Slashdot Mirror


IBM Subpoenas SCO Investors, Analysts

Bigfishbowl writes "Forbes has an interesting article about IBM sending subpoenas to large SCO investors in an effort to compel discovery. An IBM spokesman says IBM is frustrated by SCO's reluctance to produce proof of its allegations. '"It is time for SCO to produce something meaningful. They have been dragging their feet and it is not clear there is any incentive for SCO to try this in court," he says.'"

49 of 507 comments (clear)

  1. Well... by __aavhli5779 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I am by no means in hell a lawyer, but it seems like IBM is trying to determine whether something much of Slashdot suspects is verifiably true: that some sort of sinister third party (Microsoft comes to mind) is morally and financially behind SCO's actions.

    The question is whether a "Microsoft is behind this whole sham" argument will be as well-received in a court room as it has been on Slashdot.

    I am so not a lawyer that I don't even know whether it would be admissible.

    Or, for that matter, whether my analysis is entirely incorrect.

    1. Re:Well... by Gorobei · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Going after the analysts is a great idea. If they are forced to respond to the subpoenas, they can say:

      a) I just used public information and personal judgement to predict the stock will double in price. This would imply extreme naivety on the part of the analyst, and, given the current lawsuits against analysts pumping stocks, probably gets a Spitzer-style lawsuit against him and his firm.

      b) SCO told me X, Y, and Z, and that is the basis for my estimate. If public info, see above. Else: Woohoo, material information given to analysts yet not publically disclosed.

      c) SCO hinted privately at Microsoft (or other firms) involvement. Great evidence of dirty hands in the case, and maybe a bit of case b).

      In short, I'd hate to be an analyst forced to defend my "strong buy" rating on a stock while also claiming to be an expert in its market sector.

      Note also that the Forbes' article also used the phrase "pump and dump." It's never a good sign when the major media starts propagating such theories!

    2. Re: Well... by Gorobei · · Score: 5, Funny

      We may hear of an SCO offer to settle in the very near future.

      If they do, it will show the same lack of understanding the German high command exhibited at the end of WWII:

      With the Russians surrounding Hitler's bunker, the Germans actually sent an officer out to negotiate peace terms. After five minutes, the Russian general basically said "we have troops and you don't. No settlement other than unconditional surrender is possible."

      SCO has spent six months pissing on IBM. Short of "Darl consents to be publically sodomized by the IBM executive of your choice," SCO may not have any negotiating points left.

    3. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Well, SCOX was at .70 before this all started and was off everyone's radar. It's not totally crazy that the stock doubled after they announced a $3 billion dollar lawsuit against a large competitior.

      However, the people recommending Buy when the stock is at $20 are probably the same folks pumping money into SCO so they can keep the bubble from deflating. Even if it's an honest recommendation, it's based purely on high-risk speculation and not on any fundementals or facts.

      Contrary to the slashbots, I think it's highly unlikely that this market manipulation is SCO, Canopy, Microsoft, Sun or anyone else. It's probably just independant brokers who know a goldrush when they see one. Just like VA Linux, etc.

    4. Re: Well... by mj01nir · · Score: 4, Funny

      Darl consents to be publically sodomized by the IBM executive of your choice

      Ugh, I thought we were talking about IBM winning.

      --
      the no .sig .sig
    5. Re:Well... by fferreres · · Score: 4, Funny

      Oh, you mean IABNMIHAL.

      Ouch, some time ago I read the (old) thing where the letters that matter are the first and the last one, and the others can be mixed. I read a large paragraph that way. And now this? I inmediatly read:

      Oh, you mean IAMHANIBAL. :-(

      --
      unfinished: (adj.)
  2. Just like Poker by Quasar1999 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is just like poker... And IBM finally called... now SCO is gonna have to lay down the cards or fold... Either way... we all win! :)

    --

    ---
    Programming is like sex... Make one mistake and support it the rest of your life.
    1. Re:Just like Poker by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 4, Insightful
      If you look at the legal papers they've filed so far, it seems pretty clear that they have no "secret weapon". Even the judge seems to have thought so, and rather than wait for another attempt at discovery, scheduled the oral arguments.

