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ZDNet Examines SCO Indemnity Options

Ursus Maximus writes "David Berlind of ZD NET has posted a major opinion/research piece. What do you all think? I don't like the story at all, but he does seem to have made more of an effort to try to find reasons to back up SCO's claims than any of their other supporters have."

368 comments

  1. RH ducks the punch by Sad+Loser · · Score: 3, Insightful


    my guess about why redhat is not offering indemnification is that it would be setting itself up as an easy target.

    Maybe RH figures (not unreasonably) that it is better to let the big boys slug it out. I think if it were a choice between RH's lawyers and IBM's lawyers, I know who SCO would go for.

    --
    Humorous signatures are over-rated.
    1. Re:RH ducks the punch by nomadic · · Score: 5, Funny

      I don't know, after you reach a certain level of wealth the law teams even out. Both IBM and RH can afford to hire the best, no reason why IBM would be any more intimidating than RH.

    2. Re:RH ducks the punch by mellonhead · · Score: 4, Informative

      RH filed a lawsuit against SCO for "unfair and deceptive actions."

      Firing one over the bow like that isn't exactly letting the big boys slug it out...

    3. Re:RH ducks the punch by c1ay · · Score: 5, Funny
      It's really a moot point since SCO is a Dead End...

      --

    4. Re:RH ducks the punch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm curious if Ziff Davis offers indemnity to their readers in case of copyright violation. If they really believe an end user is liable for copyright infringement they really should be.

      Mods,
      This is both insightful and funny.

    5. Re:RH ducks the punch by dbIII · · Score: 4, Informative
      my guess about why redhat is not offering indemnification is that it would be setting itself up as an easy target.
      My guess is that it would be a pointless waste of time and money until SCO produces something that stands up in court. SCO is playing the same silly games in discovery that Ford did in the Pinto case (burying the case under enormous amounts of paperwork) and which no-one else has been game to risk contempt of court and try since. I'm sure a real lawyer could say more.
    6. Re:RH ducks the punch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Insightful? Who's modding this?

      A legal defense fund for developers covers EVERYONE that legally can be sanctioned by the court for copyright infringement. Does that explain Red Hat's move better? A clear explanation follows.

      There's one thing in these lawsuits that even a non-lawyer can understand that really nullifies the whole point of your article. If I sell you a newspaper with a plagiarized article and the newspaper contains a license that says the newspaper comes with no warranty, you know no one can legally approach you for more license money later, since you never committed a crime. No warranty is a standard contract clause to avoid blame for buggy software, but it can't shift blame for a crime. No license can shift that responsibility. Likewise, only the parties that inserted stolen code and the parties that distributed it can possibly be guilty in this case. Darl McBride is no lawyer and clearly speaks often about legal issues without consulting one. He thinks that because the community owns the software, that they also get to answer for crimes, but they don't own it, since that's not how copyrights work. That copyright and its IP liability rests solely with the software authors or the companies they work for if it's work for hire. If there is stolen code in the Linux kernel, Linus Torvalds can be sued and sanctioned, but Google can not unless they added SCO IP.

      HP chooses to indemnify, since it's something their customers ask for without understanding that only the developers can be held liable. Their indemnification doesn't protect modified software, so it's not worth the paper it's printed on. It's a cheap ruse that looks like a selling point.

      Secondly, SCO has failed to add copyright claims regarding Linux to their IBM lawsuit after they claimed they were, which is the loudest canary singing today. Their new copyright claims are about IBM's failure to stop shipping AIX instead. Their trade secret claims have gone missing too.

      I don't doubt a frivilous lawsuit can be won. I do doubt that it can be won without a lawyer's legal reasoning by the plaintiffs. Just because they can easily confuse the media doesn't mean they can confuse a judge.

    7. Re:RH ducks the punch by SoTuA · · Score: 1
      Huh?

      Maye redhat can afford some real good lawyer, but IBM _has_ the best _on payroll_. That's right, IBM probably has more lawyers on payroll than redhat has employees.

