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SCO Prepares To Sue Linux End Users

Bootsy Collins writes "In a brief article, Computer Business Review Online quotes Darl McBride as saying that SCO has been busily identifying Linux end users and is preparing to launch lawsuits against them in order to encourage more such end users to buy licenses from SCO. SCO indicates that they'll start with a company that uses AIX, Dynix and Linux, so as to 'settle several legal arguments in one go.'" Not everyone is going to take the SCO approach sitting down; read on for a story on how (among others) Weta Digital and Australia's Massey University aren't jumping to say Uncle to SCO. Update: 08/20 13:11 GMT by T : Oops! Massey University is in New Zealand, not Australia.

Chris Brewer writes "Massey University's Helix supercomputer would incur a licensing charge of nearly US$100,000 for it's 132 CPU Beowulf cluster, and Weta Digital's render farm could cost somewhere between US$1.15 and US$1.5 million dollars at SCO's 'introductory' pricing, according to this Computerworld article. Massey's parallel computing director says it's unlikely that they'll buy a licence, instead, waiting for what the U.S. Courts decide. Weta's CTO Scott Houston says that they're also not going to buy a licence, but are focusing on making movies in the meantime."

70 of 1,209 comments (clear)

  1. Jeebus... by Heem · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can this thing just end already? When is the US Government, or a federal judge/court system actually going to step in? This just keeps getting more and more rediculous.

    --
    Don't Tread on Me
    1. Re:Jeebus... by frisket · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Unfortunately the US Government and the court system are too much under the influence of business interests to step in. If they ever do intervene, it will be to uphold SCO's right to charge anyone they like anything they want for something they claim to own.

      Just as with the Patent Office debacle, the Administration rolls over and plays dead the moment someone says "businesses need this 'protection'" and threatens to withhold their annual checks to party funds. Until they start to uphold the rights of the people instead of the rights of stockholders, this fiasco will continue.

    2. Re:Jeebus... by ultrabot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This just keeps getting more and more rediculous.

      And the more ridiculous it gets, the better! The more SCO flail desperately around, attacking everybody around it, the more enemies and negative publicity they get. And that's great for us.

      BTW, anybody notice how SCO's actions are more and more in line with Microsoft's wishes? Attacking GPL is one such thing, urging IBM and others to abandon their "futile" GPL use... Attacking Linux end users, trying to scare people away from Linux, saying how SCO code can not be removed from Linux, how the Linux business model is flawed... Many of their arguments don't even help their case at all, since they have no interest in doing Unix business anymore anyway. SCO is doing its best to drag the (once) good name of Unix (not just Linux, all of them) through dirt, making MSFT Windows look more and more attractive.

      --
      Save your wrists today - switch to Dvorak
    3. Re:Jeebus... by TopShelf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just because the suit was filed in March (or around there, right?) doesn't mean the case will go in front of a judge right away. This is a complicated legal fight and quite often it can be several months, even more than a year, before things get rolling.

      Whenever I see quotes like "the US Government and the court system are too much under the influence of business interests to step in," I just have to laugh. Is there a single, monolithic view that defines "business interests" here? Hardly! You have giant corporations on both sides of the issue (IBM/Microsoft), and the (Bush) "Administration" has next to zero role in this whole endeavor. It's a civil suit, for crying out loud.

      And I also love "Until they start to uphold the rights of the people instead of the rights of stockholders, this fiasco will continue." Guess what, bub - the people ARE the shareholders!

      How does crap like that get modded Insightful? Anyways, thanks for a good chuckle to start my day...

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
  2. Re:Not me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I guess their scare tactics worked on you then. "Better do what I'm told or I'll be punished" eh? This is the attitude that has served many a tyrant. You can always trust the ignorant to be timid.

  3. Oh goodie... by anthonyrcalgary · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You know, I thought their stock price was getting a little low.

    They're making IBM's case for them.

    --
    When someone might yell at me, it has to be OpenBSD.
  4. Smart move by SCO? by ginkelb · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think this action of SCO is smart. Smart from SCO's standpoint. I hate the company, just to make it clear.

    By going after the end users they can create clarity in the courts because the end users probably won't put up a defence like IBM or RedHat would. They simply wouldn't be able to afford the legal bill. So by going after these small time offenders first they can set precidence in the courts that would be harder (and take longer) to reverse when Redhat and IBM step up to the plate.

    Luckly i am not in the position to be targetted by SCO. First off because i live an ocean away. If i were targetted by them however, thinking im a smaller than fortune500 company, i would probably be very tempted to pay up. I would however demand a addition to the license that would warrent me a refund if on a later date SCO was proven wrong in their statements.

    A small company would go bankrupt before they could take on SCO. Is it time for the EFF to step up to the plate for us all? Possible defend the first company being sued by SCO? I would pay for that to happen. I would pay most certainly.

    --
    Real programmers don't document.
    It was hard to write so it should be hard to understand.
    1. Re:Smart move by SCO? by Trigun · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Anyone with even a matchbook lawyer will ask the courts to delay the hearing until after the SCO/IBM and SCO/Redhat lawsuits, as they are the basis of SCO's as-of-yet unproven ownership rights.

      If you pay up now, you'll be out all those license fees if and when IBM and Redhat tear apart SCO's dead body for pocket-change. You hold out now, and it takes $200 for a lawyer to delay the case.

    2. Re:Smart move by SCO? by WCMI92 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      SCO is a small company itself. And in filing their suit, they invite countersuit from ANY AND ALL Linux users soon as they make the claim.

      It's a bluff. Hire a lawyer. Insist on trial. SCO won't show up. They CANNOT reveal the code, and they will have to in order to prove that the Linux on your servers infringe their copyright.

      --
      Corporatism != Free Market
    3. Re:Smart move by SCO? by Hrothgar+The+Great · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Try going to court sometime without a lawyer. I just got a divorce recently, and it was about as simple a divorce as possible really (no children, mostly separate assets, etc) - and it was still very difficult figuring out courtroom procedure on my own. I had read a damn book on divorce law before I went, too.

      Finally, I paid a lawyer $50 and he told me exactly what to say and when to say it, and he fixed my fucked up documents. Everything went great. My point is, YES, you DEFINITELY need a lawyer to go to court for pretty much anything.