      What we will get from this is not any more material from SCO, but material on what they have told others that can be used against them in the Lanham act case and subsequent cases against them.

      Bruce

    2. Re:Just like Poker by ThisIsFred · · Score: 4, Funny

      I would make a joke about McBride not playing with a full deck, but as far as I can tell, SCO didn't even have a pack of cards when it sat down at the table.

      --
      Fred

      "A fool and his freedom are soon parted"
      -RMS
    3. Re:Just like Poker by dipipanone · · Score: 4, Informative

      What is the Lanham Act anyway? I find two references to it at law.cornell.edu but the links don't point to the actual part of US law that they affect.

      I'm English and even *I* know what the Lanham Act is. (Or think I do, anyway.)

      The Lanham Act is a law that stops businesses unreasonably making allegations that interfere with a competitor's trade. I believe that it forms the basis of part of IBM's countersuit, and also of RedHat's action against SCO.

      *Googles to be sure*

      OK. It seems that while it's primarily about trademarks, I'm still right. You can find the whole thing here.

    4. Re:Just like Poker by Professor+D · · Score: 4, Funny
      Actually, it seems to me more like they have a hand of four cards in a game of five card stud.

      And two of them are from an Uno deck.

  3. Follow the money by jaymzter · · Score: 4, Interesting

    At this stage of the game, IBM is publicly stating they doubt TSG is serious about entering a court room. With that in mind they seem to be trying to hurt TSG where it hurts: the wallet. Have you seen SCOX performance lately? Beautifully mimicking a swan dive. Good riddance to bad trash

    BTW, 5th post?

    --
    If thou see a fair woman pay court to her, for thus thou wilt obtain love
  4. SCO Gives Filenames by emacnabber · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is a little OT, but SCO told the names "offending" files in a court doc at groklaw. They don't say what parts of the files are "theirs", but they've narrowed it down to about a 1/5 of the kernel. :-)

    1. Re:SCO Gives Filenames by darnok · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Is there something in the US legal system that actively prevents SCO from claiming every single file in the kernel as their own? I mean, if they're claiming a huge chunk of the kernel anyway, why not claim it all and be done with it?

      Presumably the court would have to investigate every single file to establish the veracity of SCO's claims. Can you imagine weeding through every single .h file, many of which are going to look identical on any Unix system, and trying to establish the one true inventor of the file? I'd bet the original creator of a lot of those files is lost in time.

      SCO would claim ownership, nobody could dispute it, and SCO could conceivably table some obscure document saying they created blah.h on some vaguely appropriate date. It doesn't have to be truthful - it can be manufactured just like all their other claims. If someone eventually comes forward and says "No, I created blah.h and here's proof", SCO would say "Fine, now let's look at blah2.h...".

      Meanwhile, time would pass & SCO execs would be that much closer to their bonus payouts for keeping the stock price going upwards.

      Other than the cost of doing things in this very long drawn out fashion, and I suspect SCO could find external funding for their legal costs from one or two sources in order to keep the anti-Linux FUD alive, is there anything in the US legal system preventing them from doing this?

      I'm thinking all SCO's execs need to do is waste the court's time until they've got their 4th quarter of stock price rises, then bail out with big final paycheques and leave the remaining investors with whatever's left.

    2. Re:SCO Gives Filenames by Arker · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What I want to know is whether there's something in the US legal system that can stop SCO just stringing the court out ad infinitum with bogus ownership claims on file after file. All SCO's execs need is another couple of quarters and they win, regardless of what happens to SCO afterwards.

      As I understand it, for the moment that's up to the patience of the judge. Once plaintiff gets caught in a few lies the judges tend to get a bit short-tempered.