    8. Re:RH ducks the punch by nomadic · · Score: 1

      The best trial lawyers work in firms. RH has about a billion in the bank. Do you really think they can't afford any lawyer in the country they want?

    9. Re:RH ducks the punch by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      I would think that the penultimate of irony would be if the judge uses linux. :) ~X

      --
      ~X~
    10. Re:RH ducks the punch by mstahl302 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      my guess about why redhat is not offering indemnification is that it would be setting itself up as an easy target.
      My guess is much different.

      One possible outcome of the SCO affair is that companies become convinced that all Open Source Software requires idemnification before it can be used in an enterprise. This would be a terrible blow to the Open Source Movement as a whole. Once convinced of the need for idemnification, then your own corporate lawyers will insist that no one in the company ever use any Open Source Software, unless it is provided through some distributor that has agreed to offer idemnification.

      The need for an idemnifying distributor will undermine the use of open source in the corporate world. It will either become just as inconvenient to obtain as commercial software, or it will be precluded altogether if no idemnifying distributer can be found. The Open Source movement as a whole will suffer a horrible setback.

      I like to think that one of the reasons Red Hat chooses not to offer idenmification is because they know that conceding the argument to SCO is tantemount to destroying Open Source. They are standing by the principle that Linux in particular (and Open Source in general) does not need indeminfication, and I admire them for seeking a declaratory judgement to that effect, rather than caving into SCO's underhanded attempt to undermine the Open Source Software movement by giving into the pressure to idemnify.

    11. Re:RH ducks the punch by Crazy+Eight · · Score: 1

      Uhh, you mean a linux using judge would be the next to last item in a list of ironies? And if so, would that really be considered irony?

  2. SCO Sues an End User by Mr.+Darl+McBride · · Score: 5, Funny
    Alright. This doesn't really seem to be going the way we wanted. I mean, you said no to $690 a seat. You aren't willing to assign future Linux refinements to me and my posse. You wouldn't even read the brochure I worked so hard on, or cry uncle when I surprised you with a titty twister. And now you say you've called the police, and that's kind of harshing my mellow. I mean, that's a fine how-do-you-do for your good friend Darl!

    Listen, I mean - maybe we can still settle this. I want what we're due... you want what's fair... look: I'm taking one... two... see? Two big handfuls of mints from the nice bowl on the reception desk... all good? Okay so far? Excellent. And I'm keeping my visitor's name tag, and I want on your Christmas mailing list. No? Okay... just the mints and the tag? Just the mints? Excellent.

    Hey, look -- Jesus at the copier!!

    CHRIS! Grab another handful of mints! Let's bolt!@!!1

    ~Darl

    1. Re:SCO Sues an End User by c1ay · · Score: 5, Funny
      Hey Darl, maybe you should try negotiating indemnity from /. before someone posts your phone number here again...

      --

    2. Re:SCO Sues an End User by NaugaHunter · · Score: 4, Funny

      You mean this one?

      --
      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.
    3. Re:SCO Sues an End User by quandrum · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There's one thing I never understood about the whole "You have to license parts of the kernel from us!" If you did this, wouldn't all the GPL code in the kernel be linked to a non-compatible license?

      If so, this would mean, you lose the right to use everything but the SCO code, and you would have to negotiate with each individual person and group that holds a linux copyright.

      So, if SCO is right, who would actually buy a license? A switch to *BSD would be painful, but surely easier than trying to negotiate terms with Linus and Alan that would allow their code to link with SCO licensed code.

      Or maybe SCO can come up with a GPL compatible license. Sure worked for X Windows!

    4. Re:SCO Sues an End User by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heh, actually Kevin is moving from Utah to California, and he had to file something about that with the court, which you can read about here.

    5. Re:SCO Sues an End User by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sure that's him? I thought he was in Lindon?

      Or is that just SCO?

      It would be awful to harass some poor innocent schmoe*

      * The cynic in me wants to add "when we could be harassing the real Darl," but it is not good for us to harass either of them in any capacity. SCO will try to turn this against IBM, even when none of us have any ties to IBM or anyone else who is actually litigating here...