  5. Re:SCO hasn't engaged in litigation, SCO has decla by CowBovNeal · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't get it. How is it going to sue linux users without showing them the code?

    Companies that have been sued by SCO have bought their products from Red Hat or similar companies. This means, the responsibility actually falls on Red Hat and SuSe etc.

    In essence SCO is suing Red Hat etc.
    But Red Hat and SuSe are already suing SCO, and so is IBM.

    This means the companies, users using linux aree insulated because their case will not proceed until the above cases are solved.

    That means SCO can kiss my ass.

    --
    Bush is on fire and its not good for my lungs.
  6. A quote by Badgerman · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "There is no warranty for infringement of intellectual property [in the GPL], so all of the liability ends up with end users."

    1. Please prove that the liability ends up with the users.
    2. You're the ones starting a lawsuit, SCO. All arguiments about IP aside, you're essentially offering to protect users from yourselves.


    Yeah, makes me REALLY trust them . . .
    --
    "The Sage treasures Unity and measures all things by it" - Lao Tzu
  7. Oh, do shut up, Darl by Rogerborg · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The company has signed one large customer up to its Intellectual Property License for Linux. [...] "Instead of doing mass-mailings we're now taking a very targeted approach," [Darl McBride] said.

    Yes, Darl, Microsoft has let you re-announce that they gave you $10 for a license, and yes, we know that everybody else has ignored you. Do you have any actual news, or are you still just trying to spin your past ineptitude into shinola again?

    We need a sweepstake on when he's going to (illegally) dump his stock and head to Brazil for a face change. I'm guessing it'll be the day before they actually hit a court with this farce.

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  8. Yeah right... by stephenry · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The important word there being 'preparing'. Like they're 'preparing' to audit AIX customers, sue AIX customers, sue Linus Torvalds, raise holy Jihad against the GPL... (continues) They've had months to carry this out, yet their STILL preparing to do so? Yeah, right! Looks like their just trying raise FUD to get their stocks out of a proverbial downard spiral, as seen for the last couple of days.

    I'll belive it when I see it!

  9. Re:SCO to World: by insomnic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    World to SCO:
    Fuck you too!

    Seriously, this is the last death-twitch before the body stops moving. SCO is as dead as... death. Their tactics are getting more and more desperate, and they are trying to scare the world into believing their claims without presenting any real proof that the claims are valid. The bigwigs are selling off shares while they are still worth something, and as more and more information leaks out about the lawsuit, we get more and more confident that it does not have any valid grounds.
    The code in the Heise screenshots was quickly identified and reviewed, and failed miserably - instead of proving to the Linux community and IBM that the lawsuit really could be something we need to think about, instead it proved the opposite.

    My guess is this is what is going to happen:

    1. More information about the code SCO claims infringes their copyright will leak out.

    2. Code will be reviewed and shown as not proving SCO-s case.

    2b. Code can not be shown as "innocent" and will be rewritten quickly.

    2c. The Linux kernel will be cleaned from any "suspicious" code and released. Joe User with an x86 uniprocessor desktop architecure will be able to use the "clean" kernel right away.

    3. SCO will fall apart together with the lawsuit.

    In fact I don't think it will ever even come near a courthouse. My firm belief is that IBM and the Linux community will finally prevail and have an even better position than before the lawsuit.

  10. Re:Lawsuits... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    well at this point i think it would be a bit difficult to prove the company has done anything wrong. While it is clear what they are doing (sue. get rich.), all of the trades and etc have been registered with the SEC as planned sales and the like, so as far as the SEC is concerned i dont think there doesnt seem to be any wrong doing. Now if they were about to say "we are full of it" and sold their stocks the day before, then the SEC would be interested.

    Im just being an armchair bandit at the moment. But it seems thats the way it is.

  11. willful infringement by loconet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sontag warned users that ignoring SCO's requests to license the code in advance of a court case could be costly. "Those who have chosen to ignore the license are more in a situation of potential willful infringement," Sontag said.

    How can it be willful infrigement if there hasn't been any violations proven yet? This is getting ridiculous. Germany already stopped these idiots, I can't believe nothing is being done here to stop these morons from talking so much shit!

    --
    [alk]
  12. Re:The Samba team has already sent SCO a letter by Arker · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Because of this, we believe that the Samba must remain true to our principles and be freely available to use even in ways we personally disapprove of.

    To use yes, but since SCO stands in breach of the GPL, they have no longer the right to modify or distribute Samba or any other GPL software.

    --
    =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
    Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
  13. Calling all crackpots by SunPin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    SCO has basically decided to take this matter to the edge of violence. While the vast majority of open source zealots are peaceful and merely annoying, how many are in the Ted Kaczynski Unabomber Club?

    Emotionally unstable, socially detached, angry and brilliant people are going to start having trouble holding it together. Kaczynski didn't have the benefit of the net to get better information or gravitate towards like minds.

    What if SCO/Microsoft knows this and is purposely creating an environment where a small group snaps and discredits everything about the "eccentric" hobbies of geeks?

    The whole concept of doing geek stuff outside of university walls is a very young concept. Read up on the history of astronomy. Rulers and the church had no problem with what these guys were doing as long as it stayed within the walls.

    If we move all knowledge back to universities, corporations will call all the shots on progress. That's exactly what will happen after the first zealots decide that "Bombs not reason" is a good name for a political action committee.

    How many idiots have issued death threats against spammers? The clock is winding down.

    --
    Laws are for people with no friends.
  14. Re:SCO hasn't engaged in litigation, SCO has decla by Karl+Cocknozzle · · Score: 2, Insightful
    1 Freedom to use. A GPL licensed program can be used for any purpose whatsoever.

    ...


    What you are proposing is breaking the 1st freedom; it is not because they claim the GPL is invalid that we believe so and should break it.


    I think I get your point, that Copyright holder's retracting their license on Samba et al. would be antethical to the ideals of the Free Software community. While this could be true, is it not also against our interests to simply lie back and take this sort of abuse without a fight?

    I certainly support the right of free use, and nobody is suggesting SCO should be somehow enjoined from using old versions of Samba, Apache, etc BUT it is suicidal for us to continue giving SCO free labor which they sell to their customers to finance a lawsuit to destroy the beauty and utility of one of humanit's greatest (non-profit) community initiatives ever. Consider how amazing the Linux kernel/family of software is... It mostly exists because a few people with some spare time wanted it to. There are people involved in for-profit development on open source apps, and nobody begrudges them that success, but mainly it is a volunteer effort.
    --
    Who did what now?
  15. Legal fund by jeti · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Your memory can't be too good.

