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Apple Sued Over Unix Trademark

Jerrry writes "CNET News reports The Open Group is suing Apple over unlicensed use of the Unix trademark, after Apple used the term in conjunction with its Mac OS X marketing. Apple, meanwhile, is countersuing to have the Unix trademark declared invalid because the term has become generic."

97 of 881 comments (clear)

  1. Go, go, Apple, go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unix has become a generic term. Removing trademark status would benefit not only Apple, but the free Unixes, Linux and the BSDs.

    1. Re:Go, go, Apple, go! by Aneurysm · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This is true. The underlying technology should be taken into account, rather than just the name used to describe it. Unix is a generic term now, and trying to sue people over a name that describes a large and diverse base of technology is just silly.

    2. Re:Go, go, Apple, go! by RLiegh · · Score: 3, Funny
      Unix has become a generic term. Removing trademark status would benefit not only Apple, but the free Unixes, Linux and the BSDs.

      But it would severely hurt the GNU movement. ["it's not unix? Why isn't it unix? Does that mean it isn't free software?"]
    3. Re:Go, go, Apple, go! by keyslammer · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Unix has become a generic term. Removing trademark status would benefit not only Apple, but the free Unixes, Linux and the BSDs.

      I think there might be a little more to it than that. Just got done reading ESR's OSI Position on the SCO-vs-IBM suit paper, and it looks like the right to use the Unix trademark is conferred upon vendors who go through a certification process to confirm compliance to Unix standards.

      So it's sort of like if somebody slaps the famous "compact disc" logo on a copy-protected disc - you're advertising conformance to a standard that you don't conform to. That's not to say that apple is necessarily out of compliance with the standard, the point is that the "Unix" trademark is the TOG's "seal of approval".

    4. Re:Go, go, Apple, go! by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 5, Funny
      Good thing you posted that anonymously when using the U word. You were sure to be sued.

      It's easy to talk about UNIX® ** without being sued. Just follow a few simple guidlines, and you can put UNIX® in your posts all day long. Let's try the original post with lawsuit-resistant terminology:

      UNIX® become a generic term. Removing trademark status would benefit not only Apple, but the free UNIX®es, Linux and the BSDs.

      ** UNIX is a registered trademark of The Open Group in the United States and other countries.

    5. Re:Go, go, Apple, go! by Angry+Pixie · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Sort of like saying "works with Windows" or "Made for Windows" when in fact it doesn't and isn't?

      I like the idea of making UNIX generic because we can now market Linux and FreeBSD as UNIX, giving it instant credibility and attraction in the market.

      I dislike the idea of making UNIX generic because we can now market Windows as UNIX, giving it instant credibility and attraction in the market.

    6. Re:Go, go, Apple, go! by Angry+Pixie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I never liked that whole GNU movement mess. I don't like movements. As a good friend of mine once said: When something becomes a movement, it creates religious fervor - and that's not very Zen. Even good movements are just antithesises to bad movements; If there were no movements at all, a person could just release his source code, call the application freeware, and go have a smoke without first saluting someone else' battleflag.

    7. Re:Go, go, Apple, go! by mrseigen · · Score: 4, Informative

      Apple does this; read any of their ads where they mention UNIX... it says in the bottom, in legal boilerplate (UNIX is a registered trademark of the Open Group..*some other garbage*)

      More power to Apple. UNIX's a generic term now. Maybe SCO can die along the way if we get lucky.

    8. Re:Go, go, Apple, go! by cait56 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Agreed. None of the classic purposes of trademarks apply.

      Apple's labeling of Darwin as "Unix" is neither:

      • misleads consumers.
      • creates confusion with other products
      • impairs the ability of anyone else's product to be recognized.

      Apple's use of the term "Unix" is clearly descriptive. The Open Group is merely seeking testing fees.

      If they have a complaint that Darwin somehow deviates wildly from other "official" Unixes in a way that discourages development of Unix applications I'd love to hear it. As it stands, Darwin is the single largest reminder to developers that Linux is not Unix.

    9. Re:Go, go, Apple, go! by walt-sjc · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yeah, but without bowel movements you would be quite uncomfortable. :-)

    10. Re:Go, go, Apple, go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      we can now market Windows as UNIX

      No, that would actually be fraud. Even without the trademark status.

    11. Re:Go, go, Apple, go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Apple's labeling of Darwin as "Unix" is neither:

      misleads consumers.
      creates confusion with other products


      I have to disagree with you. Although I think Apple has a fabulous product, it clearly is not "Unix". Products that are "Unix" pretty much have one of two characteristics:

      1. Built from a cut of the original Unix code base.
      2. Pass the Single Unix Specification (1170) or a newer incarnation.

      As far as I know, MacOS X qualifies under neither standard.

      MacOS X is a great product, but it is clearly "Unix like" as opposed to A/UX, Apple's System V R2.2 Unix with BSD extensions, may it rest is peace.

      Mislabeling MacOS X, or any other operating system, as Unix clearly confuses issues, such as how easy it will be to move applications from one platform to another, and the way the operating system behaves.

      Commercial "Unix" has by and large been System V since the 80s. The BSD derivatives (like MacOS X) are at a disadvantage in meeting the current Single Unix Specification given the divergence between BSD and SysV. This issue goes back for quite a ways since the power over the licensing of the Unix code and the Unix name have followed the System V code, not BSD.

      The current definition of Unix is in a sense both more strict and more flexible. Since a cut of the Unix source originating from AT&T is no longer necessary, more operating systems could qualify as "Unix", but the Single Unix Specification is fairly detailed so it wouldn't be trivial to pass the test. The Single Unix Specification has been a good thing since it is working to make the commercial System V unixes (AIX, HP/UX, Solaris, Digital Unix, etc.) more compatible.

      As far as qualifying for the "Unix" label goes, Linux is considerably better off from a starting position if Linus wanted it to be "Unix". Unfortunately for Linux, Linus believes that certain POSIX standards are stupid and doesn't feel bound to stay compatible.

      Although the standards for Unix are clearly defined and available, GNU, the Linux community, and the BSDs often feel no need to converge on the standard. To my mind a fair amount of the work of the Linux Standards Base is pointless. The Linux community could just adopt the 1170 specifications, but instead, like so many things, the Linux community is rolling its own instead of going with an established standard when one exists.

      There is a trade-off between standards and massive innovation. Linux, *BSD, and MacOS are nothing if not innovative. But if the builders of these systems don't want to adhere existing standards then they shouldn't be whining when they are properly referred to as "Unix like" instead of Unix.

      Frankly, if being called Unix is important to the "Unix like" communities, then they should consider doing what Sun does with Solaris. The behavior of a Sun in userland is highly variable depending upon your path. It can behave with: traditional Sun SystemV behavior, BSD behavior, GNU behavior, or POSIX/1170 behavior.

      Frankly, I think it would be a hoot if Apple dusted off the source code for A/UX and layered appropriate parts of it on top of MacOS X.

      New and improved MacOS X!! Now with improved POSIX & System V personalities!!

    12. Re:Go, go, Apple, go! by jjon · · Score: 3, Informative

      Unfortunately for Linux, Linus believes that certain POSIX standards are stupid and doesn't feel bound to stay compatible.

      Whay are you dragging out a quote from 2000 about Linux not supporting POSIX threads? Linux 2.5 contains support for NPTL, a POSIX-compliant thread library, and has had this since 2002.

    13. Re:Go, go, Apple, go! by Hiro+Antagonist · · Score: 3, Funny

      ...and the RIAA would be missing their greatest source for new hit music.

      --

      --
      I Hit the Karma Cap, and All I Got Was This Lousy .sig.
  2. In other News... by Davak · · Score: 4, Funny

    Yes, in other news the FGA (Fruit Growers of America) is filing suit against Apple.

    "Apple" is pretty damn generic term... get off soapbox!

    Davak

    1. Re:In other News... by Surak · · Score: 4, Informative

      I agree. FreeBSD is *genetic* Unix, and that is the sense in which Apple is using the term Unix. I don't think Apple is trying to claim that OS X is a certified Unix.

      OS X is based on FreeBSD, which is genetic Unix, hence OS X is also genetic Unix.

    2. Re:In other News... by sultanoslack · · Score: 5, Informative

      Trademarks are registered for different categories of trade. i.e. I can trademark Apple as a new type of car and this is just fine. I could also create a new fruit drink called Unix or a toilet papaer brand called SCO with no trademark problems.

    3. Re:In other News... by Surak · · Score: 4, Interesting

      In fact, I don't see Open Group suing FreeBSD over *their* use of the UNIX trademark, right on their front page!

    4. Re:In other News... by TiMac · · Score: 5, Insightful

      FreeBSD doesn't have as much money as Apple does....

      --

    5. Re:In other News... by Hes+Nikke · · Score: 5, Informative

      OSX is NOT UNIX. It is a proprietary OS, which has some Unix-like properties but is not UNIX by any means. Besides, FreeBSD does not claim it is UNIX, just that it's derived from one.

      FYI: Mac OS X's core (darwin) is dirrived from FreeBSD therefore, it must be direived from a UNIX.

      for a more visual look at it, see the Unix timeline. on the timeline you can trace Mac OS X all the way back to the 1st AT&T release of UNICS. (not a typo)

      --
      Don't call me back. Give me a call back. Bye. So yeah. But bye our, well, but alright we are on a shirt this chill.
    6. Re:In other News... by cmason32 · · Score: 3, Informative

      This is not always true. Some brands are so powerful that their owners can, in fact, prevent you from registering that mark for another trade. You could not, for example, make Coca-Cola toliet paper, as the public might then become confused as to the manufacturer.

    7. Re:In other News... by dalassa · · Score: 4, Informative

      I believe the exact phrase used by Apple is "Unix underpinnings." From what I understand of Darwin this is correct, so would be the phrase Unix texhnology. Apple used Unix technology in making OS X. I don't see where this is inaccurate.

      --
      Feminism is the radical notion that women are people.
    8. Re:In other News... by TheCrazyFinn · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, Apple would have little trouble getting it certified.

      The userland is pretty much a cross between FreeBSD and NeXTStep, both of which are genetic Unix's (And I mean derived from their codebases, not just emulated)

      And it performs just like Unix, and uses little GNU code apart from the compiler, and a few utilities not available from NeXTStep or BSD development. The major difference from most (but not all) Unixes is the use of Aqua instead of X, and that's not even unique (both NeXTStep and SunOS shipped with Non-X windowing systems)

      Apple also never claimed it was UNIX Certified.

      --
      "You've got an invalid haircut" -Warren Zevon - Life'll Kill Ya
  3. Apple should pay up. by Sebby · · Score: 4, Interesting
    As much as an Apple fan I am, I think they should pay up; a license is a license, and the Open Group clearly have a trademark of 'Unix'.

    After all, Apple has trademarks of their own, how would they like it if MS or some other company started using them without a license?

    --

    AC comments get piped to /dev/null
    1. Re:Apple should pay up. by naitro · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem isn't really the price, but rather the fact that MacOS X doesn't follow the given standards describing what framework a Unix is supposed to be based on. Take the directory tree as an example.

      Thus, even if Apple did want to buy a license, they probably couldn't.

    2. Re:Apple should pay up. by jest3r · · Score: 4, Informative

      Definately. They are sending money Amazon's way for 1 click shopping which is questionable at best ..
      As per the following link Apple is clearly using the UNIX trademark to their advantage to SELL their product.

      http://www.apple.com/macosx/jaguar/unix.html

    3. Re:Apple should pay up. by mrpuffypants · · Score: 4, Informative

      Apple, if anybody, knows about trademarked terms:

      1) Apple Corps. and the lawsuit with the Beatles publishing company over the music biz thing. This could rear its head back up in coming months because of iTMS

      2) Firewire. Apple MADE firewire, but because they refused to let anybody use firewire as the name of the device all these odd names like IEEE1394, i.Link, and others crowded the market. Later on Apple wised up and said that Firewire was so generic now that anybody can use it to describe IEEE1394 devices.

    4. Re:Apple should pay up. by clarkcox3 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nowhere on that page does Apple claim that OSX is UNIX, they only say that it is "UNIX-based", and that it has "The power of UNIX".

      --
      There are no tiger attacks in my area and it's all because this rock I'm holding keeps the tigers away.
    5. Re:Apple should pay up. by SewersOfRivendell · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Later on Apple wised up and said that Firewire was so generic now that anybody can use it to describe IEEE1394 devices.

      No, what they did was license the name "FireWire" for free. They did not release the FireWire trademark into the public domain. Big difference.

  4. Wow, Kettle meet Pot, Apple by puto · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You know I love Apple as much as the next guy in many respects, although not one of the fanatics who have fallen into the apple marketing hype or a part of the cult(As I love my windows 2000 box as well) and Linux. Well, I love computers.

    Anyway, Apple is getting a little taste of it's own medicine. Didn't they sue somone over them copying, or making a similar color scheme on a pc case?

    And haven't they sued before for things just a frivilous. Apple is fanatic about protecting their ip.

    But maybe they are wrong here.

    Puto

    --
    The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
    1. Re:Wow, Kettle meet Pot, Apple by EggMan2000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They have also "threatened" to sue mfg'rs of toasters, PC accessories, and other computer mfg'rs for using pastel and bright color schemes on their products.

      They really work to protect their brand more than anything else. I saw a cease and desist they sent to wincustomize.com for somebody emulating the OSX desktop look and feel on a PC.

      Protecting IP is one thing, but Apple is tops when it comes to protecting their brand.

      Personally, I think Apple is in the wrong here. I have seen some of these ads for OSX that basically say "It's just like UNIX" -I mean come-on, at least put a bullet next to the word or something.

      --
      what? what I thought we were in the trust tree in the nest, were we not?
  5. Did the check bounce? by RLiegh · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I thought that apple paid the Open Group to certify themselves as a Unix, around the time that OS X came out.

    What am I missing here?

    1. Re:Did the check bounce? by Arker · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I thought that apple paid the Open Group to certify themselves as a Unix, around the time that OS X came out.
      What am I missing here?

      One simple thing. They didn't. Their OS is based on Unix code for certain, it's pretty close to BSD compatible, but it's not Unix(tm) and, as your post shows, they've been marketing it in a way that can be argued to be misleading in that sense.

      There's a big difference between Unix-like (Linux), genetic-unix (BSD) and branded Unix(tm) that's been thoroughly tested and certified by the Open Group. The trademark can't stop people from using the word unix in association with the first two, but it is illegal to use it in a way that implies or misleads that something is in the third category when it's not.

      I don't know all the details here, but it's entirely possible that Apple has crossed that legal line.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
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    2. Re:Did the check bounce? by maggard · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I thought that apple paid the Open Group to certify themselves as a Unix, around the time that OS X came out. What am I missing here?
      One simple thing. They didn't. Their OS is based on Unix code for certain, it's pretty close to BSD compatible, but it's not Unix(tm) and, as your post shows, they've been marketing it in a way that can be argued to be misleading in that sense.

      From The Open Group's own website:

      Platform Vendors Supporting the Single UNIX Specification:

      Acer; Amdahl; Apple; AT&T GIS; Bull; Convex; Cray; Data General; Compaq; Encore; 88 Open; Fuji Xerox; Fujitsu Ossi; Hal; Hewlett-Packard; Hitachi; IBM; ICL; Matsushita; Mips ABI; Mitsubishi; Motorola; NEC; Novell/USL; Oki; Olivetti; OSF; PowerOpen; Precision RISC; Pyramid; SCO; Sequent; Sequoia; Sharp; Siemens-Nixdorf; Silicon Graphics; Sony; Sparc International; Stratus; Sun Microsystems; Tadpole; Tandem; Thompson/Cetia; Toshiba; Unisys; Wang Labs.

      Here's also an osOpinion piece from May '01 questioning MacOS X's certification as Unix and at the bottom is an update noting:

      Since osOpinion's publishing of this piece, the Open Group has updated their web site to include Apple into its list of vendors that support the single Unix specification.
      --
      I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
    3. Re:Did the check bounce? by Arker · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Are you sure that doesn't refer to A/UX?

      If I'm not mistaken it is Unix(tm).

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    4. Re:Did the check bounce? by Laika · · Score: 4, Informative
      You most certainly should have included the foot note to that list.


      Platform Vendors Supporting the Single UNIX Specification:1
      Acer; Amdahl; Apple; AT&T GIS; Bull; Convex; Cray; Data General; Compaq; Encore; 88 Open; Fuji Xerox; Fujitsu Ossi; Hal; Hewlett-Packard; Hitachi; IBM; ICL; Matsushita; Mips ABI; Mitsubishi; Motorola; NEC; Novell/USL; Oki; Olivetti; OSF; PowerOpen; Precision RISC; Pyramid; SCO; Sequent; Sequoia; Sharp; Siemens-Nixdorf; Silicon Graphics; Sony; Sparc International; Stratus; Sun Microsystems; Tadpole; Tandem; Thompson/Cetia; Toshiba; Unisys; Wang Labs.
      ...


      Footnote 1: This is a list of vendors who have expressed support for the specification and does not constitute any endorsement by The Open Group of the company or their products.

  6. You just have to laugh by crmartin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ... because if you took this stuff any more seriously, you'd have to cry.

    SCO suing IBM
    Open Group suing Apple
    Apple suing Open Group

    It's starting to sound like a game of "Six Degrees".

  7. MAC OSX is unix by rkz · · Score: 5, Informative

    A/UX was Apple's first try at a Unix operating system and was based on System V Release 2.2. But that wasn't where Apple stopped. They added custom extensions from Releases 3 and 4, and the networking and filesystem were from 4.2/4.3BSD. The GUI was System 7.0.1 (for A/UX 3.0.1, the version I use) and Apple's own version of the X Window System called MacX. I would say that this is Unix.

    Another example (closer to Mac OS X) is NEXTSTEP/OPENSTEP. This OS uses the Mach kernel developed at Carnegie Mellon University with major contributions from Avie Tevanian. This Kernel had no natural interface, so to stay with standards, BSD was used as an interface layer (specifically 4.3BSD was licensed to be used). For a GUI, NeXT developed their own application environment (that would one day become Cocoa) and used Adobe's Display Postscript as the display engine (which Apple would replace after Rhapsody with Quartz, which used Apple's Display PDF in place of Display Postscript). There was no version of X Windows shipped with NeXT systems, but a number of people made versions for NeXT systems (much like people are doing today for Mac OS X). I would say that this is Unix.

    I, personally, have a hard time not considering anything that uses either System V or BSD to be Unix. These have been the pillars of this OS, and when not used have been the models for other operating systems. I would not consider POSIX to be a good way to judge a system as being Unix because Windows NT 4.0 was POSIX compliant and it is not Unix.

  8. It's about time by Space+Coyote · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Apple, meanwhile, is countersuing to have the Unix trademark declared invalid because the term has become generic. Thank the great good lord someone with clout is finally going to push this position. Incidentally I've only ever seen Apple use the phrase 'Unix-based' or 'unix-like' in their advertising literature, but I haven't been exhaustive by any means. It's good to see them at least put up a good fight in the name of the greater good (i.e., stopping Unix snobs from weilding that particular sledgehammer against Linux) rather than just capitulating and signing a cheque, which they're certainly able to do.

    --
    ___
    Cogito cogito, ergo cogito sum.
  9. Next on /. by Mr.+Sketch · · Score: 5, Funny

    SCO sues Open Group for illegal suing over the Unix trademark.

    Followed by:
    SCO sues Mr. Sketch for using the term 'Unix' in a public discussion forum without their prior permissions.

  10. Unix looks generic to me by eet23 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    If you say "Unix" to me I don't think of the Open Group. I think of things like BSD, or (partially) MacOS X, and Linux is Unix-like.

    If most people look on it that way, the trademark is probably generic.

    1. Re:Unix looks generic to me by 3Bees · · Score: 4, Funny

      Be quiet or I shall be forced to say Unix to you a second time!

      --
      "I think we should tax people who stand in water! " - Mr. Gumby
  11. OPEN Group? by LamerX · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Guess they're not so Open about things after all?

    Where do they come up with these names?

    1. Re:OPEN Group? by Otter · · Score: 4, Informative
      The use of the word "open" in the systems world (referring to standards-based systems, in contrast to heavily proprietary minicomputer systems like Prime and VMS) long predates "open source".

      Eric Raymond doesn't own the word "open" any more than Richard Stallman has the right to go around insisting that people are using the word "free" incorrectly. Let them invent their own words.

  12. *nix by rfsayre · · Score: 3, Insightful

    the use of "*nix" should pretty much prove their point.

  13. KB by sbszine · · Score: 5, Funny

    Now if IBM would just sue Kevin Bacon, you'd really have something there...

    --

    Vino, gyno, and techno -Bruce Sterling

  14. As generic as they come by Faust7 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Apple has countersued, asking a judge to declare that the trademark is invalid, because the term Unix has become generic.

    And it has. So many companies have been marketing and otherwise throwing around the name "UNIX" for so long now -- what do you think the chances are that The Open Group formally licensed their trademark to each and every one of them?

    The timing and selection of this lawsuit reeks of convenience.

  15. Hoping the lawyers involved choke on their hot air by Vicegrip · · Score: 5, Funny

    The day just isn't the same without a UNIX related lawsuit.... lately I've been thinking the medieval witch test (the water drowning one) could easily find itself a new vocation in detecting corrupt lawyers.

    --
    Do not spread "09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0" over the internet, thank you.
  16. Why? by n.wegner · · Score: 5, Informative

    According to their web pages, NetBSD and OpenBSD are "UNIX-like operating system[s]", and FreeBSD is "derived from BSD UNIX". Since parts of OSX are from FreeBSD, I could see why they can say Unix-based.

    I commend them for taking it to court instead of settling, but surely they should have known that the *BSDs started because of these same issues with the Unix owners. I wonder why they stepped into this minefield.

  17. Apropos UNIX quote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    (http://catb.org/~esr/writings/unix-koans/unix-nat ure.html)

    Master Foo discourses on the Unix Nature

    A student said to Master Foo: âoeWe are told that the firm called SCO holds true dominion over Unix.â

    Master Foo nodded.

    The student continued, âoeYet we are also told that the firm called OpenGroup also holds true dominion over Unix.â

    Master Foo nodded.

    âoeHow can this be?â asked the student.

    Master Foo replied:

    âoeSCO indeed has dominion over the code of Unix, but the code of Unix is not Unix. OpenGroup indeed has dominion over the name of Unix, but the name of Unix is not Unix.â

    âoeWhat, then, is the Unix-nature?â asked the student.

    Master Foo replied:

    âoeNot code. Not name. Not mind. Not things. Always changing, yet never changing.â

    âoeThe Unix-nature is simple and empty. Because it is simple and empty, it is more powerful than a typhoon.â

    âoeMoving in accordance with the law of nature, it unfolds inexorably in the minds of programmers, assimilating designs to its own nature. All software that would compete with it must become like to it; empty, empty, profoundly empty, perfectly void, hail!.â

    Upon hearing this, the student was enlightened.

  18. Unix is generic by NavelFozz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It has definitely become a generic term. I'd like to see the courts support Apple so that we can all use "Unix" without fear.
    e a generic term. Removing trademark status would benefit not only Apple, but the free Unixes, Linux and the BSDs.
    When was the last time that some company came out with Unix v9.0 or whatever?

  19. Making a stand by TrekkieGod · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I'm not an apple fanatic. But I think this demonstrates the character of the company. From the article:

    In any case, no company is required to pay more than $110,000, said Graham Bird, vice president of marketing for The Open Group.

    You know the legal battle will cost much, much more than that...but instead of doing what makes economic sense, they're doing what's right, and taking the burden off the rest of us. Because you know that if the Open Group succeeds, they're probably going to start suing red-hat and other linux distros for explaining that linux is "unix based" in their FAQ.

    --

    Warning: Opinions known to be heavily biased.

  20. UNIX: What's the first thing that comes to mind? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When someone asks you about "UNIX," what's the first thing that comes to mind? BSD? A Class of Operating Systems? Linux? SCO? Sun? IBM? Apple? DOS?

    I'll tell you what the answer is NOT: The OPEN GROUP. I don't even have a clue what they do. Most people have never heard of them, even most people who know what unix is.

    Also, Apple is accurately describing their OS when they say it is Unix-Based.

    The mark should be generic.

  21. SCO wouldn't like that by eddy · · Score: 5, Funny

    a toilet papaer brand called SCO with no trademark problems.

    Actually, that's reserved for Authentic SCO Stock(TM)

    --
    Belief is the currency of delusion.
  22. Re:I think i'll side with Apple by demon · · Score: 3, Informative

    Sir, inform thyself. The Open Group has no relationship at all to Linux. In fact, at one point they were the proprietors of the X source code, and they were going to close that code, leaving only XFree86 to maintain an open X Window System codebase. (Thankfully, that didn't happen.) They're no special friends of the Linux or *BSD communities, suffice to say. They own the UNIX trademark, and they'll beat you bloody with it.

    That said, I'm surprised I hadn't heard something about this earlier. I wondered many times when The Open Group was going to start in on Apple for calling OS X "UNIX", when they don't even let the free *BSD variants and Linux use the name.

    --

    Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
    Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"
  23. Goal is to Maintain the Unix Standard by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 5, Informative
    The goal of the lawsuit is to maintain the Unix Standard. Not a bad thing. The Open Group owns the definition of Unix and the test suite, and of course the trademark. Things that don't certify to the standard can call themselves anything but "Unix". This sort of certification bound with a trademark is compatible with Open Source, and is a way that Open Source proponents have generally recommended that business people protect their brand and trademark.

    Neither Linux nor the BSDs infringe upon this trademark, and of course the Open Group has made significant contributions to the Linux Standard Base (about 95% of the test-suite software, I'm told) and has been working on an Open Source Strategy with me since last year. You'll like it. It's in internal review now.

    If you would like to send a message to the Open Group, I would not be a bad intermediary to use. Please write to me at bruce @ perens.com . I am on the road right now and will not be able to engage in a long debate on Slashdot, so email will be best.

    Thanks

    Bruce

    1. Re:Goal is to Maintain the Unix Standard by Bull999999 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I agree with Mr. Perens. If UNIX trademark becomes generic, some Joe Blow can create any old OS and call it UNIX. How would you feel if you bought such an OS to find out that it's really based on Windows NT kernel?

      --
      1f u c4n r34d th1s u r34lly n33d t0 g37 l41d
    2. Re:Goal is to Maintain the Unix Standard by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Consider all the places where we handle this in Free Software. Ghostscript and the various PDF viewers don't abuse the Adobe PostScript trademark, for example. There must be dozens more.

      Thanks

      Bruce

  24. Re:"GNU/Unix" has a nice ring to it by RLiegh · · Score: 5, Funny

    GNU's Not Unix...except on alternate tuesdays.

    I think I need an ibuprofen now!

  25. unix is generic! by Sophrosyne · · Score: 5, Funny

    I woke up this morning and ate my Unix brand cereal, talked on the Unix for a while, and then Unixed my car to work.. How can anyone say Unix is not generic!!?
    Apple has a rock solid case, the Opengroup can go Unix themselves

  26. Let's try some actual information, whaddya say? by crmartin · · Score: 4, Informative

    The OpenGroup (which used to be X/Open) is a nonprofit, like the FSF, which owns the trademark and licenses it when a system has successfully passed a compatibility test. The notion is that any UNIX should be (at least approximately) compatible. I'm not at all sure if Linux could pass, since it has, eg, a rename(2) system call in place of unlink. The money that OpenGroup gets is used to continue their standards operation. See

    This press release on the UNIX trademark and SCO

    this one on testing and certification.

    What the OpenGroup doesn't do is support open source per se -- unlike GPL'ed code, you can be OpenGroup certified and still be closed source. Bad bad OpenGroup, they're not RMS-correct.

  27. Generic? Based on what? by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Apple, meanwhile, is countersuing to have the Unix trademark declared invalid because the term has become generic.

    Based on what? Are we to understand that frequent use of a trademark renders it generic? That is utterly preposterous. The Unix trademark is as zealously defended as the law requires, and beyond any reasonable doubt it is most certainly not generic. Is "Volkswagen" generic? How about "Coke" when referring to a beverage? Try it out in the marketplace and see how far you get.

    Get real, folks.

    1. Re:Generic? Based on what? by realdpk · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It's quite generic. With regard to your "Coke" example - it's actually "Coca-Cola" - Cola is the generic part there, and anyone can (and do) use it.

      When someone says Unix to me, in my mind, I do not think "Officially Licensed Solaris UNIX", I think, "oh, what flavor?" Is it Coca-Unix, or Pepsi Unix? FreeBSD Unix, or Linux Unix*?

      (Demonstrating, of course, that Coke > Pepsi)

    2. Re:Generic? Based on what? by jlgolson · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Words that are generic that used to be trademarks:

      thermos
      escalator
      aspirin
      trampoline
      celloph ane
      linoleum

      If they're not careful:

      Kleenex
      Xerox
      FedEx
      Jell-O

      There are plenty of examples of companies losing their trademarks to general use. It IS a big deal, though in this case, it seems that Apple is right.

      -jg

  28. Poorly Reported by maggard · · Score: 4, Informative
    At one point Apple was listed by The Open Group as a fully compliant Unix certified by them. Since then either Apple hasn't continued to pay some sort of licensing fee (yearly?) or each new version of MacOS X must be re-licensed.

    The story really is poorly reported by not including this information, and the rabid /.'ers posting would do well to have done the minimal amount of research before expressing strong opinions (this is the www...)

    In any case the "Unix" certification is one of those check-off items that get used in evaluations so whether or not there's any real value to it there is an effective value. "Unix", "Posix", this-book/that-book compliance; they're common evaluation criteria and having or not having them is very important.

    Of course the question is has "Unix" become a generic word like "Crayon" became or is it still specific to a vendor like "Xerox" or "Kleenex". YMMV but it looks like to me T.O.G. may have a point and paying through the nose may be one of Apples costs for the best selling Unix distribution out there.

    --
    I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
  29. Jurassic Park by post_toastie · · Score: 4, Funny

    "It's a UNIX system! I know this!!!"

    Did Crichton and Spielberg pay a license for that?

    1. Re:Jurassic Park by Nexum · · Score: 5, Funny

      For years I thought that all Unix machines involved hovering around in 3D over a virtual landscape of your files and folders...

      --

      This sig has been deprecated.
  30. Unix name and Standards by Dagum · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It seems to me that everyone (and I mean absolutely everyone) who has so far posted here is missing one important aspect of this licensing/evaluation issue.

    Unix is a standard. As I understand it, Linux is referred to as "*nix" because it hasn't passed the Open group's Unix standards evaluation. Just as companies are ISO-certified when they meet certain workflow, structural, managerial, and who-knows-what standards according to a very expensive evaluation, an OS will be certified as "Unix" once having been evaluated as specifically matching those standards.

    Investors and entities considering contracting a company's services will use the "ISO-whatever" certification as an indicator that that company has been evaluated to have a certain set of qualities, just as those evaluating operating systems for a project will use the "Unix" certification as an indication of the OS's having met a certain set of standards.

    Now, I'll have to leave the value and full meaning of the "Unix" standard up to someone else to define for us, but the point is that it is not the simple purchase of the right to use a trademark name.

    Starting with Windows NT, there was a "POSIX compatibility layer" in Windows, but I don't believe that Microsoft ever claimed to be offering "Unix." However, if Apple were to win this suit, it is conceivable that the precedent would be set that would allow Microsoft - and anyone else producing an operating system - to claim that their operating systems wer "Unix."

    If the term "Unix" is judged to have become as generic as "Kleenex," then there might well be a need to come up with another name, so that there can be a standard for future reference.

    Personally, I suspect that Apple is not "upholding a principle" by not paying for a name that should be available to all breeds of "*nix," but rather that they know of something or many somethings that would prevent OS X from meeting the Open Group's Unix standard.

    1. Re:Unix name and Standards by shylock0 · · Score: 4, Interesting
      You raise a good issue. However, it's worth pointing out that Kleenex -- and other generic terms like "Xerox," and even "Xerographic" -- are still trademarked and cannot be used by competitors in marketing.

      Still, I believe that Apple has a legitimate claim to the Unix name, and that, contrary to what you say, OS X probably qualifies as a UNIX; at least as much as, say, Solaris does. Furthermore, I think that the case you bring up concerning Microsoft is probably trivial. Microsoft would open itself up to lawsuits based on false advertising, or false representation of goods or services.

      I think legally the "UNIX" label carries with it a set of generic expectations on behalf of the general public, and nothing more. The public would clearly feel misled if Microsoft started marketing Windows as "Unix," as you suggest -- it clearly does not meet the generally accepted definition of what a "Unix" is. Apple's OS X, on the other hand, from any reasonably technical standpoint, clearly meets that definition. This definition is left intentionally vauge by this post, as I firmly believe the defition of a "unix" is vauge indeed.

      --
      Statistically speaking, there's a 99.998% chance that my IQ is higher than yours. Get over it.
  31. Re:This is ridiculous! by sulli · · Score: 5, Informative

    Xerox retains its trademark for photocopiers, and defends it meticulously. You're thinking of Cellophane and Aspirin, which did lose their traademarks years ago.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  32. Lawyers by Tsugumi · · Score: 5, Funny
    Is there a special offer on suing technology firms at the moment? "Shopper, head to aisle 5, where you will find a team of lawyers armed with TLA's, right by canned goods"

    Well, I'm suing Apple, Open, SCO, IBM, all you lot, and cowboy neal's mama. Hell, I'm suing my mom too, she uses computers, I betcha she's up to no good.

  33. How to lose your trademark by Infonaut · · Score: 3, Informative
    As enumerated here, there are plenty of ways to lose a trademark.

    "Once a trademark is selected, it is important to use it properly. Failure to use a trademark properly can result in loss of the trademark. Ways to lose trademark rights generally fall into three categories. Abandonment occurs when one stops using the mark and has no intent to resume using it. A mark will be lost by actions or failures to take action, that cause the mark to lose its significance. Also, a mark can be lost by becoming *generic* if the public comes to think of a mark as the identity of a particular brand of a product. This is really a subset of actions or inaction causing a mark to lose its significance. For example, some people think that Kleenex brand of facial tissue, Xerox brand photocopy machines, and Band-Aid brand adhesive strips are in danger of falling into this category. "

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
  34. Turn it on its head by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 4, Insightful
    A standard way to determine if something is fair is to turn it on its head, to see what it would be like if reversed. Given that, how much do you think Apple Computer Inc. would want per year for the right to call a computer "Apple"? I bet it would be more than $110K :-)

    Thanks

    Bruce

  35. Re:"GNU/Unix" has a nice ring to it by andrewski · · Score: 4, Funny

    No, it'll have to be GNU/nix pronounced "New-nix."

  36. Generic? Golly, won't SCO be pleased! (-: by leonbrooks · · Score: 5, Funny

    Judge scratches head, "you own what?"

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Generic? Golly, won't SCO be pleased! (-: by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yeah. 'Caus EVERYBODY knows SCO owns it!

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
  37. Re:iInconsistent iLawyers by andrewski · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Shit, they licensed Unix way back when they made AUX! I know that Next also licensed Unix from whoever owned it at the time, so for fuck's sake, they've already got 2 Unix licenses! I have always wondered if the other Unix companies (Sun, SGI, IBM, DEC, HP, etc...) had to buy a new Unix license for each version or type of OS that they had, or did they use the same one all along? For example, when SunOS became Solaris, and there was substantial feature change (breakage) to the whole OS, did they have to run out and buy a new Unix license, or did they use the old one that they still had for SunOS?

    I would think that sooner or later somebody at Apple will remember that they, too, have one and quite possibly two Unix licenses of their own, and the case'll be thrown out.

  38. Previous lawsuit - 800-ITS-UNIX by ziegast · · Score: 4, Informative

    When BSDI's BSD/386 was first released, they advertised their phone number - 800-ITS-UNIX - implying indirectly that the operating system was a UNIX derivative. Lawsuits ensued, and instead of trying to prove that UNIX was generic, BSDI just changed the phone number to settle on that count. USL defended the trademark.

    That round of lawsuits, though, paved the way for freeing the BSD 4.4 Lite code base to be used by *BSD and Linux operating systems to build their products. Acknowledge the efforts of those people (BSDI and the University of California) when you run your free operating system today.

    The trademark had been defended in the past, and Apple can either try to defend their use of "Unix" (like it seems they're doing) or side-step the issue (like BSDI). Sure, there's alot of pollution in the press where journalists mistake a free operating systems for a "Unix-based" operating system or use the term "unix" generically, but the current trademark owners might have a leg to stand upon when it comes to corporate advertising of a product. I can't think of any company that advertised an operating system as "Unix" and got away with it.

    Frankly, the term "Unix" has as much stigma to it (expensive, incompatable, hard to administer, not Microsoft) as it does positive (stability, scalability, not Microsoft). Apple could do without using "Unix" in its advertising and continue to market the operating system on its own merits. To fight for use of the "Unix" trademark seems to me to be waste of shareholder money. Is the benefit to Apple worth the expense of fighting the lawsuit?

    IANAL; YMMV; yadda yadda yadda

    -ez

    (*) "Unix" is a trademark of <insert company du jour>.

  39. Not generic, but not relevent by fm6 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    You're right and wrong. From a technical point of view, it doesn't make any sense to deny that Linux or BSD is a flavor of Unix. But I don't see any logic to the claim that the Unix trademark has gone generic. I've never seen it used in official documents by anybody who hadn't licensed it. (Sun, HP, and all the other Unix biggies have licenses.) Even the online community usually avoids the issue by saying "*nix" or "Unix-like" instead of "Unix". (I don't, because terms like *nix offend my tech-writer's compulsive nitpickiness. But I'm definitely in a tiny minority.) As far as I can see, the Unix trademark is better enforced than such common trademarks as "Kleenex" and "Xerox", and there's no sign that they're in trouble.

    On the other hand, it's not clear to me that Apple has violated the trademark. They are a little sloppy when they talk about OS X's Unix origins -- they really should make it clear that they have no license for the Unix trademark -- but it's perfectly legitimate for them to claim that OS X is derived from Unix.

    Really this is about the Open Group struggling to hang onto the shreds of its dwinding relevence. Sun and HP still go through the motions of certifying their right to use the Unix trademark, but they don't make a big thing about it. And Linux continues to eat into the Unix marketplace, even though it isn't certified as compliant with any Unix specification. It probably could be, if anybody were willing to spend the money. But nobody is, and nobody cares -- which is bad for Open Group.

  40. False by maggard · · Score: 4, Insightful
    They have also "threatened" to sue mfg'rs of toasters, PC accessories, and other computer mfg'rs for using pastel and bright color schemes on their products.
    Cite that.

    Seriously.

    Apple has sued other PC makers for too closely copying the iMac. That's their trade dress and they've every right to it.

    However Apple hasn't sued any toaster manufacturers unless you're referring to some of the really bad Compaq designs that ran really hot. Nor blender makers, vacuum manufacturers, not even the George Foreman Grill folks.

    Just PC and OS folks too closely infringing on the iMac's trade dress.

    Go ahead, rebut me. Find a citation where Apple has sued a non-computer related company for infringing. Apple iMac-identical items aside Apple has and can lay no claim to products with swoopy translucent plastic casings in bright colors. Rowenta irons, vTech phones, PaperMate ballpoint pens, all can be as harmonious as they wish with apple's iMac and remain unharassed.

    If you've got a problem with a company go ahead and express it but don't go making things up.

    --
    I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
  41. Offtopic.. but required by wondercat2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Slashdot needs a +1, Eloquent moderation for those posts that are, well, eloquent. You know the ones i mean.

  42. Wednesday is by bmckeever · · Score: 4, Funny

    Help me remember:
    Monday is patch your windows server day
    Tuesday is patch your Linux box day
    Wednesday is file a Unix lawsuit day?

    --
    Your favorite .sig sucks
  43. Unix is unix is unix by io333 · · Score: 3

    In my mind at least, linux is unix, bsd is unix, and unix is unix. I bet it is for lots of you too. Here is why:

    Say I'm facing a prompt. It could be anything:

    > or

    %a

    or

    whatever>

    So what OS is is it. Let's see:

    ls

    Did ls work? Yes. Ah OK, unix. I know what I'm doing.

    Did it not work. Sh*t. What is it. Is it Prime, VMS, AppleDos, DOS, CPM, etc etc etc.

    Basically. If it has ls built in, it's unix.

    For me anyway.

  44. Certification and other things by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 3, Interesting
    First, as can be seen from the following quote, Open Group sued Apple in 2001 and the issue has been on going from then on:
    The Open Group, also known as X/Open, sued Apple in December 2001 alleging, among other things, that Apple had infringed on its trademark.
    The Open Group also seems to be wanting to get Apple to certify themselves Unix 'compliant':
    The Open Group wants Apple to have Mac OS X undergo testing to certify that it complies with its standards for software bearing the Unix name; it also wants Apple to pay a fee. The Open Group says the costs to license the name are reasonable, based on the size of the company and the rough number of copies of the software Apple sells. In any case, no company is required to pay more than $110,000, said Graham Bird, vice president of marketing for The Open Group.
    $110,000 isn't much for a company like Apple. I am not really sure whether Apple is counter suing because they want to save face or because there is a real feeling that Unix really has become a generic term. I for one never applied it to any one product and think of it more as a general design philosphy

    While thinking about it, I would guess that Apple wants to be to able to use freely the Unix in its marketing, yet also have the freedom to build a system that is based currently on the Unix 'approach' and then branch as they feel necessary. Having to conform to Unix certification would probably prevent the system from evolving as it needs to.

    What is going to be interesting is between this and the SCO vs IBM issue, Unix may just as well be in the public domain. There is so much of the basic workings that is public knowledge and has found itself into numerous computer science text books, I wonder whether anybody can lay a claim to Unix, either as intellectual property or as a trademark.

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
  45. Re:UNIX: What's the first thing that comes to mind by gabe · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Not that arguing, debating, or even discussing this will matter or change anything but...

    I've known about UNIX for about 10 years now. I've been using it in some form for about that long. (NetBSD, Linux, Solaris, Mac OS X, etc.) I know of The Open Group, I've heard/read a few mentions of them before, in relation to the UNIX trademark, but I haven't a damn clue what they do or why they own that trademark.

    Do they make a version of UNIX? Shit, I don't know.

    Do they market UNIX? Again, dunno. I never see any "UNIX: Brought to you by The Open Group" posters, or ads or anything of the sort. To me, they don't have any public presence.

    Does this make me ignorant? Maybe. I've gotten along just fine being ignorant of this group.

    What does that say about their trademark? I bet if you took a poll of the slashdot community (and since slashdot has that capability, why not?) most of them would probably not know which OS is REAL UNIX, or who The Open Group is, or what they do. Furthermore, I'd guess that most of them think about UNIX the same way I do: FreeBSD, Linux, Mac OS X, AIX, whatever; it's all just UNIX, they basically all do the same thing. To me that's the equivalent of everyone calling bandages Band-Aids, or tissues Kleenex, etc., etc. I am not everyone else though, so perhaps I'm wrong.

    Has apple misused the UNIX trademark? Perhaps. I do recall seeing some Apple ads touting that it is UNIX based, though I do not recall any stating outright that it is indeed UNIX (R). Does this mean that Apple is misusing The Open Group's trademark? Could be. But that's now up to our legal system to decide evidently, and given the actions of our legal system over the past 3 years or so, I'd say there's probably not a great outcome to this.

    --
    Gabriel Ricard
  46. Re:"GNU/Unix" has a nice ring to it by JoeBuck · · Score: 5, Funny

    If and when apple wins, GNU will stand for "GNU's Now Unix".

  47. Re:"GNU/Unix" has a nice ring to it by Lonath · · Score: 4, Funny

    Except:

    (GNU/Unix) = ((Gnu's)(Not)(Unix))/(Unix) = (Gnu's Not) = GN. WTF is a GN?

  48. Why does apple license some things and not others? by NickV · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Now I know this post will not be read by many because it's a late one in 500+ comments, and lemme preface by sayign I love Apple... but...

    Why does apple license some ridiculous "technologies and patents" like 1-click shopping from Amazon and then at the same time not bother to plunk down the small amount (i'm sure it is for a company the size of apple) of change to officially get their OS UNIX certified?

    I mean, it should meet the open group's standards, right? My concern is apple might not think it will meet TOG's standards and they'd rather not risk it. (eitherwise, they'd just pay for it like they did with 1-click)

  49. Oh please don't by donscarletti · · Score: 3, Funny

    SCO has been getting up people's arses enough already.

    --
    When Argumentum ad Hominem falls short, try Argumentum ad Matrem
  50. UNIX is NOT a generic term by mnmn · · Score: 3, Informative

    UNIX means all the operating systems certified to be Unix, even in common use of the word. This includes AIX, Solaris, IRIX and HP-UX and excludes BSD, Linux, OSX, minix and Xenix.

    No go about the net looking for software ports. Some are available for UNIX ports, most frequently Solaris on sparc. In many places youd see Unix parallel to Linux as a selection, and you will rarely hear a geek say hes using Unix at home, while hes using FreeBSD or Gentoo.

    Apple is in the wrong and might lose the case. OSX, like BeOS has great merits and has stood under its own name well. Theres a whole community of Darwin users, feeding on the leftovers of OSX, so OS-X is a known and used term. Forcing Unix's meaning here will result in failure, regardless of what we believe Unix SHOULD mean.

    --
    "Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
  51. Re:"GNU/Unix" has a nice ring to it by mcc · · Score: 4, Funny

    According to logic, this gives us all things that are Unix and are not Unix is one package. Therefore, all things in the universe are now a part of Unix, and open source.

    Young Nerd: What is UNIX?

    Old Nerd: Unfortunately, no one can be told what UNIX is... They have to see it for themselves.

  52. No, no, Apple, no! by ejungle · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Everyone here needs to take a pill and get a fucking clue. Apple and The Open Group included. I'll deal with each individually.

    Slashdot Readers:
    You guys are fucking unbelieveable. "Go Apple!" and all this shit. You've gotta be fucking kidding me. Learn something about what "UNIX" means, reflect upon it, then think about how destroying the Unix trademark might be a bad thing. For the unenlightened; You're only allowed to use the Unix trademark if you conform to the Unix specification. Why does this matter, and who cares? YOU care because you're posting to Slashdot only because of any number of specifications, a Unix spec probably being one of them. HTML being another. TCP/IP, C, Perl, SQL, 3-Phase Power at 110 or 220 volts, whatever. The point is that standards and specifications are the only way to provide reliable infrastructure. Let me bring it down to earth for your Slashdotted minds: You know that "United Linux" thing (or whatever the fuck they're calling it this week) where a bunch of distribution vendors are getting together to make a Linux specification? It's the same fucking thing as The Open Group! Supporting one but not the other is not only inconsistent, its hypocritical. The only way that Linux will ever be able to rival Microsoft is by providing a common specification for which to program and support. Similarly, this is one of the main reasons the Unix specification and it's accompanying trademark has been around for 20 years or so. This is why big iron almost always runs an implementation of the one true Unix specification. If Linux ever wants to move out of the closet and onto the production floor, it would be wise to follow suit.
    So stop being such short-sighted pricks. Yes, trademarks and other IP are misused on a regular basis. However, that doesn't make them inherently evil.

    The Open Group:
    I can understand that you guys are upset that Apple has been using the word "UNIX" in it's marketing literature; because you probably feel like it diminishes your trademark. Realistically though, Apple has made a reasonable effort to say things like "Unix based..." and crap like that. You couldn't possibly have come to some sort of agreement? I mean, they're only part of the fucking group.

    Apple:
    I like what you're doing these days, but...
    Stop being such hypocritical jackasses. You throw your IP around like Mike Tyson does women. Then when you step on someone's toes, instead of removing your foot; you press down harder so that you can knee them in the balls with your other leg. What an asinine thing to do. Don't forget that you own IP on standards and specs too. I mean shit, if you'd have started "The Firewire Group" as an off-shoot of the IEEE1394 working group, you'd probably be selling more iPods because I could use them as storage for my Sony DV Recorder. By the same token, if you ever want Rendevous to be at all useful to people in the real world, it has to be cross-platform. So either submit it to a standards body, or better yet, make "The Rendevous Group" and licence it out. Then, in 20 years you might understand The Open Group's position when someone else is selling "Rendevous Based" brain implants.

    Okay, I think I'm done ranting now.

    --
    Remember: umount it before you fsck it.
  53. Some history .... by taniwha · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I worked on the original A/UX kernel (the port wasn't done by Apple, they bought it) - it was V.2.2 (not V.3 or .4), licensed (via UniSoft) from AT&T (so you can't legally make a copy for your friend). It also had BSD 4.2/3 networking added to it.

    Apple added to this a MacOS layer (all of the MacOS ran in a single A/UX process) - I was really impressed with the nifty job they did - if you look at the later A/UX releases when you walk up to a screen you have to look hard to figure out it's not a native MacOS box.

    It only ran on 68k Macs, they let it die when they went to PPC - I still have a copy that boots, rumor is that there's an AUX DNS server still running somewhere in Europe. And of course I go to the A/UX user's group dinner at MacWorld every Jan.

  54. You mean the lawyer weighs the same as a duck? by MichaelCrawford · · Score: 3, Funny

    "He's an attorney! Burn him!"

    --
    Request your free CD of my piano music.
  55. I KNEW I'd heard this before... by jpellino · · Score: 3, Funny

    OG owns the name but not the stuff... SCO owns the stuff but not the name... Apple can't call it by its name but can use the stuff... AH! Yes! Mr. Carroll, care to comment?:

    Alice could only look puzzled: she was thinking of the pudding.
    `You are sad,' the Knight said in an anxious tone: `let me sing you a song to comfort you.'
    `Is it very long?' Alice asked, for she had heard a good deal of poetry that day.
    `It's long,' said the Knight, `but it's very, very beautiful. Everybody that hears me sing it -- either it brings the tears into their eyes, or else --'
    `Or else what?' said Alice, for the Knight had made a sudden pause.
    `Or else it doesn't, you know. The name of the song is called "Haddocks' Eyes".'
    `Oh, that's the name of the song, is it?' Alice said, trying to feel interested.
    `No, you don't understand,' the Knight said, looking a little vexed. `That's what the name is called. The name really is "The Aged Aged Man".'
    `Then I ought to have said "That's what the song is called"?' Alice corrected herself.
    `No, you oughtn't: that's quite another thing! The song is called "Ways and Means": but that's only what it's called, you know!'
    `Well, what is the song, then?' said Alice, who was by this time completely bewildered.
    `I was coming to that,' the Knight said. `The song really is "A-sitting On a Gate": and the tune's my own invention.'

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
  56. Should have enforced that mark, X/Open! by watchful.babbler · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Unfortunately for the Open Group, their failure to strongly police casual trade use of the term Unix tends to militate against their claim. BSD, for example, is not a licensed Unix (though some BSDs are licensed), but the Bach book certainly considers it so (c. 1986), calling it a Unix "variant." Indeed, were I to purchase a Unix book -- say, the Big Red Book -- and it didn't cover BSD and BSD-derived Unices, regardless of whether they're Open Group certified or not, I'd be much put out indeed, and I think most people would as well.

    A longstanding failure to vigorously ensure that those third-party products only cover licensed Unices or otherwise make clear that unlicensed products are not Unix makes the Open Group's case a tough one to win. Just like asprin, kerosene and the thermos, Unix has arguably long been a generic term for a specific class of operating systems.

    To put it another way, when you hear that an OS is Unix, do you immediately think, "Ah-hah, it's passed the UNIX 93, 95, 98 or Base conformance criteria administered by the Open Group! I can now use the T_TCO_TRANSFAILPROB QoS flag without fear!"

    In any case, nothing can be more ironic than the X/Open version of the famous license plate: "Live Free Or Die: UNIX. (UNIX is a registered trademark of The Open Group.)"

    --
    "Freedom is kind of a hobby with me, and I have disposable income that I'll spend to find out how to get people more."
  57. General Response by ejungle · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Thank you all for pointing out the details of Apple's standards activities. I'm much better educated for it, without having to exact the effort to check the facts myself.(/SINCERITY)

    The reason I didn't check them is because they are completely tertiary to the point. Perhaps I should have written more hypothetically, but I figured that might have been evident when I mentioned brain implants.

    Do any of you have friends (insert obligatory slashdot joke here) that can only respond to one point of a multi-facted email or letter? I do, and I'm reminded of them here. For those who have trouble following, I'll condense my post into a list of points: (with bullets!)

    • Standards and specifications are good.
    • The Open Group should stop being IP nazis.
    • Notwithstanding, Apple are hypocritical assholes for wanting to invalidate the Unix trademark and consequently the specification.
    If you will, allow me to clarify a few things. Unfortunately, I didn't state explcitly that whether the standards are, free, open, closed or proprietary, I don't care. When it comes to standards I care about two things:
    1. The quality of the spec, or the implementation of the standard.
    2. The documentation of said standard or spec.
    I apologize to the IP bigots who had to waste their time screaming, "WHAT ABOUT OPEN STANDARDS!?!?" Your cause was never meant to be a part of this discussion. But since you brought it up, I might say a few things. As I mentioned before, IP isn't inherently evil. It just seems that way because it is often times wielded for the wrong reasons. Just as the GPL is a copyright licence, IP can often times work in your favor. The trick is to leverage it effectively and not get caught up in utopian visions of software without ownership. Please, allow me to get all Nash-like on you: What's best for both the group and the individual is what's best for both. Now some Darwinism as paraphrased from Ghost in the Shell: Overspecialize, and you breed in weakness. That is to say homogeneous groups or individuals are more susceptible to failure than a heterogenous group. Applied the world of IP the solution for success becomes quite clear: One must use IP to benefit not only one's self, but others to a proportionate degree. By the same token, if one behaves with only the group in mind; failure is inevitable, as the individual has not paid enough attention to it's own needs to remain viable. I await the responses of both your neighbourhood PHB and Mr. Stallman. :)

    Getting back to the point, I think I just gave a good reason why The Open Group might be best to stop hoarding their IP. ;)

    As it relates to Apple, whatever they might be doing elsewhere is irrelevant. Similarly, the hypocritical bit is self-evident. What matters is that they are intent on destroying the IP of others for no one's benefit but their own. How would your life, or the life of any given slashdotter improve without a Unix trademark? It wouldn't. In fact, it might get irrevocably worse. This is perhaps the fault of The Open Group, because it seems to me that the Unix specification means very little without the Unix trademark; and vice-versa. I simply don't see the benefit of everyone and his dog being able to call their software "Unix". I do however, see a problem with the loss of the definition of exactly what is Unix and what isn't. Yes, I'm aware that they'd probably just come up with another name/trademark; But that then begs the question, "Why bother?"

    --
    Remember: umount it before you fsck it.