SCO Fined in Munich For Linux Claims
nordi writes "heise.de reports (in German) that SCO Germany has to pay a fine of 10,000 Euros (~10,800 US$) because they kept on saying that Linux contains stolen intellectual property of SCO. In May a German court had decided that SCO Germany must not continue making those claims." Yes, it's auf Deutsch, so break out babelfish.
At the end of the day, companies like Microsoft and SCO won't be stopped by the US. The best we can do is waste a couple hundred million in tax dollars on a useless court case that is headed by a puppet judge. We can only hope that the EU will save us, a body that acts swiftly against vil business tactics, and usually solidly (just look at how they dealt with Nintendo).
SCO Germany must pay 10,000 euro order money. Basis for the decision of the regional court Munich I is a provisional order of the enterprise Tarent and the LinuxTags against SCO. thereafter may not the enterprise not maintain, of Linux contains illegitimately acquired mental property of SCO. against it is to SCO on its homepage to have offended, why Tarent had requested an order procedure in June
The court accuses negligent behavior "according to a report of the Tarent GmbH SCO" with the enterprise of its firm homepage . There the statement is to have read be also after the provisional order that "final users, who use the software Linux for protection injuries of the mental property can be made liable by SCO".
Tarent lawyer Till hunter sees itself confirmed in the decision of the court that the statements of SCO as "substantial business-damaging expressions" are to be regarded, which concern a "extremely sensitive range". With unproven statements expense the expense third a business with the fear one make. With SCO Germany to time anybody for a statement cannot be attained; to request on a procedure stress Hans Bavarian, Managing director of SCO Germany, already beginning June opposite c't: "our intention was to hold back us conformal." The offence against the provisional order did not happen deliberately. ( anw
Or link to Babelfish and save us the trouble.
It's not the amount of the fine that's important. (Who gets the money anyway.) It's the 'official' trashing of SCO's accusations which is important. It will restore confidence in business considering Linux systems.
Surely in vain the net is spread in the sight of any bird -- Proverbs 1:17
Now, why would SCO germany pay, if they have SUCH a solid case??
Side Note: Babelfish is aptly named, the translations are usually Babble
Sehr geehrter Toilettenbenutzer!
Let's all sit back and watch their stocks go up as a result.
Once SCO has been sued, the amount does not matter. If the plaintiffs (I must RTFA) can enjoin SCO to stop their claims, and get the courts to set damages, each time SCO repeats their offense, they'll pay again.
Besides, I strongly suspect that a conviction in a German court will weigh heavily against SCO in other courts should this become a popular tactic.
Even a 1 EUR award would be a significant blow against SCO's position.
Ceci n'est pas une signature
;)
I'm sure that SCO will pay the 10k euro without blinking, but they are unlikely the change their bahavior. Then what? In the US the continuation of claims after paying the fine would eventually lead to contempt of court charges. Would this not be the case in Germany as well?
:)
Darl in a German prison. That thought makes me smile
What? A court deciding that SCO can't make unsubstantiated claims that damage other companies? That's socialism! It's not for the government to pick winners and losers. Let SCO say anything it wants to and let the marketplace decide whether or not to believe them.
bit like one of those "dead lawyer" jokes...
Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
I wonder what sort of spin the SCO Information Minister is going to put on this one... I bet it's all IBM's fault again!
http://WeLoveTheSCOInformationMinister.org
---
Any man who can drive safely while kissing a pretty girl is simply not giving the kiss the attention it deserves. -- AE
If it is because what they are saying isn't true, based on what "proof"?
Don't get me wrong, I don't believe them either, but it isn't that simple in the courts.
The question now is can SCO germany be fined for the slander by SCO in the US. After all they are making these comments about an international operating system and comments in the states do effect lionux in the EU.
Come to think of it could every distro with a presence in Germany sue too.
I wonder though where this fine will go? :)
would be nice if a larger amount found it's way to the open source community
Hopefully this will result in companys thinking before buying licences from SCO's FUD-factory..
- I choked on the red pill and now I'm stuck in limbo
For whatever reason, it looks like Courts of Law in other countries seem to operate with more sanity than American courts do. I've wondered if this is in response to a feeling of a lack of due process when the U.S. was founded, or if we just have gotten to where anyone feels that they're entitled to sue "just because".
Of course, SCO/Caldera being an American company trying to enforce claims in a foreign country that doesn't (yet) have software patents might be partially why.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
This German court has ordered the German division of SCO to stop making these claims. But what if the North American parent company continues making the claims? Is SCO Germany still liable?
thereafter may not the enterprise not maintain, of Linux contains illegitimately acquired mental property of SCO
I nominate the phrase "illegitimately acquired mental property" as the catchy phrase of the month for September.
Mental Property? That's a new one. :-)
zWhat would an EWOULDBLOCK block, if an EWOULDBLOCK could block would? -- me
10k USD is loose change in the states, though i've the understanding it's valued quite a bit more in the hands of a Germand operation. Additionally, this sets the tone for another official confrontation (well you lost to SCO Germany, so it looks like all that publicity really *sarcasm* validates your claims, hosers. pay up).
good news for me, "yay!"
=o]
SIGERR: laziness exceeds quota
English:2 1
. html
http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=113
German:
http://www.pro-linux.de/news/2003/5909
Please remember, this is not about the SCO case at all, but about false advertising. SCO was saying "linux users have to pay" even though this is an untested legal theory - it is for these misleading statements they now have to pay. If they later are proven to be right, they still made allegations out to be proven fact, which is a no-no in advertising, as far as Germany is concerned.
Bear in mind the order restraining them from making such claims is only a prelimenary injunction. That means all is still to play for, though the likelihood of a judgement against SCO Deutschland is very high indeed.
SCO employee? Check out the bounty
This is becoming more and more clear..
Europe are prepared to take a stand, and the US just sit back and let people / corporations make all the claims and have all the power they want.
This seems to be evident in the Microsoft Antitrust stuff, the Software Patents Issue and now the SCO case.
Glad I live in europe.
it goes like this (only applicable in Countries with preliminary injunctions against SCO regarding their Linux statements):
...