    According to a /. article published hardly more than two weeks ago,
    Red Hat set up a legal fund to deal with this kind of tactic:

    http://slashdot.org/articles/03/08/04/1817247.sh tm l

  16. SCO just signed its own death warrant by grolaw · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If the end-user suits are filed then SCO has taken the fairly obscure legal issue of marginal infringement (never marginal with the expansions in copyright, No Electronic Theft, and the Sonny Bono Acts - innocent infringers simply do not exist) and found a way to snatch total defeat from a nuisance settlement.

    When Polaroid (The Land Corporation) sued Kodak for instant camera/photo patent infringement and enjoined Kodak from further production of the infringing products - Land never targeted the jobbers, distributors, end-unit-sales operators or individual owners of the infringing product. They were aware that they would poison the market for their products and create a vast public backlash from such tactics.

    (Yes, the analogy is flawed: the laws were different then - but the option to sue a larger group and Land's decision not to do so was a valid option that they eschewed.)

    SCO is far from their progenitor the Santa Cruz Operation and their UNIX for the PC OS.

    I'm not certain what SCO brings to the market today, save chaos.

    Has Ken Starr signed on as chief counsel? What good result can SCO possibly expect from this tactic?

    SCO cannot survive this vast expansion of their litigation without a huge (vast, impossible to predict) infusion of cash to fund the litigation. Even with unlimited funds the secondary costs will eat them alive.

    Public backlash over time and costs are two things that SCO clearly has not considered properly in this litigation. So long SCO - you won't be missed any more than a broken abacus.

  17. Well... by superdan2k · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...I guess our buddy Darl is going for the "it's better to burn out than to fade away" method of running one's company into the ground. (No matter how this lawsuit works out, who the fuck is ever going to want to do business with SCO afterwards?

    It's not like there's any grounds for going after end-users -- they haven't even proved that there was theft of their intellectual property yet. It'll be hard for them to sue an end-user in court and say, "Well, he's using stuff that illegally contains our IP."

    Joe Average end-user is never going to be able to see the SCO code or even bother to look at the Linux kernel code ("kernel? like in corn?"), and will have no basis for comparison. Furthermore, the IP onus is not on the end-user. That would be like Ford suing the owners of Nissan cars if Nissan were to happen to use a mechanical part that Ford owned the patent to, without licensing it properly.

    Translation: SCOFUD.

    --
    blog |
  18. ...and so it goes. by sms · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We haven't even begun. This is the same process that we go through whenever an American company is spiraling toward bankruptcy. It goes out in a blaze of lawsuits in a desperate attempt to pad the executives' golden parachutes. Anyone remember a company called Wang? They were everywhere in the mid-1980s. The only difference is that back then, we didn't have /. chronicling the daily lunacy of profit by litigation.

    The good news is that ten years hence, we will be asking, "Remember a company called SCO?" If there were justice in the USA, Darl McBride will be in a gutter, pathetically crawling in a puddle of his own vomit. Unfortunately, there is no justice.

  19. I'm looking forward to it... by iceT · · Score: 2, Insightful

    busily identifying Linux end users and is preparing to launch lawsuits against them

    Let's see... $699. That's small claims court. As they haven't provided PROOF of anything, I'll be happy to meet them in small claims court for them to get their money. It'll cost 'em more than $699 to have their lawyer drive to the courthouse.

    Bad business model.

    --
    -- You can't idiot-proof anything, because they're always coming out with better idiots.
  20. Re:SCO hasn't engaged in litigation, SCO has decla by ignoramus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If they are claiming the GPL is invalid

    It seems to be worse than that. From the article, the point they keep trying to make is that "[the GPL] has forced it to take action against Linux users". McBribe states, "There's a bouncing ball that ends up in the hands of customers because of the GPL".

    So the attack is basically "using GPLed soft makes you liable to the first nutcase who wants to stir up some trouble". Now I'm really starting to wonder what type of deal went down between Microsoft and SCO...

  21. Re:Breech the GPL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You are correct, but there is nothing stopping all the projects which use the GPL from sending SCO a cease and desist for violation of the GPL provisions. They don't agree to follow the GPL, they say they don't think it's legal, fine, they don't get to distribute all GPL'd projects where the maintainers of the project say NO. If they continue to distribute, it's a clear copyright infringement.
    The brilliance of the GPL is that it is basically a copyright agreement. Those distributing under GPL give those using the software the right under certain circumstances to copy their work as many times as the want so long as the agreement is followed. If they don't, the copyright holders have the right to pull the unlimited copy clause and revert to normal copyright policies. These circumstances are well defined and can be enforced in court.

  22. Small Retributions by veldmon · · Score: 5, Insightful
    It's time that this FUD campaign come to an end. I own a small business that deploys five Red Hat AS boxes. SCO has already sent my legal department (2 lawyers) three letters (threats) regarding our "illegal use of the Linux operating system [sic]".

    Like most users of Linux, we are at the point where we are not going to stand still while SCO trashes the entire Free Software movement. I have already authorized a payment of $10,000 to the FSF, and a payment of $5,000 to the Red Hat Open Source Now fund. If you want to do all you can during this waiting period before the trial, I would urge you to sign this petition that signifies the unity of the Free and Open source communities against SCO's outlandish claims.

  23. Why don't we all just call them by EckRhino · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Instead of endlessly repeating our distress over SCO's insanity on /. why not just pick up the phone and tell them why you think their extortion tactics will fail and you will never buy anything by SCO *EVER*. If a 10th of the people who read /. call them they're sales staff will be swamped. Product and Sales Inquiries 1-800-726-8649 Or, call their home office and complain some more... The SCO Group 355 South 520 West Suite 100 Lindon, Utah 84042 USA 801-765-4999 phone 801-765-1313 fax

  24. Sigh by heironymouscoward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    SCO's manoever has never been about anything else than attacking the GPL and the concept of OSS.

    IBM and AIX are entirely incidental to the affair, and the connection between AIX and Linux is a spurious convenience.

