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SCO Run-Time Licenses: Get 'em While They're Hot!

ddtstudio writes "Well, if you've been holding off your payments to SCO for your Linux usage, eWeek reports that you need wait no longer. SCO has now made available for your IP pleasure their run-time licenses -- that is, if you can get one. Seems there are some problems getting even sales people at SCO to answer the phone. Is this any way to run a business?"

18 of 587 comments (clear)

  1. Wow... by Tyrdium · · Score: 5, Insightful

    $699 for a single CPU license? Jeez... I bet (even if SCO had a valid case, and they won the lawsuit[s]), almost everyone would go to a non-System V OS rather than use UnixWare... What makes them think they can get that amount of money from anyone, even if they win the case[s]?

  2. Disturbing by ThePeices · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I find it quite disturbing that the EWeek article comes across as if linux does have SCO's IP in it, while this has still yet to be proved. It does state in the end of the article that the FSF and other org's say that nobody should buy a licence, but the impression of the article is just wrong. It is generally accepted that SCO's claims are nothing but fluff, and there is mounting evidence against their claims, but SCO seems to be hell bent on causing anarchy and getting brought out by IBM. But the slant of the article is sending the wrong sort of message.

  3. Re:Go Big Blue! by Col.+Klink+(retired) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As long as your giving money to people who never bothered to prove that they own what they're selling you, I'm going to go ahead and claim that I own something in the Linux kernel too. Like SCO, I won't tell you what I claim to own, but I'll only charge you $400/CPU for it.

    --

    -- Don't Tase me, bro!

  4. Re:Dang it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    > When is the business world gonna wake up and *SMACK* SCO so I can cover my short positions? Frickin' knew I shoulda
    > bought at $10, instead I placed my faith in justice and shorted them... Oh well, at least I can add my name to the list of those
    > screwed by SCO ;-)

    First, it should be clear by now that you should not take investment advice from /. just as you shouldn't take medical or juridical advice. Second, ask yourself, did you *expect* the stock to fall or did you *hope* it to fall?

  5. suing or no suing by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The article starts with...

    The SCO Group has been threatening corporate Linux users with legal action unless they obtain a license for its intellectual property, but until now, businesses have been unable to buy that license.

    Now I may not be kept up to date on the current SCO status but I thought last week SCO said they have no plans to sue linux users - no?

    So if they are not going to sue, what motivation would anyone have to but a licence?

    And how the heck can they demand payment before clearing establishing their IP?

  6. Re:choices choices.. by Alizarin+Erythrosin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So what you're saying is that you don't think McBride is an asshat?

    And don't forget that SCO went from "contract dispute" to "Linux is our bitch" to "We own anything and everything even remotely related to Unix", and now seem to be switching between those arguments randomly. I don't know about you, but contradictory press releases and interviews do not a court case make.

    --
    There are only 10 kinds of people in this world... those who understand binary and those who don't
  7. Let's see if I've got this right by sjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The SCO guy (who's nervously flicking his Bic) believes that he can smell some burning wires in my store. For $699/CPU he will insure me against fire hazards.

    Is that about right?

  8. DANGER! MUCH more expensive than money! by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 5, Insightful

    SCO has now made available for your IP pleasure their run-time licenses [...]

    And you're a fool if you buy one.

    SCO is not suing IBM for misappropriation of their IP. What SCO IS suing IBM for is VIOLATING THE TERMS OF THEIR LICENSE.

    Right now you probably don't HAVE a SCO license - shrink-wrap style language and all. This makes you nearly immune to suits from SCO.

    But if you buy a license - even one - you are not just out the money. You have also paid them by entering into a contract, with contractual obligations. And if you buy one NOW, after all the publicity over their claims to own UNIX and evertying related to it, you can't claim ignorance of their claims.

    If you use linux on one machine, and you pay them a sale price of a couple hundred bux, what are you going to tell the judge when he asks you:

    - Why aren't you paying them whatever their latest asking price is for another license for your next two hundred machines.

    - Why did you distribute this open-source software that SCO says contains their IP, in violation of your contract with SCO.

    After all, if you signed the contract and paid the money. Didn't you just admit that this IP was theirs?

    IMHO, anyone who buys a SCO license has just signed away, forever, his right to work on open-source code. As an individual you can't EVER release your work. As a company you can't EVER release your employees' work. (And good luck hiring any new employees with open-source experience.)

    No open-source drivers for your products. No folding your fixes back into the mainstream, so you don't have to make them again on every new release of whatever open-source tool you fixed or improved for your critical business process.

    So if you're contemplating buying a SCO license, ask yourself: "Is that REALLY what I intended to to?"

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  9. Re:choices choices.. by platypus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Whatever people feel about Darl Mcbride bashing him don't do the Linux community any good. And whatever people feel about SCO they have allways concentrated on the case on copyright infringment and not tried to take some easy shots on the Linux community.

    WTF??? Have you been in a cage the last half year? No easy shots?
    Look at this diamond (yeah, they removed the page since then).

    Or how about:
    ""A significant flaw of Linux is the inability and/or unwillingness of the Linux process manager, Linus Torvalds, to identify the intellectual-property origins of contributed source code that comes in from those many different software developers" who contribute to Linux, the suit said.

  10. Re:Sep 9th: SCO CEO Posts Open Letter to OS commun by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just a few flaws:

    1) Darl implies that because one person allegedly associated with the open source community has launched a DDoS attack against SCO and, again allegedly, ESR didn't turn this person in, the whole open source community is suspect. I don't think so.

    2) Allegedly (again) some SCO proprietary code made its way through SGI into the Linux source tree with the SCO copyright notices removed at some point along the way. Darl claims that this means that all Linux code is therefore suspect. Again, I don't think so.

    3) Continuing from 2, this conveniently ignores copyrighted BSD (Berkely Packet Filter) code that was presented as an example of Linux code that infringes on SCO copyrights. It seems that somehow the original BSD copyright notice got removed at some point and now SCO calls the code their own. For Darl, SCO employees removing someone else's copyright is not a problem.

    4) Darl seems to be really concerned about warranties and indemnifications not provided by open source software and Linux but he must not have ever read a software EULA. They always claim to limit the liability of the licensor to the cost of the product. As an aside, this concept doesn't work with open source software since the customer has the source code and is freely permitted to change it as they see fit. No one can warrant a product when the end user can make changes, not that the warranties provided by closed source software vendors are anything to make you sleep well.

    5) Darl (talking about profitable business models) apparently wants to return to the time when software companies thought they could make big bucks by selling software licenses. All it takes is a quick look at the TCO and ROI arguments for Windoze vs. Linux to see that these times are long gone and that isn't just because of pricing pressure from Linux. Software buyers are more concerned now about support, service, stability, maintainability, etc. The initial cost of the software license is a small component at what buyers look at when selecting an operating platform for a business. A litiguous vendor such as SCO is not someone I would consider even if there weren't technical arguments against choosing them. Also, I haven't exactly heard of SCO as being a paragon of customer support which is supposed to be the argument for selecting a closed source vendor.

    Its time for dinner so I'll stop at this point.

    --
    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
    Ben
  11. Re:Get 'em While They're non-existent by NickFortune · · Score: 4, Insightful
    How come if you called anyone else and said "I want to purchase a license for this software" They would jump on it and get your CC# when all SCO is doing is going on and on about lawsuits? This has to be a joke.
    Well yeah. Look: I hereby declare that I and I alone own the sole and exclusive right to Feet. You better buy a *ahem* run-time licence off me right now or I will personally sue each and every one of you into oblivion.

    OK guys - what crime did I just commit? Fraud? Extortion? Attempting to obtain money under false pretenses? I'm damn sure that'd be illegal behaviour. It would if I did it anyway. Maybe if I was publically traded it'd be another matter.

    Point is, I rather suspect that it'd be just as illegal for SCO to do it - especially since their claim to Linux is only marginally stronger than my claim to Feet(tm). But as long as they only talk about it there's no evidence for anyone to base a case around. So there'll be no sales.

    It's just more FUD. And possibly, as someone else pointed out, a ploy to get future victims to identify themselves. But mainly FUD I think.

    --
    Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
  12. Re:Dang it! by MuParadigm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "I've seen no credible theory that would get SCO any money out of their claims..."

    To be fair to SCO, not that there's any reason to be, their very first claims that the SCO Openserver and Unixware *libraries* should be licensed and paid for by end-users had some merit. If they had left it at that and charged a fair price - say $100 give or take $25 - to license those libraries, then most of us would not have had any issues with them.

    BTW, I know and you know that those libraries kinda suck, but they're a niche product for corporate deployments that need that support, so the relatively high price I'm suggesting for them is probably a fair value to the clients who would actually need them.

    Other than that, I agree; none of their other legal theories have any credibility whatsoever.

  13. Re:But what do their employees think by The+Pim · · Score: 4, Insightful
    SCO has laid off most of its development staff

    This was also clear from the ineptitude of their slide presentation: If there were any competant techs in the company, the execs would at least have had them sanity check the presentation to avoid making fools of themselves. Which evokes the amusing image of SCO execs and lawyers staring dumbly at Linux and SysV code in Word and, with only the fuzziest comprehension, trying to figure out what to paste into PowerPoint.

    --

    The evaluation of an action as 'practical' . . . depends on what it is that one wishes to practice.
  14. The devil can quote scripture by stwrtpj · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... to his own ends, and this is precisely what has happened here in the LinuxWorld article.

    I will not go into the details of the misquotations from ESR and Mr. Perens, or his abuse of the DDoS attack, as several other astute /. posters have already done so above (below? not sure where the post will appear in the thread). I will instead turn to the interesting tidbit that Mr. McBride mentions near the end, after all the talk about the flaws in the Open Source development process:

    It is easier for some in the Open Source community to fire off a "rant" than to sit across a negotiation table ... Working together, there are ways we can make sure this happens.

    And to this I can only respond: Mr. McBride, how the FUCK can we negociate with you or work together with you when you WON'T REVEAL A SINGLE GODDAMN LINE OF INFRINGING CODE?

    Mr. McBride is playing an interesting game here. He is acting as the master manipulator of the public mindset. Whether this was his intent from the beginning or simply a means to cover up a huge blunder is irrelevant at this point. While it is true that many of his statements are contradictory to the rational person, his intended audience is NOT the rational, but the business world and the media. He knows all the buzzwords that make business/media sit up and pant like lapdogs. What makes this an uphill battle for the OSS community is the very fact that we eschew these buzzwords and prefer to rely on fact. Unfortunately, fact is apparantly not what business/media wants to hear. I am sure that in the next few days we will see reports from the media that Mr. McBride is presenting the proverbial olive branch to the community. I can almost guarantee that the very term "olive branch" will be used.

    It will be interesting to see if this is successful in affecting the tide of opinion. I sincerely hope not. But then again, the vitriol and self-contradictory, specious, racist bullshit spewed by Adolf Hitler was enough to sway the masses.

    --
    Karma: Frotzed (mostly due to the Frobozz Magic Karma Company)
  15. Re:choices choices.. by the_other_one · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They are professionals alright.

    Professional criminals to be specific.

    --
    134340: I am not a number. I am a free planet!
  16. Re:Darl's interesting quoting style by RealityShunt · · Score: 4, Insightful


    The fact that the code in question won't compile suggests to me that it's so ancient it hasn't been supported in compilers since well before the 2.x series (which I've compiled on my systems).

    It's a shame that all this info can't be directed to the stock-owners in such a way that they understand it. If so, and if any of them have any sense, SCO would take a huge hit.

    realityshunt

    --
    Democracy is susceptible to being led astray by having scapegoats paraded in front of the electorate.
  17. Bah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When is thing going to trial? I'm getting sick of discussing it.

  18. Re:Darl's interesting quoting style by benking · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I Still don't know how all this applies to IBM. He talked about what SGI did. He talked about the "flawed" process by which Linux & OSS in general is developed. None of this goes to prove that IBM did any thing wrong. And the Offending code That SGI put in is Open Sourced now, & no longer in the source anyway.

    So, SCO where's the beef? (Clara Peller)