      Beyond that, though, the assumption in your original post that the authorship of this code is somehow murky is incorrect. It took mere hours from the time the examples they screened in Las Vegas became known to the time they were identified, and a couple more days to refine the identification at most. One example that came through SGI is public domain as a result of being derived from V32, the other (the one that TSG claimed as an example of obfuscation) was a reimplimentation from the Berkley spec, both cases are well documented. You can pull any file you want, select a section of code, and pretty quickly track down where it came from, what publically (or, in the case of SysV and the like, semi-publically) available codebases it's occurred in, plot a timeline of changes... the only thing that could really make this difficult is the sheer number of different sections one might wind up looking at.

      But judges, as I said, aren't known for limitless patience. Once SCO gets specific and advances some verifiable claims, and has them shot down in flames, the judge isn't going to simply let them go through that cycle ad infinitum. He's going to berate them for wasting his time, forward some transcripts to ethics committees and possibly other agencies, and turn his attention to the counterclaims. TSG knows this, and that's why they're dancing like crazy in these filings trying to deny that they ever made the claims they made, trying to avoid specifying any real claims that can be refuted.

      The jig is almost up for them. The US legal system may move slow, but it gets quicker when the judge starts suspecting someone is jerking him around, and that's what's happening. Oral arguments have been scheduled, a good sign he's already caught a whiff of what TSG has cooking and he doesn't like it.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
  5. Good Thing! by Delphinios · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Pretty cool, if you think about it.

    IBM, Big Blue, batting in Linux's court. This will likely be the case that stands as precedence for or against the GPL, and with such a giant behind Linux, I don't think SCO will win.

    If they had a chance, they would have pressed their fist into using the law to compel licensing, instead of sending "invoices" and pressuring companies to provide 'insurance' against their lawsuits.

    With the right leverage (such as the kind that IBM has) this could easially compel strong legal backing for the GPL, something it could definately use.

    1. Re:Good Thing! by sydlexic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      IBM, Big Blue, batting in Linux's court. This will likely be the case that stands as precedence for or against the GPL, and with such a giant behind Linux, I don't think SCO will win.

      You sound downright giddy at the prospect that a large company is going to prevail ... because it's large. As much as I hate SCO for the toilet licking scumbags they are, I want IBM to win on the MERITS of the case.

  6. Announcement by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 5, Funny

    about IBM sending subpoenas to large SCO investors in an effort to compel discovery.

    In the recent wake of subpoena frenzy, we at subpoenaforless.com are pleased to announce a 20% discount on all our printed subpoenas, and 25% discount on rose-smelling quadrichromic printed 320g paper models. Up to 40% off all our models of subpoenas can be had if you puchase in volume. We have many satisfied customers and you could be one too.

    We're also working hard on the upcoming opening of our new online Internet portal, oneclicksubpoena.com. Be assure that we at subpoenaforless.com are committed to high quality, trouble free legal hassles.

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
  7. For a good read, click by overshoot · · Score: 5, Informative
    GrokLaw's posting of IBM's "Handy Guide to SCOX Legal Obfuscation," also known as "IBM Addendum to Memorandum in Support of IBM's 2nd Motion to Compel Discovery."

    Warning: put drinks and domestic animals safely out of danger first.

    --
    Lacking <sarcasm> tags, /. substitutes moderation as "Troll."
  8. Haha - great quote by Raul654 · · Score: 4, Funny

    "I view this as an attempt to bully and intimidate..." says Christopher Sontag, executive vice president at SCO.

    Oh, the irony.

    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
    1. Re:Haha - great quote by mebon · · Score: 4, Funny
      I also like this part:

      Sontag says SCO has provided 1 million pages of documents to IBM and that IBM in return has provided only 100,000 pages to SCO. "The foot-dragging is on the part of IBM," he says.

      100,000 pages is dragging your feet??? I'm glad this guy wasn't my literature professor. "Next week please turn in your 1,000 page paper on 'To Kill a Mockingbird'. And it must be single spaced".

    2. Re:Haha - great quote by jjo · · Score: 5, Informative

      What's worse is that a large part of the 'million' pages that SCO produced were scanned printouts of UNIX source code. Rather than burning a source code CD or DVD and mailing it to IBM, they went to enormous efforts to furnish the data in the least useful format possible. They did this even though they acknowledged that IBM would need to perform computer analysis of the code itself.

      Oh, and though they had time to send the million pages to IBM, they didn't have the chance to include the code that they have been showing for months to financial analysts, columnists, and anyone who will sign an NDA. It must have slipped their minds.

    3. Re:Haha - great quote by JanneM · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well, you do a typical fifteen page paper in formal legalese and you'll likely end up with 1k pages or so...

      "The claimant of the first party, hereafter identified as Mrs. Lee, has a prior, wilful relationship with the claimant of the second party, hereafter identified as The Book, in that the claimant of the first party establishes the status of authorship on the claimant of the second party, a status that the claimant of the second party has yet to file a motion to dismiss. Within The Book, the claimant of the third party, referenced alternativel but equally as Scout and Miss Finch is described by the claimant of the first party as ..."

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
  9. This is about calling SCO's bluff about code by csoto · · Score: 5, Insightful

    SCO claims to have shown "the code" to investors and such. IBM says, "okay, SCO won't show us the code, so we'll make your investors do so." Both intimidates the investors and calls SCO's bluff. Brilliant!

    --
    There exists no way of exchanging information without making judgments. --Bene Gesserit Axiom
    1. Re:This is about calling SCO's bluff about code by antiMStroll · · Score: 5, Interesting
      A better theory, IBM is cutting off SCO's funding by using SCO's tactics against them. SCO expended most of their energy so far badgering corporate Linux users with threats of IP transgression and 'offers' or ridiculously priced licenses. The obvious intent is to make corporate users think twice before adopting Linux.

      It's no coincidence that IBM's move came soon after the RBC and BayStar announcements. It's a warning to other potential investors, invest in SCO and endure the gaze of IBM's army of lawyers. With Worldcom and Enron still fresh in their memory, watch them blink first. Anyone care to bet on another anonymous mass purchase of SCO licenses?

  10. Laziness! by bersl2 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Geez, how lazy are you people? Just check the box next to "Caldera."

  11. "Enthusiast"? by John+Hasler · · Score: 5, Funny

    Let's start referring to www.forbes.com as a "stock-market enthusiast Web site".

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  12. Re:It's About time by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 4, Insightful
    No. You don't want it laughed out of court.

    You want this to be properly resolved. We don't need any more of the bullshit coming from the courts where it's decided that the case is not strong enough to set a precedent, so it's dropped instead of getting resolved. Then they wait until another situation comes up that is more favorable. The future of freedom can not wait.

    --
    You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
  13. Sontag wants IBM to send him more paper? by Drishmung · · Score: 5, Funny
    Sontag says SCO has provided 1 million pages of documents to IBM and that IBM in return has provided only 100,000 pages to SCO. "The foot-dragging is on the part of IBM," he says.

    The mind boggles! Sontag is asking IBM to deluge him in paper? He only has 100,000 pages, and he wants IBM to see his million and raise it!

    Groan, somewhere, a forest cries in pain as the log chippers are fired up.

    Do not start a land war in Asia, do not enter a paper war with IBM. Sheesh!

    --
    Protoplasm. Quiet Protoplasm. I like quiet protoplasm.
    1. Re:Sontag wants IBM to send him more paper? by NaugaHunter · · Score: 4, Funny

      Do not start a land war in Asia, do not enter a paper war with IBM. Sheesh!

      Or:
      SCO: Don't get involved in a lawsuit with SCO, when intellectual property is on line! Aha-ha-ha-ha! Aha-ha-h- [CLUNK]
      The Press: And to think, all that time it was SCO with the infringing code.
      IBM: They both had the same code. I built up an immunity to lawsuits over it by following the GPL.

      --
      R: That voice. Where have I heard that voice before? B: In about 365 other episodes. But I don't know who it is either.
  14. Re:Didn't Microsoft and IBM just get in bed? by plierhead · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I thought Microsoft and IBM just signed a huge Xbox 2 chip deal? Maybe I am too idealistic and the proper way to act is to sue your business partners. Maybe thats why I don't own a big company :)

    Big companies like IBM, Microsoft, et al don't act in a single-minded way like we individuals tend to. You can't run a big company with a "you're my enemy so I won't do business with you" mentality.