    If SCO were serious about their original "license agreement" allegations with IBM they would stick to this point and not start commenting on the GPL. SCO may be lying, thieving scoundrels, but they are working for someone else, or they would stick to the issues that might pay off.

    I've said this for months now: the most likely director of SCO's actions is Microsoft, the only significant player to benefit from this mess. Every time the "validity" of the GPL is discussed Microsoft get a thrill and achieve what they could not do directly - no-one takes Microsoft's propaganda seriously anymore.

    At least one goal appears to be working, namely to discuss the "validity" of the GPL as if it were a law or a contract. The GPL is a license that an author (that is, the person who's sweat, blood and tears were spent on making a work) can choose as the vehicle for licensing his or her work. Period. Anyone taking this work must obey the license conditions.

    If I choose to license my work with an agreement that says that you must wear only red, that is my right. SCO may say "we choose not to use the GPL for our work", but to attack it like this is purely malicious.

    And, so, we come back to the people who have in the past spent so much effort attacking the GPL because they realize that it frames their demise. The Redmond Gang, the company that believs might makes right, that laws are for buying, not obeying, and that lawyers are for suing other people.

    Sigh.

    On the bright side, I assume if they sue me for using Linux, and they lose, then they will pay my legal fees?

    --
    Ceci n'est pas une signature
  25. How long will it be by thaddjuice · · Score: 2, Insightful

    before the money trail gets traced back to Microsoft? If you seriously look at this, there is exactly one entity that will benefit from all this: Microsoft. Even SCO is screwed, they could never take on Big Blue. Sun has the problem that PHBs don't understand that Unix is not Linux is not BSD. They see it as Windows or Unix (maybe Apple if they do graphics). They see trouble in the Unix world and that means they look to Microsoft.

    To sum up, I think that it's just getting waaaaaay too convenient for MS for all of this SCO stuff to be happening. This begs the question, assuming Redmond is behind all this will the truth ever be found, and if so when? If the truth does come out, how will the business world react, or will they?

    --
    Find me in ~/.sig
  26. Re:Massey is in New Zealand. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    No no no, Australia (dammit) sold out way before the UK, so
    Israel is the 51st, Australia 52nd, the UK 53nd and Iraq the 54rd. And that's if you don't count all the invasions and coups in the South Americas.

    I forcast that Iraq will soon be an abandoned state like Afghanistan, Somalia, Angola and the Phillipines. Then again the oil is surely worth a few poor soldiers and a few votes? (Sarcasm - I hope this is wrong).

    NZ will never be a state while they won't let the USA park their Nuclear boats there. But I heard Bush was trying to work on that. Not that trade sanction threats worked real well against NZ before. Actually that kind of NZ attitude to threats from big bullies, will probably work against SCO too.

  27. Small Claims Court time by Vengeance · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The best tactic the community could use, IMHO, would be to overwhelm SCO with piddling, individual small claims. I may be wrong on this, but doesn't a corporate officer or some such have to show up for this, as opposed to legal council?

    If just the 1500 companies that had received threatening letters were to do this, each claiming the loss of say, 200 dollars for letter processing time and such, SCO couldn't possibly keep up with the docket.

    Of course, I could be wrong (and often am).

    --
    It was a joke! When you give me that look it was a joke.
  28. Re:Lawsuits... by div_2n · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I dunno but I just called their complaint phone number at (202) 942-7040. Their office doesn't open until 9:30AM EST. I am calling then. So should everyone else. Just be polite and and to the point. They probably won't know or care what a kernel is but they will care that a company is making consistent unsubstantiated claims, threatening consumers meanwhile their execs are dumping stocks.

    Stick to that. Tell them you are a computer expert if you have to and that it is your professional opinion that their claims are groundless and that it seems everytime their stock takes a dip they make new claims.

    Make sure to tell them that in Germany they were required to stop with their threatenting campaign by the German government because they have not produced proof and refuse to do so.

    I am sure someone here can come up with better points than me.

  29. Hello!? INJUNCTION anyone??!!! by nagora · · Score: 5, Insightful
    What the hell is keeping IBM/RedHat/FSF/HP/Samba/the Pope from having an injunction slapped on these crooks?

    For fuck's sake: they are publicly stating that they are going to start an extortion racket! Where's the bloody police? Where's the C&D letters? Why is it so easy to lie and steal if you are a company? Any human individual would be behind bars by now.

    TWW

    --
    "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
  30. Re: Invalidating the GPL by ClayJar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Wouldn't the GPL being proven invalid just replace it with standard copyright law, and if so doesn't that mean that they have NO rights to the code what-so-ever?"

    As I understand it, SCO isn't just trying to get the GPL declared invalid. They're trying to get the GPL declared invalid and all GPLed software declared public domain. Basically, their argument (however invalid it may be) is that anyone who gives you as much freedom as the GPL gives must obviously not care to do anything with their copyright, and therefore "GPL" == "public domain".

    I personally find this "They gave us a piece, so they owe us the whole pizza!" argument reprehensible, but it seems as if it is perfectly acceptable to some people (read: SCO lawyers).

  31. Re:Isn't it odd... by einTier · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I mentioned earlier that I didn't think these cases could survive discovery. However, unless you have a corporate lawyer on staff, it will likely cost you more than $700 just to get to discovery. And, that's why these businesses will pay up -- because it's cheaper to just pay the $700 extortion fee than to spend thousands of dollars just to prove that you shouldn't have to pay the fee.

    I'm not a big fan of the 'loser pays' court system, but something has to be done to stop these extortion lawsuits (SCO isn't the only one doing this) that have absolutely no legal merit.

    --
    -------------------------------------------------- $665.95 -- retail price of the beast.
  32. Re:OMG by salesgeek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    they'll start with a company that uses AIX, Dynix and Linux

    omg! they'll sue IBM again!


    No, they'll find a small or financially hurting IBM customer. Then they will settle for an undisclosed fee (where SCO gives financially hurting company a plane ticket to a news conference and a press release to put out). They'll do this a few times.

    Their hope is that:

    * The media will try the case and most users will lay down.
    * They will get away with the trial by surprise strategy.
    * IBM will be represented by the same people who represent the EFF.

    The minute things go badly, heads will roll at SCO and this whole thing will be a misunderstanding. That's why it's critical that we start documenting actual dammages as a result of SCO's actions.

    --
    -- $G
  33. What is really needed by Frodrick · · Score: 2, Insightful
    SCO is obviously going to pick a soft target and hope for a settlement. Then, bolstered by this, they will attempt to intimidate a few hundred million out of other users by making "lawsuit" noises.

    If we are to truly take the wind from SCO's sails at this point, we need to cut off their revenue stream. To do this, one of the injured parties (any of the Linux Distributors, for example) must go into court and ask for an injunction to prevent SCO from attempting to collect any licence fees from Linux users or distributors until such time as they prove their claims - either to the Kernel developers or (failing that) to a court of law. Since SCO has a) announced a price list, and b) sold a licence they cannot argue that they are NOT pursuing licencing, so injunctive relief is a valid request for Linux distributors at this time.

    Because SCO's current action smells more of extortion than of copyright-licencing there is a pretty good chance that any halfway-decent lawyer (sorry for the oxymoron) could walk out court with a temporary injunction almost immediately

    I would think that the sheer insanity of SCO's position ("You have our code but we won't tell you what it is") would be all the excuse a judge would need to step in.

    This would cut SCO off from their anticipated revenue stream for the forseeable future, and could even trigger a stock collapse since there was no likelihood of any corporate growth until the completion of the lawsuits sometime in the next few decades.

  34. Re:SCO seems adept at manipulating media by elvum · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That's 'cos Linux doesn't have a PR department.

  35. This has to be unbridled stock price pumping. by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Has anyone noticed a pattern here? Every time that SCO gets a major slap-down, they churn out a new press release with some sort of new angle to temporarily bolster their position until the next slap-down? You can practically time the when press releases roll out the factory, folks.

    I don't think there isn't anything illegal in that, per se, but in my mind, it kind of points to a goal in all of this. But then again, I could be tying the generation of a 'fear buzz' with the stock price. They are doing an excellent job of keeping the fear buzz going.

  36. Court case by teval · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't live in the US (Canada), we haven't really seen FUD from SCO here. Most large companies have laughed and moved on. Why doesn't the US gov't stop this? No infringement is proven, yet they're threatening lawsuits? Is there some kind of law saying that it's legal? And.. don't you have a blue sky law? I really don't see how SCO is selling anything but that..

  37. That is a very, very bad idea by FreeUser · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Personally I'm going to customize the GPL for my work where you cannot use it with SCO software, for the SCO company, etc. etc.

    What do you do when SCO changes its name, is bought out by Microsoft (or IBM), or otherwise metamorphasizes itself through corporate/legal slight-of-hand. Do you ban the canopy group? What if canopy purchases an innocent bystander (if they haven't already) ... are they suddenly banned from using your software. Are you going to ban Darl McBride by name? The Mormons as a whole? America? Where does this sort of thing stop.

    SCO has violated the GPL on Linux. They are no longer allowed to distribute Linux under US copyright law, and they are violating that law massively even as I type this. That is enough.

    Do not try to revoke SCO's GPL license to products they haven't violated the license of ... if anyone does so, they will put the GPL in a no-win situation, where if it is upheld, you cannot revoke SCO's license becauuse you don't like them, or it is not upheld, you can revoke the license of people you don't like later, and none of us are safe (the very foundation of software freedom is taken away). One thing is almost certain: violating the license of one product isn't going to mean you lose licenses to all products who happen to use the same license ... I cannot imagine any court of law ruling that, for example, you lose the license to Samba because you violate the license of transcode, merely because the two products' licenses happen to have the same text (the GPL) and are otherwise unrelated.

    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
  38. Isn't the correct term by eyepeepackets · · Score: 2, Insightful

    for SCO's legal abuse of Linux users "EXTORTION?"

    --
    Everything in the Universe sucks: It's the law!
  39. For fuck's sake by KilljoyAZ · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Do you know how ridiculous this sounds on its face? Assuming your reasoning applies here, please explain why would the US government take the side of the tiny company (SCO) against the side of the deep-pocketed multinational superconoglomerate (IBM) if it was so beholden to business interests?

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    This .sig is currently on hiatus for retooling.
  40. Re:SCO hasn't engaged in litigation, SCO has decla by arkanes · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is especially amusing because Samba is potentially in much more legal danger than Linux ever was - due to MS's patents & annoying EULAs on documentation, Samba developers have to be VERY carefull about what they read and look at, and it'd be much easier to slip them up or even press claims that they did splip up than against Linux.

  41. Discovery Process? by Above · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Isn't part of _ANY_ trial discovery? Doesn't that mean that both sides have to give each other the evidence they are going to use in the case? More to the point, if SCO decided to sue you, could you basically stand up and say to the judge "SCO needs to turn over any and all evidence of infringement, and the trial should not start until they do so?"

  42. Re:SCO hasn't engaged in litigation, SCO has decla by LWATCDR · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is a case of going after the weak sisters. The idea is go after people that can not afford to defend themselves. The will
    1. Settle and pony up some money.
    2. Go to court and not afford to pay the big guns needed to defend themselves and loose.
    It is a win win for SCO. If the company pays the can use that in court to say, "Look XYZ paid because they knew we where right."
    Or if they go to court and SCO wins then which it very well could beacuse a company that is not IBM or Red Hat does not have the knowlege or the money to defend it's self. With a win or two under it's belt they will have "Proof" that they where right all along.

    It is a nasty tactic but not a new one.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  43. Words to make the morning even better... by Ron+Harwood · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Class Action Lawsuit...

    Seriously folks... there's gotta be a lawyer out there thinking about this... getting all of the American linux community together and suing SCO...

    Mmm... the warm glow of that thought almost gets me past my anger that SCO stories foster...

    1. Re:Words to make the morning even better... by letxa2000 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Chris Sontag, senior vice president and general manager of the company's SCOsource business, added: "There is no warranty for infringement of intellectual property [in the GPL], so all of the liability ends up with end users."

      So SCO says the GPL is invalid and won't stand up in court... but they use it as the basis to justify suing end users and hold them responsible for (supposedly) someone else inserting questionable code in the kernel? So which is it? Is GPL valid or not. Some of their claims depend on GPL being valid and others depend on it being invalid.

    2. Re:Words to make the morning even better... by ichimunki · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The point is that even if the GPL is valid the end user is still responsible for any infringement.

      That might be true if the user committed any sort of copying or distribution that did not constitute Fair Use and if they continued to do so after being reasonably notified that they were doing so in an infringing manner. Simple possession of a work does not violate any clause in Title 17 that I'm aware of. If you are aware of such a clause or a precedent in law that would be sufficient to back up the idea that simple possession of a work that was created or distributed in an infringing manner is illegal, please cite.

      Patents are a different issue and there end users cannot use patented stuff without a license. To date I have not heard SCO once mention that they own patents that are being infringed.

      --
      I do not have a signature
    3. Re:Words to make the morning even better... by letxa2000 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      What he's saying is that the fact that you used the code under what you believed was a valid GPL license does not indemify you from copyright infringement.

      If someone else is responsible for the infringement and SCO knows who it is (apparently they do) then it is not reasonable to go after end-users who obtained the code in a legal manner from a source that they had a reasonable expectation to provide legal code.

      Even if the end-user could in theory be guilty of copyright infringement, I don't think the user can be held responsible until SCO tells us all what sections of code are infringing. So far we just have idle threats with no evidence. If SCO were to let everyone know the supposedly infringing code I think we'd all take action to make sure we weren't using it. The fact that SCO doesn't tell anyone forces end-users to continue to infringe because we haven't been told what they think is infringing.

      Basically, we can't do anything until we are sued by SCO. That's bogus.

      The point is that even if the GPL is valid the end user is still responsible for any infringement.

      I doubt that will be found to be the case if this goes to court. I think the infringement was committed by the people/persons/company that took code from SCO and put it in Linux (if it indeed happened). Those are the ones SCO needs to go after. Going after end users is like going after Honda owners because they own cars that happen to contain designs that Honda stole from Toyota.

    4. Re:Words to make the morning even better... by Tsu+Dho+Nimh · · Score: 2, Insightful
      " So, if I bought a book by Stephen Ambrose, who has been accused of plagiarism, can the 'original' author sue me? I"

      No. They can sue Ambrose, and they can request that the judge impound all of the allegedly infringing material until the end of the trial (everything in the pipeline from publisher to retail gets yanked), and if they win, ask that these materials be destroyed, and get damages from Ambrose. But if that SAME author happens to see you reading a copy of that book on the subway, they can't sue you for anything. You can't collect twice for the same "injury" and they already got paid by Ambrose for their losses.

  44. Re:can users infringe? by Tsu+Dho+Nimh · · Score: 2, Insightful
    "Is there a valid legal argument that makes users vulnerable to litigation on the basis of copyright infringement?"

    Not that I have been able to find, in an end-to-end reading of the stuff available from the copyright office: "Circular 92 : Copyright Law of the United States of America and Related Laws Contained in Ttle 17 of the United States Code." There are remedies, but only against the infringers, and ONLY after you file a complaint. Skip to chapter 5 "Copyright Infringement and Remedies" And read Section 106 in chapter 1 ... which details what you actually control wuhen you have a copyright:

    Subject to sections 107 through 122, the owner of copyright under this title has the exclusive rights to do and to authorize any of the following:
    (1) to reproduce the copyrighted work in copies or phonorecords;
    (2) to prepare derivative works based upon the copyrighted work;
    (3) to distribute copies or phonorecords of the copyrighted work to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or by rental, lease, or lending;
    (4) in the case of literary, musical, dramatic, and choreographic works, pantomimes, and motion pictures and other audiovisual works, to perform the copyrighted work publicly;
    (5) in the case of literary, musical, dramatic, and choreographic works, pantomimes, and pictorial, graphic, or sculptural works, including the individual images of a motion picture or other audiovisual work, to display the copyrighted work publicly; and
    (6) in the case of sound recordings, to perform the copyrighted work publicly by means of a digital audio transmission.

    In theory, because I have copied and distributed various Linux distros, SCO could sue me for infringing on whatevre copyrights they hold on anything in Linux, IF they can get the small matter of the GPL thrown out, AND IF they file a complaint within the next two years, AND IF they can convince a court that all that stuff that says (C) Linus Torvalds, SGI, Intel, BSD, and IBM is really theirs (and show the court rulings to prove it).

  45. Why do you pretend you have a clue? by JohnDenver · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First of all, why are you pretending you know ANYTHING about the procedures of this type of lawsuit?

    SCO is a professional organization with a good litigation team with a very good track record.

    You're just throwing out assumptions like they were the gospel without bothering to consider that maybe 1 or ALL of your assumptions are wrong!

    In layman's terms, Rule 11 is used by a judge to say "You have the nerve to bring that piece of shit argument into my courtroom?"

    Do you really think SCO's lawyers are so enept that they're going to break Rule 11?

    During the initial stages of litigation, they would have to introduce more evidence or the judge would eventually dismiss the case for failure to state a claim. To get scheduled for a trial they would have to show code.

    What makes you think they WON'T show code in court? What makes you think they have to show ALL of the infringing code? Lastly, What makes you think they can't convince the judge to protect their "Trade Secret" from being dissemenated beyond the court?

    Have you ever bothered to consider SCO is really fucking with our heads?

    Consider Sun Tzu:

    All warfare is based on deception.

    Hence, when able to attack, we must seem unable;
    when using our forces, we must seem inactive;
    when we are near, we must make the enemy believe we are far away;
    when far away, we must make him believe we are near.

    Hold out baits to entice the enemy.
    Feign disorder, and crush him.


    Rather than spouting conjecture about something you seemingly know very little about, maybe you should consider asserting fewer "facts" and asking more questions.

    --
    "Communism is like having one [local] phone company " - Lenny Bruce
  46. Re:Thats Better... by yoriknme · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is nutty. I actually bought my first Linux distro from - it was Caldera then. Since they have my name, are they going to sue me for buying the product? I'd like my money back please.

  47. PA Linux Businesses by Seanasy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you're in PA and you use Linux, consider filling out this Consumer Complaint Form. Maybe we can get the PA, and other states', attorney general interested.

  48. Re:SCO hasn't engaged in litigation, SCO has decla by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...what is kneaded here is attack rather than passive defence.

    I've been saying this (and getting modded up) since SCO started, but nobody who matters cares. Linus et al need to start caring, because this is a major problem that is not going to disappear overnight without their involvement. SCO is currently guilty of massive copyright infringement, literally enough to shut the company down and possibly "pierce the corporate veil" and allow the officers to be pursued to help pay up. But they'll keep using that money to trash Linux and threaten others until someone does something about it. A lawsuit by Linus alleging that SCO is improperly using Linux code would allow him to subpoena their code without the stupid NDA.

    It seems that the open source community thinks copyright law is something for the RIAA and MPAA to wield against file sharers. It works just as well for us, likely better since nobody likes the entertainment industry outside of Congress.

    Anyway, you're right, it's time we go on the offensive. My suggestion was the establishment of a legal fund for offense, which is much more needed than Red Hat's defensive fund. Winnings would be split 50/50, with the copyright holder getting 50% and the fund getting 50% of the winnings. We'd be able to grow it within a few years to the point that nobody would want to mess with us, but only if people (e.g. Linus) pulled their thumbs out of their asses and started defending their property.

    Michael

  49. Re:Thats Better... by spikenerd · · Score: 5, Insightful

    you know there's a reason we're seeing an SCO story every day--it's because we care. This is the first major test of the GPL, and that's a really big deal! Remember when two planes crashed into a couple buildings in New York and the news just wouldn't shut up about it for months and months and we had to hear about it every single day of our lives? We couldn't even watch our favorite shows because everyone just wanted to blab about terrorists? Well, this SCO case is to geeks as that business with NY, Afganistan, and Iraq was to the rest of the world. I, for one, thought terrorism made bigger headlines than it deserved, but that didn't change the fact that the news was hell-bent on giving people the stories they wanted to hear. Nomatter how tired of it you get, Slashdot is going to keep on telling geeks about every SCO development there is. And I just happen to be on the edge of my seat about it, so if you're sick of these stories, stop looking for them and go do something productive. Slasdot isn't going to hunt you down and force you to hear about SCO.

  50. Re:Why not? by Linux_ho · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Arker,
    You obviously either have no understanding of US copyright law, or are a troll. The GPL cannot be 'revoked' for all GPL'd software at once for SCO or any other entity. SCO may say nasty things about the GPL, but that doesn't mean software isn't licensed to them under the GPL. Sometimes I say nasty things about my wife, but that don't mean I'm divorced...

    Think of the FSF as a blank contract publisher. Yes, they hold copyrights on some software, but for projects in which they hold no copyrights, they are just a fill-in-the-blank publisher of license forms. It's just like a blank lease form you fill out when you rent an apartment. The company that printed the lease form cannot revoke the lease. It's a contract between you and the landlord, and you and the landlord are the only ones who can break the agreement.

    The GPL is the same way. Every software project has different copyright, which restricts copying. The GPL is a contract, between the copyright holder and the user||modifier||distributor, which gives the the right to make copies under certain conditions. So SCO essentially has a separate contract with each copyright holder for GPLd software that SCO distributes.

    I agree that they have violated that contract for the Linux kernel, and Linus could easily file an injunction to prevent them from distributing Linux further. But they have not violated their contract with the SAMBA team. The terms of both contracts are the GPL, but they are completely separate agreements. If Linus files an injuction preventing them from distributing Linux, I wonder if they would be prevented from distributing their UnixWare kernel; it is rumored that it contains Linux kernel code in the LKP module.

    --
    include $sig;
    1;
  51. Re:Calvin Peeing on SCO by mnemonic_ · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The reason Bill Watterson chose to never license his trademarks for anything besides his comics was to prevent the development of trashy stuff like this. It's sad that his trademark ownership is often ignored.

  52. bzzt! wrong! by dh003i · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This article is filled with so much misinformation as to be astounding:

    Choosing a user of AIX and Dynix would help the company to back up its position that it terminated IBM's licenses for Unix in AIX and Dynix in June and August respectively

    No, actually, it wouldn't help prove that, because SCO could not and can not terminate IBM's right to use AIX. IBM created AIX and has the absolute and unquestioned right to use or not use it.

    "There is no warranty for infringement of intellectual property [in the GPL], so all of the liability ends up with end users."

    There is no warrantee against infringement for *any* software you buy, from *anyone*, including Microsoft, SCO, IBM, etc. This is also true of the GPL. In fact, to even imply that there could be a warrantee for infringment is absurd. It is, quite frankly, impossible. There is so much bullshit crap out there that you can't write a single line of code without violating some trivial bullshit patent somewhere. At least, with FS and OSS licenses, the code is open-source, so issues of infringment can easily be identified.

    There is no hiding skeletons in the closet when you develop FS and OSS software. It's all out in the open. If there really was an infringement issue, it would have been found and dealt with long long long ago (e.g., like when SCO was distributing Caldera). Also, by having distributed GNU/Linux, SCO loses the ability to seriously do any of this crap (which is why they have to attack the GPL).

    "End users are improperly using this copyrighted material, and under copyright law SCO is entitled to damages and injunctive relief"

    Until there's some actual evidence and a court rules, no-one is using misappropriated material. No-one is obligated to do anything until a court rules on real evidence, that SCO actually has valid claims. This is, of course, why they're pressing so hard, because they know the court will find that their case is non-sense. If they want to have any serious case against end-users, they need to show end-users *proof* that the software they use violates SCO's copyright. Even then, they still have no case, because they distributed a GNU/Linux distribution.

    "Those who have chosen to ignore the license are more in a situation of potential willful infringement"

    Actually, no, they aren't, since SCO hasn't presented any evidence what-so-ever that anyone is violating SCO's copyrights.

  53. Re:And here's another dose of humor from DiDio by blang · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I encourage any Linux users, MIS managers, development managers, CTOs, and CEOs with a fair amount of IT budget, and that have previously bought reports from the Yankee Group to voice their concerns to Yankee's sales department over DiDio's lack of professionalism and competense, as well as the extrememe bias in the SCO case. Since the issues of this case is obvously not her field of expertise, it must be of some concerns that she is willing to issue conclusive and sweeping statements using only one source of information, namely the SCO insiders.

    You can no longer can have faith in the Yankee Group's quality control and that this casts a great shadow of doubt over all their research reports. You can no longer trust their research when making decisions about IT investemts and industry trends, and you regret that you can no longer maintain a business relationship with the Yankee group.

    --
    -- Another senseless waste of fine bytes.
  54. Good for Society by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think getting sued by SCO would be good for many slashbots.

    That's because you are a bunch of subservient morons who usually never miss a chance to bow down before your MBA and JD masters.

    If a broadband company advertises "20 times the speed of dialup" and then caps the modems and blocks all ports, half the thread is taken up explaining in condescending terms that the cable company has to make money, therefore false advertising and fraud just have to be set aside.

    Stories on file sharing are full of nervous worry about artists going out of business. So what ? Whose job is it to keep the artist from starving, me or the artist ? Any news of any type of corporate rip-off or fraud generates a nervous round of excuses: sure 1/2 of every telecom bill is fraud, but who will take care of the wires ? (Someone honest who charges half as much ?) Sure every telecom charges fees for number portability that they don't deliver, but we like the idea of number portability ! ( Like the idea of faster than light travel ? Pay me $2 a month and I'll look into it, and you'll never get that either !) Sure Linksys is violating the GPL, but if we aren't nice little victims some board members might thing bad things about the GPL, and that would be awful ! Sure DirectTV is asserting unconstitutional and facist like claims against our ability to manipulate the EM waves they send through our houses and bodies, but . . . but . . . it just feels rebelious to object !

    I hope all you fuckers get taken for at least $4,000 to $8,000 in legal fees. I hope the Federal Marshalls come and take your computers, and charge you a nice fat handling fee to get them back on top of whatever SCO manages to get you spinelessly settle for, and I hope the BSA and RIAA jump in there and make you pay for every copy of windows and every mp3. (Let's see the "but I have nothing to hide, so I'm against the 4th Amendment" posts then!) Ideally, the financial hardship will force you to drop out of the university for a semester or two, see the real world, get fucked over and laid off at a couple of different jobs, and maybe grow out of your junior Republican industrial peasant mentality.

  55. Re:SCO hasn't engaged in litigation, SCO has decla by rifter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Apache is not GPL, quite a bit of Free software is under BSD/MIT style licenses actually, but SCO has certainly terminated their own rights to use the stuff that is GPL because of that clause. It's just a matter of who has the money and time to C&D them and be ready to back it up with litigation."

    Ehm, IANAL, but I don't think so. The GPL covers distribution, not use. You don't have to agree with the GPL to use software it covers, that's only necessary when you want to distribute that software or derrived works.

    Firstly, you are right in that the GPL explicitly covers only distribution and says essentially that usage licenses are unneccessary for any software. However, SCO is currently distributing GPL software because they distribute Linux. Not only that, they have been beefing up UnixWare by adding Free Software like Samba, Apache, et al to Unixware, to say nothing of their Linux Kernel Personality which uses Linux kernel code.

    They are distributing this code without giving their customers the rights they have under the GPL. Further, they are attempting to require Linux users to pay licensing fees, a practice which directly violates the GPL. All of this adds up to SCO not following the GPL when it comes to distribution, ergo they have no right to distribute any of the Free Software they are distributing.

    The copyright holders would be well within their rights to offically inform SCO that they cannot distribute Linux, Samba, et al if they insist on breaking the GPL and especially since they have declared it invalid, and if they persist they will be sued for copyright violation. It would also be poetic justice.

    Come to think about it, it woudl be just plain justice. SCO has wrongfully appropriated the IP of others and had the gall to try and turn the whole situation on its head. The company now known as SCO has created 0 IP no matter what they say they own. Now I am willing to concede they own some IP which they have purchased (though what exactly they bought is something they and the people from whom they purchased the IP do not agree on), but the fact of the matter is they are claiming to own all kinds of things, including AIX and Linux which they did not create. They are trying to make themselves the sole licensee for Linux and therefore own Linux.

    Their argument that Linux users just do not want to pay for software just does not hold water. After all the people who paid RedHat $2500/pop for Advanced Server or whatever would beg to differ. Besides that they make no sense. If Linus and friends create something and give it away for free, how is that something SCO has anything to do with at all? Why is it that we should pay SCO because "Linux is just too good to be free?" They did not create Linux; it is not for them to be charging jack shit.

  56. How about... by AlXtreme · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We just ignore anything SCO says or does> They've had enough /.-promotion of their fight against Linux, and quite frankly, each new bit of news is being blown up like they really have a clue what they are doing. Lets just ignore SCO and their demented actions, let IBM and Redhat fight it out, and in the mean time actually have some serious news we actually care a bit about...

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  57. Re:Thats Better... by sjgman9 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Since when did SCO take the RIAA approach of suing customers?

    No sane IT person will buy a license. SCO must show their code.

    Most likely, SCO's code is prior art, not theirs to claim, or they just dont have anything.

    I see the SEC maybe investigating a pump n dump scheme by SCO execs, as well as the better business bureau investigating complains by millions of pissed off linux users.

    Even then, SCO has no case because I can still download source RPMs from SCO's ftp servers. They're distributing, under the GPL, the very code they're claiming was illegally inserted. They have no case under the GPL. I hope they just crawl up and die.

    IBM must be glad that it has the entire linux community doing research work for Big Blue's legal team. Obviously, IBM has contracts and whatnot, but this has gotta be helping. Go IBM! You guys rock helping out linux and helping out Apple with the G5 (970)

  58. But hard to get Linux experts to sign the NDA. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Since the issues of this case is obvously not her field of expertise, it must be of some concerns that she is willing to issue conclusive and sweeping statements using only one source of information, namely the SCO insiders.

    Not to mention that, as a Windows specialist, she has a vested interest in keeping its market share large enough that it remains newsworthy, so she doesn't have to retrain to stay in business. B-)

    But by the same token signing the NDA could end the carreer of a Linux analyst. So it will be hard to get any to sign up just to view the internals of SCO's FUD.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  59. Let them sue Los Alamos by BoneFlower · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And let the Bush administration defend what they love more than business, our aresenal of massive destruction.

  60. Re:And that is, of course, not true. by canajin56 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A better example would be, everybody buys a popular DVD, and SCO says "There is a scene in that movie stolen from our IP! But we can't tell you what it is, or it would invalidate our trade secrets! So everybody who owns it, please pay us $125 per DVD player in your household, or else we will sue you!"

    --
    ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI