Linus to SCO: 'Please Grow Up'
brakk writes "From this article at Infoworld, Linus responds to SCO's open letter in a manner reminiscent of patting a child on the head." chrisd notes that his company is making SCO employees unhireable.
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Another relatively uninteresting open letter, however this part of the submission caught my eye:
chrisd notes that his company is making SCO employees unhireable.
[from that link]:
Any resumes which include the Santa Cruz Operation after May of 2003 will be immediately deleted as well.
That is truly childish. The real assholes at SCO are the suits and money-grubbing lawyers responsible for this charade. A code monkey in the trenches who needs a job to pay the bills isn't necessarily an enemy of open source.
Guilt by association is a slippery slope, remember Joe McCarthy?
Trolling is a art,
Linus to SCO: "Please Grow Up"
SCO to Linus: "My OS can beat up your OS. Nyah nyah nyah!"
All of our source code is out in the open, and we welcome you point to any particular piece you might disagree with.
Until then, please accept our gratitude for your submission
Haha.. thanks LINUS!! now i got dr. pepper all over my purty flat screen!!!!
SCO scratch off tickets? Now there's an idea!
Come one people only the current top management of SCOX and Canopy are responsible and should be held accountable..
However, with the laying off of most of the r&d coders is there any one left that is accoutnable in nature?
Don't Tread on OpenSource
IP problem: How could you said that this letter was created by Linus?
Some reference to the original e-mail of Linus?
Hmmm, maybe they're not Smoking Crack, Obviously as I suggested yesterday...instead, they're Spoiled Children, Obviously. :-)
How To Get Humans To Mars
Post-trial Justice
Ian
I'd complain about how immature the policy is except that if you read the page, you see that they are not hiring, so SCO employees are ineligible for all zero of the openings they have available.
They must really believe this. Soon we'll hear zillion infinities lines plus their dads being bigger than our dads. It's *spelled* S C O, but it's pronouned "ass hats". Lawyers have pulses? This Comment was generated with the Comment-O-Matic for SCO Stories.
Dear Linus,
You were a hero of mine, until this letter. Now, you are a SuperHero! The SuperBestFriends had an opening, but I would say it is now taken.
-Spack
That's capricious and sick. It is not the rank and file who is responsible, it is the brass. To punish people who have done nothing wrong, guilt by association, is cruel and unfair. This would be like throwing an Enron middle-level mananger in prison simply because he/she worked for Enron. SCO isn't Nazi Germany, people!
Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
I suspect that the reason that Damage is refusing to hire ex-SCO employees is to prevent any possible legal action on SCO's part - I would not put it past SCO to sue a new employer for misappropriation of trade secrets or any number of other things, given their track record. I really don't think it's a political statement at all.
Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
Hey Chrisd,
You can't seriously claim to be an Equal Opportunity Employer and at the same time reject applicants based on where they used to work. I know there's not a law but come on, that's the spirit of EOE.
--J(K) DOS is like Unix in exactly the same way that a pinto is like an aircraft carrier.
What they didn't do was use it to make good products or a functional business. "Squander" implies they ever intended to try to do either of these.
By the way, am I the only one who always thinks about Resident Evil's Umbrella Corporation every time he hears the name Canopy?
and now seems to play the U.S. legal system like a lottery
Not quite my friend. Somehow I think my Mega Millions ticket has a better chance of winning that SCO getting anything from the community.
Dissenter
"There is no knowledge that is not power."
Alright, Linus. The gloves are off.
We'll now show the most damning evidence yet. There we have it, we've presented the basis for not hundreds, not thousands, not tens of thousands, but hundreds of thousands of derivative code in the Linux kernel.
Let's see you dig yourself out of this one, wunderkind.
that the open source community should stop responging the SCO period. If you ignore them, maybe they will go away.
Karma: The shiznight, mostly because I am the Drizzle.
I've always had respect for Linus, the respect that I don't have for other OSS "advocates" like Stallman, Raymond or Perens.
Simply because Linus is the guy who just practices what the rest preach. He just keeps his mouth shut for the most part and works on the code. Instead of pontificating, he produces something that proved that the OSS model can work.
