Slashdot Mirror


SCO Fires back, Subpoenas Stallman, Torvalds et al

SirFozzie writes "SCO has just, within the past hour, announced that they have fired back against IBM's legal broadside, with one of their own, filing subpoenas against several of the biggest names in Linux. SCO filed subpoenas with the U.S. District Court in Utah, targeting six different individuals or organizations. Those include Novell; Linus Torvalds, creator of the Linux kernel; Richard Stallman of the Free Software Foundation; Stewart Cohen, chief executive of the Open Source Development Labs; and John Horsley, general counsel of Transmeta."

5 of 1,145 comments (clear)

  1. Mirror of news by bob301 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Subpoenas are flying in the high-profile lawsuit between The SCO Group and IBM, as both companies try to buttress their legal claims by turning to third parties for information. SCO said Wednesday that it has filed subpoenas with the U.S. District Court in Utah, targeting six different individuals or organizations. Those include Novell; Linus Torvalds, creator of the Linux kernel; Richard Stallman of the Free Software Foundation; Stewart Cohen, chief executive of the Open Source Development Labs; and John Horsley, general counsel of Transmeta. SCO spokesman Blake Stowell said he did not know what the subpoenas asked for, but "I know that some of them have been served." IBM also has broadened its efforts to respond to the Linux-related lawsuit by asking a federal judge to order SCO to identify illegal source code and serving four other companies with subpoenas of its own. SCO filed the suit in March, claiming that IBM "contaminated" Linux by illegally incorporating trade secrets inherited from Unix. So far, SCO has listed the names of 591 files in the Linux 2.4 and 2.5 kernels that allegedly contain illicit code but has not been more specific. IBM's subpoenas were sent on Oct. 30 to BayStar Capital, Deutsche Bank, Renaissance Ventures and The Yankee Group, which have indicated they have reason to believe SCO's claims are legitimate. IBM has cited an Oct. 16 article in the Salt Lake Tribune that reported Deutsche Bank analyst Brian Skiba visited SCO's headquarters and saw a "near exact duplicate of source code between the Linux 2.4 kernel and (SCO's) Unix System V kernel." In October, BayStar Capital invested $50 million in SCO. In a statement to CNET News.com on Wednesday, IBM said: "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." IBM filed motions on Nov. 3 and Nov. 6, asking the court to "issue an order compelling SCO to respond to IBM's interrogatories with specificity and in detail." SCO's Stowell said his company provided about a million pages of documents in response to IBM's requests. "They are trying to coerce and intimidate," Stowell said, referring to Big Blue's subpoenas. "I think what they're trying to do is that if you're a potential investor in our company or an industry analyst that says anything even remotely favorable toward SCO, you're going to be subpoenaed by IBM."

  2. Dude, who works at SCO? by Aqua+OS+X · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Dude, who works at SCO? 13 year old bipolar kids who don't take their pills?

    One day they're going to sue everyone, the next day they're dropping law suits, the day after that they decide to sue everyone again.

    Erahhhhh!

    --
    "Things are more moderner than before- bigger, and yet smaller- it's computers-- San Dimas High School football RULES!"
  3. I'm sure they'll find TONS of copied code!!! by L*stB*y · · Score: 0, Redundant

    i++; every where! the thieving anarchists!

  4. Please, please, SCO... by Zoolander · · Score: 0, Redundant

    why won't you just roll up and die, and save us all the trouble. You know that is what's going to happen, sooner or later.

    --
    Meep.
  5. Re:How about an investigation by nateDigs420 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Sun licenses UNIX because they have their on VERSION of Unix that they like to sell with their server hardware.