1. call the SCO HQ.
2. ask them about ther 'Linux end user license'.
3. The SCO person will answer "we can't tell you about this because a German court does not allow this."
4. pretend to be surprised.
5. hang up.
6. call again.
7. tell them that you actually read the preliminary injunction and it does not tell anything about the SCO-Linux-License.
8. ask again to send information about this SCO-Linux-License to you
9. listen to their suffering.
and so on.
I did it 4 times and the last time, they forwarded me to the CEO of SCO Germany. It's funny indeed.
My dictionary says that "schadenfreude" is also an english word.
The Inquirer:
Stephen
"Don't write down to your readers, the only people less intelligent than you can't read" - Sign on Newspaper Office Wall
What's it going to take to get a similar ruling here in the US??
Making these insane claims like they do is damaging Linux and the reputation of a lot of good people.
SCO needs to put up or shut up.
I hope to see a slew of counter suits filed against SCO and I hope a judge will order SCO to STFU until this is resolved. Anyone that loses money over this should personally sue SCO..
To make a short article shorter (and enlighten the German-impaired):
SCO Germany got fined 10,000 EUR because they transgressed against an injunction ordering them to remove from their web page any allegation that Linux contained ill-gotten IP of SCO's. Apparently they overlooked something when cleaning up their pages.
However, there was no judgment on whether or not these allegations are correct, so put the champagne back in the fridge, guys.
It has to be added that the sum that the court had deciced to charge against violation of the court decision was set to 250.000 Euros. The reason that it is only 10.000 Euros is that SCO "forgot" to remove all statements from their HTTPS server as well, thus not complying to the court decision. As this was only seen as a minor offense against the court decision, the sum was reduced.
To whom will those 10,000 euros be given?
Artaxerxes
Most people are scoupled, but these people are scoupless? Oh the huganimarity! I have great timrishinoon against the falagooaly that this case obhvioutely can musthard in case!
It must stop!
But on the other hand, Germany embraces its own collection of stupid ideas, like the cradle-to-grave welfare state and the belief that Saddam wasn't worth getting rid of.
No, the matter was about HOW to get rid off.
It's a small price to pay to procect your patents, assuming the case is true.
That's great for a start. Atleast somebody is concerned now. But does this mean that the FUD will stop now atleast for a few days? Maybe not. I wouldn't be surprised if Darl comes out with something new tommorow once he sees that the stocks are below $12 again. I hope the SEC will do something to shut them up as well. BTW, watch out for more internal trading as well soon. What stops the FBI from raiding them? Or is MS pulling some strings to stop that from happenning? Just a wild guess anyway.
are you like this by nature or were you dropped on your head when you were little??
Oh wait. This isn't the Spanish soccer station.
It seems like "Rufmord" ("character assassination" was the only translation i could find) isn't a crime in the US.
Those comments askin' why german courts could do such things (with such speed) make me believe that...
SCO Germany has to pay a 10000 Euro fine. This decision by the Landgericht Munchen I is based on a preliminary injunction against SCO, granted to the Tarent company and LinuxTag. According to it, SCO may not claim that Linux contains illegally obtained intellectual property from SCO. SCO has allegedly violated this on its homepage, therefore in June Tarent asked for a trial.
According to a Tarent GmbH statement, the court accuses SCO of "negligence" in running its company's homepage, which, even after the preliminary injunction allegedly read: "End users who use the Software Linux may be held liable for violations of SCO's intellectual property."
Tarent attorney Till Jaeger sees the court's decision as confirming that SCO's allegations are "massively business-damaging statements" concerning an "extremely sensitive issue." Unproven claims were used to do fear-induced business on the expense of others. SCO Germany is currently not available for comment. In early June, asked about the trial, SCO Germany CEO Hans Bayer emphasised: "Our intention was to comply." and that the violation of the preliminary incunction had not been intentional.
Actually the point that the Scientologists really don't like is that they are allowed operate in Germany to practice their religion, only as far as the German authorities are concerned, they are treated as a business. They don't like that.
See my journal, I write things there
A search of qwestdex.com shows:
Mcbride Darl C
1799 E Vintage Oak Ln
Holladay UT 84121
(801) 424-2006
enjoy.
I apparently dont have the Karma-O-Matic, since this keeps getting modded down as troll and offtopic. I just thought it would be something funny for the slashdot crowd. Oh well.
StickMan
www.rageagainst.net
That's the price we must pay for living in a state with a constitutional guarantee of freedom of speech, instead of a totalitarian dictatorship.
From the Article
I was initially quite skeptical about these claims, but after talking with several of the principals in the case, I'm not so sure anymore. The history of SCO and Unix is complex.
That's when the copyright controversy emerged. Chris Sontag, a VP at SCO, recently visited PC Magazine's offices with a stack of documents he claims proves SCO's case. Some of these documents are compelling. Sontag explained that SCO owns the copyright to Unix System V. He said that through kernel 2.2, Linux was progressing fine under the GPL. But in the transition to kernel 2.4, code was added that violates SCO's copyrights.
Some of the evidence Sontag showed us is straightforward: Sections of the Linux kernel code relating to the journaling file system and multiprocessor support are identical to the Unix System V code. He offered to show us specific sections of the Unix code, but only under a nondisclosure agreement, which we refused. He said this code was not added to Linux by IBM but by someone else, and that it's a violation of SCO's copyright. I'm not a lawyer, but his argument seems convincing.
PC magazine may not be as relevant as it was a few years ago, but it is still where a lot of people get most of their computer news. I was pretty shocked to read this crap as the first story. I would encourage people to leave some feedback for Mr. Miller.
... as the only opinion (!).
And Nasdaq doesn't even have one broker prepared to issue a recommendation.
The court of financial advice appears to have a verdict here.
Can't SCO easily get around this by issuing press releases in German in some other countries? Wouldn't it really be necessary to get injunctions in all 170 different countries to really make the FUD machine stop? In the future, will allowing slander and FUD become a big part of small island econmies like Nevis/St Kitts?
"Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney
.. now this? Almost makes me want to move to Germany.
Although I think that SCO's claims are totally without foundation, I wonder if, in the end, there is just a little bit to this and SCO it blowing it out of porportion. The implication I read in the article was that it wasn't lie as in fabrication, but lie as in there wasn't enough evidence to support such a strong claim.
No, but judges may treat a "guilty" verdict in another member state as contributory information.
It depends rather on the basis for the charge: if it comes under some quirk of German national law, the chances it will affect a ruling elsewhere are slim. But if it comes under a law enacted on the basis of an EU convention, the chances may be good. Disclaimer: IANAL.
Ceci n'est pas une signature
HAHAH! Now that is funny!!! Mod it up gawdammit!!
SCO has been fined for saying things without proof/ Where SCO to say the same things and substantiating their claim, it would be ok for them to say so.
A hell of a difference.
"But on the other hand, Germany embraces its own collection of stupid ideas, like the cradle-to-grave welfare state"
A cradle-to-grave welfare state is a beautiful thing. You're young, healthy and I presume able to have a decent insurance (or you haven't had the pleasure to fall through one of their loopholes yet), but you'll change your tone once you're no longer deemed "productive"...
I currently live in a country with US alike healthcare system, trying to undo some of the 1980's US foreign policy (El Salvador, look it up and weep) and we can't even get our housekeeper and her husband insured. They don't count, the (company-paid) doctors laugh at us. The most we've been able to do is insure her against accidents.
I'll be very glad to move back to Europe next year. Paying my taxes in full, knowing that I'll get it back somehow in education for my daughter, healthcare for my family, a gun-free environment and protection against poverty if we fall from grace.
I just can't believe most Americans think welfare is "liberal"... You just wait and see what happens when something unforseen happens. You'll wish your country (that is presumably you and others who vote) cared a bit more for people in general instead of success stories.
I think, therefore I am...I think.
SCO reminds me of my brother and I fighting over something. Please mod me down, I'm a redundant, trolling, flamebait-loving dogmatist and I was a pro-DMCA lobbyist. They are claiming the whitespace. As soon as my crack legal team locates him, he will be sorry! I'd like my money back please.
This Comment was generated with the Comment-O-Matic for SCO Stories.
SCO Germany has to pay a 10'000-Euro fine. The basis for this decision of the court of the district of Munich is a preliminary injunction of the company Tarent and Linuxtag against SCO, according to which the company [SCO] may not state that Linux contains illegally aqcuired intellectual property of SCO. SCO is supposed to have violated this ruling on its homepage, and Tarent had requested a ruling against this in June.
According to a communication of Tarent Ltd. the court accuses SCO of "negligent actions" regarding its corporate homepate. It's supposed to have contained - even after the preliminary injuction - the claim that "endusers who use the software linux can be held responsible for violating intellectual property of SCO".
Tarent's lawyer Till Jaeger is of the opinion that the courts decision confirms that the behaviour of SCO is "massively economically damaging" which concern a "very sensible area". Business with fear on the back of third parties is made with unproven statements, continues Jaeger. Nobody could be reached for comment at SCO Germany; when a ruling had been requested at the beginning of June, Hans Bayer, CEO of SCO Germany, said: "It was our intention to conform to the preliminary injunction". The violation of the preliminary injunction had not been intentional.
Unfortunately, wrong country. You might get the PR angle in the US, but not the legal.
-Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat
Want to destroy SCO? Contribute to a Death of a thousand cuts by filing suit in small claims court. Only a 150,000 such suits should tap SCOX's market cap.
Logic is not Divine.
yah yah you like dat... you have been naughty SCO!!!
Translation by hand (mostly):
:P), so I hope there are not too many stupid mistakes in my translation.
SCO Germany has to pay a EUR 10,000 fine. This decision of the regional court of Munich I is based on [violation of] a provisional order of the enterprise Tarent and the LinuxTag against SCO. The order states SCO should cease making claims that Linux is violating SCO's Intellectual Property. It seems that SCO continued making such claims on their homepage, and therefore, in june Tarent asked the judge to impose a fine on them.
The court accused SCO of ignoring this order, because according to a report of Tarent, their homepage still contained statements such as "Linux end users can be held liable for infringement upon SCO's IP" - even after the provisional order was in effect.
Tarent's lawyer Till Jaeger is glad that the court has confirmed that SCO's expressions can be seen as "very damaging" to his company, especially because these claims have to do with very sensitive aspects of Linux development.
"These totally unproven claims cost other companies a lot of money, because people tend to get afraid (FUD)."
SCO can not be reached to comment on this matter.
In june, Managing Director Hans Bayer of SCO Germany said in an interview by C't [a well known and respected IT magazine in Germany and the Netherlands] that "his company intended to do exactly as the order stated. The violation was a mistake, it did not happen deliberately".
Disclaimer: Neither English nor German is my native tongue (and it shows
Every expression is true, for a given value of 'true'
Although your post appears to be some kind of flamebait, you are dealing with valid points.
If Mr. Bremer (CEO of SCO GmbH in Germany) walks to the street and says "I personally believe that Linux is inviting the whole world to steal our code", it's okay.
The preliminary injunction only applies to the doings of SCO and its employees in business.
The short version (which omits many important points) is:
"The world sucks" --> nothing happens.
"SCO sucks" --> if you are a competitor of SCO, SCO might be able to request a preliminary injunction against this statement.
"You suck" --> under normal circumstances, "you" might be able to request a criminal investigation for insulting. Of course, there are situations where "you suck" might be justified.
Could you please specify why you think that there is a lack of freedom of speech in Germany in this case?
(personally, I agree to this article 130 of the German criminal law which makes it illegal to deny the murder of millions of people under the 3rd Reich)
If SCO really has that quantity of evidence against Linux, they should be able to let the community know about just one truly illegally incorporated item, while saving the rest for the courtroom. Since they refuse to reveal just one, we might as well assume they actually have none, and will consequently deserve much worse than dinky fines.
Yep, those Europeans really suffer. Having their education, healthcare and safety. Those poor repressed sods. And instead of a constitution, they only have a constitution. Worst, their freedom of speech is laughable, they're not even allowed to lie!
"Prejudice is wrong; you should hate everyone the same."
Oh, come on.
This is the most stupid I heard since the SCO claim.
Legitimate claims would be devastating.
Imagine SCO having to show up at court in a thousand different places at a thousand different times. Imagine the billable hours, travel expenses. Imagine the default judgements for not showing up. Imagine the leins on SCO property for not paying. Imagine SCO cedit rating going through the floor.
See small claims FAQ.
Logic is not Divine.
Don't forget, the ruling actually states that it's 10000 euros or 10 days in a German jail for the CEO.
Don't drop the soap, Darl!
this is just a uneventful story about a fine for a court procedure violation and the slashdot summary for this article is misleading. Huh, havent seen that one before.
Oh and its all Ashcroft's fault.
SCO must pay order money
.
SCO Germany must pay 10,000 euro order money. Basis for the decision of the regional court Munich I is a provisional order of the enterprise Tarent and the LinuxTags against SCO. thereafter may not the enterprise not maintain, of Linux contains illegitimately acquired mental property of SCO. against it is to SCO on its homepage to have offended, why Tarent had requested an order procedure in June
The court accuses negligent behavior "according to a report of the Tarent GmbH SCO" with the enterprise of its firm homepage . There the statement is to have read be also after the provisional order that "final users, who use the software Linux for protection injuries of the mental property can be made liable by SCO".
Tarent lawyer Till hunter sees itself confirmed in the decision of the court that the statements of SCO as "substantial business-damaging expressions" are to be regarded, which concern a "extremely sensitive range". With unproven statements at expense third a business with the fear one make. With SCO Germany to time anybody for a statement cannot be attained; _ to request on a procedure stress Hans Bavarian, Managing director of SCO Germany, already beginning June opposite c't: "our intention was to hold back us conformal." The offence against the provisional order did not happen deliberately.
"Ha ha!"
It's only $10,000, but it is a start. I guess this means the Heise/Boies/McBride/Sontag/Stowell show is on hold, eh? Either that or the poor German SCO Mgr. is off to jail.
I can imagine this in Utah:
McB: What is barratry?
Sontaggie: I dunno, I only do what I am told.
McB: (muttering below breath) Stupid, yes-man, marketroid (now shouting...) Lawyer, get out there and put a spin on this - now!
H: Well, if we do anything, then they may rise the fines or put someone in jail in Germany...
McB: So? I am in Utah! I want to sue every German now! Put out a press release! We declare Germany in violation of our Intellectual property, and they hate Mormons too!
H: I don't know how our German employees will...
McB: Somebody better get this written and in the German papers by this afternoon too.
H: But..
McB: But what? I am in Utah dammit. Stupid German Courts can't touch me. Bill G. hisself is backing my play, so shut up and do as I tell ya.
The above parody is provided via the Not Ready For Evidenciary Players. We enjoy bringing you this daily laugh at the lives of some really screwed up people.
All Ad hominem replies happily ignored as the sender shall be deemed to lack the faculties to comprehend the equation.
But it does make me wonder if perhaps the Babelfish in HHGTTG didn't actually work that well. Thanks to the fish, no one ever bothered to learn anyone else's languages, but how do they know it's an accurate translation? Maybe the fish doesn't do any better than our poor software-based fish, but the bad grammar was fixed by the character's brains/the editor. At least it's amusing to think of all the aliens communicating in babelfish-like translations.
:)
No, if you've read the book, you'd know that the fact the babelfish did in fact translate people's meaning and intent perfectly was why it led to larger wars and more violence than any other cause in history
Jay (=
google and babelfish translate some stuff wrong, but mine is far from perfect - due to my incompetence with judical english and the fact that it is really difficult to translate the complex german sentence structure into halfway-readable english.
(I tried nevertheless)
SCO Germany has to pay 10.000 EUR penalty fine.
This ruling of the district court Munich 1 is based on an interim injunction of the Tarent corporation and the "LinuxTag" organisation against SCO Germany.
Subsequently the company must not claim that linux would contain illegimate aquired intelectual property of SCO.
SCO ought to have infringed upon that on their homepage, wherefore Tarent had applyed for a "order law-suit???" in June.
According to a statement of the Tarent GmbH the court accuses SCO of "negligent behaviour" when operating their company-homepage.
There ought to have been readable the "End-users, who use the linux software could be hold liable for violations of intellectual property of SCO"-claim, even after the interim injunction against that.
Tarent-attorney Till Jaeger sees himself confirmed with this court decision,
that the claims of SCO are to be seen as "massive ???business-hurting??? expressions", which affect an "extremely sensible domain".
???With un-proven claims there would be made business at the expense of peoples fear.???
Nobody is reachable for a statement at SCO Germany right now.
Hans Bayer, CEO of SCO germany emphasized against c't (a computer magazine of heise.de) about the apply for an "order law-suit???" in early June:
"Our intention was, to act conform." and the approach against the interim injunction would not have been intentional. (anw/c't) (translation - Corvus)
where? you talking sarcastically about europe or usa?
-
NewsForge has released their top 10 things to do with your SCO Linux Invoice.
Mm, so right ideed. Everything is not a success story! Actually; most people does not experience the "success" we hear so much about.
A good welfaresystem, where everyone is guaranteed a basic way of life, is one of the basics in a modern "futuristic" star-trek-like world.
"You're young, healthy and I presume able to have a decent insurance (or you haven't had the pleasure to fall through one of their loopholes yet), but you'll change your tone once you're no longer deemed "productive"..."
By the time we're that old, the Boomers will have bankrupted the nation to pay for their pensions and "free" healthcare by stealing money from our pockets. My generation will suffer the most from the evils of the welfare state, because we'll be forced to pay for welfare for the old farts, but by the time we get to their age it will be dead and gone. So excuse me if I want to see the whole thing shut down before I have to pay 80+% tax rates.
a company without an 'S' in their name starts running amok? where are we going to put that $ sign? my god!! we won't be able to mock them appropriately
I may be wrong, but from the translation it seems to me that SCO is being fined for breaching an injunction. If that is the case then it has no bearing on their guilt or innocence (as much as we might like it to...)
There are a lot of expressions and words in American English that are actually more archaic than those in English English -- that is, they were used in Britain at some point, but have since died out, but continue in the US (and sometimes Canada). Especially terms from the South, such as a "poke" for a "bag." Not that I've ever heard anyone say "poke" in northeastern Tennessee, but you get the drift.
Dude, I think I can see my house from here.
Probably Darl is just going to pretend this didn't happen, not say a word about it, and hope that the mindless frenzy of stockbuyers don't even notice it happened because it was a news article in german instead of a press release in english.
And the stockbuyers probably *won't* notice. In fact, SCO's stock price for today is up *already*. Sigh..
Irritable, left-wing and possibly humorous bumper stickers and t-shirts
$10,800 - That's 16 license fees, no sweat.
If you do what you always did, you get what you always got.
From the Google Translation, it sounds to me like the claims that they are being fined for appear on their web site. It also appears that SCO is claiming that this was an oversight that will presumably be corrected.
The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
Are you still guaranteed a seperation between Church and State, or has that one little niggling problem been taken care of by the screaming banshees in Alabama and Washington?
Because it seems to jive with other evidence I've found that Germany has some very strict "thruth in advertising" laws. I've never had anyone confirm it (don't know any Germans) but it strongly seems to be the case.
I first noticed it with pro audio equipment. When a company quotes SNR stats at you about their pro sound card, it is almost always marketing BS. They quote you the SNR of the D/A or A/D converters themselves, not the effective SNR with all the supporting circutry taken into account. This is, of course, a more impressive number since the supporting circutry isn't perfect and degrades sound quality. This is accepted practise in the US, and is the same as chip companies quoting theortical Gflop numbers at you that you'll never see off of paper. Well, this isn't the case with any German card I've ever used. All the numbers are the no-bullshit, check-it-yourself, actul performance of the actual unit.
I suspect that's where this kind of injunction came from. LinuxTag said "They are lying about us in their ads (or offical company releases, same thing)" and the court said "Ok, SCO, you need to shut up until we have a hearing to determine the truth of your claims". SCO violated that order and is now in trouble for it.
Here it seems to more work that they can go around making claims UNTIL they are shown to be false, then they have to shut up.
Hope I did better than the fish ...
SCO must pay a monetary fine
SCO Germany has to pay a fine of 10'000 Euro. The basis for this ruling of the district court Munich I is an injunction (trans: a rather loose translation of "einstweilige Verfgung", a German legal term, and IANAL) of both the Tarent company and the LinuxTag exposition. According to this injunction, SCO may not allege that Linux contains illegally acquired intellectual property of SCO. SCO apparently violated this injuction on their home page, and for this reason, Tarent filed for legal court proceedings.
According to a press release of Tarent GmbH, the court blamed SCO to have behaved negligently in the operation of their company home page. Even after the injunction, the accusation that "end users who use the software Linux, can be held accountable for violations of intellectual rights held by SCO" could be read on the home page.
Till Jaeger, the lawyer representing Tarent, sees the court ruling as a confirmation that SCO's claims have to be considered as "massively damaging to business", and that they concern a "very sensitive area". At the expense of other parties, Unproven allegations are used to make money out of fear. Nobody at SCO Germany was available for comment at present; regarding the filing of legal court proceedings, Hans Bayer, CEO of SCO Germany, told c't already in the beginning of June: "Our intention was to comply with the ruling." He claimed that the violation against the injunction had not been deliberate. (anw/c't)
There are actually 1010 items listed.
Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
Just saw that there are two manual translations (excellent ones, nonetheless) have already been posted. Well, whatever, now you have a little variety ;-)
The best we can do is waste a couple hundred million in tax dollars on a useless court case that is headed by a puppet judge.
A puppet judge? Whose puppet? I suppose you also have proof for that sort of allegation?
Oh, wait, I forgot. This is Slashdot.
The fish said it! Much more suiting than IP really.
"Glad I have a big daddy watching my back."
Don't forget that daddy can sometimes spank you as well...
Typical European.
I would not like to see anyone in an American prison (at least the Texan variety), where basic human rights are systematically neglected. Humiliation, sexual harassment, no private space, no learning, no decent work, extreme overcrowding. How could anyone come out of such a place as a decent reformed member of society?
Being locked away for several months/years is hard enough without being treated like garbage.
Moritz
"but you'll change your tone once you're no longer deemed "productive"...
Well, I will take my chances in US - at least they don't bury their old people people by the thousands (14 000 actually) whenever temperature goes up.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/3190585.stm
I have been made aware that the european parliament is going to vote on legislation regarding software patents. Here is an excellent FAQ. I understand the vote has been delayed until Sept. 22. My question is will this ruling have any effect on the vote, one way or another? Though I am a shameless Windows user, I have been known to boot into knoppix now and then, and they have stopped development due to this pending legislation. I'd like to know people's thoughts on this and how it effects the future of linux development.
-D
Not died out; in Scotland it is common (though admittedly decreasingly common) to purchase a "poke of chips" which is a "portion of fries".
Of course our "chips" are not very similar to "Freedom Fries". They are much chunkier, less crisp, always made of chipped potatoes rather than potato puree and covered in salt and sauce (which is a thin mixture of brown sauce and vinegar).
Yours Sincerely, Michael.
has some very strict "thruth in advertising" laws.
Yes, we have. That is why commercials are so boring in germany. But in this case (SCO vs. "Linux reputation") it is completely different. It's not false advertising, it is an offensive attempt to damage a reputation which is considered a much more serious crime in germany than just false advertising.
If I lose my job, I'll do whatever low-pay degrading job I have to do to get the basics of life. Janitor, fry cook, garbage collector, jizzmopper...you name it, I'd probably do it if I couldn't find anything else. I'd move to the cheapest apartment I could find. I'd eat ramen and other college classics.
If I'm disabled in some way, I'll do my damndest to find a job I can still do, and then see above. If I'm disabled in such a way that there is absolutely no fucking way I can possibly have any other job than "doorstop", well, that's another reason why the US government should relinquish ownership of our bodies back to ourselves so we can call up a man like Jack Kevorkian. If I can't support myself without government help, I'm not so sure I want to be alive.
Remember when Monica Seles got stabbed in the back in Germany by a tennis fan who liked Steffi Graf?
The attacker, Gunther Parche, was sentenced rather lightly by the German court. He never served one day in jail.
He succeeded in his goal which was to put Graf back at No. 1. He succeeded in closing the formerly open interaction between fan and player. This sort of incident has not happened again, but the point is he succeeded. So be happy the court at least fined SCO ten grand.
A postscript, Monica Seles has ever since refused to set foot on German soil.
Ich liebe es wenn eine US Nachrichtenseite auf einem deutschen Artikel verwiest..... Scheis auf die Deutschen..... Uebersetzt diesen Scheis ihr faulen Bastarde....
(hope you like the translation)
Poke is still used throughout Scotland as slang for "bag". Oh, and thats British English, not English English.....
"My parents were strict, but they never pitted me against livestock" - Doug Stanhope
Can no one get into the NDA SCO evidence session with a hidden camera and get this evidence onto Freenet? Surely they are still showing the evidence to major clients under NDA.
We can't afford to wait for a year and a half for this to come to court to defend ourselves; this is hurting the community dramatically, and we have the right to defend ourselves. If we can get the evidence out and vetted, by whatever means necessary, it will cause the entire affair to dissipate.
I can't imagine any non-governmental victim in the world having a richer capability of obtaining and anonymously posting this evidence than we do.
I like the translation - 'Mental Property'
Humour in the machine?
VLC Remote for iPhone and Android
Hey.. I'm all for spanking... if fact, I sometimes pay good money for it :P
the internal employees of company had no problem ascertaining that the "opinion" was false.
I don't see why the opinions of a company's internal employees (or even external employees) would matter. The employees are very likely NOT the company's target demographic, so their opinion really doesn't matter. If I'm a union factory worker in Arkansas building some expensive luxury widget for Asian export, then yeah, my tastes are probably going to be way different than those who the product is targeted at. Another example... If I'm an employee of a movie studio, and I'm old and Christian, and my studio has just produced the latest teen slasher movie with lots of cuss words, I'm probably going to hate it. I will probably tell you it sucks. I might say it's the worst movie of the summer. Is the studio's marketing lying when it says "Best Movie of the Summer!"? Or "A Better Movie than All The Other Movies Combined!"? Hell no. Caveat emptor. Do your own research and stop reading the opinions in advertisements.
If you agree to that then I have a home to sell you that happens to contain 0% house.
I already own a home with 0% house. My home is generally called "an apartment in a high rise", for your future reference. Thanks though.
So what does SCO's name really stand for? Could it be something like "Source Copyrighted by Others" by any chance?
HA!
It's good that slashdot has the power to make me smile. GO GERMANY!! I guess I've got my team for the next world cup match! I'll keep yelling for them to sco mo.
If you don't want to become some other man's girlfriend in a US prison you don't do the crime.
Well, it is a Liberal Democratic construct (see Great Society) but that's not the point. The problem with welfare in the U.S. is not conceptual, it is pratical: it is so laden with fraud and criminal abuse that those that need and deserve it rarely get it.
The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
10k Euro is still infinitely better than 0 (the usual price of linux).
Plus, it sets a precedent. Hopefully, the US courts aren't dumbf*cks like they usually are with regard to tech rulings but one can only hope.
Now I have to get back to my pitchforks and torches and paint the German flag on them.
I've got a friend who's family lives in West Virginia. I can't understand them. At all. but at least now I know what the hell a poke is!
"Champagne for my real friends - and real pain for my sham friends!" http://ericblade.postalboard.com/
Considering how much the European Commission (EC) has advocated open source software in their own common market, you'd think they'd be going after the European subsidiaries of SCO. The EC certainly is not afraid of Microsoft, Boeing or AOL, so why should they be afraid to go after the pipsqueaks that constitute SCO? Their [SCO's] business/legal behaviors have to run counter to some European trade law somewhere on the books.
"Right now, somewhere in this world, Scott Baio is plowing a woman he doesn't love," - Peter Griffin, *Family Guy*
SCO Germuny hes tu pey a 10'000-Iooru feene-a. Zee besees fur thees deceesiun ooff zee cuoort ooff zee deestrict ooff Mooneech is a preleeminery injooncshun ooff zee cumpuny Terent und Leenooxteg egeeenst SCO, eccurdeeng tu vheech zee cumpuny [SCO] mey nut stete-a thet Leenoox cunteeens illegelly eqcooured intellectooel pruperty ooff SCO. SCO is sooppused tu hefe-a feeuleted thees rooleeng oon its humepege-a, und Terent hed reqooested a rooleeng egeeenst thees in Joone-a.
Eccurdeeng tu a cummooneeceshun ooff Terent Ltd. zee cuoort eccooses SCO ooff "negleegent ecshuns" regerdeeng its curpurete-a humepete-a. It's sooppused tu hefe-a cunteeened - ifee effter zee preleeminery injoocshun - zee cleeem thet "indoosers vhu use-a zee sufftvere-a leenoox cun be-a held respunseeble-a fur feeuleting intellectooel pruperty ooff SCO".
Terent's levyer Teell Jeeger is ooff zee oopeeniun thet zee cuoorts deceesiun cunffurms thet zee behefeeuoor ooff SCO is "messeefely icunumeecelly demegeeng" vheech cuncern a "fery senseeble-a erea". Booseeness veet feer oon zee beck ooff thurd perteees is mede-a veet unprufee stetements, cunteenooes Jeeger. Nubudy cuoold be-a reeched fur cumment et SCO Germuny; vhee a rooleeng hed beee reqooested et zee begeenning ooff Joone-a, Huns Beyer, CEO ooff SCO Germuny, seeed: "It ves oooor intenshun tu cunffurm tu zee preleeminery injooncshun". Zee feeuleshun ooff zee preleeminery injooncshun hed nut beee intenshunel.
I am willing to bet they will obscure the code or present it in such a way so that if it does get leaked they will know who did it.
Besides, doing this will just make SCO belive even more that their insane and unproven claims are true. Also this would not make Linux programmers look so good, if they do find out and make the changes it will just make SCO's claims look more valid and Linux programmers being disrespectful of IP.
Microsoft buys lots of full-page ads. How many ads does a monopoly need? Coincidence or conspiracy? You decide.
Why hasn't anyone sued SCO for libel? If they keep sitting there shouting unproven statements that harm and defame linux developers and distro's, then can't someone file suit?
"SCO Germany has to pay a fine of 10,000 Euros (~10,800 US$) because they kept on saying that Linux contains stolen intellectual property of SCO."
Since when do people have to pay fines for "saying" something?
A short time ago I filed complaints with the FTC and with the WA state Attorney General's office regarding what I consider to be (at this time) false advertising, i.e., claims by SCO to provide some actual benefit in return for licensing fees. In my not-a-lawyer viewpoint, SCO can't make that claim in a solid way until the legal issues surrounding it are resolved; until then, they should at least be required to label the benefit as "speculative."
Haven't heard anything back on either complaint, nor do I necessarily expect to, although I know that SCO will receive a copy of it (at least from WA state if not the FTC). Not that they'll likely care unless the government agrees with my complaint and takes specific action accordingly...
No Laughing Allowed!
Actually it is funny how people just don't get it, as they are so used to C's twisted arithmetic rules.
Operations like = and / have well defined meanings in basic arithmetic that we all learn from elementary school onwards. This creates a very natural expectation of what are they supposed to work. C breaks this expectation gratuitously, in a bug inducing manner.
Say, suppose someone labels a lever "fire alarm, pull here" and then connect it to a gasoline dousing device. One day, a fire breaks out, and Joe Blow pulls the lever. As is is expected the fire gains in intensity. Would you say that Joe is a fool or would you rather blame the person who labeled the gasoline lever "fire alarm, pull here" instead of "gasoline activation device"?
When C chose to label integer division "/" instead of div or someother thing that cannot be confused with real division, they did exactly that.
This is not a precedent (or precedence for that matter). It is a fine for contempt of court. It is not damages to any company.
i'd quit.
Could you please specify why you think that there is a lack of freedom of speech in Germany in this case?
Well, it seems to me[1] that comments posted on this site about Microsoft (to pick an example at random) are much "worse" (in terms of being both rude and lacking in verifiable accuracy) than anything SCO has said, but the denizens of Slashdot seem to approach the two rather differently.
Denizens of Slashdot seem to support the freedom to say rude things about other people in the USA but to applaud the inability to say similar rude things about different other people in Germany. My comment was about the double standards of posters here, not really about German law.
[1] Yes that was me posting as AC earlier (from another machine, haven't a clue what my password is).
I always thought the Fish was named after Ralph Babel, a well known Amiga-Programmer which developed an early predecessor "Babelfish" for AmigaOS. The Fact that its also a synonym for "babble" or "Babel" is just coincidential.
Hopefully my memories don't betray me.
not whether linux infringes on their IP or not, but that they were forbidden to make further public claims about it until proof exists (to prevent FUD). Since the continued, in spite of this prohibition, that have very clearly violated this and must pay the fine.
Its a start, and thats what this whole mess needed. We can't ignore it, cause they won't shut up about it - so to SCO in the infamous words of Snoop Dogg:
"Right back up in your motherfuckin' ass"
I agree that this whole situation is nonsense, and shouldn't be going even close to as far as it has gone - but right now the industry has no choice left but to stand our ground and fight back.
SCO continues to talk nonsense everyday... when they are confronted directly they dodge it, ignore it, or hide behind their lawyers with it... Then they switch gears, and start talking more shit to provoke the same response.
I am glad to see someone catch there ass out there, no matter how small, and hope this will encourage other places to do the same.
Whatever happens to SCO at this point they brought on themselves.
You spelled ScheiB wrong, Kumpel. (Scheiss, if my ess-et doesn't come through properly... HTML is Scheiss indeed...)
Yes but if someone told you "Don't buy a pig in a poke" you'd know that it meant not to buy a pig, in a bag without examining it first. yet this is what $co wants us to do, buy a license to use some vague system V IP, without even showing us the supposedly miss-appropriated code. Even vaguer is that the license is to "hold harmless" so if alleged IP isn't even there we have no recourse for damages because they did in fact hold us harmless!
Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
I was told in Edinburgh this summer that deep-fat fried Mars bars are popular in rural communities about 20 km from the city; the Royal Society of Edinburgh is concerned about the health of citizens of Scotland. While I am sure everything served in Scotland is better than the equivalent item in the US, I would not try some things. (Now two months in Leipzig was great.)
just curious
"Of course, SCO/Caldera being an American company trying to enforce claims in a foreign country that doesn't (yet) have software patents might be partially why."
Do not take this personally, but I am sick and tired of people talking about patents in reference to SCO. They don't have any patents. I did a patent search on them and they have no patents on the things they make claims about. They are talking about copyright infringement pure and simple!!!
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"foreign policy (El Salvador, look it up and weep) and we can't even get our housekeeper and her husband insured."
That is rough man... rough. I don't know what I'd do if I couldn't get my household staff insured... the butler, the housekeepers, the chauffer... all without proper healthcare. What if they fall of the fourth floor balcony while cleaning windows or cut themselves cooking my meals. I feel your pain, but isn't it nice that we always have the option of relocating to another continent entirely?
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...welcome our new European overlords
Do not meddle in the affairs of geeks for they are subtle and quick to anger
Don't get me wrong, I think the SCO group are a bunch of foofoo heads that really need to get their asses whiped by the court system.
They've been hit by a court order in Munich which doesn't allow them to spread their FUD... again, I agree with this 100%
Question: does this only apply to servers in Germany or does this also apply to material located on US websites that those resident in Germany can access?
While on the SCO level I don't mind so much, but I can see some far reaching implications of this. Clearly the German goverment has some very diffrent attitudes are censorship then America as a past slashdot story has shown.
I'm sure it's possible to take reasonable measures that only specific countries can access specific web-pages which would solve the problem of possible legit forms of censorship aka court orders removing slander from infringing on other countries choice to make up their own minds.
There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
no. the court forbade them to repeat their claims without providing some evidence. my understanding was that if they had backed up their claims, they would not have been obliged to wait for a court decision on their claims
That's cute.
Yes, I'm priviliged.
I'm educated, well fed and groomed by the country I grew up in.
And if we decide to go to another continent to see what we can do, we even get paid for that. The shame, right?
Instead of making sarcastic remarks about that, you could consider it a career opportunity. There are plenty of needs here in the so called soft sector.
And when you're here, you could consider it a good idea to spread around what you have. In countries like this, it means - apart from doing what you do - getting a help and NOT pay her badly.
And insure her, her family and whoever needs it. If you think that's bourgeous you haven't traveled much.
Let me give you an insight: you get sick here, then you lose your job and if you're not like us (privileged white stuff) you eventually die.
What's shocking is the fact that it's considered normal, also by Americans. I don't know, you're the self proclaimed land of the free, I somehow expected more.
Disclaimer: there are some great initiatives and people from America here, doing real things, whether they have a housekeeper or not.
I think, therefore I am...I think.
OK, my response was way over the top. Your comments were funny, if intentional or not.
Part of it is feeling guilty about having in a country with so many have nots.
I think, therefore I am...I think.
Yeesh, that made me really hungry. You don't see it too much in other parts of the US, but up here in New England, you generally see jars of vinegar sauce on the tables specifically for fries (at least at non-chain restaurants anyway).
Show me on the doll where his noodly appendage touched you.
Guilty ?
Did you steal all that stuff you own ?
If not, what's there to feel guilty about ?
Aren't we all supposed to strive to be successful?
Do you really want to live like people do in places like Salvador ?
I didn't mean it to be an insult... I was just chuckling to myself thinking about healthcare for my housekeeper. If only that were my problem. I take care of old people for a living. I'll have a housekeeper when Darl McBride admits he's wrong.
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Yeah, I really went over the top with my rant there...
I think, therefore I am...I think.
Why is it that every "major setback" SCO suffers is followed by a rise is stock price? I do wish we could stop them from profitting from these major setbacks.
yes the letter normally is an s-z or ess-zet and yes you could write a double s instead, but fuck spelling.
And i am not your mate (Kumpel)
Thanks for not listening
In Germany SCO was gagged for spoiling the environment for Linux companies. SCO spoiled things by claiming that SCO IP is in Linux without providing proof.
Therefore as long as SCO does not provide proof it falls foul of the German court order and have to pay a penalty as they just did.
The IBM case has nothing to do with it. SCO can say in an American court what it likes. I am sure that the American judge wants proof from SCO in order to validate their point.
Thanks,
Gerard
SCO currently provides detailed lists of such business partners: http://www.sco.de/partner/index.html and http://wdb1.sco.com/sdir_web/owa/ptrLocator.search
It might be a good idea to copy or mirror the information available there - SCO can withdraw that information at any time...
Expect SCO's lawyers to react with threatening legal mails if you contact their business partners.
Important: Do not be rude! Some of these companies do not like what SCO is doing.
covered in salt and sauce.
;-)
A ya' east coaster you - I only eat my chips with salt and vinegar.
cheers
Java programmers do it with
NOT. Human rights mean just that. Every human has these rights. EVERY HUMAN. Not just your aunt, not just you not just Americans. Even criminals, even mass murderers have human rights.
This does not mean, that he can't and should not be punished. Of course criminals should be punished, as provided by law. This (in Germany) would mean a life in prison, but it would not mean nearly certain humiliation, abuse, rape or anything else.
If a child gets grounded, it is supposed to stay at home. Nothing else.
It should not be raped by older brothers, be humiliated or be forced to sleep on a square foot, as criminals in some US prisons are forced.
If a convicted criminal gets a prison term, his freedom is taken from him as punishment, not his Human Rights as such.
Moritz
Germany basically adopted our Constitution and are actively protecting its values and the rights of its citizens while the US government is actively taking our rights away bit by bit.
While we allow the music police and now have the Patriot Act (which is the greatest move toward Big Brother ever conceived), Microsoft is in charge of national computer security (the closest human counterpart to Big Brither and the anti-Christ), the RAVE act (making the sale of water an indication of drug use), the upcoming Extasy legislation (designed to make dancing, music and public gatherings illegal) and monopolies rule the country, our German counterparts have thrown out Microsoft, are protecting privacy and adopting open source.
Why is it that Germany acts more and more like it is the United States every day, while the United States acts more and more like Nazi Germany?
Man, loosen up. You are not arguing conclusively. If someone steals money, they have to give it back. But they can (minus damages and fines) keep their own money.
..."
But human rights are not like money. They are inalienable. See the preamble of the UN charta of human rights: "... recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world
Or if you are one of those isolationists, who don't trust the United Nations of this planet, look in the fundamental declaration of independence: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."
Unalienable rights, mister! That your aunt was killed did not take the human rights of the criminal away.
The US constitution also forbids unusual and cruel punishment, which rape and other things would be.
Moritz
Only power, means that you do not believe in rights, law and justice. Quite amazing then, that you complain about the killing of your aunt. Did she not have a right to live?
If she could not defend herself, or was not defended by others and if the other person, you want to see tortured, had the power to kill her, then in your twisted and in my opinion not very well thought through world view, everything worked out perfectly.
The criminal probably - like you! - said fuck the rights of others. Well, if that is the logical consequence of your - power overrules justice and human rights world view.
I do not subscribe to it. I think a moral person should respect the rights of others wherever at all possible.
Moritz
The Regional Court of Munich stiffed SCO GmbH Germany for 10 thousand big ones, necaise SCO refused to STFU as they were told to yonks ago.
Tarent lawyer Till Hunter seemed quite proud of the outcome, especially since SCO's pissing and moaning about Linux users being a bunch of Intellectual Property scavengers was putting people off. The court went easy on them though, since the SCO brass claimed that they really had been trying to do the right thing (really!).
At the time that this story was being scratched out, noone from SCO was willing to stick their heads out and make a noise. They're probably all crying into the holes where their paychecks are supposed to be.
Ripper, mate!