    There are many, many examples where IBM competes or cooperates with Microsoft and others. An even more extreme example is Sony, where, one half of the business is frantically taking on file swappers and copiers, and the other half is making bucks from selling devices used to copy and swap files.

    --

    [x] auto-moderate all posts by this user as insightful

  15. But by Raul654 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The idea here is to do to SCO what they are trying to do to the OS movement - make the public afraid to touch them. I mean, if buying SCO stock means you risk getting a subpeana, who is going to do it? So what if ESR gets one - I'm sure he'd be happy to give SCO a piece of his mind. The goal is to make your average wall streeter afraid to touch SCO with a 10 foot pole, and there's not a whole lot SCO can do that they haven't already done.

    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
  16. Re:It's About time by John+Hasler · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No. We don't want SCO "laughed out of court". We don't want them out of court at all. We want them _in_ court, unsuccessfully defending themselves against IBM's counterclaims after the judge grants summary judgement in favor of IBM on all of SCO's claims.

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  17. Re:In case we kill Forbes by dtperik · · Score: 5, Funny

    Sontag says SCO has provided 1 million pages of documents

    I don't think he realizes that press releases don't count.

  18. Well you see, the problem was... by SuperKendall · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... that all of IBM's 100,000 pages so far all said:

    "This page intentionally left blank."

    Of course, all of SCO's 1M pages were diagrams of kittens and houses in crayon so they can hardly complain.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  19. Now it gets interesting by theolein · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't think that Microsoft is directly behind this action, but I sure as hell wouldn't put it past them to do so. They've done some pretty weird stuff in the past such as the famous dead people mailing initiative and their famous round of hideous anti-linux FUD in 2001 where Ballmer, Mundie and just about every honcho at MS were telling strange tales of viral cancer etc.

    Given that they discovered that such direct FUD backfired but are reportedly gearing up for the next round of FUD with respect to security would you be willing to state with 100% certainty that MS is not behind this action?

    I wouldn't.

    If it is discovered through IBM's process of subpoenas that MS is in fact behind this I wonder what will happen then. I assume that MS will be facing a court action for trying to willfully harm a competitor's business that will make the $3 billion SCO claim look tame, and I think that there will be a number of anti-trust questions raised.

  20. There are words for this by MarkusQ · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Big companies like IBM, Microsoft, et al don't act in a single-minded way like we individuals tend to.

    That's because when individuals act the way big companies do, we call them things like "nut cases" and "psycopaths." An individual that dumped toxic waste into a river or FUD into the media (at what would be a modest rate by corporate standards) would be locked up. An individual who was insulting someone while kissing up to them would seem (at best) socialy maladroit.

    This is what makes corporate characterization of hackers as social outcasts so ironic. The most nerdly hacker is still an order of magnitude more sane & sociable than the average mega-corp.

    -- MarkusQ

  21. Since no one else pointed it out by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The author of this piece, Daniel Lyons, should use the by line, "SCO Mouthpiece." He is the same hack who wrote the "Linux's Hit Men" article about the FSF plus there was another recent piece of SCO FUD that I've managed to flush out of my memory.

    You will also note that quietly buried in the body of the article is that Forbes was also served with a subpoena. This is undoubtedly because of Mr. Lyons' articles.

    --
    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
    Ben
  22. I wondered if this would happen by swillden · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From SCO's supplemental responses:

    IBM has unfairly competed with SCO by... entering a conspiracy... with others in the Linux development and distribution business... to artificially restrain prices below natural levels for the purposes of destroying competition in the operating systems market for UNIX software on Intel machines. ... By artificially restraining the price of Linux to zero, which price is very substantially below the actual development cost contributed by IBM and others, IBM induces customers to switch to Linux. This is, among other things, unfair competition.

    I've been wondering when someone was going to try this for quite a while. "Dumping", selling a product below cost in order to force your competitors out of business, is illegal for good reasons. It seems like a motivated attorney could pretty easily make a case that any company who is putting substantial investment into software that is distributed for free is dumping, and trying to kill a competitor.

    This doesn't just apply to IBM and Linux, it also applies to Sun and OpenOffice, and perhaps others as well. Now it looks like SCO is trying this argument out for real.

    I had hoped the argument wouldn't get brought up for a while, until a history of such corporate open source efforts was well established. And it seemed reasonable that it might not be brought up, since the "damaged" party in both the Linux and OpenOffice cases is Microsoft, and as a convicted anti-competitive monopolist with a massive market share they're not in a very good position to complain.

    It seems like Microsoft has found a way to get the idea in front of a judge after all...

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    1. Re:I wondered if this would happen by Raffaello · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There might be some companies out there that would want this idea to be scrutinized closely in court, but Microsoft would not be likely to be among them.

      Remember that Microsoft has a long history of what you refer to as "software dumping." Internet Explorer anyone? How much have MS users paid for that piece of software, which must have cost MS millions to develop. Clearly, MS have been dumping their web browser below cost! It was, for years, a separate, free download, in an era when MS was struggling mightily to catch up to then leader, Netscape.

      So, no, I don't think Microsoft really want the courts to rule that giving away software is de facto unfair competition. It would take a weapon from Microsoft's arsenal that they have used to excellent effect in the past.

  23. Re:It's About time by KD5YPT · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think the precedent is the fact that SCO claims GPL is not enforceable. If the court agreed that GPL is a legal license, that will make any challenge in the future against GPL hard or impossible. Which gives open source softwares some legal backings.

    --
    In US, you can easily buy enough major firearms to wipe out your neighbourhood but a few little fireworks are banned.
  24. Hello, gentlemen by Compact+Dick · · Score: 5, Funny

    I would like to purchase one (1) subpoena against oneclicksubpoena.com with regard to violation of US Patent# 5,960,411.

    Sincerely,
    amazon.com

  25. Re:It's About time by Geek+of+Tech · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Don't they realize that doing this is suicide? If they were to determine that the GPL is enforcable, SCO just shot themselves in the foot. It they decide that the GPL is not enforcable, every kernel contributor, even everyone who has worked on a package that has appeared in Caldera or SCO Linux could sue SCO. In just a few weeks, they could bankrupt the company.

    --
    Stop the Slashdot effect! Don't read the articles!
  26. IBM's options at this point by Animats · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The Cravath machine is starting to roll.

    First, if SCO stalls much longer on discovery, Cravath will be in a good position to move for a dismissal. They might get it, too. Maybe even a dismissal with prejudice, so SCO can't refile, or summary judgement in IBM's favor.

    Independent of this, it looks like IBM is gearing up for a securities-fraud counterclaim. Cravath has pointed out in legal filings that SCO has made statements publicly that are inconsistent with the positions they take in court. Ordinarily, that's OK. But when the stock price spikes and insiders are cashing out, that's not OK.

    There's also the potential of a false-claim-of-copyright claim. That's rarely used, but here, it's clearly appropriate.

    This is going to crank for a while, but unless SCO comes up with something a lot better than what they've shown so far, they're not going to win.

  27. Ignore parent by aws4y · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Sorry hit submit instead of preview, I got flustered and the buttons are so close together.

    Some of thoes files don't contain any UNIX System V source code, only "UNIX methods" which is a vague way of saying that it may have appeared in a textbook. That is why IBM feels that simply giving filenames is insuffecent since even if there is not one pice of SysV code in thoes files SCO can still claim that some of the algorithims are similar to thoes in SysV and thus there is still a copyright violation, even though these alogrithims are taught to students in classes and SCO dosent have a patent on them.

    The last point is the major weakness in SCO's case and why Novell can now just flick them away like the tiny fly that they are.

    --
    Did Glenn Beck rape and kill a girl in 1990? gb1990.com
  28. Re:It's About time by ces · · Score: 4, Insightful

    SCO's lawsuit against IBM is over a breach of contract. It doesn't mention the GPL at all. However, IBM's countersuit does bring up the GPL several times. SCO's lawsuit can be laughed out of court without affecting IBM's countersuit. From what I've heard, IBM would like a court ruling backing the GPL as much as the rest of the open source community. The chances of IBM dropping their countersuit is really small. If IBM is sending subpoenas to investors, then it sounds like IBM would like to make an example out of SCO and everyone that has helped them.

    SCO made the mistake of attacking something very core to IBM's business, its reputation.

    By claiming that IBM willfully and flagrantly breached its contracts with SCO and disregarded confidentiality agreements, SCO is jeprodizing IBM's business with almost every one of their customers including banks, government, and nearly every large corporation.

    --
    Happy Fun Ball is for external use only.
  29. Congressman Barney Frank (D Mass.) on SCO suit by hqm · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When SCO was going around threatening end users, I sent a letter to my congressman, Barney Frank of Massachusetts. Here is his response:

    ====

    September 26, 2003

    Dear Mr. Minsky,

    I share your view that the suits being brought by the SCO Group
    against the users of the Linux system are an entirely inappropriate
    use of the legal systems for broader corporate purposes. While I have
    note been able, obviously, to examine these in detail, the suits do
    not appear to me, from what I have read, to have any merit, and in
    fact seem to be motivated, as I said, by an effort simply to prevent
    the use of Linux for competitive reasons.

    There is, unfortunately, a very limited role for Congress here. I
    agree with those who would like to see us "stop SCO from punishing
    innocent consumers to inflate its other legal claims." But under our
    separation of powers doctrine, Congress has no role whatsoever to play
    in the pursuit of particular cases. We can pass laws which prevent
    certain types of suits from being brought, but it is very, very
    difficult to pass those in a way that would be retroactive - that is,
    that would apply to existing suits. And the problem with this suit is
    not that it is of a sort of legal claim that is inappropriate to
    bring, but that it is totally unjustified on the merits. In other
    words, the remedy here is for these suits to be dismissed on their
    merits and Congress has no role, as I have said, in doing that.

    I am prepared to join in expressions of extreme disapproval of what
    SCO is doing, and I will be consulting with my colleagues to see if
    there is a movement to do that. I hope that will have some impact on
    them. All of these lawsuits brought against individuals will of course
    be dismissed but I realize that is of little consolation to people
    who have had to go through the trouble and expense of defending against
    them. It may be that at some point a judge will act decisively enough
    in this regard to prevent this proliferation of suits, and while, as I
    said, our Congressional role is very limited here, I will be
    encouraging anything we can do along these lines.

    Barney Frank

  30. Re:Congressman Barney Frank (D Mass.) on SCO suit by circusnews · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Many readers (like the two reading over my shoulder) are taking this as a cop-out on Barny Franks part. I for one really wish more of our elected leaders understood the seperation of powers. If they did, we would have far fewer problems with the law than we do today.

  31. Don't write off conspiracies just yet by siskbc · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Contrary to the slashbots, I think it's highly unlikely that this market manipulation is SCO, Canopy, Microsoft, Sun or anyone else. It's probably just independant brokers who know a goldrush when they see one. Just like VA Linux, etc.

    I definitely understand the tendency to ignore all the paranoid ravings you hear on /., because I do too. That said, there are some legit reasons to give this one consideration. First, Forbes is typically quite the conservative mag, and I doubt they'd even have printed that had it not passed the laugh test to outsiders. Second, this scheme is simliar to what canopy has done before by Canopy. I'm generally skeptical, and I will bank on this being a pump-n-dump or similar scheme by SCO/Canopy. This is their MO.

    The Microsoft angle is more farfetched, but not completely implausible. MS paid a *lot* of money for SCO licenses that were somewhere between unnecessary and worthless to MS. Also, lately, SCO has been making strange offers about discounts to people who make the switch to any non-linux system, and saying it in a way that all but screams "Windows."

    Bottom line, I'd bet on Canopy running this scam. I'd wait for some more bookkeeping before I listened to the MS angle.

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat