SCO Attorney Declares GPL Invalid
chrullrich writes "According to heise (German, fishbait), SCO's chief counsel Mark Heise (unrelated) of Boies, Schiller and Flexner has declared that the GPL violates the US copyright law and is thus null and void. SCO's legal position is actually a little too crazy to believe: The GPL allows unlimited copies, the copyright law allows one. Therefore, the GPL is invalid. Apparently, they try to argue that the copyright law, in giving consumers the right to make one backup of their software without any permission from the copyright holder, outlaws any contractual agreement that allows users to make more than one copy." There's an Inquirer article in English. Apparently SCO is now using the Chewbacca Defense. Other SCO news: SCO reports a profit, examining SCO's contributions to Linux, an attorney summarizes the case.
I thought part the GPL was the copyright holder giving permission for people to make copies, etc..
but that doesn't make it so. Anyway, if it is invalid, then Linus should file suit immediately regarding their unauthorized distribution.
Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
They're trying to say that if I create something (it doesn't have to be a software program, call it a book) that I can't allow other people to copy it? What baloney!
Speed Demos Archive - Lots of speed runs!
So shareware and freeware programs have been illegal all these years... thank you so much SCO, for clarifying this point. NOT!
Seriously, there is a post every 2 days about SCO.
Because authors and publishers make a contract?
The GPL is, in a sense, also a contract. It says, "We're giving these rights to you. You don't have to agree to our terms, but if you want the rights we give to you, you have to agree to our other terms." The GPL doesn't modify copyright laws, any more than a contract an author makes with a publishing house does.
Sheesh.
Read Bujold. Free (as in
This is just so ridiculous that the only thing that keeps the sanity is that *eventually* SCO shit will tumble down - may not be weeks, but definitely a few months to a couple of years.
SCO press releases make the (former) Iraqi Information Minister look "forthcomingly honest" and makes Faux news "fair and balanced". Heck, it makes Steve Ballmer look sedated.
S
Because Copyleft isn't a Law, it's just an idea. Copyright is a law.
However, that being said, Copyleft is BASED on Copyright. What they are saying is.. no matter what the license says, you can only make one copy. Of ANYTHING.
So the Book Publishers and Authors need to start suing the printing press companies, since they give them the "right" to make copies so they can sell them.
The author of something can define his terms of agreement as he sees fit. If the author of a package wants to allow unlimited copies to be made and distributed, then so be it, no law can negate his wishes if he is the author of that work.
In other words, I can write a poem and I can make a public declaration that my poen belongs to the world and that anyone that wants can copy it and give it away and modify it and give that away, as much as they like. You can't then come along and tell me that there is a law that overrides my wishes (that my work be freely copied and distributed) and that I'm a lawbreaker..
SCO is a dirty diaper. They are full of shit, they stink and they need to be changed and thrown out..
Also, on a side note, why is SCO making this the focus of the case if the reason for the lawsuit is that they are claiming that code was used without their permision. If that is the focus of the case then they should prove that code was used without there permision - not that the program is distribuited and they don't like the way it is distriuted.
Actually SCO's reasons for why the GPL is invalid is actually what makes GPL legally strong. It grants rights (unlimited copying and changes) that are prohibited if the user does not accept the license. Therefore, if someone makes more than one copy, or modifies the source code the defacto accept the license (or they are breaking the law).
Galium Arsenide is the material of the future, and always will be.
It's all well and good that you're tired of SCO articles, but this one is *highly* important...Important enough, I think, that the editors could "override" your Caldera selection.
/. . The future of Free Software is contingent on the outcome of this allegation.
The GPL is being formally challenged in court. I fail to see how that *couldn't* be "News for Nerds" or "Stuff that Matters". This affects *everyone* here, and hundreds of millions of people that don't read
"Mod, mod, mod...and another troll bites the dust."
what? huh? what? huh?
wtf? this is wrong... Copyright law allows one backup copy, and such other copies as are necesary to use the software, unless the copyright holder grants permission to make more.
If their interpretation is valid, all free software available on the planet might be violating US copyrights laws because agreements that allow free distribution of copyrighted materials is illegal. Thanks for the tip, Boies office. I can no longer make copies of Mozilla or OpenOffice binaries without copyright holder's permission. Damnit!
But hold on a second; I thought GPL was an agreement more for distributor to release copyrighted materials to public without fees. While EULA is a Nazi copyright contract to limit users' rights, GPL works both on copyrights holder, distributor and end users mutually.
hmm, looks like SCO legal team, in desperation, is making radical accusations that is tough to verify.
Sun doesn't mind because their revenue doesn't necessarily come from Solaris, it comes from servers and support contracts. Whether they slap Solaris on a box or Linux, won't matter as long as they are still the ones supplying the hardware with redundant power supplies, fiber channel disk arrays, etc. Short term, solaris may be a little more stable for a large scale enterprise. Long term, if linux fills the gap there, they just increase their profit margin by not having to maintain their own OS.
Wouldn't a legal ruling along these lines make all commerical site licenses invalid as well? Can they really be arguing that the owner of a copyrighted work doesn't have the right to contractually license duplication rights to others? Wow, that's just plain nutty. --M
Come to think of it, SCO's source code agreements with everyone else (including Sun and MS) are probably invalid also. This is hilarious.
I am now waiting for SCO's explanation on how code in Linux can still be a secret in spite of the fact that tens of thousands of people regularly look at it. Next, we can learn how patent law does not permit Novell to retain Unix patents when relinguishing the source code and why SCO really does have the right to keep talking about its right to the 'Unix' IP (when it is supposed to have no such right because it does not even own the Unix trademark).
What do they care about SCO Unix? I doubt they care if they sell another copy. Right now, SCO is a zombie that only exists for two reasons: (1) Sue as many people as possible and hope they win something before they're locked up in prison or the loony-bin. (2) Live-testing designer drugs.
One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
Copyright dictates that *only* those who have been permission to distribute a copyrighted work may do so (Note, *distribute*, not merely copy.... copyright law is actually quite relaxed on the allowance of copying for purposes of fair use).
The GPL outlines what terms a person must agree to in order to acquire permission from the copyright holder to distribute copies of the works.
Therefore, simple failure to abide by those terms while continuing to distribute such works is plain ordinary copyright infringement.
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
But if the GPL is not valid and enforceable, then what software license is? I'd imagine that if the GPL were found not valid, then it could validly be argued that Microsoft's EULA is not valid either. That would be a hell of an interesting class action lawsuit.
Fun with Anagarams! LADS HOST, SHALT DOS. HAS DOLTS. AD SLOTHS, HATS SOLD. ASS HO, LTD.
Any software that doesn't allow one copy also has an invalid license. Ergo by preventing me by license or DRM (digital restrictions managment) from making my one copy, the license is also invalid. Not that I'm rooting for the one copy thing to knock down the GPL, I'm just saying this is a two-edged sword that could also be used against draconian liceneses and DRM measures. Regardless, this bears watching. You can't argue that it works for more than one and than counter that you mean it can work for less than one.
I like the BSD license just fine, but I'd be concerned that if the GPL is ruled invalid, that the BSD license wouldn't be valid either.
Neither will any site license of commercial software.
Finkployd
ext2 is available in FreeBSD, under the BSD license. SCO and even MS can take it and do whatever they want.
-molo
Using your sig line to advertise for friends is lame.
It seems to me the GPL acts as a balancer against a changing legal climate - the more "IP" friendly and less "fair use" friendly that climate becomes, the stronger the GPL becomes.
Brilliant.
It's not wasting time, I'm educating myself.
So if SCO does convince some court of law that this is a valid argument, they'll self-destruct.
How on earth can SCO get theri own product CDs pressed if the CD production company is only allowed to make one copy from the master? ;)
Yaz.
because there is legally no such thing as "copyleft"
Technically this is correct. There is no "copyleft" concept in the lawbooks.
However, legally there is a such thing as "copyleft". It is provided for by the GPL and other free software licenses. These are legal and binding license agreements set by the licensor and agreed to by the licensee. Regardless of copyright.
Simply put:
I the author give permission to you the recipient to copy and modify (beyond that allowed by law since the works are mine and I have say over how my works are handled) the works I created and own provided you follow the the rules I have set. If you do not agree to these terms, you have no rights or permission by me the author to circumvent normal copyright laws.
Ascalante: Your bride is over 3,000 years old.
Kull: She told me she was 19!
If the obviously brain damaged shitheads at SCO wants to play like that, fine, let them. It can work to our advantage.
Since SCO claims the GPL is invalid and therefore SCO is not bound by it, then that works both ways. Authors of the software are not bound by it either. Therefore, everyone who has ever written a line of code that is used anywhere in GNU/Linux should now inform SCO that their rights to distribute the author's code has been withdrawn, royalties for any future distribution will be required, and royalties for past distribution are now due...just like SCO is wanting to do to IBM. If they want to play games, then dammit we can play games too. Batter up!
I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
this argument as put forward by SCO's councel seems pretty damned thin. Anorexic. Thin-sliced deli meat.
No, it's not thin, it's transparent. Invisible. Non-existant. A fart in a sewer.
I'm wondering why everyone is posting in a manner that suggests they didn't even understand the argument?
Perhaps because they do understand the argument, and the conclusion it draws is so laughably stupid it's unbelieveable.
What SCO is claiming is that since the JPL is not a recognized framework under the law
Yes, and this is the part that falls under "laughably stupid" - no contract that hasn't been to court is a "recognized framework" - but that doesn't mean that every contract that hasn't been validated by a judge is invalid.
any contradiction between the two should result in what U.S. copyright law saying winning out.
And (again) this is NOT a logical conclusion - people give up their rights in contracts every day. The NDA that SCO wants people to sign to see the alleged infringing code forces people to give up their right to free speech - does this mean that the NDA is unenforcable? Of course not.
They then further say that since U.S. copyright law allows for only one backup copy, any provision stating otherwise in the JPL is null and void under U.S. copyright law.
And this is their second unbelievably bone-headed, colossaly stupid statement.. The US copyright law allows for one backup copy without the permission of the copyright holder (and this is not entirely correct.) Note that key phrase. The GPL is exactly what gives them that permission.
Those two points, when taken together, is their argument. And contrary to what so many seem to be saying, it is a logical conclusion to draw.
It's only logical if you decide to throw away the concept that people are free to enter into contracts as they see fit - which is ludicrous.
It has NO logic behind it. At all.
it does make sense on the surface
If you define "the surface" as "believe everything they say, without applying any kind of logic-check to it at all", then you may be correct. But as soon as you decide to engage your brain, you see that it's totally and completely without merit of any kind.
... will there be a massive shift to BSD-style licenses. I like the BSD license just fine, but I'd be concerned that if the GPL is ruled invalid, that the BSD license wouldn't be valid either.
... a clear restriction, albeit a benign one), but the net effect is to allow greater lattitude for people to copy the work than the default otherwise permitted under copyright law.
Good God, don't you people think before you type? Or, more to the point, have those who have moderator priveleges today been passing the crack pipe around a little more frequently than usual?
The argument being used in this incredibly weak attempt to overturn the GPL is that it violates copyright law because the creator of the work is offering terms more liberal than copyright's default restrictions.
Now, for those slow on the uptake, what does a Microsoft site license do? Yup, it grants (in exchange for money) a more liberal right to copy than that otherwise offered by copyright law.
And, for those even slower on the uptake, what does the BSD-style license do? Yup, you guessed it again. It offers a more liberal right to copy than that otherwise offered by copyright law, just like the GPL. The specific restrictions BSD-style licenses impose are different from those of the GPL (and don't think for a minute it doesn't impose restrictions, however benign. If it didn't impose restrictions, the work would be in the public domain. Instead, you are required to maintain the copyright notice
Which part of this progression escapes you? If in some perverse miscarriage of anything remotely resembling rule of law, much less justice, the GPL were to be ruled invalid on this basis, that would spell instant death by precident to not only the GPL, but BSD-Style licenses, Creative Commons style licenses, Artistic Licenses, and, yes, corporate site licenses of the variety Microsoft, Sun Microsystems, and just about every other software company on the planet eagerly offers their customers in exchange for cold, hard cash. For about three minutes, before an appeals court slaps a stay on the judgement, hears the case, and overturns the ruling.
Any other outcome would mean we could say goodbye to the software industry, the online content industry, and probably a whole slew of other industries we're not thinking of as well, upon which copyright law touches in one way or another. Not to mention saying goodbye to 220+ years of precident.
There is absolutely no chance this argument will hold up. It will be interesting to see if any lawyers are disbarred or fined for even bringing this argument to court.
IANAL, but I am a sapient being with a three digit IQ, which is all this level of insight really requires.
The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
The GPL is the only OSS license I would ever release my work under. Why the hell should I let anyone profit off of my work without giving anything back. Especialy fuckheads like you?
I should be able to release my code how I want. If you don't like it, then don't fucking use it.
If the only choice was All rights reserved or public domain, then I would choose rights-reserved over PD any day.
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
Except that their competition (IBM RS/6000's, HP PA-RISC boxes, etc) cost the same.
Sun's low-end stuff isn't much, but their highend server boxes are killer. Only reason to by the dinky boxes is that they run the same software.
"You've got an invalid haircut" -Warren Zevon - Life'll Kill Ya
"SCO's reasons for why the GPL is invalid is actually what makes GPL legally strong"
Exactly. I think this is just a floater for Boies, etc., to see how well it will fly. My bet is that the common reaction of "That's insane" will lead them to look for another strategy. Remember, they demanded a trial-by-jury. If they can test drive legal theories in the press, and gauge reaction, then that just works to their advantage.
At that point, the infringing code will be written out and the problem goes away.
===== Murphy's Law is recursive. =====
I always thought of copyright and license to be two seperate things.. I can hold the copyright, but give you a license to distrubute it anyways you feel, thats the jist of GPL..
If they are saying that copyright only allows one copy, then there's many many companies that will have issue with this.. Think of software that allows 5 copies installed... Usually, they are called 5 user, yes you got it, licenses.. Not copyright..
Slashdot is like Playboy: I read it for the articles
If the GPL is invalid because it allows multiple redistributions, doesn't that make all of SCO's UNIX licenses invalid?
Or at least doesn't it indicate that there is no good faith on their part?
LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
now i'm not a lawyer, don't pretend to be, but it would seem that this argument would also make things like shareware and freeware illegal as well not just open source, right? any software (or song or whatever) where the creator says, "make copies of this for your friends and give them away." would be illegal? so then this interpretation of copyright law has much broader implications than open source.
http://www.popularculturegaming.com -- my blog about the culture of videogame players
well, now... finally we are getting to the heart of the matter. This latest maneuver is what this case has been about from the beginning: an attempt to kill the entire free software movement. This goes straight back to the Microsoft Halloween Letters, with the goal of finding some means of stopping Linux.
In fact, Halloween II raised the idea of pursuing exactly this: the effect patents and copyright in combatting Linux. Given the insightful analysis of one of our own, there is pretty good evidence that Microsoft is playing the wizard behind the curtain. This is precisely the arena they wanted to test Linux in.
Ext2: Whoops. I guess my bad.. I knew they *could* do a clean room, there's plenty of info, I just still doubt they DID.
;p
:p
I just found out about ExtFS anywhere... I suspect that *is* a clean room, given the nightmare of making windows file systems, starting with the linux one, wouldn't be much help
I never thought about the BSD version. Hmmm. In a way I'm kinda suprised that that exists. Was that really implemented from scratch? Really? wow.
Still the Linux Compatability layer in SCO Unix is hardly likely to be actually cleanroomed. (wait: I've got a SCO style argument for that!) "There's no possible way they could come up with that without using the source code" -- Isn't that what they said about the SMP support in linux?
Heh-heh..
either way, I would almost bet the farm on GPL code being inside of SCO's products. Those dimwits aren't all that careful.
Heck, I'd be willing to concede that there is a significant amount shared. But how can we tell when it appeared in SCO's code? As it's closed source, there is no public record of the commits to their source tree. All those copied code segments between Linux and Unix probably originated with Linux.
Any way you slice it, SCO is a box full of assholes. Unwiped.
"...In your answer, ignore facts. Just go with what feels true..."
Forget site licenses. If SCO's logic were true, and it was not possible to grant someone permission to make copies, then you wouldn't be able to authorize a publisher to make copies of your work! So basically if you own a book by an author who retains the copyright to their book, then both you and the publisher are violating copyright law!
No... Wait... That's completely stupid, too. The whole reason we have copyright is so that the author can grant the right to copy to others, and request compensation in return. Unless we required all authors to self-publish, or transfer their copyright. Which I suppose SCO thinks is the case!
So is this Heise a moron, or does he think we all are? Does he actually not realize that copyright law prohibts only unauthorized copies, and that the GPL is a document which grants authorization? Or is he just hoping we won't realize that?
Either way: This is completely stupid.
The enemies of Democracy are
A pertinent quote:
"The GPL allows unlimited copies, the copyright law allows one. Therefore, the GPL is invalid. The copyright law, in giving consumers the right to make one backup of their software without any permission from the copyright holder, outlaws any contractual agreement that allows users to make more than one copy."
There is an obvious flaw in the above reasoning. It focusses on the the public, and not on the copyright holder. A copyright holder decides how a work is to be released, after all, and it is perfectly legal for a copyright holder to release something to the Public Domain. In actual fact the copyright holder has the right to decide on any degree of release between public domain and not-at-all. So, when the copyright holder releases something under the GPL, the copyright holder has decided to accept the GPL's details for a release. In such case the copyright holder is giving the public the right to make unlimited copies, which fact does NOT violate the copyright law.
Thay think the legal system has become so megaoligopoly-friendly that any claim that benefits one will be held valid in court, no matter how insane.
"The Constitution doesn't say anything about nerds!"
Hmm Whats this in Websters Dictionary?
\Cop"y*right\, n. The right of an author or his assignee, under statute, to print and publish his literary or artistic work, exclusively of all other persons. This right may be had in maps, charts, engravings, plays, and musical compositions, as well as in books.
ok Now lets see License...
\Li"cense\ (l[imac]"sens), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Licensed (l[imac]"senst); p. pr. & vb. n. Licensing.] To permit or authorize by license; to give license to.
Hmm, and their paying this guy as a Attorney?
CLUE FOR SCO: THE GPL IS NOT A COPYRIGHT!! It is a license between the author of said works, and user of said works.
End Transmission....
Although the case you describe could be seen to set a precedent against preemption it is also a case of a much more worrying precedent, that is it is a case of judges coming to a conclusion that flies in the face of the law and logic.
I wish that were so. The truth is far more interesting.
While I believe "our side" has the better side of that argument, Judge Rader's analysis is far from the illogical or illegal claptrap you suggest -- indeed, he is also far from alone, the 7th Circuit in ProCD began this particular line of analysis -- it is simply my view that the fair use and first sale issues are in some sense more fundamental statements of Federal policy than the quibbles in the ProCd and the utter silliness of the present GPL argument. There is more than ample precedent to explain these cases, and ultimately, I think, Bowers will be rejected over conflicting law, without exposing this Section 117 argument.
Comforted by the conflicting Vault v. Quaid case, which holds to the contrary concerning no-reverse-engineering provisions, and on grounds irrelevant to Bois' argument, I think justice ultimately will be done in each line of cases.
I think we (as led by mass media) are missing the point of SCO's venture. SCO's senior management are actually quite smart and cunning, and are getting exactly the results that they want (even if it will cost them the company).
The court date for SCO vs. IBM has been set to sometime in 2005. In the mean time, they have a pretty nifty scheme involving an absurd pending lawsuit, even more absurd press releases to match, Slashdot readers (&al) to provide free publicity, and gullible potential CEOs that are only asking where to send the check (and how much to put on it). 'Course, they'll stifle the use of Linux in some environments too, but hey, those are environments that probably should not be using Linux in the first place.
To put it in simpler terms - the lawsuit has nothing to do with legal issues such as license violations, copyrights etc. It's a ridiculous case that they are bound to lose, and they know it.
They are only trying to boost the stock price of their dying company long enough that their insiders can unload some shares. Sort of a highly publicised pump'n'dump scheme, if you will.
We saw the evidence yesterday, when some execs dumped some stocks (at a price higher than, say, back in May...).
Too bad this scheme is probably a little bit to the side of what the SEC normally would prosecute.
-tor
Where I work, they ship systems based on UnixWare, with custom software added in. I've asked my managers many times why the company is sticking with an outdated product (conforms to the Unix95 standard, not the Unix98 standard - how lazy are they that they can't even make Genuine Unix System V.something code "Unix compatible"?).
The answer is always "there are no plans to change". More specifically, there's no budget allocated to change.
I fear that a few months from now, we'll have a dozen very expensive boxes sitting by the door with no OS on them. And some upset customers making many upset phone calls.
I wonder what the budget will have to say about that.
The point is, I'm sure this isn't rare. It's the main reason for MS Windows being so dominant in the face of better alternatives (more so in the past). To change would mean to make an effort, and if you've stuck with UnixWare this long, you're not the type to ever make an effort to change.
No, GWB is prez because of this (apparently) little known entity called "The Electoral College". It's taught in 6th grade civics classes. Maybe you should take a refresher before you try and influence governmental leadership again. (ie, vote).
Yes, I'm flaming. I'm pissed, because no one seems to know how the system actually works, and instead goes on a bender about how wronged the country was because GWB is The POTUS.
Mod me down - I don't give a rat's ass. Rant over.
Truck driver, plumber, Linux systems engineer.
No. SCO executives seem to know well what their
are doing. So far, the left hand was dumping
stock while everyone was looking at their right
hand hold the U.S. Copyright Law. The real
question do *we* know what they are doing?
Or, are we distracted in the SCO v. IBM show, and in
claims of licensing fees,
when the real game is somewhere else?