    6. Re:SCO Sues an End User by E_elven · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, it does. Everything would drop to default copyright (no-one has any rights but the author.) SCO just choose to ignore it for now.

      --
      Marxist evolution is just N generations away!
    7. Re:SCO Sues an End User by Puggs · · Score: 1

      No (s)he means this one:

      Darl C Mcbride
      1799 Vintage Oak Ln
      Salt Lake City, UT
      (801) 424-2006 ;)

    8. Re:SCO Sues an End User by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Furthermore, if SCO succeeds, they have established that their past actions in distributing the Linux kernel violated the GPL on the kernel. They cannot simply choose to go back to being in compliance. They must get permission from every kernel developer to go back to using the Linux kernel under the GPL. Effectively, if SCO wins, here's what happens:

      1) All of the SCO code is replaced.

      2) The new, non-infringing Linux kernel is distributed.

      3) SCO is notified by IBM, RH, Mandrake, OSDL, and a few hundred individual contributors that they have violated the GPL. There will be conditions if they ever want to distribute the Linux kernel again.

      Personally, I would only require a few minor conditions:

      1) SCO pays a $699 license fee to each kernel developer for each copy sold or downloaded.

      2) There will be a $699 upgrade fee as well for every new version of the kernel they distribute.

      3) SCO will release all of the code for their various Unices under the GPL.

      4) Darl McBride will resign and donate his entire net worth to OSDL, FSF, EFF, and Groklaw.

      5) Letters of apology, including an admission that they knew at the time they were wrong, will be sent to everyone they sued or threatened to sue.

  3. No mention of the claims' validity... by dartmouth05 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Berlind makes no mention of the validity of SCO's claims--his argument is simply based on the existance of the lawsuits. That's like telling the manager of the local fast food franchise to give in to the mob's protection racket, because if you don't pay them off and your store gets trashed, you might get fired. Even if the local mob is two 12 year olds with nerf guns. It is idiotic to argue for imdemnification without analysing the threat posed by the SCO lawsuits. Anyone can file a lawsuit--it doesn't mean you should pay a 3rd party to indemnify you.

    1. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by Kristoph · · Score: 1

      Insightful?

      The article specifically addresses the question of the claims' validity.

      ]{

    2. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by pez · · Score: 1

      In what way, exactly?

    3. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by Rimbo · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yup. More to the point, he's saying "Just because the opposition to SCO is bigger, louder, and carries the most-respected voices, doesn't mean they're right." He's technically right in that regard; just because Torvalds says they're on crack doesn't mean they can't win.

      On the other hand:
      1. The fact that the very rights they claim to have are in dispute,
      2. The fact that it took them MONTHS to produce, even for the court, any evidence supporting their claims -- and even admitted that they didn't have all of the evidence they'd claimed to have,
      3. The fact that their high-priced lawyer hasn't shown up to court in a while,
      4. Other facts related to the case,

      those DO suggest that this is bullshit, and that there's nothing to fear.

      So yeah. Don't believe us because we're loud. Believe us because the evidence supports us.

    4. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So yeah. Don't believe us because we're loud. Believe us because the evidence supports us.

      Don't underestimate the US court system. I'll believe you if and when SCO's last appeal is dismissed.

    5. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by JoeCommodore · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Knowing some decision makers - the unsupported thinly vieled threat of a possible lsawsuit makes them very reluctant. Are you saying your company never has instituted 'silly safety policy A' or 'adjustment to personnel manual B' because of some story about something that *might* happen?

      The truth is - we have too many hungry lawyers who BS better than our policymakers can stand up for what should be right.

      In the long run doing all this FUD probably will hurt SCO even if they win - as not all their code is owned by them and if they were to win who's to stop another code contestor from suing for his piece of the pie?

      In the past advancement was achieved by standing on the shoulders of those before you. Advancements today are achieved by standing on the feet of all those around you.

      --
      "Enjoy what you're doing! If it becomes drudgery, you're doing it wrong!" - Jim Butterfield
    6. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by raga · · Score: 5, Informative

      Correct. IANAL (but I do have a couple of friend who are, and this is how they explained it to me). YMMV/VWPBL etc. etc.:

      As long as the ownership of any property (in this case the UNIX IP) is under dispute between two parties in a court of law, then the end user of that property is under no legal obligation to listen to or believe in the claims of either of the parties. The end user is only obligated to the contract she entered into with the original party at the time she started using the property, until directed to do otherwise by the court.

      E.g., A rents B a house, and B, in good faith, signs a contract with A to pay a certain monthly rent, gets the keys to the house and starts using it. A couple of years later, C shows up and tells B that the house actually belongs to C, and B should be paying rent to C and not to A. Then, A and C sue/counter-sue each other re. the ownership of the house, and a court starts to look at the matter. While the matter is sub-judice, (and without any clear directive from the court to put the rent in an escrow fund etc.), B is only obligated to follow the contract with A.

      This is true especially if the matter is sub-judice. So the issue of indemnity is moot.

      cheers- raga

    7. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by mehaiku · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, don't underestimate the US court system, and the fact the he who has the bigger wallet will most likely win. I think we know who that is in this case.

    8. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by Shadowlore · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'll believe you if and when SCO's last appeal is dismissed.

      Wow, someone who doesn't decide what to beleive on their own! Wait all too common ...

      --
      My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
    9. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 5, Informative

      2. The fact that it took them MONTHS to produce, even for the court, any evidence supporting their claims -- and even admitted that they didn't have all of the evidence they'd claimed to have,

      The real issue is that what evidence they have produced in court is simply pointing out a well-known fact: that IBM contributed code that IBM itself wrote into Linux. SCO doesn't even claim ownership of the code; they are just claiming that IBM was supposed to ask SCO before contributing it. SCO does not claim and cannot support that there is any System V code in Linux.

      So, regardless of whether IBM contributed code improperly or not, there is no code in Linux that is a "derivative work" of any SCO property. The asking permission thing is a contract dispute between SCO and IBM and end users can't be held liable for that; nobody but IBM can. And it looks very much like SCO has no control over IBMs actions since (1) Novell has retained the control rights for existing Unix licensees, and (2) the AT&T license gave it no rights over licensees own code anyway.

    10. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only thing about this case that scares the shit outta me is the randomness factor of the US judicial system. The IBM/SCO case on the surface has several similarities to the Microsoft/Eolas patent dispute -- and Microsoft is having to appeal the judgement against it. (It is so wierd hoping that IBM and Microsoft win these suits.) Do the judges roll 20 sided dice to decide these cases?

    11. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by BobTheLawyer · · Score: 4, Informative

      any lawyer will tell you that there's always a risk that a case goes against you, no matter how strong your case.

      I work for a large law firm in the UK - we typically advise clients there's a base 10% chance of losing a cast-iron case. Would be surprised if the position is very different in the States (and presumably jury trials are significantly more uncertain).

    12. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      I fully agree with the HP position in his articlet.

      Over the past year we all learned that SCO's claims were baseless. It's media fuzz targeted to the capital market. They didn't offer a real proof of their claims. In germany SCO may not sell their licenses because of competitive law, a court ruled that sco's media campaign infringed on certain business standards. So i feel very safe about the Sco's "we own linux" circus. What we could also see was the way media works, they never looked deeply into SCo's accusations. Indemnification sounds bitter as it creates the impression Sco owned rights of Linux --- without any proof from Sco's side.

      IP in the hands of a failed company is dangerous, bear that in mind.

    13. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by c1ay · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I think they should just go after SCO at this point for filing a frivilous case they had no evidence for in the first place. Consider just two facts:

      On Aug 20 of last year Chris Sontag is quoted as saying, "the company has uncovered more than a million lines of copied code in Linux, with the help of pattern recognition experts."

      Then on Feb 6 of this year, in court before the judge, IBM states that SCO has publicly made such a claim but has in fact only shown a few lines of code in 17 files to which SCO replies, "With respect to the overriding issue, that SCO failed to identify line-for-line code copying", Heise (SCO's attorney) claimed "that has not and is not what the case is about." At that point, Heise said SCO cannot identify the violations.

      Now, either they had the evidence they said they had when they filed the suit in the first place or they didn't. It's beginning to look more and more like they didn't and the whole affair was merely a fishing trip. If this is the case they should be held accountable for everyone's time and money that they wasted since they never had the evidence they claimed in the first place.

      --

    14. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by TobiasSodergren · · Score: 1

      Given the large amount of money being spent in the court room, my guess is that they use two 6-sided dices, a wheel with 36 number on, or trying to get their cards to get closest to 21.

    15. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by rcs1000 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Does this mean I should start 10 $3bn law suits against random people, on the basis that I'll win one of them?

      Finally... the solution to

      1. Something.
      2. SUE EVERYONE.
      3. Profit.

      --
      --- My dad's political betting
    16. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by Rimbo · · Score: 1

      Jury trials are the worst. Face it: You're dealing with 12 people who weren't smart enough to get out of jury duty.

      What you basically do is you multiply the probability of losing by the amount you stand to lose. Then you multiply the remaining probability by what you lose if you don't. You now have two (estimated) dollar amounts. You pick the one with the smallest dollar amount. Move on.

      The author of the article is not only telling people that the former amount is not $0, he's trying to say that it's greater than the 10%. But the thing is, HINAL (He Ain't A Lawyer). The big corps have lawyers, and they've asked the lawyers, and their lawyers are telling them percentages, just like you tell your clients. And these companies, if they have any brains at all, have already done the math. And right now, the math favors doing nothing. That's why SCO hasn't won a lot of licensing fees.

    17. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jury trials are the worst. Face it: You're dealing with 12 people who weren't smart enough to get out of jury duty.

      Or, perhaps someone who thinks a jury trial is a basic right under the US Constitution and is of SOME importance?

      Yep, been on a jury. . .Nope, didn't want to be, but wouldn't lie to get off.

    18. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1
      The benefit of jury trials are if you are guilty. Magistrates often call cases correctly in the UK - juries often get it wrong.

    19. Re:No mention of the claims' validity... by BobTheLawyer · · Score: 1

      in case you haven't noticed, there are plenty of people doing this in the US already.

      Most countries have a rule that if you start a law suit and lose, you are responsible for some or all of the other side's legal costs. If you had a rule like this is the States, you might not have an out of control legal system.

  4. Skipping to the conclusion... by antiMStroll · · Score: 5, Insightful
    " Most companies using Linux (not including embedded Linux-based appliance makers, which could have more significant risk) could easily bury the cost of protection in their IT budget without anyone batting so much as an eyelash. But, you can't bury the damages in the hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars, or the pink slip that goes with them.

    Basically, you have one question to ask yourself: How much peace of mind do you have now and how much more are you willing to spend for a little extra?

    Others here have argued that the appearance of such warnings in the popular press - making Linux a risk - was part of SCO's intent all along. Don't know if they're right but the warnings are here.

    1. Re:Skipping to the conclusion... by __aanebg9627 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Exactly. I'm wondering how much SCO had to pay, and to whom, to get this guy in print. The article is hardly an 'analysis', so much as an attempt to lay out the logic SCO wants businesses to see. ("Pay us, it's cheaper than getting sued later.") There was no attempt to gauge the liklihood that SCO had any valid case, which is the key issue. Of course, how could he -- the author has no background in IP law. Any decent analysis of the risks has to take the relevant IP law into account. Otherwise, it's just uninformed noise.

    2. Re:Skipping to the conclusion... by nomadic · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yeah, I automatically assume anyone who writes an opinion piece I don't agree with is being paid under the table to propagate his or her views.

    3. Re:Skipping to the conclusion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Maybe you should read past the first sentence of the grandparent post.

  5. Microsoft shill ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    from Berlind's Bio ...
    ... Prior to that, he served as editor-in-chief of Windows Sources, where he led the magazine's push for exclusive coverage of Windows NT for business users.

    http://www.wirelessenterprisesymposium.com/sympo si um/speakers/DavidBerlindBio.shtml

    Sounds like permanent brain damage to me.

    Ziff-Davis is a Microsoft shill. Their bias
    is pretty transparent.

    Fear. Uncertainty. Doubt.

    Same. Old. Story.

    1. Re:Microsoft shill ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Times when I wish I had modpoints...

    2. Re:Microsoft shill ? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 5, Interesting

      As someone with more familiarity with Ziff-Davis than the average person (hint: in my time I've done more than just read what they've got to say), I can honestly tell you that the overwhelming majority of ZD staffers are less than enamoured by Microsoft and its business practices.

      However, living in the real world, it's a bit difficult to run a series of IT publications without writing about Microsoft and its products given their dominance in both the enterprise and the consumer markets. ZD (or CNet, IDG, VNU, etc) ignoring Microsoft would be about as sensible as a mainstream movie magazine ignoring any Hollywood productions.

      Frankly, I'm fed up with this "Ziff-Davis is a Microsoft shill" line. ZD has spent the last two decades writing about Microsoft (and other) products that run on Microsoft operating systems because that's what sells magazines. If Joe Average had wanted magazines about Unix instead then they would have written about Unix instead, but they didn't, so get over it.

      And, finally, why you would be surprised that the editor of a publication called Windows Sources would "push for exclusive coverage of Windows NT for business users" is a mystery to me - would it make more sense to you to devote large chunks of coverage to other OSes in a magazine that's devoted purely to Windows? I guess you'll be demanding that Apple magazines now cover Linux too.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    3. Re:Microsoft shill ? by westlake · · Score: 1, Offtopic
      Ziff-Davis is a Microsoft shill.

      Guaranteed to score at least 4 points. The predictable, all-purpose, mod this one up high! Slashdot response to anyone who prints a story the true Linux zealot doesn't want to hear

    4. Re:Microsoft shill ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Frankly, I'm fed up with this "Ziff-Davis is a Microsoft shill" line.

      Okay. You're fed up with it. Regardless,
      it's true. I got fed up with Ziff-Davis
      and stopped subscribing to PC Magazine.

      ZD has spent the last two decades writing about Microsoft (and other) products that run on Microsoft operating systems because that's what sells magazines.

      Used to sell magazines. ZD is in a big hurt
      these days. You're also ignoring the other
      side of equation : ad sales. ZD was notorious
      for kow-towing the Redmond. IMHO ZD went out
      of their way to attack Linux in the early days.
      They tried to bury the baby in the cradle.
      They're sill trying to kill it. ZD could have
      had some balance and pemitted some criticism
      of the advertizers ... but they didn't. That's
      the big reason ZD is irrelevant now.

      If Joe Average had wanted magazines about Unix instead then they would have written about Unix instead, but they didn't, so get over it.

      Oh beleive me, I am over it. Who subscribes
      to PC mag. anymore? Or Computer Shopper ?
      Or Network Week? or whatever fad bandwagon
      ZD tried to domesticate?

      ZD would have been better of hedging their bets.
      The ruined their credibility.

    5. Re:Microsoft shill ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Or KDE Zealot. Or Mac Zealot. Whoever.
      Lotta Zealots around here get the
      gratuitous hyperboost.

      No. This one is more than heartfelt.
      ZD was/is an agent provacatuer sponsored by
      Redmond. These guys kissed Mickey's foot
      straight into Chapter 11. Now their supposed
      to be "objective"? C'mon, these clowns made their
      reps praising Windows 3.1. Yeah, they really
      know their stuff.

      I'm sorry, they're pretty hard to take seriously.

    6. Re:Microsoft shill ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can honestly tell you that the overwhelming majority of ZD staffers are less than enamoured by Microsoft and its business practices.

      Okay, tell us about it.
      Please! This is a great place to
      tell us about Microsoft's relationship with ZD.

    7. Re:Microsoft shill ? by abulafia · · Score: 4, Insightful
      And, finally, why you would be surprised that the editor of a publication called Windows Sources would "push for exclusive coverage of Windows NT for business users" is a mystery to me - would it make more sense to you to devote large chunks of coverage to other OSes in a magazine that's devoted purely to Windows? I guess you'll be demanding that Apple magazines now cover Linux too.

      No, that isn't the point, and it this is bordering on strawman argumentation.

      Of course you would expect such behavior from someone in that place. That, in fact, is exactly the point. Given such an investment in the past, looking at that in light of current behavior is simply sensible.

      This is no different than considering a politician's background then looking at what they're currently peddling.

      I'll leave it as to others to think about this in context with the rest of your ZD rant, and only say this. Suppose you're covering the local farming industry, and in order to survive as a company, you have to keep the Big Local Farmer happy. That's fine, but if people doubt your integrity when covering that particular farmer, I don't believe you have any legitimate complaint.

      --
      I forget what 8 was for.
    8. Re:Microsoft shill ? by turbosk · · Score: 1

      for me, he lost credibility as a writer for missing the distinction between "it's" (contraction) and "its" (possessive), as in "dependent upon it's ability to continue distributing Linux".

      i EXPECT that error in /. posts, but when someone is claiming to be a professional writer in a professional magazine, it makes him and the publication look silly.

      yes it's a nitpicky sort of thing, but Ziff Davis should proofread its articles for content and grammar.

      fred

    9. Re:Microsoft shill ? by yomegaman · · Score: 2, Funny

      Judging by the way your posts wrap at 40 columns, I'm guessing you're still pissed about them dropping Commodore 64 coverage.

      --
      ...wearing a skin-tight topless leather jumpsuit, with cutaway buttocks and transparent crotch panel.
    10. Re:Microsoft shill ? by Erik+Fish · · Score: 1

      Since you're such a ZD expert maybe you can explain why PC Magazine buried and ignored OS/2 back in the early 90's when it actually had a shot at beating Win 3.1.

    11. Re:Microsoft shill ? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      How is my post a "rant" any more than the original post to which I was replying to or, indeed, your own post? Do I fly off the handle attacking people? Am I derogatory because something or someone is at odds with my views? Am I pushing an agenda down people's throats? Or am I merely making observations based upon both first-hand and common experience?

      In short, is every comment or opinion that you disagree with a rant?

      Please, feel free to debate the level of ZD's bias towards Microsoft (real or imaginary). But please show me the same courtesy as I've shown the original poster by responding to my comments in a rational manner without resorting to snide remarks just because you don't like what my I have to say.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    12. Re:Microsoft shill ? by incom · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I could say the same thing about your post with regards to the microsofties. The predictable "this one is an intelligent troll against those linux communists, mod it up!" Really, I don't get why people who hate linux even come to slashdot, trolling is the most retarded idea of fun I've ever heard of.

      --
      True genius is grasping a situation like a peice of fruit, and peircing it just right so that it drains dry.
    13. Re:Microsoft shill ? by black+mariah · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      This from someone that can't properly capitalize a sentence. For all we know it could be one of his EDITORS that thought "its" was INCORRECT.

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    14. Re:Microsoft shill ? by black+mariah · · Score: 1

      Uh... because it sucked and nobody liked it? It wasn't exactly the most user-friendly OS in the world. Only upon hindsight is it worth a damn.

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    15. Re:Microsoft shill ? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, I didn't realise that PC Magazine or any other publication was responsible for the success of Windows 3.1 and the (relative) failure of OS/2.

      Perhaps the marketplace had something to do with it? You know, the fact that there was a severe lack of native OS/2 applications and little incentive for developers to write them when OS/2 itself was capable of running the applications that they had already written for Windows? Or that IBM was less aggressive than Microsoft in selling its OS vision to not just the press but also vendors and end-users?