He doesn't spout off into diatribes about free vs Free, he doesn't rant and rave about technologies like the TCPA, just comments on how they can be implemented in Linux.
Please, Linus, don't drag yourself down to the level of the foaming mouthed nut. There's no shortage of zealots to badmouth SCO, and you're merely preaching to the choir.
Ultimately all you'll do is damage your image, when someone mentions Stallman or Raymond, do you immediately think of code they've written, or an image of them jumping up and down on a soapbox?
Stick to the tech, keep being an inspiration to true geeks, and not anti-gumment nutjobs.
I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
Mr. Codemonkey has been submitting resumes without success?
If they're applying for a job at a Linux company, shouldn't it be painfully fucking obvious that they're TRYING TO JUMP SHIP?
Why benefit SCO by making it *HARDER* for their employees to jump ship?
retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
chrisd notes that his company is making SCO employees unhireable.
.. oh, they don't actually have any open positions right now.
So they're refusing to consider SCO employees for any of the open positions that they
Wow, that'll teach them a lesson.
Linus' letter reminds me of a good example of a flame: biting, yet so intelligently written that you might miss it.
The real shocker here, of course, is that a Linux advocate spelled "bated breath" correctly for the first time in recorded history.
What I'm listening to now on Pandora...
.. to have been reading a lot of Nigerian spam lately.
SCO doesn't seem to have any employees other than lawyers and mouthpieces at present.
I doubt that anybody looking for a job in the software field would have SCO from May, 2003 on their resume.
"May I have ten thousand marbles, please?"
To paraphrase Kelso from That 70's Show:
"BUUUUUURRRRRRRNNN!"
Sorry, I just got caught up in the wicked burn. Linus is awesome, what can I say? He certainly has a way with words. I laughed so hard after reading that.
There are only 10 kinds of people in this world... those who understand binary and those who don't
And their first task will be going through the SCO customer list in my geographic area and whacking each and every SCO system they can locate.
You have to view it from their perspective - years, some times decades of hard work, stock in the company trapped by trading rules, and scam artists from Canopy making it all just a sick joke.
If you really want to jab SCO, find a job for *every* person there who does real work, and do it quick.
I am very easy to get along with, but I don't have time to waste being nice to people who are being stupid. -Theo
Preventing an SCO employee from jumping ship by denying them a job opportunity *benefits SCO*.
Although a poster below made a good point - This could be intentional to avoid intellectual property problems. SCO noncompete agreements might likely make their employees ineligible to apply for employment at ChrisD's company in the first place.
That said, the wording of the statement on ChrisD's website is immature and vengeful.
More proper wording which I would accept is, "Due to intellectual property issues and conflicts of interest, we regret that we cannot hire former employees of the Santa Cruz Operation at this time."
retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
Just the Torvald's letter ... hilarious !
---
Dear Darl,
Thank you so much for your letter.
We are happy that you agree that customers need to know that Open Source is legal and stable, and we heartily agree with that sentence of your letter. The others don't seem to make as much sense, but we find the dialogue refreshing.
However, we have to sadly decline taking business model advice from a company that seems to have squandered all its money (that it made off a Linux IPO, I might add, since there's a nice bit of irony there), and now seems to play the US legal system as a lottery. We in the Open Source group continue to believe in technology as a way of driving customer interest and demand.
Also, we find your references to a negotiating table somewhat confusing, since there doesn't seem to be anything to negotiate about. SCO has yet to show any infringing IP in the Open Source domain, but we wait with bated breath for when you will actually care to inform us about what you are blathering about.
All of our source code is out in the open, and we welcome you point to any particular piece you might disagree with.
Until then, please accept our gratitude for your submission,
Yours truly,
Linus Torvalds
:wq
Which one is worse, the fool or the fool that follows him?
I find the attention/flames that everybody is giving to SCO highly surprising, as a result it is hard for bystanders to differentiate between the opponents. It would be much more mature of Linus and Co to either ignore the whole matter or respond professionally, instead of playing the same game.
When men used to be men
Please send all resumes in text or pdf format. We do not open word documents sent from outside the company. We will immediately delete them, and the mail they came attached to, if recieved.
Good idea, security-wise.
Now, if only they would immediately delete any resumes which were obviously not checked for spelling errors...
<rant>
When reviewing resumes, my eye is immediately drawn to typos like this, and resumes containing things like this are put into the "consider them only if nothing else better shows up" pile. It's important, folks -- you only have one chance to make a first impression. Do you really want the boss to see that you can't be troubled to hit F7 (in Word)?
</rant>
In walking, just walk. In sitting, just sit. Above all, don't wobble.
-- Yun-Men
"...forever!!!"
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/1997/Nov9 7/scopr.asp
REDMOND, Wash.-November 24, 1997 - Microsoft Corporation today applauded the decision of the European Commission to close the file and take no further action on a dispute between Microsoft and Santa Cruz Operation (SCO) involving a 1987 contract. The Commission's decision follows progress by Microsoft and SCO to resolve a number of commercial issues related to the contract, and upholds Microsoft's right to receive royalty payments from SCO if software code developed by Microsoft is used in SCO's UNIX products.
However, you choose who you work for. By working for a company, you support its actions. You may not believe these actions are correct, but if you do nothing to change it, you are as guilty as those driving that bus. We each much take responsibility for who and what we support.
In this case, we have a company preying on innocent companies and individuals. This may change if SCO ever gets around to showing any evidence for the claims they have made. Similarily, if these claim turn out to be true (doubtful), I'm sure Damage Studio will change their policy.
I wouldn't work for Microsoft. Even though MS has some fantastic emgineers and great benefits. I simply don't agree with their business practices. Now...if they changed and perhaps opened a department to port their applications to linux or decided to open source their operating system, I might change my mind.
Look, the IT market is going to shit so fast it seems like diareah (sp?) and you're pissed at folks not wanting to abandon their already shrinking job market because of some stupid political stand?
Try explaining to your kids why you can't buy them food or pay for their school or why the lights just got shut off. An answer of "Oh well I had to make sure my stance on ensuring the freedom of Linux and GPL software everywhere was loud and clear. Sorry you feel faint from hunger but hey at least my startling irrelevant opinions on the computer industry's morality remain untarnished!"
I mean are you on 100% Genetically Enhanced Columbian Crack Cocaine? Janitors and receptionists? WTF would they care about Linux at all for? Its just a job for them. Most likely they aren't even AWARE of anything other than windows (I'll bet you $5 the receptionists at SCO or even Red Hat have Windows based PC's on their desks). This isn't the civil rights movement were talking about here. A LITTLE bit of perspective would do you a world of good.
Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
I find it interesting that the mainstream news outlets seem to pick and choose what stories to run.
for example, yahoo news on SCOX
in the latest there is the comment " Leading Linux experts or advocates were not immediately available for comment."
w-w-wha-WHAT?? The open source commuinity has been doing nothing *but* commenting- take the latest extremely well written open leter from Bruce Perens, for example.
Meanwhile SCOX stock price continues to inexplicably rise.. All the harder to fall.
...clever comebacks and snide remarks make little difference for corporate execs and lawyers keeping an eye on this case.
While Torvalds is a Linux-figurehead, he's still a techie - which means his commentary will be drowned out by the SCO lawyers, CEO and PR drones babbling on. While /. won't listen to them, I fear the ignorant public (investors, analysts, lawyers, execs) will get a one-sided view as long as only SCO official representatives and Linux techies exchange rounds with these statements in front of the press. IBM won't comment since they're in legal proceedings, but where are all the rest?
Comment removed based on user account deletion
It takes a special kind of genius to be able to tell someone to go to hell in such a way as they end up thinking you wished them a pleasant journey. Linus has done well to keep his cool while all this has been going down. I wonder what pills he's been taking?
As for Damage Studios' policy, I think it is mostly just for show. But they have got every right to refuse ex-SCO employees, and I don't think there is anything wrong with that. There are things I, personally, would far rather be on the dole than do. As long as you have a head on your shoulders, a hand on each arm {and, absit omen you should ever have to use it, a hole in your arse}, there is no reason why you should be going short.
Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
Contrary to common opinion, Equal Opportunity only covers protected classes under the Civil Rights Act of 1963. The Civil Rights Act does not protect people based on where they worked before and it never will. There are many justified reasons not hire an employee from a certain company. A company could decide to not accept applications from a competitor that has been involved in corporate espionage to protect trade secrets.
Before judging Damage Studios, one must know whether they have a reason to fear SCO. Do they fear being sued by SCO for stealing their human resources? Do they do in house programming and contribute to the GNU/Linux source code? Any company that does contribute code to GNU/Linux should not hire ex-SCO employees because that will give reason for SCO to accuse them of adding illegal code.
I think the responses should continue for two reasons:
1) While some people have become bored of the rhetoric, I am still enjoying the responses from the OSS leaders and representatives.
2) There are many people out there who on occasion happen to read an article about the SCO debate. If the response from the community is to stay silent then the masses will presume that all McBride says is true. Granted you may not care what the rest of the world thinks of you, however, as an OSS advocate I for one become angry when I'm portrayed as a commie, thief, drug addict, etc, etc.
I say keep the rebuttals coming.
burnin
This whole charade might benefit Linux greatly. One of Linux's shortcomings is a lack of perception as to value. SCO, by demanding a license fee, has given a dollar amount for the value of a Linux installation. After SCO loses their case, their appraisal of Linux will remain. This could make it easier to convince clients and management to use Linux, by letting them see how much the software is worth ($700), and how much it costs ($0).
SCO wants to talk to Open Source developers about monetizing the software? By placing a dollar amount on the worth of Linux, they have just monetized it.
Too bad the credibility of SCO is next to worthless now.
Bill Gates is tired of being the most despised human being in IT, so he put up Darl as the new "Whipping Boy." It seems to be working! :-P
Buzzing the information Superhighway at Warp speed
If you can't look at yourself in the mirror and say "i did the right thing" you have to live with guilt. This hurts more than hunger. Never compromise. You slowly kill yourself and a part of you dies with every inch you give.
Is one I have mixed feelings on. Do I think it's right or wrong? Sadly, I'm not sure, so I toss this out for discussion.
First, I feel bad for the average employee in the trenches. Imagine SCO collapsing and someone looking for work having had nothing to do with this.
At the same time, if they want to work for a company doing something so reprehensible, they also made a choice. They can live with the results. Yes, the economy is tough, but life's not a series of easy choices.
There is of course the concern that SCO employees are "poison" now, which I have to admit seems completely rational. Gods only know what legal issues they may (innocently) drag in with them.
So, largely in the end I see an anti-SCO policy being rational as a cover-my-legal-rear action. It's not fair, sadly, but it is one involving survival.
I wonder if this could also be the beginning of a trend, as we seem to see more and more legal acrobatics in software and IT.
Any thoughts?
"The Sage treasures Unity and measures all things by it" - Lao Tzu
If you are referring to the word "Bated" as which some controversy has already started over, see below.
bate1 1. To lessen the force or intensity of; moderate: "To his dying day he bated his breath a little when he told the story" (George Eliot). See Usage Note at bait1. 2. To take away; subtract.
Usage Note: The word baited is sometimes incorrectly substituted for the etymologically correct but unfamiliar word bated ("abated; suspended") in the expression bated breath bated on dictionary.com
boycott slashdot February 10th - 17th check out: altSlashdot.org
.. I'm getting flashbacks to the 'engineers on the Death Star being innocents' bit of Clerks?
For a non-native English speaker, Linus needs to be given credit for the subtle zinger at the end: "Until then, please accept our gratitude for your submission,". Nice double meaning on that last word there!
If you really want to kill a company, hire away all of its people. Refusing to hire SCO people seems counterproductive.
Instead, whittle them down to Daryl and a fax machine.
I am totally on-side that there is no real technical merit in the SCO claims, and that they are being litigious bastards.
However I think that the tone being adopted by the Linux community is possibly hurting our cause.
All of the open letters I've read from Linux "leaders", including the latest one from Linus, have been by turns condescending, sanctimonious, and needlessly insulting at times.
These things are being read by business leaders who are quite interested in how this whole thing will play out, and if they get the impression that Open Source is being led by a bunch of smug, whiny, business-insensitive geeks, they will stay away.
Al I'm hoping for is that the public responses written by the Linux champions are clear, confident, and professional, and not geeky bitch-slaps. We have the high ground here, there's no need to get personal or insulting.
And the brats who launched the DoS's against SCO, you're not helping.
I can't help but be reminded of a similar exchange in a cinematic venue:
... Uh, they've already got a license, you see?
Darl: Halt! Hallo! Hallo!
Linus: 'Allo! Who is zis?
Darl: It is Darl McBride, CEO of SCO, and this is the Unix copyright. Who's source is this?
Linux: This is the Linux - it's open source.
Darl: Go and tell your users that we have be charged by our board of directors with a sacred quest. If you will admit you have violated our copyright, you can pay money for a license to use the infringing software.
Linux: Um, I'll ask them, but I don't think they'll be very keen
Darl: What?
Chris Sontag: He says he's already go one!
Darl: Are you sure they've got one?
Linus: Oh, yes - the GNU public license - it's very nice.
Darl: Well, um, we know you copied our code, so you need to purchase a license. Will you buy one?
Linus: Of course not! You are corporate types with no proof!
...
Darl: Now look here, my good man!
Linus: I don't want to talk to you no more, you empty headed animal food trough water! I fart in your general direction! Your mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries!
Chris Sontag: Is there someone else up there we could talk to?
Linus: No, now go away or I shall taunt you a second time-a!
The little guy just ain't getting it, is he?
Now that Godwin's law has killed this thread, can we PLEASE go back to RIAA?
And when do we get to start bashing Microsoft again?
This might not be (just) about being against SCOs ethics - given Darl's track record, there might be a very real possibility that if someone hires one of "his" people, he could come after that company and somehow claim that they have stolen "his" property (the intellectual property inside that person's head).
Problem with SCO is that since nothing they're doing makes sense, predicting future moves is equally difficult.
The decline of America is coming from within, not without. I am more worried about bad laws perpetrated by my own government than I am about some stranger whom vaguely wishes me dead. Live Free or Die.
Wow, that must really concern management at SCO, that they don't have to wory about employees leaving and going somewhere else because no one will hire them. Even is this were true, it actually would be great news for top management. Between that and Linus's response being a lame "grow up" while they watch company stock go through the roof and some chumps actually paying them and they must really be having a good day today.
I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
From a legal standpoint they're tainted. Anyone who works for SCO might have had access to the source code at any point - which means if you are developing your own code, since SCO (Well Canopy group anyways) has proven to sue at the drop of a hat without any real evidence, you CAN'T hire any kind of technical staff who recently worked at SCO without potentially exposing yourself to a frivilous lawsuit.
They might well launch the suit just to punish someone jumping ship for that matter - they haven't exactly proven themselves to have much of an ethical track record as a company after all.
Until the suits are settled and the legal issues over with (and SCO buried likely), you're opening yourself up for some potential liability hiring ANY technical staff who worked for SCO.
(Management is a moot point - I mean who would want to work with them anyways? Well possibly certain mafia shell companies.... no... even the mafia has limits....)
Let's find out for certain that SCO's lawyers are nitwits, slap them across the face for wasting our time, then call it a day. If SCO is so confident in their accusation, they would have nothing to fear by letting someone *actually compare* the code bases. How do they expect to win a lawsuit if they won't present evidence to support their case?
Why don't they just publish their source code and let us all do diff's on it? If we've all already seen it before anyway (in Linux), then it can't harm them any further!
If it's not one thing it's your mother.
No law. However, there is a law (Americans with Disabilities Act) that requires employers to retain all received resumes for one year.
These resumes would serve as the basis for evaluating hiring practices for evidence of discrimination against disabled individuals.
Whether there is a real danger here is debatable as the discrimination does not fall under the scope of the act (IANAL).
The little guy just ain't getting it, is he?
What SCO has done is play a legal game, and from what I have heard that is what SCO's management is good at doing. They are also playing the stock game, where what they are currently claiming is driving their stock up, so management can sell off their stock and make a profit.
They stil have not shown one single peice of evidance that shows that this code was in UNIX first and not open source / BSD or Linux. Yeah there are code fragments that do exist, but who owns the copyright?
Guess we shall all have to wait and see who wins he lawsuit and who is left in the end. Their lawsuit almost remids me of the RIAA, only the RIAA has shown that they own the songs, whereas SCO hasn't shown squat. So until SCo can prove that they own the code in Linux I'm not paying them a dime, and when they do prove it I'll switch my Linux box to BSD before I give them a f***** dime!
Only 'flamers' flame!
Does slashdot hate my posts?
Words have little value if you do the opposite than what you preach. Otherwise, you are just being consistent with your ideas.
Any resumes which include the Santa Cruz Operation after May of 2003 will be immediately deleted as well.
Er... What does the Santa Cruz Operation have to do with any of this? The SCO Group is the former Caldera. They bought SCO Unix from the Santa Cruz Operation, but they did not buy the Santa Cruz Operation itself. Thus current employees of Tarantella (formerly known as the Santa Cruz Operation) have nothing to with the SCO Group's mess.
Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
The Americans with Disabilities Act requires retention of all received resumes for a period of one year (as evidence of compliance with non-discriminatory hiring practices in relation to disabled individuals).
Here's a guidance page for HR document retention
The little guy just ain't getting it, is he?
Okay, let us play this game then.
Tell us for whom you work.
I am sure that I can find something that your employer did that someone, somewhere, will feel just as strongly as you. They believe with all their hearts that you should take a stand and quit your job.
Let us see if you will do it.
Mid-Eastern Pennsylvania Gaming Convention
Look at you, all principled and what-not. It's easy to talk big. When you're looking down the barrell of sudden unemployment in a tight market at your own hand it's a potentially harmful tipping point for your career and those you love. See if your wife cares about your principles when you're missing your second mortgage payment in a row and you can't look your son in the eye because you can't afford your new eyeglasses prescription...
So long, michael. Don't let the door hit you...
I got laid off in early 2002 and it took eight months to find a job, and the job was clear across the country, so yes, folks could lose thier house, and end up homeless or living in a shelter. If you have children, you can't just say 'son I don't agree with my companies polices, so we will be living under a bridge for awhile'.
If SCO employees started looking for a job in April or May, chances are they won't find a new one somewhere else for a while. 422000 jobs were cut last month.
In fact all idiots like damage studios are doing is making it harder for folks from SCO to leave.
Yes when people don't make money they starve.
Damage needs to change thier name to Brain damage studios. because doing crap like this shows me they won't be around very long.
So Long and Thanks for all the Fish.
In light of France's refusal to go along with US action in Iraq, there was a public and governmental outcry against all things French. We had "freedom fries" and French wine and cheese was thrown out. Many people here directly criticized these actions as stupid, even the Slashdot editors voiced their opinions through commentary and "department" titles for articles. The sentiment was that it was stupid to blame the rank and file French citizen or French business for the actions of its government.
The same thing should apply here. Why blame the rank-and-file employee of a company whose management is doing something unpopular? Does Joe Programmer have any influence on the legal machinations of his company? No, he just churns out code for a paycheck. And saying "Well, he should quit his job because his employer is doing those things" is just plain ridiculous and doesn't take reality into consideration. The need to eat and possibly support a family generall trumps most personal beliefs.
Just as you can't expect someone to renounce French citizenship because their government does something you don't like, you can't expect an employee to quit because their company does something you don't like. We are putting the burden on the people who can't do anything about the problem. Blacklisting SCO employees does nothing to the people who actually matter in this case, if they don't give a crap about 90% of the IT industry, I bet they don't care about their own employees.
If you worked for a University and some group was doing research that was highly controversial and that you disagreed with on moral or ethical reasons, would you quit because the organization you also happen to work for allows that sort of thing to go on? Should a math professor quit in protest of some experiment going on in the biology department? Should the actions of the company or larger employer actually be held against the little people who work for them?
It's like blaming the White House janitorial staff for the bad policy decisions made by the President and refusing to hire them because they happened to previously work there.
It's stuff like this that makes me realize that for all the screaming about morals and ethics and fair-play that many people do here, that it's mostly an act, one that they discard as soon as it goes against what they like.
How would ChrisD and the rest of the slashdot editors react if a company posted that they would not hire any programmers connected with X Y or Z open source projects?
-Z
This is so beautiful because it so totally destroys SCO's "reason" for not disclosing the infringing code: the argument that they can't disclose it becauses it's proprietary (even though, by their own statements, it's already in the publicly available kernel source code).
Characteristically, Linus curts stright to the crux of the matter.
"that's not encryption - it's a new perl script that I'm working on..." - from some Matrix parody
Bottom of chrisd's link:
(C) Copyright 2002-2403 Damage Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Slashdot is like Playboy: I read it for the articles
Drill baby drill - on Mars
The policy of not hiring SCO employees is actually somewhat inteligent, and I would be surprised if other companies did not follow suit....
Bear with me for a moment....
By hiring a SCO employee, and knowing SCO's current mindset (sue for money), I would not be surprised if you got a knock on the door six months down the road from SCO counsel asking for a code audit, thinking that the former employee must have given your company some IP knowledge due to past experience at SCO....
So by not hiring an ex-SCOer, you would be keeping yourself from being exposed to such risks.... not at all unfair.... and good thinking
Who is the master of foxhounds, and who says the hunt has begun? -Pink Floyd
MoFoQ engraves "Linus Rules" in his pitchfork and flaming torch
It's absolutely critical that the Open Source Community counter one-sided stories like the one written by Reuters yesterday.
. ht ml
/.'ers to write Reuters to get their editors to take a second look at their story:
. ht ml
- 09 -10-016-26-OS-CD-CYl _eben_moglen_position _paper.pdfw .htmla ckgroun der.htmm l
http://biz.yahoo.com/rc/030909/tech_sco_linux_1
I would encourage all
Here's what I wrote them. Please feel free to send my letter verbatim, or something similar. The more feedback they get, the less likely they will be to do a one-sided treatment of this in the future.
To: editors@reuters.com
I am writing in reference to the September 9 article on SCO's current lawsuit and critique of the Open Source community.
http://biz.yahoo.com/rc/030909/tech_sco_linux_1
Your article failed to provide any response from members of the Open Source community, or to articulate the views of the community, and as such was an entirely one-sided treatment of the topic.
The author lamely suggested that Open Source leaders were "unavailable for comment" either unaware of, or deliberately ignoring the mountains of responses generated in recent days, weeks, and months regarding the lawsuit, and in particular, and McBride's letters. Given the lopsided nature of the article, I suspect that the author did not try very hard to find responses from the Open Source community regarding SCO's claims.
In the interest of balance, I would strongly encourage you to write another story articulating the Open Source movement's response to McBride's letter.
For references in which the Open Source, and other communities, notably the Open Group which holds the UNIX trademark, have responded to SCO's claims in general, and to the particular letter being reported on in yesterday's article please review the following references:
http://linuxtoday.com/news_story.php3?ltsn=2003
http://www.osdl.org/docs/osd
http://www.perens.com/SCO/SCOSlideSho
http://www.opengroup.org/comm/press/unix-b
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/sco/sco.ht
Please give the following email addresses to authors doing future research on SCO's claims regarding the Open Source community.
moglen [at] columbia [dot] edu Eben Moglen
esr [at] thyrsus [dot] com Eric Raymond
bruce [at] perens [dot] com Bruce Perens
rms [at] stallman [dot] org Richard Stallman
torvalds [at] transmeta [dot] com Linus Torvalds
Do you (plural) have any idea how many people work in the weapons industry (WI) or are in some way paid, funded or whatever you want to call it by the WI?
People rationalize.
In the case of working for the WI I don't sympathize, but that's just personal. In the case of SCO I think one shouldn't be too judgemental and look at this case by case.
Maybe people think good jobs for nice people who make the world a better place are for grabs. I don't think so, and I don't see many people making an effort to ensure their employer is ethically sound. I don't like that, but it's only human. We think about ourselves, spouses, children first.
IMO there are far worse people to work for than SCO (from an ethical point of view)
And from the other side of things:
I can see why a company wouldn't hire people with certain backgrounds, but I fail to see any ethics being involved.
IMO it's - apart from maybe prudent policy - a pointless gesture aimed at the wrong people.
And I'm sure SCO management couldn't care less.
I think, therefore I am...I think.
"... and now seems to play the U.S. legal system like a lottery."
SCO's forum 2003 took place in vegas...
I mod down anyone who says "I will be modded down for this", regardless of the rest of their comment
That SCO is so full of bullshit that by repeating and denying any particular version of their fantasy-land claims, we only give credence to them. This is the letter than ESM and Bruce should have written. Short, to the point, and utterly dismissive.
But it could be even better. I hope that from now on, if open/free advocates decide to bite Darl's trolling, that they restrain themselves to just saying "Identify the infringing source," and not one word more. Unless it's "fuckwad".
If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
"So when do you draw the line? What if your company was making dangerous chemicals and not disposing of them properly? What if they were making chemical weapons? What if they were selling chemical weapons to terrorists?"
The point some of the above posters have made is that you can't draw the line, if people like chrisd will find you guilty by association. If more companies did what chrisd did, then SCO employees CAN'T jump ship, even if they want to.
Why help SCO? What you SHOULD be doing is giving SCO employees INCENTIVES to leave!!!!
Tell us for whom you work.
I am sure that I can find something that your employer did that someone, somewhere, will feel just as strongly as you. They believe with all their hearts that you should take a stand and quit your job.
Let us see if you will do it.
I bet you can't! Because I work for the U.S. Govt! HAH!
-matt
The SCO situation exists now and is a problem now.
The 09/11/2001 terrorist attacks were 2 years ago. Get over it.
Seriously, I read through the letter and have to concur with everything you've written. Unfortunately, neither my opinion nor yours is going to even elicit a response from SCO, never mind a change of heart.
If SCO were sincere on any point, they'd be replying to letters written in genuine sincerity, where genuine, non-hostile questions are posed.
So far, letters like yours have typically been met with a deathly silence. We don't have dialogue, we have two asynchronous monologoues in opposite directions. (Us responding has no meaning if our output is sent to
If this is to depart the Twilight Zone and enter the real world, we need more than merely good arguments. We need to make it impossible for this non-resolution state of being to continue.
SCO distribute a lot of GNU software with SCO UnixWare, for example. If SCO are in violation of the GPL, then the FSF could probably fire off a "Cease and Desist" letter. This wouldn't "hurt" SCO, but might get their shareholders to push for a faster resolution. And, in the end, the shareholders are the ones who can make or break SCO.
It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
That's an easy question to answer, if you are like me and not independently wealthy and work because you want too..
The 'line' is where it does harm to me. Simple as that.
If what is taking place at my company doesn't harm me, then I wont be leaving with out someplace to go first.
That doesn't mean I wont LOOK for another place, but I'm not stupid enough to jump with out a place to go.
Eating is a nice thing to do. You cant eat morals.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
---- It puts the lotion on its skin or else it gets the hose again. It does this whenever it's told.
- Write a song about Linux, and include some source code in the lyrics.
- Build up enough interest in it so that some record label offers a deal. Major labels only, please.
- Play the hell out of the song. Get all of Slashdot to buy multiple copies, get it preinstalled on Linux distros, etc.
- Profit!!! (but we're not done yet)
- Tell SCO that the second verse contains System V code.
Things will just, well, work themselves out. On there own. Easy.I really hate signatures, but go to my website.
Ah yes, the dreaded "one slashdot member boycott". That's the tactic that brought Microsoft, the RIAA and the MPAA to their knees, ended the SCO lawsuit and the war in Iraq, made Blizzard stop abusing the DMCA, freed Dmitry, and got Half-Life 2 ported to linux! Fear the wrath of the slashdot! I think I can hear Damage Studios trembling in terror already.
0 1 - just my two bits
..safely kept in /dev/null.
Seriously, if Damage developed software with someone who worked at SCO conceivably SCO if it got even a little bit crazier might see that as a potential revenue source, based either on ancient code, gpl code, the employee's (probably secret) nda, patents, trademarks, pending lawsuits against various companies, etc. I feel for the code monkeys but even when that company dies it probably will still be one of the undead, liable to walk the graveyard at midnight from time to time. It is a bit of fear nobody needs. Maybe the employees should sue SCO?