatable as any other of the UNIX implementations, and that was already true well before IBM's involvement in it. It just can't legally call itself UNIX.

    It seems to me that IBM could avoid this by no longer calling AIX a version of "UNIX", but instead calling it "UNIX compatable", just like Linux does, and thus neatly avoid SCO's idiotic case in a manner that doesn't really hurt them in any material way.

    --

    Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

  195. Fill out their "Web Satisfaction Survey" for fun by rsax · · Score: 1
    After browsing through sco.com and hitting refresh several times ofcourse.

    http://websurveyor.net/wsb.dll/9929/websatisfactio n20021210.htm

    Question 3: When was the last time you purchased any SCO products?

    Thankfully.. Never.

    Question 4: What was your primary purpose in visiting the SCO Website today?

    Other: To try to /. sco.com =P

  196. Oh god, this actually formed as a thought: by A_Non_Moose · · Score: 1

    It is well know that IBM is one of the "Big Dawgs".

    Does this mean they are going to get a SCOoby snack?
    .

    --
    Have you read the moderator guidelines? Well, have you, PUNK? (and I want a Karma: Gnarly option)
  197. Re:Welcome to the future... by sepluv · · Score: 1
    I'm sure someone can chime in and correct me as to whether or not Guatemala is part of North America.
    You are wrong ;-). Look at the shape of America on the map; where is the obvious division? Also, where is the actual division in the tectonic plates? Read any book which mentions continents. Central America is not a continent. The division between North America and South America is the Panama Canal.
    --
    Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
    [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
  198. Crackheads! by SoupIsGood+Food · · Score: 1

    Unix is very, very well understood, as the source code was freely distributed and then forked to hell and gone. Since the early '90s, the only thing all the Unix vendors really needed from Unix was the name, which is kindly provided by the Open Group these days so long as you have the cash.

    AIX is not an SVR4-based Unix. Anyone who's taken a look at the psychotic commands required to admin an AIX box clearly understands this, as does anyone who's ever ported SVR4 based software to it.

    Solaris and Irix are a little closer to their SVR4 roots, but True64 is BSD based. HP-UX is based around a Mach microkernel. MacOS X is based around both Mach and BSD, doesn't use any of the traditional file system or configuration tools, and it's still not as weird as AIX. So it can be easily argued that IBM did, does and will continue to do it's onw weird, scary thing without the need for anybody's code, patents or input. Exhibits A, B and C: zOS, OS/400 and OS/2. IBM has OS style kung-fu like no other company in the industry.

    The offspring of 386BSD; Free, Open and Net are cleared of patent problems after a legal tussle with AT&T. Yahoo's been a FreeBSD shop from day one, so it's an enterprise class OS that got there without the deep pockets of any Computer Giant. There goes the foundation of the lawsuit.

    What's worse, if you have to fear just one legal department, fear IBM's. They have a portfolio of defensive patents that will bury SCO so deep in countersuits, they'll never see the light of day.

    So SCO is going to crash and burn and die for being stupid.

    SoupIsGood Food

  199. SCO is the Rodney Dangerfield of Unices by Kazoo+the+Clown · · Score: 1

    Are you kidding? It's obvious, they need the press. Don't forget that to marketing, ANY press is good press-- as long as they spell their name right. They've been having some trouble getting any notice of late, apparently...

  200. and the winer is ... by siemce · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Let's look at it from a different perspective.

    --SCO wins, stock goes up -- management cashes out and drives the company down the drain; they have a lot of practice in this matter

    --IBM get's fed up and buys out SCO, stock goes up-- management cashes out and doesn't give shit.

    --Bunch of spamers on stock web sites spread fud about how valid SCO's arguments are, bunch of idiots buy their stock, the stock goes up 40% in one session ...

    well ... go figure

    the management knows the company is going nowhere with their crappy software, they can't follow their fellow brothers of Enron, WorldCom and others because there is nothing to steal, so they've found out other way to make money.

    1. Re:and the winer is ... by nutznboltz · · Score: 1

      But if IBM buys SCO won't they own UNIX[tm]?

      Who would have thought that IBM would own UNIX[tm]?

  201. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by sepluv · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I don't think it's in IBM's interest to actually win the case, because that would poison any chance of IBM's bringing similar claims against other companies
    You may be right. Similar in what way, though? (Maybe I'm missing something here.) Similar in that they would be related to trade secrets (I mean it is not like this is setting any precedent in that suing over trade secets is a new thing), or in that they would be related to developers working on open source after working on proprietary code, or what?
    --
    Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
    [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]
  202. Re:Ha ha! You beat me to it! by Shadowlore · · Score: 1

    I doubt that anyone will miss them once IBM is finished mopping the floor with them.

    miss who?
    --
    My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
  203. ESR on Newsforge by oll · · Score: 1

    I just came across this short article by ESR over at NewsForge.
    From the article: ... But it's also deeply stupid to piss off that community like this, unless you think you're never going to have to hire programmers again. SCO is behaving as though it thinks its IP portfolio is the only asset it has left.

    Sorry if this already has been posted. Havn't seen it here though.

  204. www.sco.com running Linux? by jlrowe · · Score: 1
    Or so says netcraft.com

    Since 14-Aug-2002 apparently:
    The site www.sco.com is running Apache/1.3.14 (Unix) mod_ssl/2.7.1 OpenSSL/0.9.6 PHP/4.0.3pl1 on Linux.

  205. Whoo hoo! Slashdot can fix this! by multipartmixed · · Score: 2, Funny

    Let's see. Somebody replying to the other article said they're worth 16 million bucks.

    They probably pay a nickel per minute for their 888 number.

    That means that we can bankrupt them by making 320 million minutes worth of useless calls, navigating their stupid voice menus! If we can each make 100 minutes worth of calls, we only need 3.2 million slashdotters to participate!

    Looks like it's time for an offensive slashdotting, old school!

    --

    Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
    1. Re:Whoo hoo! Slashdot can fix this! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Looks like it's time for an offensive slashdotting, old school! eed 3.2 million slashdotters to participate!

      First off, the original poster was joking. You can't actually do a denial of service attack using regular mail.

      Second, automated telephone denial of service attacks have successfully been executed by the democratic party and the republican party these last elections. All it takes is one computer and one coder who is willing to take the risk (although, personally I wouldn't be willing to take that risk).

      Third, the cost of the telephone call is not what's at stake. It's the cost of the lost opportunity which matters (again, I think the original poster was only joking). If one can overload the sales phone line of a company during its busiest time of the year, one can do devastating damage to the net income of that company.

  206. Osopinion Article by A_Non_Moose · · Score: 1

    As part of the SCOSource effort, SCO has retained David Boies, the lawyer who prosecuted the U.S. government's case against Microsoft Latest News about Microsoft, defended Napster in its case against the RIAA and worked for Al Gore in the 2000 presidential election controversy.

    That last part made me smile in a rather humorous and menacing way:

    David Boise...ponder that for a moment.

    Microsoft Case: Worthless Victory.

    Napser: Lost Cause.

    Al Gore: I don't know where to begin on that.

    {veering waaay OT)
    (I forget where I heard it, but during the debates I was said "Instead of choosing the lesser of two evils, this is like trying to pick the less evil of two lessers".
    Gore as a VP was ok, but seemed like a wooden dummy at times.

    Tho I suppose a wooden dummy would be preferrable to a sock puppet (boosh)...at least the dummy has *some* substance.

    (settling back OT:)
    Damn I need more sleep and less coffee (woah...wierd never thought I'd say that).

    Does anyone else besides me see a combination of all 3 cases in this SCO suit?

    I forsee just that.
    .

    --
    Have you read the moderator guidelines? Well, have you, PUNK? (and I want a Karma: Gnarly option)
  207. Re:IBM *buy* SCO? WTF? by guacamole · · Score: 1

    You're not getting the point. Bruce suggested that IBM might want to nuy SCO to get the their UNIX IP rights, not their stinking unix or linux operating systems per se.

  208. Sun on Intel - You missed the boat! by multipartmixed · · Score: 1

    Solaris x86 probably wouldn't count, because they were talking about early Intel CPUs.

    Since Linux doesn't run on pre-386 (did it ever? I don't think so..) I think the 386 is a good test case.

    In April 1988, Sun Microsystems was selling the Sun386i 150 and 250 workstations, which used the 80386 CPU. These ran SunOS, which is BSD 4.2 UNIX derived.

    Before somebody starts hopping on the "original UNIX vendor" clause, BSD *is* a real UNIX -- particular version 4.2 which contained AT&T source code and required a UNIX license!

    Also, I'm curious as to what SCO thinks of 386BSD -- the original non-AT&T-licensed release of BSD UNIX by William Jolitz.

    I wonder of UNISYS was ever a UNIX license holder (for QNX). I remember usign 80186-based QNX Workstations back in the mid-eighties.

    --

    Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
  209. IBM's gonna hit them fools harder then Trogdor by mao+che+minh · · Score: 0, Troll

    Burnin' the SCO broke whiney cry babiiieeeeessss!

  210. Boycott SCO, YES. But do not be hateful. by Dareth · · Score: 1

    I followed the Boycott link... interesting and well presented, but the part here:

    IBM, please buy out SCO and take their so called UNIX intellectual property and make it public domain. Then terminate the employment of those who remained with SCO.

    Seems a bit harsh to terminate rank and file employees just because they worked for SCO. Evaluate them individually, might be they are good people with valuable skills. It might be a small point, but it imediately turned me off to the rest of the message.

    --

    I only look human.
    My mother is a halfling and my dad is an ogre, so that makes me an Ogreling
  211. Re:Boycott? Kind of un-American if you ask me by Flower · · Score: 1
    I disagree. Boycotts are very American even in this case.

    SCO could be legally right but ethically wrong and, if I believe that, I have every right to base a purchasing decision or make a recommendation on that viewpoint. I also have the right to state my opinion and try to sway more people into boycotting SCO.

    Perfectly legal to use a technique to net tuna that catches and kills a dolphin here and there. Enough people got together because they felt it was wrong and due to a boycott and the publicity around it you now have dolphin-safe tuna being sold. Disney has subsidiaries that made films for a more mature and non-family oriented audience. Perfectly legal. Was the Christian Coalition wrong in boycotting them?

    --
    I don't want knowledge. I want certainty. - Law, David Bowie
  212. Sure You Can! by multipartmixed · · Score: 2, Funny

    You just need a big, fat, red magic marker. Make a circle-with-slash (e.g. No SCO!) logo out of it.

    Then it will be truly 1337.

    --

    Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
  213. The best that can come of this by mcrbids · · Score: 1

    The best thing that can come of this is that IBM buys SCO.

    IBM will be around, it as a company understands the value of Open Source, and won't be bought out by M$, as SCO is in serious danger of being.

    Like AT&T owning the Unix TM, that'd pretty much ensure a future for Unix.

    Of course, what'd be best of all is for the US Govt to realize the value and industry that is Unix and buy it for the common good, but I'm not even sure if it can do that.

    --
    I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
  214. Re:Welcome to the future... by The+Bungi · · Score: 1
    First off, I don't buy that "shape" and "tectonic plates" stuff - no, Central America is not a continent, but then neither is North America for that matter.

    The North-Central-South division in this continent has probably been more political than geographical, but nonetheless the fact remains that people all over the world consider "Central America" to be the strip that runs between Yucatan in Mexico and northern Colombia.

    BTW, the Panama Canal is artificial, so that doesn't hold up much either.

  215. The Ultimate Shame... by rinkjustice · · Score: 1

    My son was taking drugs and hanging out with some mixed-up punk rock friends, and I was patient with him and his rebelliousness, but now he's installed SCO on his computer!

    That's the last straw, I'm disowning him!

  216. An open letter to SCO. by MrLint · · Score: 1

    Dear SCO,
    Be sure to close your eyes before walking into the jet intake manifold.

    Sincerely.

  217. can't sue "Linus" by horatio · · Score: 1


    Is this a deal where SCO couldn't find a way to sue Linus (and the entire assoicated parts of the OSS community), so now that they have someone they can sue (IBM), they are?

    --
    There is very little future in being right when your boss is wrong.
  218. A letter to SCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I found a great letter from a solution provider to SCO at http://mud.nexlinks.net/

    To: annm@sco.com, stevesa@sco.com, unitedlinux@sco.com
    Subject: Regret to inform
    Date: 07 Mar 2003 00:57:24 -0500
    Due to Caldera Systems expected lawsuit towards IBM over Unix/Linux
    patent infringements that have been filed, I regret to inform you that I
    will be migrating my clients off OpenServer, Unixware and any other
    SCO's intellectual property sofware they may be using in disagreements
    with your decision.

    Personally I've been a happy user of Caldera's OpenLinux since 1.1 and
    have implemented and maintained your products in a number of support
    contracts I deal with, I will be researching alternatives this month to
    slowly migrate them off Caldera Systems Products towards an open
    alternative.

    I shall post this letter at my Web site and shall send copies of it to
    many of the people who have complained to me about Caldera
    International, Inc., 355 South 520 West, Suite 100 Lindon, Utah, U.S.A.,
    and to a few others as well.

    Thank you for your attention to these matters, and for the support over
    the years.

  219. My predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone remember an AC said:

    1) IBM (and almost every UNIX distribution from now on) will replace all their existing UNIX code with BSD.

    2) No more code sharing with Linux (or any other Opensource project) in the near future.

    3) Darwin will be unaffected and will take over the second place in the world after Windows XX.

  220. fundamental problems by twitter · · Score: 1
    Did they really say this:

    the misappropriation of UNIX code, methods or concepts

    How do you misapropriate a concept? Surely, that's a misconception?

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  221. Isn't this actually good for Linux? by ctk76 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    'It is not possible for Linux to rapidly reach UNIX performance standards for complete enterprise functionality without the misappropriation of UNIX code, methods or concepts to achieve such performance, and coordination by a larger developer, such as IBM.'

    SCO group is acknowledging that Linux is as good as its Unix if anything through this lawsuit. It's like SCO telling its customers that Linux has competant enterprise functionality. This sounds like a great news for Linux to me.

  222. Why doesn't IBM do it's own LINUX dist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and uses Red Hat instead? Seems like there must be some legal/liability thing that needs to get sorted out here?

  223. too bad SCO by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

    You and I go back many years. But you seem to have outlived your usefulness. Please do the honorable thing and drink the koolaid now.
    You are hellbent on killing yourselves. Well, get it over with already!!

    You are some annoyng little people in an annoying little company living annoying little lives...

    Buh bye!!

  224. Re: Lets hope IBM buys all the IP by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1
    I hope IBM buys them.

    All the unix soure code will be safe and maybe just maybe IBM could gpl or bsd Unixware. If IBM buys them we can all email them and ask if they would release the source code and hopefully the product itself for free.

    Sco's crappy Unix that everyone hates is called Sco Openserver aka MS Xenix. I do not care about that piece of garbage but Unixware is a very good version of Unix from what I heard.

    Honestly I have never used Unixware and there are no software applications for it besides open source software but it rocks! Its the original Unix from bell labs. A full and original Unix sys-v and not a clone. It supports up to 32 processors, 64 gigs of ram and can create threads really fast. Some reports state that under smp machines Unixware can create threads 100x as fast as Linux. This would make it a kick ass webserver. Like FreeBSD and Solarisx86 Unixware supports Linux binaries. Many unixware users who used Unix back in the pdp-11 era say it feels just like old original Unix they used to use.

    Linux is trying to get to the enterprise but Unixware is already there. IBM could let Linus and everyone look at the source code to improve Linux. Future kernels could base the code off of unixware. Or better yet use Unixware as the new kernel.

    I would love to try out Debian Gnu-Unixware or Gentoo Unixware distro's.

    It would also be funny to call it Gnu-Unixware because gnu=gnu is not Unix. When RMS opens his mouth we can just tell him that Gnu is really Unix so shut your mouth. How can he call anything gnu thats unix related?

  225. Boycott SCO/Canopy Group in your source. by vaxzilla · · Score: 1

    I think the boycott of SCO should be more extensive than merely refusing to purchase any of the Canopy Group's products or services. I think that all of the open source tools and applications authors should detect and drop support for SCO's operating systems (UNIX or Linux based).

  226. some of this claim is so laughable by sanermind · · Score: 1

    83. As long as the Linux development process remained uncoordinated and random, it posed little or no threat to SCO, or to other UNIX vendors, for at least two major reasons: (a) Linux quality was inadequate since it was not developed and tested in coordination for enterprise use and (b) enterprise customer acceptance was non-existent because Linux was viewed by enterprise customers as a "fringe" software product.

    84. Prior to IBM's involvement, Linux was the software equivalent of a bicycle. UNIX was the software equivalent of a luxury car. To make Linux of necessary quality for use by enterprise customers, it must be re-designed so that Linux also becomes the software equivalent of a luxury car. This re-design is not technologically feasible or even possible at the enterprise level without (1) a high degree of design coordination, (2) access to expensive and sophisticated design and testing equipment; (3) access to UNIX code, methods and concepts; (4) UNIX architectural experience; and (5) a very significant financial investment.

    85. For example, Linux is currently capable of coordinating the simultaneous performance of 4 computer processors. UNIX, on the other hand, commonly links 16 processors and can successfully link up to 32 processors for simultaneous operation. This difference in memory management performance is very significant to enterprise customers who need extremely high computing capabilities for complex tasks. The ability to accomplish this task successfully has taken AT&T, Novell and SCO at least 20 years, with access to expensive equipment for design and testing, well-trained UNIX engineers and a wealth of experience in UNIX methods and concepts.

    86. It is not possible for Linux to rapidly reach UNIX performance standards for complete enterprise functionality without the misappropriation of UNIX code, methods or concepts to achieve such performance, and coordination by a larger developer, such as IBM. /blockquote
    --

    ---
    the pen is mightier than the sword, the sword is mightier than the court, the court is mightier than the pen.
  227. Wrong assumption. Most of AIX is free of SCO's IP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are assuming that AIX is licensed from SCO and IBM had no part in developing it. That is not the case. In fact, IBM wasn't happy with the performance of the UNIX stuff they licensed and as a result they developed their own. For the most part, all that remains in AIX are the interfaces/API's.

    IBM can release AIX source into the public domain as they please as long as that AIX source code has been developed by themselves. IBM have a very thorough review process. Rest assured before they release anything they will have made sure they ownall of the IP and are entitled to do so.

  228. SCO doesn't own the UNIX trademark by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Unix trademark is owned and licensed by the Open Group.

    SCO hold the rights to original Unix cource code and ***some*** patents.

    However, the lawsuit is neither about trademarks, nor copyright, nor patents. It is about alleged contract breech.

    SCO and IBM agreed to work together (with the now extinct Sequent) on an Itanium version of Unix derived from SCO's code and IBM's AIX. Under that agreement, the parties agreed to keep trade secrets they would learn from each other.

    SCO now alleges that IBM has not kept the trade secrets of SCO secret and thereby violated the contract. This has nothing to do with patents.

  229. SOCX Market cap is $35 Mill, thats why by Zeinfeld · · Score: 1
    Yeah, IBM never makes bad decisions about how to license operating systems. *cough*MS*cough*

    IBM bought a non-exclusive license from Microsoft for a number of reasons, all of which make sense. First they did not have a big budget for the PC project, it was a skunkworks project outside the normal IBM development line. Second their original plan had been to buy a CP/M license but Kildall went surfing instead. Third Microsoft probably would not have written MSDOS if IBM was going to keep the exclusive license. Fourth a large part of the success of the IBM PC platform was the fact it could be cloned. Without that the IBM would have been just another proprietary platform, the independents would have got together an built a competing system on CP/M and that would eventually have dominated the market.

    I read through the SCO complaint, it is very short on actual facts. It is all inferences. It is like the case Powell was making at the security council 'Saddam must be building WMDs so Inspectors failure to find them indicates he must be breaking 1441 by hiding them'.

    Particularly risible is the bit where SCO sniff that it took them 20 years to get UNIX to work on 4 processors. Multiprocessor UNIX appeared on Intel very shortly after Intel produced their first multi-processor chip, the PentiumPro, but leave that to one side. Just how many multiprocessor O/S has IBM put together over the years? If you count the prototype systems they have probably done 20 or more.

    Expect IBM to retaliate with a metric shitload of patent infringement countersuits. Although IBM does charge for licensing some of its patents, they have a lot more that they don't eforce except defensively.

    This suit is just like the Intertrust suit. You have a company that is going to the wall rapidly looking for something that can save them. They want to be taken over so they sue a larger company hoping they will recon that buying them out is a better plan than the cost of the lawsuit.

    Until recently SCOX was trading at a Market cap of $10 millon. Heck the Intellectual property is worth much more than that. The lawsuit boosted the price from $2 to $3, so SCOX would now cost a total of $35 million. This is a no-brainer for Big Blue. Just get out the check book and sign on the dotted line.

    --
    Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
    Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    1. Re:SOCX Market cap is $35 Mill, thats why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...Kildall went surfing...

      My God, I never thought I'd be around long enough to see it, but this incorrect anecdote has mutated. Now Kildell went surfing!

      You've got it all wrong. You see, Kildell was fighting mutent space aliens, and had just invaded the orbiting laser weapon when....

  230. I only hope M$ won't buy SCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I only hope M$ won't buy SCO and use the Unix source code assets to cause trouble to the Unix/Linux community.

    Also, wouldn't it be ironic if Boies suddenly ended up fighting a lawsuit on behalf of M$?!

  231. Re:The patents are probably about to expire, or ha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wow...you live in 2005. What's it like ;-)

  232. FREE UNIX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ahhh, somebody already wrote it slightly different.

    FREE UNIX!
    free UNIX from the slavery
    free UNIX so that we can type it unix
    free UNIX so that all the other *nixes can unite
    FREE UNIX so that it'll be free

    heck with SCO they're dead anyway.

    moyashi ... didn't bother to login ;)

  233. List of commentators that needs a clue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So many *experts* are just blowing smoke up their publisher's ass, for a paycheck, too...

    Here is the first one that needs a clue:

    http://www.ofb.biz/modules.php?name=News&file=arti cle&sid=216

  234. Could this be the reason... by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

    why SCO retained David Boies? Bummer, I used to have respect for Caldera, about 2 years ago. Now, I'm going to burn what's left of that respect, and scatter the ashes in the North Atlantic. I seriously *hope* that Ransom Love is doing something a bit more productive and public-minded these days.

    --
    C|N>K
  235. Re:The patents are probably about to expire, or ha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Utter bullshit. UNIX was in active development well into the mid-90s. There's probably still plenty of active UNIX-related patents.

    If UNIX hadn't changed since your 1982 VAX system came online, nobody will still be using it.

  236. Re:Boycott? Kind of un-American if you ask me by du5z · · Score: 1

    I agree with your examples but I'm not sure they apply to this case. If SCO is correct IBM stole from them. I agree if SCO is wrong they are acting immorally, but how are they acting immorally if there claims are true? My thinking was if what they clam is true and they win, where is the problem? The open source community shouldn't back companies what steal code for the sake of open source. If they are wrong and lose they are doing to die, boycott or not. I wouldn't use their OS's simply because they are going out of business at that point. Not that I use them or would use them anyway. IMHO they have a hard sell over Solaris for UNIX and Red Hat, IBM or any other popular distro for Linux now.

  237. shared library hooks? by nutznboltz · · Score: 1
    Is that a way of saying "system calls"?

    Here's the quote from the complaints that uses the term "hooks"

    38. The shared libraries of all operating systems are designed with "hooks." These "hooks" are computer code that trigger the operation of certain routine functions. A software developer can shorten the development effort for any new software program and create a more efficient code base by writing programs that access the various "hooks" of the operating system, and thereby use a shared set of code built into the operating system to perform the repetitive, common functions that are involved in every program.

  238. How to Protest Against SCO? Follow the Money! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Synopsis:

    Follow The Money!

    Go after the owners and clients of SCO.
    - Voice protests to the owners of SCO.
    - Write to the CEOs and CTOs of SCO client companies and suggest that it is in their own best interest to pursue alternative software choices.

    Attack the SCOsource division within SCO. It is the key to SCO's future survival.

    Let the non-SCO members of the Canopy Group alone - they do not own or control SCO. Let our Linux friends alone - they are already putting the hurt on SCO. Even the United Linux consortium members are hurting SCO far more than they are helping it. Focus the protest activities and energy on where it will do the most good.

    Rationale:

    In order to initiate *effective* protest action against SCO, a for-profit corporation, one must first follow the money.

    Therefore, let us ask:

    1) Who owns SCO, i.e. invests money in SCO?
    2) Who buys product from SCO, i.e. gives money to SCO?
    3) Who competes with SCO, i.e. takes potential sales from SCO?

    In answering these questions, we will be able to focus on how to directly and indirectly influence and/or attack SCO, and who to avoid protesting against because they are SCO's competitors.

    The following web pages provide information to help answer these questions.

    SCO (aka Caldera International Inc) SEC Financial Statements:
    http://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/srch-edgar ?text=company -name%3D%28CALDERA+INTERNATIONAL+INC%2FUT%29&first =1993&last=2003&mode=Simple

    List of SCO Clients:
    http://www.sco.com/company/success/
    htt p://www.sco.com/company/success/summaries.html

    List of SCO Competitors - x86 Hardware Compatible Unix Clone Software Providers:
    http://old.lwn.net/Distributions/
    htt p://www.freebsd.org/
    http://netbsd.org/
    http://o penbsd.org/

    1) Who owns SCO?

    Scroll about halfway down this page to "Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management":
    http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/da ta/1102542/000 104746903007344/a2104670z10-ka.htm

    The Canopy Group Inc (aka Raymond Noorda), John R. Wall, Ralph J. Yarro III, and Darcy Mott own substantial numbers of shares in SCO.

    These are the organization and people who own and control SCO. They are the people who we want to communicate with, and inform of our displeasure.

    Most of Canopy is owned by the Noorda Family Trust. Refer to the Canopy Group SEC filings for this info:
    http://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/srch-edgar?text= company -name%3D%28CANOPY+GROUP+INC%29&first=1993&last=200 3&mode=Simple

    Raymond Noorda, for the most part, owns and runs the Noorda Family Trust which mostly owns and runs Canopy.

    Please note: The Canopy Group owns portions of a number of other companies:
    http://www.canopy.com/portfolio/index. htm

    These companies do not own SCO. Nor do they control SCO. Some of them have a very tenuous relationship to Canopy itself. Protesting against these companies is a waste of energy and effort.

    Follow the money! Who directly owns SCO, and who buys SCO product - this is where the protest activities should be directed.

    2) Who buys product from SCO?

    Simple enough:
    http://www.sco.com/company/success/
    http ://www.sco.com/company/success/summaries.html

    These are the companies that provide SCO with revenues by purchasing SCO products and licenses. If you want to hurt SCO sales, then contact the CEOs and CTOs of these companies and inform them about why they should consider competitive alternatives to SCO software.

    Also, and most importantly, SCO anticipates increased revenues from its licensing activities. This is part of the new SCOsource division, which is directly behind the IBM lawsuit. SCO CEO McBride has stated that he expects up to $10 million in new licensing revenues from SCOsource in the coming fiscal quarter. Free software advocates need to think of ways to hinder and/or block this lucrative and profitable new revenue stream. SCO could conceivably cut all its other operations and survive on this kind of growing revenue base alone.

    See these reference links:
    http://www.sco.com/scosource/
    http://ir.s co.com/ReleaseDetail.cfm?ReleaseID=9996 5
    http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/030226/law059_1.htm l

    SCOsource is the future of SCO. As Unixware and OpenServer and the rest SCO's Unix software business dies, SCO plans to turn itself into an IP toll collector. Attack SCOsource, and you attack SCO's future and continued existence. (The question remains, how the free software community can do this legally and effectively. Suggestions?)

    And since SCOsource is behind the IBM lawsuit, this is why it is paramount that IBM not lose OR settle that lawsuit; NOR buy out SCO and pay off its senior management. Only total IBM victory is acceptable. Otherwise, SCO and its Unix IP will survive, and SCO or its successor will next attack other Linux companies that can't afford, or don't have the time, to fight such lawsuits.

    3) Who competes with SCO?

    The enemy of my enemy is my friend.

    Who are SCO's enemies in the software business? Any organization that produces an x86 compatible Unix-like or Unix-clone operating system with System V compatibility is a direct competitor with SCO. This includes most x86 compatible Linux distributions and all of the BSDs.

    By their very existence and continued success, the Linux distros and the BSDs are hammering away every single day at SCO. They are undermining SCO's business model, taking away paying SCO clients, and directly reducing SCO revenue. They are also destroying the value of SCO's IP portfolio.

    Now, some folks have advocated protesting against and boycotting the non-SCO members of United Linux. This would include SuSE, Connectiva, and TurboLinux. But each of these Linux companies produces a product that is in direct competition with SCO's Unix software. They have undermined and attacked SCO for years - doing far more than we Johnny-come-lately protesters have.

    Furthermore, SuSE's, Connectiva's, and TurboLinux's participation in United Linux only serves to somewhat help SCO's OpenLinux product, which itself accounts for only 5% of SCO's revenues. Let us focus on where SCO gets 95% of its revenue - Unix software and Unix licensing. SCO's OpenLinux product is small peanuts in the total SCO product portfolio. Whatever aid OpenLinux gets from the United Linux consortium is dwarfed by the damage done to SCO Unix products by the other members of United Linux and their Linux products.

    Finally, to a greater or lesser degree, each of these companies has been a good free software community citizen. They have all contributed something back to free software. So how can it be logical to attack these three companies and boycott them? They help the free software community and they hurt SCO.

    Please, let us not be mad cannibals about this - the free software community can not afford to eat its own young. Let us choose the targets of our protest actions carefully and wisely. SCO is the enemy, not Linux distros. SCO clients send checks to SCO, and Linux distros take those checks away from SCO when they persuade SCO clients to switch over. SCO's owners and SCO's clients should be the direct targets of any protest actions.

    Conclusions:

    Follow The Money!

    Go after the owners and clients of SCO.
    - Voice protests to the owners of SCO.
    - Write to the CEOs and CTOs of SCO client companies and suggest that it is in their own best interest to pursue alternative software choices.

    Attack the SCOsource division within SCO. It is the key to SCO's future survival.

    Let the non-SCO members of the Canopy Group alone - they do not own or control SCO. Let our Linux friends alone - they are already putting the hurt on SCO. Even the United Linux consortium members are hurting SCO far more than they are helping it. Focus the protest activities and energy on where it will do the most good.

    Cheers,
    Luke Seubert

  239. OT: kinda funny... by Cyncynut · · Score: 1

    Just been browsing and found this:
    Googlism
    the best one is:
    sco is a strong proponent of the open source movement.

    $0.02

    --
    .bottom line, don't just underwrite it...
  240. sco gpl violations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is anybody looking to see if sco has gpl violations? i would be curious if they have been doing a little creative cutting and pasting.

  241. Why buy SCO Out ? by MadX · · Score: 1

    I would think that this type of litigation would spark soe sort of personal vendetta as well ..
    I reckon that IBM should first take them to court, WIN, watch the stock plummet as everyone tries to bail out of the sinking ship, and finally buy up whatever is left ..

    Get it all .. including revenge ..

  242. Last Post! by alpg · · Score: 0

    Worthless.
    -- Sir George Bidell Airy, KCB, MA, LLD, DCL, FRS, FRAS
    (Astronomer Royal of Great Britain), estimating for the
    Chancellor of the Exchequer the potential value of the
    "analytical engine" invented by Charles Babbage, September
    15, 1842.

    - this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...