Law Professor Examines SCO Case
An anonymous submitter writes "This law professor from the University of California points out weakness in SCO's legal bluster, and further takes a poke at closed software, for those hungry for more SCO scraps. At the end, he references Slashdot for more info ('itself a demonstration of the power of dispersed individuals working together')."
They're liars.
Seems like someone is out to get some fame over this...
We've got grounds for a huge lawsuit. It's obvious that in bad faith the University Professor is attempting to slashdot slashdot. He even included a direct link to our homepage. Untold damage!
Sue! Sue! Someone, call SCO!
I assert that my comment is only my opinion, not that of any employer, past, present or future.
Which is why you feel the need to join no? /Dread
Slashdot User Examines SCO Case
"Slashdot User notque from the University of Arizona points out weakness in SCO's legal bluster, and further takes a poke at closed software, for those hungry for more SCO scraps."
Uhh.. I think SCO sucks, and I think Microsoft sucks.
http://use.perl.org
It could be that they've got a solid case. It could be that they're working out some great shenanigans. Irregardless, I'm starting to wonder if Linux should be open to the average user to contribute, or if perhaps it should be restricted to a core group of companies and Linus who can afford lawyers to vet the code. Things are getting pretty scary in the open source world, particularly with the lawyers getting involved...
GPL or not
The second principle is that a party's rights can be affected by its later conduct - which can constitute a "waiver," giving away rights. Until recently, SCO was a willing player in the Linux movement, releasing code under the open source ("copyleft") license. Everything that happened to Linux was in the open. Yet SCO delayed in suing.
SCO had made their bed in deciding to take advantage of the open source movement. Now they want to retroactively change the decision.
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--------------
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At the end, he references Slashdot for more info ('itself a demonstration of the power of dispersed individuals working together')."
Now, if only we could breed, we would rule the world! Muh ha ha ha!
I attack the darkness.
GeekNights!
Late Night Radio for Geeks!
You can replace #1 with "Write an article that mentions slashdot."
If I had something intelligent to say, I would have said it.
At the risk of parroting RMS here, Linus started the kernel roughly a decade ago.
GNU started the OS itself about two decades ago.
It is an important distinction. I really wish that there was a distribution of the GNU OS that used a non-Linux kernel (but was otherwise like other GNU/Linux distros), which would be more concrete evidence of the importance (and extent!) of the GNU portions of the overall OS.
Somebody get that guy an ambulance!
Can anyone put out an article on SCO and have it posted as news?
If I could spell more than 15 words in the english language correctly, I'd create an article and submit it.
They are rehashing the same statements, we can all tell that SCO has almost no case to stand on, which is why the story is so compelling.
It's like watching the Iraqi Information Minister. It's hilarious to watch someone openly ignoring the blatent obvious.
And we get really mad when they make headways in the case, because they are so utterly moronic.
http://use.perl.org
I have to say I'm gonna root for SCO on all of this from now on, I love cheering for an underdog
Slashdot, the site where everything's made up and the points don't matter
Not that Linus', RMS, or ESR didn't have some good points on the technical side, but it is good to see a legal perspective of the case.
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
This really demonstrates the only Archilles heel that Linux has to fear: software patents.
If Microsoft or anyone else gets coordinated enough, maybe 10 years from now, the software industry will be so littered with software patent landmines that Linux will no longer be able to continue development. This is a very real possibility.
Please, Slashdot readers, we need to join together to figure out how the hell we are going to stop this, or else we need to come up with implementations of new ideas, business methods, software algorithms before anyone else like Microsoft can, and publish them open source so that no one else can claim a patent on them!
Talk to your representatives in Washington, Europe, whereever because this is a very real and very serious threat that **will** kill software development.
I thought I'd have to go without my coffee 'n SCO(ne) before starting the day..
Slashdot refers to him, he refers to Slashdot. HELP!!! I'm stuck in a DOS loop!
-- Thou hast strayed far from the path of the Avatar.
I have a small company and was attacked in a similar way by a large German company (I'm in the USA). They simply attacked with a lawyer from a large office in New York and I am in a small town in California. My lawyer did some digging and found that there is a federal law that states you must give the person in violation a full description of the violation and allow a responce. If there is not a civilized responce then you can go to court. We never went to court and we got the problem sorted out. It sounds like SCO would be in violation of that federal law.
It'd be better if Slashdot actually posted arguments on both sides instead of preaching to the choir by posting some random opinion written by an activist lawyer.
"The jews are insidious pigs bent on world domination." - Noam Chomsky
it's more fun to go against the tide :)
Not to be too critical, but did it seem that that "lawyer" basically just wrote a book report from previous slashdot stories? I'm NOT a lawyer, but could have come up with that.
Well, there went his credibility...
Sure, the federal government wouldn't let old Brigham retain governership of Utah when it became a state, but wouldn't it by nice if we could install the guy as head of SCO? Even as a man who's been dead for more than a century, he could probably run that ship better than its current leadership.
..is not listening to cusotmers..
After they lose this case there will be nothing lkeft but the angry mob of customers taking McBride's hide and stapling it to the wall..
Don't Tread on OpenSource
Ok, this SCO business is seriously getting out of hand. Why do we need to hear commentary from everyone and their mother about this case.
What's the next article going to be? CowboyNeal's left nut gives it's opinion on the SCO/IBM battle.
I think we should "Manure bomb" SCO's headquarters, and thier lawyers' offices. repeatedly. thill they disappear. And also o' Darl McBride's house as well (out of spite).
Just dump a manure truck in from of their doors. It will tell them what we think, and hopefully will dirupt them long enough to run out of money. Then IBM cand buy them for like 1 MILLION DOLLARS or less.
> I really wish that there was a distribution of the GNU OS that used a non-Linux kernel
GNU/Debian/HURD, GNU/Debian/BSD
he references Slashdot for more info ('itself a demonstration of the power of dispersed individuals working together').
I though slashdot was a 'demonstration of dispersed individuals procrastinating together'.
Who knew I was demonstrating power all this time?
This post cannot be rebroadcast without the express written constent of Major League Baseball.
1) Write an article how SCO is evil.
2) get it posted on slashdot.
3) get slashdotted, ad banners get zillions of hits
4) PROFIT!!!
One thing that this legal commentary explains is why IBM is so hush hush. Did you notice when reading the article that a large number of the arguments hinge on how the individual parties interact with the public?
I really wonder if IBM knows this and as such is keeping quiet. To show the image of the "good quiety" student.
"You can't make a race horse of a pig"
"No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
repeat after me... there is life beyond /.
please people, wake up!
can't you see it's obvious what SCO is doing?
and what this is all really about?
no... ok clueless ones, here's a clue for you...
after they announced the lawsuit their stock went up $10 a share, and the VP sold over 100,000 shares that day!
hello?!? Don't you get it? They don't care if they lose (and they will) that was never the point!
just like the WMD crapola in iraq (there never were any, it never was about that), it was about the oil!
all SCO wants to do is jack the stock high enough, long enough for their CEO, VPs, etc to cash out nice and RICH, and leave a burning twisted pile of rubble at the end....
they probably figured IBM (or someone - say Mr. Bill at M$) might buy them out, but either way, they're getting fat and rich off the share prices.
its a stock scam, and the securities people should be all over this!
so now you know the truth... what are ya gonna do about it?
"Seriously have you ever notived the vast amount of crud thats posted here? "
Yes, and the worst being yours.
1f u c4n r34d th1s u r34lly n33d t0 g37 l41d
Was Caldera a loveable shoe-shine boy, when their ultrasonic hearing hear the cries of the stolen, proprietary code, Sweet Polly Purebread? Are they attempting to rescue her from IBM, aka Simon Says? What's that pill in Underdog's ring - oh no! It's a Lawsuit Pill!
R: That voice. Where have I heard that voice before? B: In about 365 other episodes. But I don't know who it is either.
how come every parody of Gilbert and Sullivans 'Modern Major General' (including the one in the article) is always fundamentally lacking realistic phrasing / rhythm. There are too many sylables.
Photos.
Only fools worship the nails instead of the hammer.
How many /.ers are members of the EFF? /.ers don't go out to buy RI/MP-AA products? /.ers write a physical letter to their congresswhores? /.ers actually use Linux? or contribute to it or other OSS? /.ers live alone in their parent's basement, rather than with a helpful cult or commune? /.ers use Office & save their files in .doc format?
How many
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Bob Dylan would say something about wind here.
BTW, I think the professor is trying to recruit /.ers for his own private army. Sure, SCO today, but tommorrow...the world?....
SCO is claiming that IBM licensed some code (from AT&T mind you) and since they (actually Sequent) wrote some code that ran on top of that licensed code then they had to obey the license for the new, original work created without any help or IP from the "licensor".
That would be like saying since McAfee wrote Virus Scan on top of Windows and using the information from Windows then they can't reuse any of that code in writing a Virus Scanner for any other OS.
--- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
Either: ...or... b] The evil GPL has destroyed the intellectual property of SCO.
a] SCO wins and Linux and/or IBM is injured
I have to wonder if they researched the issue and then clued in SCO to go after people.
Also...
What if it is determined that IBM gave up its rights (by helping Linux) and that SCO isn't the sucessor the the rights? Would nobody own UNIX, and if so, would that devalue it in some way?
Geez, some of you people can be assholes.
Alright, the guy is brown nosing in his article to get some fame, but he's surely more qualified to comment on the legal merits of this case than 99% of the cretins here. It is legal opinion that will decide this matter, not a bunch of people arguing over the merits of RMS's claims to OS glory. No matter how wizard your skills are Harry Potter, getting a lawyer's opinion is the only way to understand the potential impact of this case, which could make some of us very unhappy. I, for one, found this article informative, and that's all I ask for with opinion pieces.
Now take a pill and play nice.
Only x posts and slashdotted! Must be running their site on product "A".
Imagine a beowolf cluster of item "B", on a "C".
Just wait till the RIAA hears about this! and/or Just wait till the MPAA sees this! and/or Just wait till the **AA hears and/or sees this!
Something SCO would do....Or Sue! Sue! call SCO
BSD is dying, only a few million users left!
Oh and MS knows security like they know open competition.
I used Mozilla once!
1. Action "D"
2. ???
3. Result "E"
MS sucks. or MSFT sucks. or Microsoft sucks. or Micro$oft sucks or Micro$loth sucks.
Linux has a far superior kitch factor.
I'm going to patent patenting. I'm going to patent the wheel, air, fire, water, item "F". Quick hide it from bezos.
I'm going to sue for violating my first post (patent|copyright).
Check my l33t signature!
Accomplishing goal A: Cost "G". Accomplishing goal B: Cost "H", for everything else there is item "I".
Something, something, something, private part [giggle like the school child you are], something, something, something.
Someday, I'll have a real sig.
Stop the madness, SCO please go out of business so I no longer have to hear this boring news about how you are trying to sue the pants off of other bigger better competitors. I would rather read about you on f*ckedcompany.com
Many have mentioned that if SCO showed some illegally copied code in the kernel, it would be replaced in no time. I wonder who could re-implement those parts in a safe way, I mean as in "a cleanroom implementation". Wouldn't every kernel developer be contaminated? Linus would, he must have seen SCO's code when he received the "illegal patches".
If this is true, it would be a really big problem, wouldn't it?
I have read through th article and it makes sense to me. Hopefully he is right and SCO go down. Bring it on.
-- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
I'm soooo SCOverdosed!
How many /.ers are members of the EFF? ME
/.ers don't go out to buy RI/MP-AA products? ME
/.ers write a physical letter to their congresswhores? ME
/.ers actually use Linux? or contribute to it or other OSS? ME
/.ers live alone in their parent's basement, rather than with a helpful cult or commune? NOT ME
/.ers use Office & save their files in .doc format? NOT ME (.swx baby)
How many
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" Most of my friends agree that the SCO tactics raise questions about their underlying evidence. If you've got the trump card against IBM, why wouldn't you play it right away instead of engaging in this kind of game they've been playing? But you know, given some of the history here I'm starting to wonder if they've got something that's slam dunk against Linux. I doubt it, but I can't imagine they'd try to bluff IBM, let alone the raging Linux community."
And why wouldn't they? Desperation breeds desperate acts. Besides bluffing is a time honored tactic, both in war and business.
" It could be that they've got a solid case. It could be that they're working out some great shenanigans. Irregardless, I'm starting to wonder if Linux should be open to the average user to contribute, or if perhaps it should be restricted to a core group of companies and Linus who can afford lawyers to vet the code. Things are getting pretty scary in the open source world, particularly with the lawyers getting involved..."
Did you read the article? It's already explained why this isn't necessary. Besides those things in life that are truely worthwile are worth fighting for. Now the OSS movement will finally have the trials and tribulations that seperate the men from the boys. The rubber meets the road, and we will find out if our principles actually mean anything.
Mr. Chandler also have some interesting points about the case posted here. Interesting read.
How many
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I'm not but should be.
I do but I tend to steal their products.
I don't. Waste of time.
I do. I can't contribute except for bug reports.
I don't. I have a large mortgage. My wife and I are the only members of our cult.
I do.
Who? I do like a good breeze, though. Especially through the windows of my Excursion.
Thats a really good point. I hadn't thought of that.
-- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
SCO (ex-Caldera) is run by lawyers, and they are not stupid nor crazy. Clearly they have a plan and it justifies putting their company at total risk.
Assume for a second that this case goes to court. What are the chances that it will be resolved quickly? Not good. The matter is arcane enough that it will spend several years going through judgement, appeal, judgement, appeal, as long as SCO can pay their own (cheap) legal fees.
What on earth can SCO be after? I don't believe it's a settlement from IBM. They _know_ IBM, a company that has always lived by the fist.
What else? Their business is bankrupt. They sell _nothing_. Their IP is worthless - indeed, realizing this may have been the trigger that set them on their course.
Nuisance value, that is their game. They are attacking Linux and all OSS by association, and they are attacking it a level that plays directly to the paranoia of managers making a Windows / Linux choice today. What SCO are saying, and getting lots of attention to, is that Linux/OSS is not a safe choice. Even IBM are likely to be sued. How about your business next? If the RIAA can sue ten thousand P2P users, why can't SCO sue ten thousand Linux users?
Normal decent paranoia suggests that Microsoft's hand and money lie behind this move, but that is not the crux of the matter.
What is important is that we are at the stage when Linux/OSS seriously threatens commercial interests, and this looks like an undeclared war by those interests against it. War is not nice, not decent, not logical.
Such attacks can go either way. Linux has never has so much publicity as during the last weeks, and the association IBM+Linux is now strongly in the minds of many managers. This is a good thing. People trust IBM.
The OSS community must counter attack. The best approach would be a collective libel and defamation suit by some thousand OSS developers, seeking punitive damages against SCO.
Such a suit would not win but it would show SCO that their opponents are not helpless nerds unable to understand the meaning of cold, hard steel. Knives out!!
Perhaps someone from the EFF would set up a campaign fund? I would gladly contribute $50 or $100 if it would result in SCO getting slapped with a suit.
Ceci n'est pas une signature
We're getting off the subject with this which is why I've "held my tounge" up till now. However, I think I'm going to comment on this anyways.
A few years ago, I was mucking around with Linux on my machine. Of course, I was a regular in the associated IRC chat rooms, and did a lot of internet searching to basically "learn how the dang thing worked". As my understanding grew, I started to contribute by helping newbies myself when I could (once walked someone through a kernel build over IRC). Anyway, back then, the pervading mode of thought was that Linux was the actual operating system and the everything else were merely extensions to it (X, FVWM, etc.). Just like with DOS was the actual operating system and Windows was just a program running on top of it.
Now, the paradigm appears to have shifted. The latest versions of Windows are no longer trying to eek out what they can out of the venerable DOS and, today, Linux is just a kernel and the whole package is the OS.
Fair enough, define it however you wish, but it really just boils down to semantics..doesn't it?
BTW -- When the HURD matures a little (a my kids get older so I have some free time), I'll probably muck around with it a little as well. Although, I did just do a hard drive install of Knoppix and I'm pretty darned impressed with KDE - quite an evolutionary change from FVWM2.
A goal is a dream with a deadline
Finally somebody who understood the reasoning behind this all...
The good thing about all this will be that SCO will be so deep in dept that it will die and take it's damn Unix IP with it into the grave, no more Unix legalese crap.
Obviously the moderators today did not read the article or they would know what this is in reference to. He/she should not be labeled Troll. Funny or off-topic maybe, but not a troll.
Day trading is back. Ready the Put options!
Lets turn this statement around. The real achilles heel for patents is open source. If someone puts it patented software into GPL software, that software becomes GPL too. If SCO have put there stuff in linux it's GPL. But in general IMHO the one who puts illegally patented stuff in GPL software is the one who is violating someone rights. So question is not if there is patented software in Linux but just who put it there. And my guess is that that's hard to prove.
If hackinga bad site that is seen as bad to some and defacing it is against hacking ethics (the free flow of information part), what about hacking a site that is trying to stop the flow of free information, linux for christ sake! Would anyone have distain for that hacker?
..is the "Buy SCO OpenServer 5" ad sitting at the top of Slashdot right now.
I just reloaded to see a Reginald Charles selling $55,450 worth of his SCO stock. At $55,450 that's the largest insider trade listed since this thing started.
06/20/03 BROUGHTON REGINALD CHARLES Sold 5,000 $11.09 $55,450
Belief is the currency of delusion.
Um...Mr Insightful. I hate to tell you this but software patents don't discriminate against just OSS. Software patents is a mainefield that the entire computing industry has to face every day.
Since it's the US that's pulling most of this nonsense. It's the US that will suffer the most, while the rest of the planet will shake it's collective head, and mutter something under it's breath about those silly Americans.
If there's any dark knight? It's the same force that brought about the mess in the first place.
That's right, greed. You'll see change when rampent software patents make it nearly impossible to continue to make money.
Then you'll see the gordion knot undone quicker than it took to tie.
The tinty URLo cation=206&category=10&Email=suckthisbitch@fuckyou .com&subject=FUCK_YOU_ASSHOLES!!!&message=SCOsuckm ydick!!
http://tinyurl.com/cx5f
points to
http://www.sco.com/company/feedback/thanks.html?l
just in case you want to know that before you click on it...
Is is well known that SCO relies heavially on BSD code. But the BSD license, while it allows forking, strictly forbids suing over derived code. Since linux and BSD share alot of code - I could envision SCO loosing controll over all of their 'intellectual property'
is it just me, or are we slowly bing SCO'ed to death here on slashdot? let me get this straight off the bat:
SCO is publicly making a public ass of it ('s corporate) self.
there, it's been said. i don't need to say it again. if the subject comes up here around the water cooler, i may voice my opinion again to a new party, but really, i'm pretty confident that SCO has no legal grounds here (yes, IANAL, like most other slashdotters). this "me too"ism that is growing here is getting out of hand. how many people do we really need to tell us that darl and co. are raving?
i am sure that there are all kinds of interesting submissions that are being passed over in favour of SCO stuff, and most lilely because of volume, so please - i beg you: don't submit more SCO stories. pretty please? with sugar? unless something changes?
i'm done whining now (which is my right as a slashdotter). move along...
Schrodinger's cat is either dead or really pissed off...
Part 1 and Part 2 of 3 part interview with McBride
At the end, he references Slashdot for more info
oh, so nice with recursion in stories.
- To understand recursion, we must first understand recursion -
Nice to see you're still lurking around GNU/Slashdot. How's your GNU/day been?
But at the same time, it has also generated FUD--"fear, uncertainty, and doubt"--among Linux users.
At long last I know what FUD means! All this time, I was too afraid and uncertain of myself to ask. Now my geek cred can remain intact.
I wasn't aware of the timing, but according to the article, SCO's McBride said:
Let's see. He's saying that IBM quit working on Project Monterey before Caldera bought Santa Cruz Operation's UNIX rights. That Santa Cruz Operation sold the rights precisely because they weren't as worth much at that point.
But part of SCO's lawsuit against IBM is SCO's claim that because IBM quit working on Project Monterey, IBM is conducting anti-competitive behavior.
Since SCO knew about this at the time they bought it, then surely, the price SCO paid for those rights was already discounted because IBM was no longer pursuing Project Monterey.
It's kind of like buying a junked car that had been damaged in a collision and then suing the driver of the other vehicle for wrecking your car. It was already wrecked when you bought the car! At best, the seller might have had a claim against the other driver, but not the seller.
If SCO wins, maybe we should buy the salvage rights to a World War II navy vessel sunk in a World War II battle. Then we can sue Japan for the full cost of the ship plus interest and penalties because they sunk our boat.
Really? Think about what will happen if they die = someone else will buy the IP (maybe MS??) and start a whole lot more crap like this.
Good For Him!
This is my sig. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
hmm, buy shares ?
Corel shareholders fight suspicious takeover deal
Corel is being buried alive, and at breakneck speed, by Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen and a former MS executive who, incidentally, also worked for the McKinsey consultancy firm which validated the post-MS investment strategic U-turn. Under the deal all Corel products would be privatized for a measly $30M. Corel shareholders - who've also pushed for Linux support long and hard - hope to canvass enough NO VOTES to scrap the deal but the raiders are tilting the rules in their favour.
It all went horribly wrong after the Linux powerhouse merger agreement between Corel and Inprise/Borland was derailed three years ago. We understand that Borland (in which MS had a shareholding stake) had valid reasons for pulling out under the agreed terms, but the combination would still have made perfect sense. Corel founder and CEO Mike Cowpland was soon ousted and CTO Derek Burney was named interim CEO. Conveniently soon afterwards Burney's half-acquintance, Microserf Tom Button, gave him a call and invited Burney for a visit at the MS campus and before we knew it, he had signed a $135M investment deal with MS, accompanied by an incredibly one-sided Alliance deal in which Corel had all the commitments and Microsoft basically none. In his debt of gratitude, Burney even promised not to sue MS over any anti-competitive tactics that MS "may" have used in their MS-Office offensives. Next Burney drew up a new strategy based on those commitments - again incidentally killing all Linux efforts and reducing emphasis on anything competing with Microsoft - and submitted his ideas for "validation" by McKinsey & Company, a consulting firm with strong culture of alumni networking.
From 2001 onwards Corel milked the increasingly-abandoned WordPerfect Office for revenue while toiling away on its dotNET descendant. Staff was getting laid off as a three-year turnaround plan was revealed to be centered on a dotNET-based enterprise system for massaging corporate data and delivering it in realtime to any type of devices through extensive use of XML and SVG graphics. Corel even bought SoftQuad and Micrografx to merge their technologies into the project codenamed Deepwhite. Great idea but with somewhat misguided execution.
In 2002 Corel managed to strike a few high-profile albeit limited OEM preload deals with the likes of Dell, HP and Sony. While Corel received little in terms of revenue from those deals, even that limited success must have come as a shock for Microsoft. "How dare those ingrate nobodies invade our holy turf!" could have been the likely reaction at Redmond. With the anti-trust spotlight under a friendly operator it was time for the final strike, and how better add insult to injury than by not just taking Corel out but actually keeping the corpse within the family!
In December 2002 the Paul Allen financed Vector Group, managed by a fo
In case you don't know what's going on: This link might help you understand the situation.
M@
Krispy Cream is people
I hope that, then, more and more people will feel more confident about open source, then start to use it.
-- --
This whole thing reminds me of the RAMBUS vs. SDRAM/DDR makers lawsuit of last year. If memory serves me correctly, Rambus submarine patented 'open standards' from JDEC and then tried to sue all the JDEC members for patent infringement after they had been releasing SDRAM and DDR SDRAM for several years/months. I.E. Once the companies were commited to a certain path (tooled and producing) RAMBUS sued so the RAM makers simply couldn't back out and switch to a new standard Rambus had no rights over.
The same thing is happening with the SCO Unix/Linux lawsuit. Now that IBM and other Linux makers are committed to Linux, SCO is submarining them with Patent and copyright infirngement suits since it's too late to back out now.
I think the outcome will be the same, only because SCO released the code to the community under the open-source agreement. That and judged don't like underhanded tactics like the one SCO is trying and RAMBUS did. Then again, I'm not a lawyer or a judge, so I can only speculate.
I still think Microsoft is bankrolling the whole thing though. It would be the best and obvious way to stop or severely delay the Linux movement and gain a better foothold in the web server world while Linux floundered. After all, Windows Server 2003 just came out...
Apparently we have a case of an immature individual committing an act of anti-semitism, illegal in the US, where this site is hosted and read a lot, and in Europe, where it's read a lot, too. CmdrTaco, the elders: are you going to do something about this individual and his petty agenda? I believe we don't deserve to see racial hatred nick above a message. Isn't the user in violation of /. policies? I'll watch this nick's posts, if it doesn't C&D will refer this to the Defamation League. (Also, if the e-mail works, hotmail should shut down their account as well.)
Should computers be able to parse the phrase "police police police police"?
The site formerly known as slashdot has changed its name to scodot; please update your bookmarks.
What I really wonder is how much closed projects have benefited from open projects. I wonder if you were to analyze a closed source program from MS or another big company if any of the programmers took their code from open sources. The only difference is that you can't be sued for patent infringment if you can't see it is there.
This kind of stuff really pisses me off. Mr. Chander has written a basically intelligent article, discussing why SCO's case is BS. Yet, he has revised history, probably unknowingly.
Linus Torvalds did not "indtroduce an operating system...that did some of what UNIX did". Linus wrote a kernel, which is complementary to UNIX kernels (though different in architecture, design, etc). He did not write the entire operating system -- properly called GNU/Linux. He wrote one component necessary for the operating system that is now improperly called "Linux".
This is not a knock again Linus. He has never claimed credit for any entire GNU/Linux operating system, nor GNU/Linux in general. He has simply claimed credit for the Linux kernel.
It is, however, a prime illustration of how simply calling all GNU/Linux OS' "Linux" is revising history. People here talk about it like, "so what, everyone knows Linus didn't write all of the software for Linux-based OS' [GNU/Linux distros]". We know that. Obviously, no one else does. This lawyer thinks that Linus Torvalds created the GNU/Linux distributions from the ground up, single-handedly.
It is an example of revisionist history. Just like how Issac Newton is credited as the founder of Calculus, but no-one mentions Leibniz, who invented calculus at the same time as Newton independently.
Linus has done great things for the FS and OSS communities. We should, however, credit others where credit is due.
social sciences can never use experience to verify their statemen
You're mixing up patent and copyright. Whether a particular implementaion of an algorithm is released under the GLP has nothing to do with who owns the patent for that algorithm or if the patent is enforcable.
As SCO is now requesting open source code to ensure it does not contain SCO's property, please send your ISOs and uncompressed images of Redhat, Suse, Lindows, Debian, Slackware, Gentoo, Mandrake, Yellow Dog, and Knoppix to investorrelations@sco.com
robertb@sco.com
kmartens@sco.com
darlm@sco.com
chriss@sco.com
shitheads@sco.com
While dying they have to pay the last bills, the UNIX "IP" would ve a valluable asset that will be sold to the first lawyer willing to sue somebody again.
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
Anybody that has read about this know that this has nothing to do with the GPL.
My goofness, SCO stuff daily and there are some people that still don't get it.
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
With this full transparency, legions of open source coders could write around the protected algorithm. Although important code might be sacrificed, no legal problem would remain.
Much more distressing is the possibility that a company like SCO finds a judge who agrees to view code that is the foundation for a legal claim "in chambers", and finds IBM or another firm using Linux guilty of violating some "copyrighted" or "trade secret" not a matter of public record.
That's the big danger of the SCO case -- the prospect that the code that is the foundation for the legal claim never sees the light of day.
But I'd love to hear the Professor's views on the evidence that has emerged thus far. As far as I can see, SCO's case revolves around developments at IBM and Sequent (now owned by IBM). They have talked about RCU and NUMA and JFS and something else I have forgotten. It seems that what SCO have shown so far is equivalent to this: IBM devise a new scheme for (eg) scheduling in the kernel. They implement this new scheme in AIX, sell it to some customers and everyone (including SCO) is happy. Later on, IBM conceives its Linux strategy. They then port their new XYZ scheduling scheme to Linux, offer it to Linus and eventually it gets merged into the Kernel. Now SCO comes along and says that IBM has no right to incorporate it into Linux because it belongs to SCO. The fact that the original technology licensed to IBM has got nothing like XYZ scheduling in it doesn't matter to SCO; as far as they're concerned, since IBM incorporated it into AIX first, the technology belongs to SCO.
All of this begs the question as to what SCO have been showing to their independent experts. Suppose they grab the code for XYZ scheduling, as seen in AIX. Then they grab the code for XYZ scheduling, as seen in Linux. Obviously, these two pieces of code, are going to be a pretty good match, even down to the comments. They tell the independent consultants that the former is System V code (because SCO claims that everything that was ever added to AIX belongs to them). And they tell the consultants that the latter is from kernel 2.4.XX. So the independent consultants, in all good faith, report that there is a match between "SCO code" and Linux code. My bet is that this is what SCO have been doing. I believe that this is the reason for SCO wanting people to sign NDAs. They can't risk anyone who knows anything about the kernel saying exactly what the code represents. It is in their interests to fudge the issue of where the code has come from. If some random hacker has grabbed the original SVR4 code and slipped some of it into a patch that has found its way into the Kernel, that could occasion some sympathy for SCO (not $3bn or even $1bn worth of sympathy). If that is the case, it looks like code that SCO originally paid for is being used without SCO being compensated. On the other hand, if it's IBM's implementation of XYZ for AIX, which they have ported to XYZ for Linux, then SCO's case is dead in the water, and SCO knows it.
Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
I think Linux itself is not threatened in its essence. Pray hard (if you live in the EU or US) that the EU doesn't follow the US' idiot lead and decide that software can be patented. As long as there are significant Linux players in countries that DON'T recognize software patents (say, China, India, and Brazil, to name a few?), Linux will thrive safe from the software patent menace. I don't think innovation itself will wither, just in certain countries.
Of course, this will come as cold comfort to those of us in the idiot countries, because if M$ and company DO manage to erect software patent barriers to OSS, Linux will be a banned article we cannot legally import.
The logical result of all this will be that the US and (probably) EU will lose their technological edge to China and India and become second-rate powers (and probably not just in the software field) until the software patent madness is overturned.
Our leaders, if they had any ability to think strategically beyond the next election, would realize that Open Source is a critical resource for their countries' ability to compete in the only area they have a critical advantage in -- their technological edge. (Not that I like what's been sliced up with that edge recently, but living in a declining country is an unpleasant prospect...).
"My strength is as the strength of ten men, for I am wired to the eyeballs on espresso."
A fascinating loop, if I may say so. :-D
More than mere navel gazing.
Not to mention the fact that in the event that the Linux kernel comes under fire for patented methods, the community will have patches to replace the patented code in about 14 minutes. The big companies are simply not capable of changing their code bases and distributing those changes to the customers that fast.
Finally, with a community several hundred thousand strong comprising professionals and students across the industry, the chances of having prior art found and your patent discarded are much, much higher.
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
From the article:
More generally, companies trying to derive more revenue from their intellectual property portfolio may lash out at licensees. But licensees of open source software distributed under a permissive license do not have to worry about this possibility.
Nuff said. Here's your argument for your PHB.
"The Sage treasures Unity and measures all things by it" - Lao Tzu
Don't buy now. The time to buy was a few months ago when SCOX was under $3 a share. SCOX hit a high of $11.95 about two weeks ago and has bouncing around $10 a share since.
Buy now, and you're buying at the top.
The hour long discussion has been archived on mp3
I once thought I could create a parody song based on this opera, but dang . . it is had to write words that match the meter and make sense! To complicate matters even more, the song is played at "ludicrous" speed to make the singer hyperventilate by the end.
robi
Some defensive items in the article are correct but that is because previous reporting got those right already, for example the delay in SCOX taking action and their willful distribution of supposedly infringing code under GPL terms (fully willful, there was no "inadvertent" element, they were "advertising" these featues)
The closing comment highlights how much this article is about politics more than law Otherwise, there will be no such thing as truly open, free software - and as a consequence, there will effectively be an economy-dragging tax on information technology. A judge will hardly be bothered with the existance or not of free software, there isn't a law or constitutional principle or similar that says freedom of software is protected. Same for SCOX being able to collect a "tax" from others, if judges were bothered by this, stupid patents wouldn't have a chance and we know this is not what actually happens...
So, Mr. Chander, please read the freaky claims before speaking about them. Getting infected with slashdotters' bad habits can be very dangerous in court.
Word of advice; personally, I wouldn't accuse the SCO folks of running an illegal pump-and-dump scam in a public forum, since that could potentially lead to a libel suit. Since you've represented this as fact and not opinion, I'd say you're at pretty high risk...
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
SCO alleges that "as long as the Linux development process remained uncoordinated and random, it posed little or no threat to SCO...." But in truth, Linux was always coordinated - just by many different hands.
In the final years of the 1930s the german army raced across Europe trashing all opposition in their path. At the time of their greatest military successes the German army was running a field command structure called "mission based" command.
Mission based command placed the authority to act in the hands of the soldiers on front line, the idea being that those closest to the front would undoubtably be best positioned to make fast assessments of a situation. Should an opportunity present itself they were free to exploit it to their advantage without having to check with the beaurocracy above. The overall target was known - to win, and as long as your actions fitted the target it was up to you.
This system worked so well that all fell in their path 'til they hit the English channel and turned on Russia (at the instruction of their one leader).
Contrast this to the latter half of the war. The more centralised command became around the leader and his sycophantic entourage, the worse things got until eventually the leaders own incapability to understand the demands of those at the front line led to the collapse of the whole system.
The first example was Hitlers order to Rommel to stand fast to the last man at El-Almain. The same mistake was made again at Stalingrad and in several other situations.
The distributed, "module based" development of Linux allows developers to react in the same way as the soldiers on the front line, patching and adding features on the fly without having to discuss it with their manager, product manager, product devlopment manager, product development management manager etc. leading to events like the KDE team patching the SSL flaw in konqueror while the MS FUD machine was still denying it was a problem.
NO! before you start saying it their are no insinuated similaraties between OSS community developers and certain historical characters of an evil nature it's the model that's similar. Ironically the intent in the case of Linux is freedom not enslavement.
Hmmmmmm..... Deep fried and look like Squirrel.
It occurs to me that the SEC should be looking hard at current events in the SCO case, as there's a real prospect the board are engaging in illegal stock manipulation. If SCO's case is all just hot air (IF? well, just for the sake of argument...), then those who are buying the shares the board are slowly dumping at high prices (assuming this is true; I cannot be sure) are being defrauded right now. If the board knows or should know that the case is empty and the stock rise just a bubble, are they not commiting fraud? Does only a stockholder have standing to raise the issue with the SEC (IANAL, I don't really know)? In that case, maybe I have $10 for a share of SCO and a dime to call the Feds...
"My strength is as the strength of ten men, for I am wired to the eyeballs on espresso."
"This law professor from the University of California points out weakness in SCO's legal bluster, "..
Talk about shooting fish in a barrel..
In point of fact, Ritchie created Unix to run a chess program, not for telecommunications. Only later, when AT&T discoverd that Unix was a very creditable OS, was it used for more prosaic, business related work.
Don Dugger
"Censeo Toto nos in Kansa esse decisse." - D. Gale
Why not just patent the CPU instruction set? Then every piece of software is really owned by the company that owns the CPU manufacturer? AHHHH! :-)
NB: obviously instruction sets are patented; even MS patents it dot net vm.
I think we must recall the creation of the PC compatible: a new BIOS was created from scratch to run the hardware. IBM fought tooth-and-nail to protect their BIOS-IP, but lost in court because the BIOS was created in a "clean-room" environment by programmers who had never been exposed to the original IBM copyrighted BIOS code, neither source nor decompiled. If you remember, this was a big win for the computer industry. I'll even go so far to argue that it was this court decision that enabled the PC to become as proliferous as it is today. This court decision established the notion that a basic computer algorithm cannot be patented, but the source code and executable that executes the algorithm can... Otherwise, some greedy company could patent "MOV AX, 9", or the powerful two hex bytes, "CD21", and then where would we all be?
But wait! What about the recently patent-liberated GIF compression scheme that Unisis held onto for so many years (GIF Patent Prepares to Expire refers)?
The point I'm making is that IP law will never kill the software industry. As long as there are CPUs which need programming, there will be programmers around to do the job. If anything, I honestly believe (I admit, a bit of RMS RDF in effect here) that because of the specifics of this SCO vs. IBM case, a clear line in the sand will be drawn much like the original IBM PC BIOS case, that allows cleanly-developed software to be developed to mimic IP software. Thus there will never be a threat to Linux, until the next big thing in OS technology comes along and the Linux community refuses to adopt it.
If anything, this will be a painful and expensive battle, but it's outcome will greatly benefit our community.
Karrick
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- "Ask not what your computer can do for you, but what *you* can do for your computer."
They think of alot more than the kernel. In fact, the average Win/Mac user doesn't even know what a kernel is. They think of the OS as the universal menu bar, the file-manager, the desktop, the task-bar, and all of the utils that are needed to at least manage files.
That is what the term OS tends to be taken as today.
social sciences can never use experience to verify their statemen
That's the fun thing about "intellectual property". It doesn't burn to the ground. It survives corporate implosion - at pennies on the dollar. With a fire-sale price, such "property" can even be snatched up by those with relatively little to lose and a lot to gain if they can leverage their new holdings in a creative manner.
And, of course, it doesn't stop there. Even if a company remains intact one shouldn't depend on the benevolence of that company. Company leadership changes. There could be a personnel shuffling in management. Or perhapse someone in Legal discovers a particularly "clever" way of making more money and gets top-level support.
Which, of course, sounds awfully familiar.
Nice. Couldn't have said it better myself. I like that guy.
today is spelling optional day.
Or...
d) SCO's programmers actually copied the code from Linux and it's us who should be sueing for copyright violations. This is a pretty plausible possibility, since the Linux code base is freely available, SCO's isn't and programmers often face tight deadlines with huge pressure to get stuff out. I hope this possibility is examined at great length, though no one's been talking about it much.
Or...
e) SCO or Caldera actually put those modifications into Linux themselves, giving up rights to that IP in the process.
Take your pick...
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
We need a new campaign.
:)
How about "Hell no! I won't SCO!"
SCO is suing someone they have no chance of beating in an attempt to be bought out. Since they know this is their only option, they're putting ALL the cards out on the table.
Let it end already!
Computer Science is Applied Philosophy
I suspect that they've probably already evaluated this case and decided it was kosher.
Or perhaps, it suddenly occurs to me, the SEC is hesitant to interfere with ongoing private litigation and will act if and when the case is shown to be meritless and it all becomes public record? (NB: a sealed settlement with IBM would massively complicate that effort). Twitchy they may be, but they're still run by an administration that is decidedly anti-regulation; that might limit their potential eagerness and make them act cautiously.
"My strength is as the strength of ten men, for I am wired to the eyeballs on espresso."
As far as WWII is concerned, don't forget that when Hitler attacked France, the French army was directed by a handful of old farts who had made technological choices that proved disastrous. France had concentrated on building a huge line of bunkers on its border with Germany (ligne Maginot) while its air force was ridiculously underequipped compared with the Luftwaffe, and it had nearly no armoured vehicles to counter the PanzerDivizionen. The French army got smashed to tiny bits when the Germans attacked...
I'll stop here, no point in going further on the subject...
In Soviet Russia, our new overlords are belong to all your base.
Hey!
;)
;)
You saw the weapon of mass destruction. Or the piece of the filter that makes the explosives for the weapon on CNN yesterday. So don't go on saying there's no WMDs. Sure there are, it'll just take a few months for our CIA to plant them, er I mean dig them up.
It doesn't matter. People won't learn. They'll just go on believe whatever CNN reports as fact. Just like they'll go on believe in their religion. Because if they can't, then their whole world comes crashing down around them because its all a lie and they know it.
What am I going to do about it? I'm going to go on lying 'til it makes me rich like everybody else.
Linux is the most compatible and fastest OS ever build. Nothing compares to its features, scalability, application availability, stability or security. No other OS can compete because no other OS has the support of all the world's best programmers. And if you buy now you'll get this free Penguin plushie. Just look at the plushie! How can you say no to that!?!
>>> The guy in the article made a similar comment and I fail to see how it's relevant at all. The issue here is that IBM licensed some code and SCO is claiming that IBM then used this licensed code in Linux. That SCO also participated in Linux development is utterly irrelevant unless they themselves also put proprietary Unix code into Linux.
The article in question covers this in the "waiver" discussion.
If SCO contributed any SCO UNIX code to Linux, ie if they did the same behavior that IBM's accused of then SCO has waived its rights to collect from IBM for that behavior.
And SCO did do that, see NZHeretic's article about Jun (forgot the last name).
Contracts run 2 ways.
The law professor's commentary suggests that while this case is being spun against open source software and could certainly affect it, the case is also an example that demonstrates significant problems in the software licensing of proprietary code. Given further analysis, the commentary could be developed into a thorough examination into the problems of software licensing and proprietary software. If the proper legal analysis was completed by reputable individuals, the resulting work could be published nation-wide in various reputable magazines, journals, and newspapers. The analysis could then be expanded throughout the IBM vs. SCO legal action. Let's change the focus of this case from Open Source ignores IP issues to the destructive nature of software licensing in business. If IBM wins, we get an "I told you so" card and the momentum behind open source could hit critical mass and be a BIG win. If SCO wins, it won't just be a blow against open source, but it will be a blow against every business since the powers of the copyright holder concerning software will increase by an order of magnitude. SCO and others are spinning this case against open source with no published evidence, just unsubstantiated legal claims. For any ip lawyer who reads slashdot, we need you. Competent analysis of this case is essential. The outcome of this case is either going to benefit software development or hinder software development, both proprietary and open source. Let's stop allowing SCO to spin this case without substantiating any of their claims, let's spin the case to show what it is really about, software licensing. Let's do it not with unsubstatiated claims, but with superb ongoing legal analysis of the situation throughout the progress of the case. Thank you.
Isn't this the reason RedHat gives for some of its patents?
The only problem with this approach is that if they're held by some company like RedHat, and it ever goes bankrupt and has to sell their IP, the new owner might not be so reasonable...
TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.
If some businesses think they can patent everything and force competitors and customers to pay an exaggerated price, they will quickly learn the realities of the world says that when there comes a point where is just easier to destroy the troublemaker. IBM and ATT have both learned this lesson. MS due to the unusually corrupted corrupted U.S. government has yet to learn this lesson in full force.
Consumers steal music. Businesses steal software. MS validates the stealing of software by consumers by forcing large corporations to pay licensing fees so the agents of the company do not have to formally steal the software. What has been proven many times, in many countries, if that if there is no reasonable way to legally acquire what is wanted, people will steal it. The key is to make the legal acquisition easier than theft.
GNU/Linux is embedded. You can be sure that Apple, IBM, Sun, etc are all looking at this carefully. Patents aren't necessarily a problem. The current SCO is not a problem, and may be necessary to clarify some historical details. People who currently use OSS already probably have a good reason and aren't easily going to be scared away. If it does become a real problem, we may see the courts or markets enter a destructive mode to restore balance.
"She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
Yes. It is obvious. This is discussed again and again each time SCO comes up. Thanks for restating it.
But you, in turn, are missing another point. It doesn't matter what their intent is. What matters is their claims and actions.
Another initial theory floated when this whole thing cropped up is that its all being orchistrated by Microsoft. After all, it would appear to be validation of MS' most recent anti-Linux strategy claims. I'm more inclined to think that Caldera/SCO took a pointer from Microsoft's sales propoganda. But in any case, there will now be CIOs making purchasing and deployment policy based on both Microsoft and SCO propoganda.
What we are already doing about it. Keeping informed. Discussing claims. Being prepared to offer a counter-perspective if the oportunity arises.
Part of this situation is a publicity stunt. That's where we come in. But the other part will, most likely, be an actual trial in court. That will be up to IBM.
One final point...
Keep in mind that the SEC is a governmental agency. These guys work on a very different time schedule than we do. They're slow and deliberate - but if they come down, they'll come down hard (whether it sticks or not is another point entirely).
I'm reminded of the spammer Rodona Garst who's legendary pump-and-dump spam eventually lead to action by the SEC.
Let us assume (it really is possible) that SCO just wants to spin this out as long as possible. Am I right that we will need to endure literally years (not weeks or months) of unsubstantiated FUD before SCO can be forced to prove anything? No doubt, eventually, SCO can be sued into the ground if (as most of us suspect) their claims are frivolous. This is rather irrelevant in that the company was clearly going under before they initiated all this. Can any lawyer indicate how, under US law, this might be brought to a quick conclusion if IBM has no real case to answer? How quickly?
There are 70 lawyers in my firm.
At least one has come into my office asking if we use Linux and expressed concern about the lawsuit when informed that we do. (Samba, CUPS, etc.)
I explained the lgeal reasons why they should not be concerned but since I am just the IT manager my words have little credence.
This is the kind of article I can forward to all the lawyers who ask as it's from the kind of source they will listen to, speaking a language they understand.
As other posters have pointed out, it's not what he says (which we all already knew), it's who is saying it.
If you don't want to repeat the past, stop living in it.
If you can be bothered to check your history, every nation which has attempted to destroy the Jewish people have met with defeat. Sometimes at the hands of Jews such as Israelis, sometimes with the help of other states such as the USA and Great Britain. You may pound yourself against a rock, but the rock will win. And the rock will not resort to pounding itself against you.
Israel has less than one fiftieth of the other arab lands. Still they cannot be tolerated by these blinded hysterical madmen. For any anti-semites and jew haters out there, I would ask when was the last time Israel attacked another sovereign nation unprovoked? Sure, they blasted Iraq's OSIRAQ nuclear power plant preemptively, but can you blame them? From the designs of that plant that I have seen, and its distant location from any city, I would say it was probably intended as a breeder reactor in my opinion. I mean, why would you need nuclear power when you have oodles of oil and low population density for 80% of your lands?
As MS has shown, what is and isn't "part" of an OS is up for interpretation. [See IE vs Mozilla] Beyond that we have the question of "Which OS?"
[ignoring historical names] IBM used SysV to make AIX. IBM wrote RCU. IBM then added RCU to AIX [not SysV]. Is RCU a "part" of SysV?
It's development didn't require SysV. [It was done as a theoretical exercise. Followed by multiple implementations.]
It's execution doesn't depend on SysV. [It runs on/in Linux, AIX and OS/400. It doesn't run on or in the SysV code they liscenced from AT&T.]
RCU was never shipped with SysV [at least not at the point they wrote it]. They didn't add something to an existing operating system. They created a new OS based on an old one. Is Internet Explorer "part" of Windows 3.1? Win95? MacOS 9?
Imagine if you modified IE to take pluggins (yes it's already been done.) MS might be able to claim ownership of the "socket" but they can't claim ownership of everything that might get plugged into it. A license for derivatives of SysV would only cover the changes to SysV which were made so that it could acomodate the RCU code. Not the RCU code.
SCO seems to be claiming that this is wrong. That they own RCU, because RCU fits in that socket. No matter the origin of RCU. This is akin to XFree claiming ownership of KDE. Or KDE claiming ownership of Karamba. This would totally destroy everything we believe about the way interoperation and extension works. Adobe would own every photoshop pluggin.
Because this is a contract issue not a statute issue, I'm being extreme. However, the concept of ownership in these cases is not trivial. The concept of derivation is under attack. If you expand it the way SCO appears to be arguing you get absurdity. Therefor, it must fail. For the sake of our livelyhoods it must be shown to fail.
This is not a political statement. This is not legal advice. It's a frick'n Slasdot post. However: I'm Running For
Hey... I'm 33 years old and have been out of college for a while and I STILL do that. Of course now it's ogg vorbis files instead of CDs.
In Soviet Russia, /. masters YOU!
Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
Actually, it does. If the patent owner distributes it under the GPL, then he cannot later claim patent rights against either users of the code, or those who modify it for another purpose and the use it. Nobody who does not have the right to so distribute the code is permitted to distribute it under the GPL under *ANY* conditions (e.g., "you must pay me a peppercorn per century" or "you must pay me for any derivitive works" or "you must get my approval for any derivitive works"). He could create a license similar to the GPL, and release it under that, but it probably couldn't include any GPL code. (There may be ways around this, e.g. including the GPL code as source, and requiring compilation and linking. And perhaps other ways.)
I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
I will attack SCO with my Blue eyes ultimate white dragon!
Which is exactly the problem.
The thing I forgot to hit, when I slipped into "speech" mode, is that your virus scan example differs from the RCU issue in an important way. In your example MS licenses AntiV from somebody. It's a contract about the AntiV. In the RCU case IBM licenses SysV from SCO/AT&T. RCU not only isn't in the contract, it didn't exist at the time of writing. RCU isn't "derived" from SysV in the traditional sense.
So the question is more akin to "If I invent a spoiler for a Honda, does that mean Honda can stop me from mounting it on a Yugo?"
This is not a political statement. This is not legal advice. It's a frick'n Slasdot post. However: I'm Running For
An examination by a law professor? Excuse me for not giving this "examination" any merit but I'd rather see the opinion of someone who actually works in law, not just theorizes about it.
SCO has said, it won't sue SCO Linux customers. Can they afford to this? I think no. It is in catch-22 situation.
If SCO sold the SCO Linux to its customers legally then that sell is governed by GPL and SCO loses right to its proprietary code. If it didn't sell them under GPL, then SCO had no right to sell at all and its customers are using illegal copies and now anyone can sue SCO Linux customers. In truth, the SCO Linux customers are doomed. Either SCO must recall the product or they can be sued by Linux developers. SCO wants to sell SCO Linux but without GPL and it can't do it.
The SCO case against IBM is altogether a different matter. That is between IBM, SCO and let them figure out in court. But if SCO tries to sue Linux customers, it is in deep trouble.
There's something I'm not understanding about the issue... Why does SCO try to imply that they own the rights to derivative work (AIX) on code they own IP rights to, but licensed to IBM for exactly the purposes for which it was used? I could understand their argument better if the license to IBM had been some sort of GPL license, but I imagine it was not. It seems like they're trying to apply open-source licensing concepts to their own proprietary code and licensing, and I don't see the justification unless it is explicit in their licensing to IBM.
Is there some general precedent for derivative works on work licensed from others that is independent of the license terms? I know that copyright infringement can occur for unlicensed works that are judged as significantly derivative from copyrighted work. That just doens't seem the situation at all here.
As far as I can tell, there has been NO crime comitted here, thus there can't possibly be a hate crime.
Sure, I would never have such a handle myself, but it's ludicrous to suggest that he has committed an act of anti-semitism merely by creating the nickname.
I know the answer to this question, as I am here posting on slashdot as well, but couldn't you find a more productive use of your time?
Pull out the duct-tape and expect the herd to move in and trample everything.
What exactly do duct tape and herds have in common?
As the husband of an ecologist [HOE], I must remind you that the order of living systems comes not from individuals working togeather, but from the less fit dying before they can reproduce.
This is not a political statement. This is not legal advice. It's a frick'n Slasdot post. However: I'm Running For
Intel has just decided to sue everyone. Being as all computer code on any intel platform is a derivitive work of their respective IP, they have decided that any and all computer code developed since their first processor release is infringing on their IP rights.
Intel has directly named SCOX as infringing on their IP and will provide proof assuming you sign their NDA..
The fact that you tow the uninformed, conspiracy-laden leftist party-line doesn't lend credence to your SCO arguments.
Speaking of which, is there a group of opensource-minded lawyers out there? Lawyers wishing to advance the cause if you will? If not there needs to be. Its the only real way to get changes made... time to organize.
McBride plans to use those audit rights to ensure that
The migration from AIX to other sources could well be a shot in the arm for US IT firms. It'll be just like the Y2K crisis, except with shorter deadlines and nastier side effects. I think that Wall Street could well afford to be offline for a few months, couldn't it?
First off, the code in question was implemented on PTx(?) which was a variant based off the licensed IP. Second off, the code they're debating was in fact written for OS/2 and ported from there.
. html for details.)
SCO is trying ot claim that since the writers worked on both the Unix variant and the OS/2 one that the knowledge used from the one extends the license to the other.
They're trying to lay claim to a derivative of a derivative of a derivative. To make matters more entertaining the actual derivative was a paper about a generic RCU implementation with nothing tied to a particular OS. (See Cringely's article: http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20030619
--- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
"In its complaint, SCO claims, in essence, that without its UNIX contracts, IBM was nothing, and without IBM, Linux was nothing. But both of these claims, like SCO's allegations, are dubious."
He worded that entirely too nicely.
If you schemed to pump up the stock so insiders could sell, the greatest risk would be from shareholder lawsuits (the people who bought at $10+ and held).
But I think SCO's management would argue that they acted only under desperation and gross stupidity. And they would have a pretty strong case
SEC investigations take time, tho. As I recall the SEC is already
/. ;=-)
into SCO from some earlier allegations; this is probably just more
on their plate. SEC manpower is not limitless, remember.
As to allegations of PnD, there have been many, many of those around
the web, some by people with a lot more horsepower than most
posters. Anyway, it's either PnD or a truly incredible coincidence (in other words, prove it's NOT true, SCO)
Just my 0.02, adjusted for inflation
SB
It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
The professor's article consistently fails to give credit where credit is due. "Linux" is not an operating system and it never was. Linux is a part of an operating system called a kernel (which acts as a bookkeeper managing the resources of a computer so applications can share those resources without conflict). It's fair to credit the major chunks of an operating system; GNU and Linux are both valuable chunks. It's also less confusing to the reader if one refers to the union of the GNU operating system with the Linux kernel by mentioning both parts (hence the term "GNU/Linux"). For the FSF's take on this, please read their essay which also has a link to a FAQ on this issue.
Also, the article inappropriately and inaccurately attributes the concept of copyleft to the Open Source movement. Copyleft, to quote the FSF, is "a general method for making a program free software and requiring all modified and extended versions of the program to be free software as well". This concept and the term was invented by Richard Stallman, father of the Free Software movement. Stallman started GNU and the Free Software Foundation over a decade before the Open Source movement came along. He also defined the need for software freedom, something the Open Source movement eschews.
Finally, it would be nice if the professor clarified that the term "free" has multiple meanings in English and that the meaning which is most important for this discussion is the one referring to certain freedoms, not price. The "free" in "free software" has to do with the freedoms to share and modify software. The freedoms of free software are a big part of why the GNU/Linux system (and other free software systems) are worth using.
I hope the professor will find the time to correct the errors in his article.
Digital Citizen
Pump and dump may well be a part of this. However, one thing I have seen noone mention is that McBride and friends make pretty good salaries and bonuses that will cease once SCO goes down the tubes. SCO did not look very healthy until they started all this. Under US law, they may be able to spin this out for years before being forced to produce any evidence. I think they could stand up five years from now and say "Ha Ha Ha ... this was all a scam to continue collecting our salaries and bonuses", and there is no US law that could touch them.
Hence, the quipe about irony at the end, chief.
Score(1-10):
Reading Skills 7
Comprehention 7
Ability to understand the definition of the word "irony" 0
Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
And IBM has more tech savvy lawyers than SCO has Dollars
Diplomacy is the art of saying "Nice doggie" until you can find a rock. Will Rogers
I thought the only way you could be liable for patent infringement was to commercially (i.e. profitably) reproduce the work. The Cottin Gin was pattented by Eli Whitney, but he didn't make a cent off of it because the design was so simple. Everyone went home and made their own, and there wasn't much Eli could do about it. Unless they sold their reproductions, they weren't liable
[If this is true]:
While this would protect the Linux kernel and the non-profits that don't sell (Debian), I'm not sure where this would leave companies like RedHat. RedHat could be considered a "seller of Linux", but they actually only sell support services. It is possible to download and install from RedHat without paying a cent.
- Sig
That, and some antipathy for things Teutonic, probably accounts for the fact that there is no such thing as a Fig Leibniz (or Eudoxus, whose work predated theirs by a millenium.)
Report this to the SEC and make some cash!
1400x1250 in a 640x480 world...
In fact it can be easily argued that open-source discourages copyright infringement because it can so easily be detected.
That could be unpleasant.
- Microsoft licensing its OS source to a third party (say, Citrix Systems for example).
- The 3rd party develops a new product (say, Citrix WinFrame, for instance)
- The 3rd party uses technology it developed in another product (like, say...MetaFrame for UNIX, maybe)
- Microsoft claims it controls the technology developed by the 3rd party because it is a derivitive
- Microsoft sues the shit out of 3rd party
Of course, Microsoft handled Citrix differently. They licensed the NT source code to Citrix. Then, when Citrix made this really neat product, Microsoft saw the opportunity and basically said, "Hey, Citrix Systems...umm, All your base..."Microsoft has the luxury of being able to say: "We are assimilating your technology into our OS. No one will buy your shit anymore because it's already in the box."
SCO can't do that, as is evidenced by their dismal failure at being an OS provider. So, they sue.
What if Microsoft decided to sue everyone who built stuff that relies on the Windows API?
though I will correct them.
However, this guy is a lawyer, and obviously made as point of researching the history of the situation a little, to form what is obviously an intelligent position, and what anyone reading it can tell is an intelligent position.
This is what makes his revision of history all the worse. Because people read his article, and are probably impressed by him, and his knowledge of UNIX history, they then think that Linus single-handedly created entire GNU/Linux distributions. Linus started Linux, the kernel. He did all of the initial work, and then others started helping him out.
Your explanation for Linux' success is absurd. The idea that a logo is what makes a project successful is absurd (though I would suggest GNU look into changing their logo). People judge something on it's merits, not the publishability of it's logo.
RMS and others who insist on GNU/Linux bear Linux, the kernel, no ill will; nor Linux. They simply want history recorded in the proper fucking manner. It is now being written in articles explaining the history of GNU/Linux that Linus invented it by himself. That marginalizes the contributions of everyone else who helped to create what we now as the GNU/Linux distributions (e.g., RedHat, SuSe, Gentoo, Debian, Slackware, etc).
To be technically correct, SCO is attacking the kernel. However, they have no clarified that; thus, it seems like they are attacking the entire OS. Another reason why this ambiguity between the kernel and the entire OS. Obviously, the guy who wrote this article does not understand that SCO is only attacking the kernel; he thinks they are attacking the entire OS. Thus, he says Linux, referring to the entire OS that he claims Linus created, when he should be saying Linux in reference to the kernel that Linus started and headed.
The entire OS was created by the collaborative efforts of Linus, RMS, the FSF, and millions of others; but most of it is GNU software, and a small (but very important) part of it is Linux (though Linux is no longer essential). Thus, for increased clarity, it is better to call it the GNU/Linux OS'. Simply calling it Linux creates confusion between the kernel, the OS, and the entire distributions.
social sciences can never use experience to verify their statemen
just like the WMD crapola in iraq (there never were any, it never was about that), it was about the oil!
Really, I rather thought that the US sold WMD in the form of chemical and biological weapons to Iraq during the Bush the senior administration.
So, yes... this could be good example for the SCO case.
America sells WMD to Iraq, then uses this as evidence of them having WMD and invades the country.
SCO releases their achient Unix source code for education, people get educated and then sued for using their IP they got educated on.
There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
In the late 1990s, IBM, Sequent, and the Santa Cruz Operation were working together on a project called Monterey. Monterey/64 was designed to be a common UNIX platform running on 64-bit Intel (Merced/Itanium) and Power4. It had wide industry support from hardware and software vendors, such as Intel and Oracle. Around 2000, IBM scrapped the project based on issues with the Itanium1 platform and concerns about SCO's ability to deliver. UnixWare retained its name for some time after the SCO purchase from Novell. In the next year or two IBM acquired Sequent and Caldera acquired SCO. However, in this way did Sequent non-uniform memory access made it into UnixWare and AIX.
This is how IBM and SCO have NUMA cache concurrency code. NUMA made it into Linux because IBM wanted to improve Linux reliability on their SMP Xeon-based servers, and instructed some of their programmers including some people who worked on Dynix/Sequent that wrote NUMA in the first place. This is how NUMA came to be in Linux. What I believe is the management at SCO has little knowledge of the code history of their SVR4 UNIX product. Caldera upper level management is populated with experts in hostile takeovers and making a business out of patent and copyright enforcement. I have no doubt that they took the effort to see if the Linux kernel had any resemblance to their UNIX code tree, and lo and behold some of the SMP memory management code is identical.
SCO quickly informs IBM to stop putting UNIX code in Linux, but they don't seem to know that NUMA belongs to IBM, it is a derivitave work of AIX, which is a derivitive work of Dynix, both of which IBM owns, and on top of that IBM's source license with UNIX Systems Lab gives them intellectual property of code they create based on AT&T code.
Claims that IBM is "diluting" UNIX by putting UNIX-based code in it and having UNIX-knowledgeable software engineers working on it is rather a stretch of the imagination. If IBM has sole intellectual property on Dynix/Sequent, just because they shared it with Santa Cruz does not mean they cannot use the code elsewhere. SCO wants to compare their SVR4 UNIX with Linux code, but what we really need to see is Dynix and AIX right beside them. This will prove that IBM owns NUMA.
Claims that using NUMA in Linux will place SCO UNIX under the GPL are also false. SCO will retain rights to use and improve NUMA code they received from Monterey, because it pre-dates the NUMA code used in Linux. So in the end there are essentially who Sequent NUMA forks, the one in AIX and UnixWare cum SCO UNIX is proprietary and the other written for Linux is open source.
So, Linux development will include patent-aware programmers? Who, pray-tell will go through the huge pile of patents to see if they've already or will infringe on software patents? Who will pay for any legal costs when Linux is hit with patent infringement lawsuits, whether the patents have merit or not.
I'll tell you who: nobody. Meanwhile companies that are Linux-unfriendly, ex. Microsoft, will take advantage of this to develop so many patents on so many computer-related technologies that it will render Linux useless. Let me explain:
What will happen, and Linus has already said this, is that Linux developers will keep on coding without patents in mind. And then, one of these days, a Linux-unfriendly company (ex. Microsoft) will have already patented something that Linux uses, and will sue them for patent infringement. Patent holders do not have to immediately protect or police their patents, they can sit on it for just up to the statue of limitations (I think 8 years) and then turn around and start suing.
As this gets more and more prevalent, and as Linux faces more and more lawsuits, companies will be less likely to adopt it because it's going to turn into a major pain in the ass. Companies like Redhat that rely on the fact that companies use Linux will go belly up, and then there goes a major source of funding.
Then, like the RIAA going after individual file-swappers, patent holders will go against distributors, and even distributions like Slackware, Debian, etc will get shut down.
Maybe one-off patent infringing code can be replaced, but what if it's the heart of some new technology? What if there's some new-fandangled technology 5 years from now that Microsoft develops that everyone needs and wants? Let's say they patent the hell out of it, so that there's no room to breathe, and they lock Linux out of this market with their patents. This means Linux users won't get access to this new technology. Over the course of several years, if Linux is missing the latest and greatest technologies because its programmers and NOT ALLOWED to develop it, it will become obsolete.
Linux will get driven into the underground.
Yes, today this sounds like FUD, but it's a likely scenario as companies that are Linux-unfriendly, ex. Microsoft, with huge armies of patent lawyers, strategically place patent landmines that Linux developers will most probably fall into.
If I were Bill Gates, and I wanted to crush Linux, this is what I would do. I would be planning for this now, so that 5-10 years from now Linux development would be so stifled that they would not be able to continue legally adding new functionality. Then businesses would be stuck with using Windows, and then they will have won. No more Linux threat.
Please don't scoff at this like this is some FUD, this is a real scenario. I have educated my IP attorney friend on Linux, and he believes as I do that this represents the single greatest threat against Linux continued development over the next 20 years.
(Well, we've had every other /. cliche on this subject...)
I hereby inform you that I have NOT been required to provide any decryption keys.
Companies that make money are free to pay for licensing, or they can have a "patent-exchange" where two companies will exchange the use of their patents for free.
.NET... this is just a sample of what's to come... Who is OSS movement is going to know enough about patents and enough about software to make sure that Linux doesn't hit a landmine? We will need an army of software-savvy IP lawyers all working for free to keep up with Microsoft's highly-paid army of top-notch lawyers, and we can't win unless we are prepared and we can beat them to the punch and release a litany of prior art before Microsoft.
Many companies will probably lend their patents to Linux royalty-free which is also good.
What about Linux-unfriendly companies, like Microsoft, that have the money, the lawyers and the developers to create an arsenal of patents that they refuse to license to Linux for any amount of money?
If these patented technologies are killer apps, then Linux will be dead.
The only way to kill Linux is through patent warfare, and if I were Bill, this is what I would be preparing for. Look at all the patents Microsoft created for
RTFL: BSD License.
The BSD license stipulates nothing other than a copyright notice (required), mention of UC in endorsements (prohibited), and warranties and liabilities (disclaimed).
Don't post FUD.
What part of "gestalt" don't you understand?
Its nice that a law professor decided to analyze this lawsuit from 50,000 feet, but he has no access to evidence in the case so his ideas are really more of an OP-ED piece.
Even a cursory history of the expert professors (most of whom have never actually litigated in a courtroom) which have filled the news channels over the last few years would show an astounding ability to make pronouncements which turned out to be wrong. The OJ Simpson case is a great example. But there they were reporting on a trial as it unfolded. Here we only have the filed complaint and media posturing by affected parties. Hardly an informed base on which to fully analyze litigation. (and a very complex one)
The professor certainly knows the law, but he does not know the facts - without which he has only 1/2 the equation.
Untils we get more information stuff like this is only surmise - regardless of who says it.
Software patents may not kill the industry, but they can kill Linux, especially if Linux-unfriendly companies hold key patents that will block Linux from implementing or supporting key, killer-app technologies.
What if Linux-unfriendly companies develop the next latest-createst technology, like the next form of CPU? Let's say Microsoft buys Intel sometime in the next 10 years, and they create a new instruction set for the 80986 CPU. They patent this and make it let companies license it for free except Linux. They are free to do this.
Then Linux will be locked out of a new emerging technology that everyone has to have. Companies will be less likely to keep using Linux because they need this new technology, etc, etc. It's a slippery slope.
I know the above example isn't the greatest, because it's possible to work around the patents for an instruction set, just like how Compaq worked around it for the BIOS. But think about it and you can see how patents make life very hazardous in the future if the software industry is riddled with patent minefields that are owned by companies that want to get rid of Linux.
The chances is small they would entertain such a thing, since affirmative defense it that they did.
They wouldn't want to have to disclose ALL the contracts and ALL the agreements that has taken place inside SCO. That includes outside investors like the Canopy scumbags.
Help fight continental drift.
Saying something like "Linus created the kernel to power the GNU OS created by FSF contributors" would have detracted from the article? I disagree. It would have added to it. False-hoods are always bad, and truths in their place always good. He bothered to go into UNIX history, so he could have devoted a sentence to this.
It is important, because the confusion between Linux the kernel and the GNU/Linux OS' creates legal confusion as well. Most people think that SCO is alleging that the entire GNU/Linux OS (what they think of as "Linux") has their code in it, when they are only really alleging that the Linux kernel has their proprietary code in it. SCO knows damn well the difference, and is using this subtle point of confusion for their advantage.
Few people would be worried about this if they knew that only a few insignificant portions of the kernel that probably don't even affect them anyways are in question, which can be easily and quickly replaced anyways.
social sciences can never use experience to verify their statemen
I think that SCO is suing over trade secrets that IBM disclosed, nothing to do with patents or copyright.
You leave your house via the windows?
Which is easier, accepting a slight grammatical incorrectness, or explaining a million times that free has multiple meanings and really we mean the other one?
RMS should have called it "freedom software." I hope RMS will find the time to correct the errors in his branding.
Now if you think I'm pedantic, reconsider how you are coming across, mkay?
I suspect that they've probably already evaluated this case and decided it was kosher.
Just because the SEC doesn't jump on SCO like a chihuhua on a t-bone steak doesn't necessarily mean they think it's kosher. When a small company sues a large company and their executive officers start selling large blocks of stock on the jump in price, that's got to raise suspicions in any reasonable person.
Uh, anybody in the world can download the code and examine it -- that's the definition of "open source". SCOites are definitely on the wrong kind of drugs!
"Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney
If SCO claims intellectual property rights to certain parts of Linux covered by the GPL, then wouldn't they void any claims by releasing those same pieces of code under the GPL as part of Caldera?
SCO does not lay claim to the Sequent code. IBM owns that free and clear. SCO's opinion is that because it was first integrated to AIX, it is a derivative work of UNIX, and can not be released to anyone without a UNIX liscense. But SCO does not lay claim to it, since they did not write it.
SCO is certainly laying claim to the code. They're saying that you need one of THEIR licenses in order to use IBM's code. Now they aren't saying the invented the code certainly, but they are trying to lay claim to any and all sublicensing rights.
--- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
I read the article again, and I agree he did imply that Linus created the whole thing. My first reading was more along the lines of "Linus created the thing SCO is suing" but that is not what the article actually says. It certainly would have been more fair to say that Linus built on existing open source and was assisted by many others in creating Linux.
I would call the SEC, but I have to assume that IBM's astute legal force, with much better contacts in government, has already thought of this. They're probably just waiting for an oppurtune time to announce the investication.
"Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney
Seems to me that one could use exactly this line of reasoning to argue that the duration of patents and copyrights is grossly out of step with the pace of technological development, and is in fact hindering the pursuit of useful arts and sciences (as the OSS community has demonstrated).
I could see granting a patent on some software process for maybe six months to two years, but things are changing so fast that years and years of patent protection only accomplishes two things; protects corporate profits and prevents other people from building off a particular invention, thus harming the pursuit of useful arts and sciences.
I'd like to know where that information came from. Under SEC regulations, insiders are required to report large buy and sell transactions. A quick check at Quicken Insider Trading for SCO shows that so far, as of approximately 5/13, when the stock started to rise, only one Senior VP has sold 5,000 shares, on 6/20. No other insiders are listed.
A check at MSN Insider Trading for SCO shows additionally a Divisional Officer who sold 7,916 shares on 6/4.
That's not to say that you are definitely wrong. You could be right. The lying cheating scumbags commonly known as chief officers may be just lying in wait for enough time to go by that their sells can't technically be linked to the lawsuit.
--Rob
Towards the Singularity.
Buddy, if you put together a well-made, cute penguin plushie, I will buy it. That's a promise.
"America has done some terrible things. But I know that Americans don't cheer when innocents die." -Dave Barry
Can somebody moderate this down to "Score: -1, Troll"?
Let's think here. SCO distributed Linux under the GPL. SCO says IBM put their unix code in Linux. SCO distributed this code, in Linux, under the GPL. SCO thus made this code free software, as they had every right to do, under the GPL. The code in question is thus GPLed code, and was GPLed by SCO! SCO is not distributing this code freely. The NDA prohibits giving out info on what was seen, and the won't let us have the code. The code is GPLed. Thus, SCO is in violatioin of the GPL, by not allowing the distribution of GPLed code under the terms of the GPL.
Not a sentence!
I called your bluff and did exactly what you said. I guess "BROUGHTON, REGINALD C." is not the senior vice president as per Yahoo stocks? thoromyr
No I don't... thanks to this professors endorsement I now go to Slashdot comments for the FACTS. And spelling help.
karma capped
Interestingly enough, Microsoft's use of the same old tactics e.g. FUD could be seen as a kind of modern day Maginot Line. As good as it would have been in WW1, it failed dismally against the new type of attack.
The flailing scattergun defence of MS over the last few years suggests they have as much understanding of the economics of Open Source in business as the French had of BlitzKrieg
Hmmmmmm..... Deep fried and look like Squirrel.
OTOH I bet they *will* listen to hundreds of SCOX investors after they get bilked.
Did you mistype the link?
I have discovered a truly marvelous sig, unfortunately the sig limit is too small to contain i
to this mess of confusion. SCO damn well knows the diff between Linux the kernel and the entire OS (GNU/Linux), but they're purposeful obfuscating so that technically, they can say they were only talking about the kernel, but the impression everyone gets is they're talking about the entire OS. That's what every executive and layperson thinks -- that this lawsuit affect the entire GNU/Linux OS.
I think that if calling something one thing leads to a bunch of confusion, that is not good.
social sciences can never use experience to verify their statemen
After weeks of relentless assault from /. regarding SCO, $CO, SCOned, etc., :-), and after reading more about it that I should :-) :-), and after more information has been disclosed, I have this to say:
Before all this, SCO was going down the tube. (OK, SCO is still going down the tube.) And SCO is not (capable off) doing anything to change that. But there is something SCO's execs can do to make their own lives better. Pump and Dump.
SCO chance of winning this lawsuit is very small. Also, this lawsuit is not about patent or anything like that. RMS nailed it when he said the term intellectual property has been misused by SCO. SCO's lawsuit alleges that IBM destroyed SCO's business/revenue by making Linux competitive in SCO's UnixWare space. That is just is filmsy excuse with which the SCO execs have a starting point to apply smoke and mirror, create FUD with lots of public annoucements. It is not about patent infringement or copyright violation, since IBM owns those code. It is not simply about SCO's market being eroded by linux, since that would mean that SCO failed (fairly) in the free market. So SCO's execs sued IBM under the contract law, accusing IBM of helping SCO's competitor when the contract said that IBM could not do that.
Notice the amount of public annnoucements, interviews, etc., that SCO execs are generating. They do not have to do this at all. Why then? To generate FUD, of course. Why? To pump SCOX up and ...
:-)
(5)...
(6) Profit!
But only for SCO execs. Anyone else profiting from this pump is purely incidental.
What is going to happen? Simple. SCO execs makes lots of money with the pump and dump. Then when it is shown that the lawsuit has not merit, SCOX tanks. At that time, SCO will be acquired. And the SCO execs let go, with golden parachutes. Who will buy SCO? Since SCO has some pretty impressive IP, they will be bought up by some big fish. And I suspect that big fish will be one or more of: Microsoft, Sun, IP-collecting-cum-lawsuit firms. My conspiracy theory is that the two huge licencees of the SCOsource are into it. One of the licencees is MS as we know. The other licencees is prolly a big tech firm or one of those shadow companies that just buy IP. The UNIX IP will be inherited by one or more of those licencees.
Follow the money. Why does MS want a SCOsource licence? FUD against linux (see how the subtle shift from IBM to linux) and possibly (joint) ownership of the UNIX source. That would give MS a big arm-twisting device against IBM/Sun/your-fav-unix-vendor.
SCO is foobared. SCO will be bought out, no doubt since they don't have any marketing plan/product that can save their collective asses. SCOX will drop in value until SCO gets bought out by someone with an interest in its IP portfolio. The current activity is just SCO exec trying to get as big a piece of pie as they can before SCOX tanks. There is nothing much about ideology or philosophy (so don't get sidetracked ;-)--those are just FUD used to accomplished the mission, and the mission is to make as much money (for yourself) as possible.
So, follow the money. Who has to gain from this? :-)
Cheers, and get back to work, yes, YOU!,
e.
People on the boards and corporate officers are not allowed to 'action' their stock within 6 months (or so, becasuse I don't know the exact time period) before, or after a major corporate change, public or not. It's so they can't publicly sink the ship and still make a killing at the expense of the shareholders. They still have to stew in it and wait. If they company sinks, and the board members are major stockholders, their stock goes down with the ship. Sorry about the metaphor kids.
Speak for yourself.
you worthless cowards can't seem to spend your time elsewhere so /. must not be as bad as you say it is.
9 out of 10 jackers say /. sucks. all 10 of them are on it every day posting bullshit which their 14 year old minds revel in ...that, my son, is what you call a dumbass. thank you all for being examples. for a minute i thought all men were created equal...
They bought whatever Unix rights
for $36 million. (Obviously quite
devalued) And then turn around and
sue IBM for $3 Billion in damages.
Buy now, and you're buying at the top.
Right. Now's the time to sell. Short it if you haven't got it (and if you know what shorting is all about and how to manage the risk).
Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
Try this one on for size...
...SCO*cough*SCO... could take GPL code put it in a library release the library under the GPL and than simply link to it and keep all work that linked to it proprietary.
Ignore all of the bluster that SCO has been spewing about copyright's and patents, what you are left with is a supposed contract dispute between IBM and SCO. SCO is trying to claim ownership over derivative works of UNIX which they are apparently trying to claim is anything that uses UNIX services. Thus anything that is a derivitive work is supposedly covered under the license that SCO and their predecessors made UNIX available under.
Now compare this to the GPL. When you release a piece of software under the GPL you must make all derivitive works available under the same license as the GPL. Sound awful familiar? I thought so too.
So...if SCO is going to compare their license to the GPL and claim, "if the GPL can do it why can't we?" than what is the result? I have read the GPL and think I understand it as well as anyone. Not being a lawyer I can't claim authority in that respect but I believe it to be a totally fair and appropriate license. So why can't SCO claim the same thing? The license they released UNIX under may be vague in this respect but if it comes down to "any derivitive work of UNIX must be released under this same license" than how can the GPL be lawful and the SCO UNIX license not be lawful? Both can't be true.
There is one aspect that may be different between these two cases. The GPL has no exclusivity clause. Thus although the copyright holder is forced to make the source available under the terms of the GPL they can also make the program available under any other license they choose. In fact this is sometimes done so that the community can work on the GPL'ed code and the copyright holder can make money by selling to companies that want to hide their code changes.
Now I don't know that the SCO license has an exclusivity clause but there's no reason it couldn't. It's certainly fathomable that the GPL could include a clause that said "you must make the source available ONLY under the GPL" but I think it would be much less useful and certainly not as widely accepted. Anyway, the point is that SCO could have an exclusivity clause in the license. The end result being that indeed anything that uses UNIX services or runs on top of UNIX could be considered a derivitive work and thus subject to the terms of that license. In which case IBM and others would be libel for damages since they broke SCO's license by releasing code that by copyright belonged to them but that they gave up control over.
So...this is just a thought, as I write it already I see ways to argue against it. But it would be a sorry day in hell if either "derivitive work" was restricted such that only code that used code from another program was a derivitive work. Effectively this would put all GPL code under the LGPL. A particularly unscrupulous company
Furthermore, if SCO has no exclusivity clause in the license than the point is moot. As the copyright holder is certainly within their rights to release the software under other licensing terms.
I'm not sure what kind of probability to put on this scenario. But I've heard of stranger things. It's entirely possible SCO wouldn't mind going to court either to restrict the term "derivitive work" or even somehow in a backhanded manner, invalidate the GPL all in an attempt to avoid copyright infringement for work they have placed in to the SCO Unix offerings. Invalidating the GPL wouldn't get them anywhere though since than they would have to deal with the actual copyright holders and I'm thinking they wouldn't be too beholdin' to SCO.
Anyway, it's just a thought.
Sure information wants to be free, but how much are you willing to pay for the packaging?
Conjugate the verb.. Conjugate the verb..
I did RTFL, inculding the part ....
IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ...
The way I see it, by suing another contributor, IBM, SCO has violated their BSD license and has forfieted the rights to the BSD code in their software.
You are supporting plaguarism. That is, taking credit for what is NOT YOUR OWN WORK. You lose all credability in the future, because you are too much of a fucktard to understand the most basic of intellectual curtousies -- giving credit where credit is due.
The Linux kernel is great. It, however, would be useless without GNU utilities and software, as well as other FS and OSS utilities and software.
What I am taking serious issue here with is the fact that this ignoramus (the guy who wrote the Law.com article) is claiming that Linus created the ENTIRE GNU/Linux Operating System by himself. That is simply false. Linus created the kernel, not the entire OS. The entire OS is the culmination of the hard work of thousands of developers.
I am sure that Linus damn well would be pissed off if someone claimed that RM Stallman created the Linux kernel. And rightfully so. It is also rightfully so that people be pissed off that this lawyer is claiming Linus created the entire GNU/Linux OS. That is disrespectful to everyone who has worked hard and contributed to the GNU/Linux OS'.
Regarding GNU/Linux, my point there was that by calling the entire OS Linux, when it is more proper to just call the kernel Linux, you create confusion. The kind of confusion that allows SCO to say "we're suing IBM for contributing to Linux" meaning the kernel, but not specifying so, and leading millions to believe that the all of the code in the entire set of GNU/Linux OS' would be tainted by this lawsuit if SCO won, when in fact, only some tiny insignificant portion of the Linux kernel would be tained.
So, how about you fuck off and go back to high-school? Obviously, you need to be disciplined a few more times for plaguarism. Just because you are too fucking lazy to give credit where credit is due in references does not make it ok.
social sciences can never use experience to verify their statemen
SEC's complete listing of SCOX filings
I think there are a few missing from MSN
..When he finds out his precious gem will actually be referred to as SCO/Linux. At least that'd bring a little joy into the gloomy picture.
You didn't read the article, did you. Because if you had, you would have found out that this is not by anyone and it is not just "15 words in the english language [spelled] correctly".
This is the only decent article I have read about the whole SCO debate. It is well written, it is concise, it is well argued. But most importantly, it comes from a legal perspective, not a geek's perspective - it is written by a Law Professor (I quote from the bottom of the article: "Anupam Chander is Professor of Law at the University of California, Davis, School of Law. A graduate of Yale Law School and Harvard College, he specializes in cyberlaw and international law.")
They are rehashing the same statements, we can all tell that SCO has almost no case to stand on, which is why the story is so compelling.
No, this article does not rehash the same statements, in fact it makes a number of points that I have not heard before in any forum. Perhaps you think it's obvious that SCO has no case, but I'm not sure that everyone does - just look at previous slashdot SCO comments. (I also can't help wondering if your assurity comes from any legal knowledge, or whether it's just based on naivety ...)
Jeesh, it's comments like yours that make slashdot a bad read, and the fact that you got modded up I find even more appalling. Yes, there been many, many SCO articles and I'm as sick of them as the next geek. But that's more the pity, because this is one article that should be read by everyone who has an interest in this issue.
You're abosolutely right in your points, and I think that greedy companies would love to extinguish Linux / FSF / GNU / etc. Obviously big companies profit on people purchasing their software, and any person, any business, and any organization that gets in the way is a fair-game target in order for these companies to stay in business.
GNU/Linux & the several BSD flavors have forced large corporations to take a hard look at the quality of their software, and realize that competition is not only not fun, but it's extremely expensive!
Most objective minded consumers would agree that this competition will only lead to higher-quality products. However, companies aren't going to just lay down and watch their piece of the pie get eaten by outsiders. As a result what we see today is outright warfare on open-source developers. But in the end, I think these whiz-bang cool app technologies you discuss are faddish and won't define the industry for extended periods of time. No matter what whiz-bang development there is, it won't stop you from making something better. Hense, 1984's release of the Macintosh! At that time the PC was a newly established standard. It was deeply entrenched in the business market. But that didn't stop Apple from developing a revolutionary computer to replace the PC. And it didn't stop developers from developing high-quality apps for this new computer, and make a lot of money doing so.
I like your points, but I don't smell the scent of doom just yet...
Cheers,
Karrick
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- "Ask not what your computer can do for you, but what *you* can do for your computer."
"Can any lawyer indicate how, under US law, this might be brought to a quick conclusion if IBM has no real case to answer? How quickly?"
As long as the Lawyers are laughing all the way to the bank. You cannot count on a quick resolution.
Thats the American way.
An all together different result might first come from a simple technology shift.
For example;
If some smart, innovative company embeds a linux or bsd based os on an add-on card with lots of chips a PC revolution to rival the heady days of the late 1980's might happen.
Wouldn't it be great if you could choose not to boot a harddrive os, or boot from a drive if you must have windoze? All it would take is cooperation from some bios writers like phoenix and award to make it roll.
If Sco was a real software and innovative company then this is the kind of innovation they would be looking into. From what I am reading the real thing Sco is trying to obscure is their bottom line. The longer they can keep the financial world in the dark then the better the chance that IBM will just buy them out to shut them up. Too bad IBM is a badly bruised dinosaur (in large part by Bill Gates and Co.) and will not venture back into the PC market with something like this idea first.
Remember how nice it was to not have to worry about harddrive failure, viruses or system check garbage when you turned on your computer? Wow even Norton Utilities would not be needed anymore. Get a virus or trojan, who cares? just install your ms backup with your permanent OS. But I am dreaming.
For far too long companies like SCO, IBM, Microsoft and their ill begotten hardware partners have held back simple innovations like this.
OH THE SHAME I fell off the wagon and use sigs again!
And they're employing the Sequent coders, hackers and gurus. If those Sequent guys get re-implementing their own algorithms in Linux, then SCO is basically committing high-way robbery/software piracy.
And Microsoft has been paying them to do so! (Pumping irony now)!
but -
have you actually been to either an Arab state or Israel?
I haven't, but I have friends that have been there (both Arab and Israeli nations) and all - without exception - say that the second you get off the plane you can feel the hatred toward the other.
So that brings me to my real question...
What is actually provoked? If one hates the other so much (as is the case in the Middle East), I would think that EVERY action, good or bad would be some sort of provocation.
I agree with your earlier post, but the question remains. Is the OS the interface between the person and the computer or the person's programs and the computer? If it's the former, then a broad interpretation of "OS" is appropriate (for example, Microsoft can say the IE is part of thier OS). If it's that latter, then those who support the kernel is the true core OS and everything else is just added programs have a point.
Ultimately, for us, it's all GNU anyway. Our support and development efforts don't change. It's fully understood that, for example, RedHat means Linux+a few GUI's+lot's of other useful things. It's easier to just say RedHat OS (or Debian, or whatever). There's nothing wrong with it as long as the terminology is understood.
Similarly, whether or not Microsoft can claim that IE is part of thier OS has no bearing on the fact that it's put their to hinder competitive products.
I stand by my earlier statement, it's just semantics. Spending time trying to draw this distinction is, in my opinion, just "picking the pepper out of the fly shit".
A goal is a dream with a deadline
That's a copout. I simply said that the OS people have in mind when referring to "Linux" is the GNU OS, running on the Linux kernel.
If I write a program that used X for display purposes, I'd say that I wrote an X program.
If I write a program that expects that functions present in the standard C library to be there (select, gettimeofday, fopen, fabs, etc.), I'd say I wrote a UNIX program, or a GNU program.
Either way, unless I dispense with the standard library myself and use ONLY system calls and functions which I wrote myself (which themselves only use system calls and functions which I wrote myself, ad infinitum), it's not a Linux program, it's a GNU (or UNIX) program executed and managed by the Linux kernel.
You could argue that it's just semantics, but the "it's just semantics" argument could be used to dispense with many other issues as well, and doesn't do anything to address the issue.
Go delete libc6 and see how many programs you can compile (remember to use a statically linked GCC!) and run without having it around, then come back and tell me that it's still an operating system without GNU.
Somebody get that guy an ambulance!
...restricting the recipient of a BSD-licensed work, concerning losses or damages which might arise from use of the work. It is not a restriction on the copyright owner(s) to seek copyright protections or remedies.
IANAL, TINLA, YADA.
What part of "gestalt" don't you understand?
"discovery phase-the death of a thousand cuts."
If you define discovery phase, as 'THE TIME DURING PRE-TRIAL WHEN LAWYERS MAKE THE REAL BUCKS'. Then you are right. The perversion of Corporate Common Law by side stepping the concept that good justice needs to be swift and fair, has made buisiness law what it has become today in America.
A honey-pot den for wealthy fools and theives run by Lawyers.
Maybe Sco's lawyers shot all of their company accountants before recommending this litigation.
OH THE SHAME I fell off the wagon and use sigs again!
I am the "average user" I am running Mandrake Linux. Not Mandrake GNU/Linux. Not GNU/Linux. Mandrake.
The average user would run screaming from RMS as soon as he opened his mouth.
Fuck it it's Linux.
Hurd was going to be ready "really soon now" a long time ago. Linux is ready today. All the GNU libs and tools are great but without an open source kernel to go with it GNU isn't much at all. RMS needs to get over it or produce a kernel (HURD ) so it can be all GNU. 99.9% of the world calls what he refers to as GNU/Linux plain old Linux. right or wrong that is what is up. 99.9% of the world calls it Linux. It's time to relax and make it 100% of the world.
"just like the WMD crapola in iraq (there never were any, it never was about that), it was about the oil!"
A recent poll showed that 99% of those poled could give a shit about WMD's or if they are ever found. It would not change their approval of the attack on Saddam or of George Bush. The only ones who give a shit are the Media and the wacked out left (left behind I guess. )
Find something to make a point with something someone actually gives a shit about.
As you can see I don't care about my karma.
G.W.Bush.. Making Nixon look honest.
Were you alive when Nixon was president? I was.
Nixon was slightly more honest than LBJ.
The Bushes are squeaky clean in comparison to either.
As you can see I don't care about my karma.
"Really, I rather thought that the US sold WMD in the form of chemical and biological weapons to Iraq during the Bush the senior administration."
That would have been conventional weapons and it whould have occured during the Regan era. No either of the Bush's.
Keep towing the leftist line ans looking stupid until you get a clue. No one gives a leaping fuck about your wacky political leanings. You simply invaladate any opinion you express with this shit. But you were not born then I would guess. Therfore you are just ignorant and brainwashed by the media and not serious with this statement I would hope.
As you can see I don't care about my karma.
While there are probably significant negative legal implications as is the pure "watch this" factor - doesn't the Regents Of the University Of California "own" the BSD implementation of TCP/IP that is the root of all TCP/IP implementations?
If this legaleze crap goes on, maybe someone could wake up these large companies by having the Regents sue to get large software companies to stop using TCP/IP.
While it sounds insane, it just might bring some more attention on the ridiculous nature of these have-been companies trying to grab themselves fake P/E on the market.