      PC Magazine didn't bury and ignore OS/2 back in the early 90's: the marketplace did.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    16. Re:Microsoft shill ? by BerntB · · Score: 4, Interesting
      So if you're an insider...

      Tell us about the connection between size of ad budget and e.g. results on reviews...

      I lost my innocence when Word 6 was released on the Mac and got good reviews in the trade rags -- while all Mac users hated it because it was both buggy and really slow. Word 6 was faster if you ran the Windows-version in VirtualPC (or what the emulator of the day was called; I talked to people that had tried but never tried).

      The interesting thing was that the columnists in the Mac magazines hated it -- they had some deal wich didn't sign away their souls. If you're in the business, please inform me:

      Can you still more or less trust the columnists in trade magazines or are they just supporting the ad sales team, too?

      --
      Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
    17. Re:Microsoft shill ? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      Most publications use standard benchmarks, which means that their results can be independently verified. In those circumstances, it's hard to see how you could think that the size of someone's ad budget would be related to how they fared in hardware reviews. Frankly, if that really was the case then Dell would win every review under the Sun, and I'm sure I'm not the only one who's noticed that's not the case.

      Software reviews are different, in that they involve a greater degree of subjectivity. Nevertheless, reviewers judge products on their merits (what they can and can't do) rather than which vendor they are from.

      Unfortunately, when it comes to reviewing new software releases (and this is true of hardware to some extent) you have to trust the vendor to some extent, especially if you're reviewing late beta code rather than gold (or shipping) code. If the vendor tells you that the shipping product will have this bug or that bug removed then you have to take that on trust, and not focus on it so much. Of course, a good reviewer will mention these things and point out that they should be gone in the box product but that's not always the case: magazines sometimes hide the fact that they're not reviewing gold code by not broaching the subject at all. It goes without saying that those magazines that refuse to review beta code have the right approach.

      The one luxury that you don't always have as a journalist (and this is true regardless of your particular field) is time. It's hard to scratch beneath the surface of a product in the time you've got to turn around a review (two or three days is typical for an upgrade review) and, of course, this means that some major faults pass everyone by first time around.

      Of course, brutal honesty is sometimes a luxury too: even when you're fairly certain that a product has a major flaw your pen is tempered by the need to avoid labelling it the next Windows ME just in case you're the one that's screwed up, rather than the vendor. (Most journalists are used to running beta software on top of beta software, so when things do go wrong, it's not always easy to put your finger on the problem right away.) Hence the need to err on the side of caution and give the vendor the benefit of the doubt.

      Having said that I can think of at least one publication that fell out with a vendor so badly over a review that the vendor concerned refused to provide them with review copies in future. The publication concerned refused to retract the critical review despite heavy pressure and resorted to buying future releases from that vendor off the shelf so that it could carry on reviewing them. It's not the first time that a vendor's been told to get lost and it won't be the last either.

      Frankly, if I had to give you one bit of advice about what you read (online or in print) it's to always read between the lines and never put your faith in just one opinion.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    18. Re:Microsoft shill ? by Erik+Fish · · Score: 2, Informative
      Ahh yes, the classic CYA. As I remember it, PC Mag was even printing letters every other month from people asking where the OS/2 coverage was and replying with "Gee, there isn't any news to report" while doing reviews of every worthless little shareware Windows 3.1 applet available.

      This was when PC Magazine ditched all pretense of being about the PC as a platform.

    19. Re:Microsoft shill ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Permanent brain damage? That's being generous. The man's page proclaims "Invite David Berlind to your inbox!" Thanks David, but as a respectable woman, I'll keep my in-box to myself.

    20. Re:Microsoft shill ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps the marketplace had something to do with it? You know, the fact that there was a severe lack of native OS/2 applications and little incentive for developers to write them when OS/2 itself was capable of running the applications that they had already written for Windows? Or that IBM was less aggressive than Microsoft in selling its OS vision to not just the press but also vendors and end-users?

      I guess IBM was less agressive in selling OS/2, the product they developed jointly with MS, than MS was at going behind IBM's back and telling developers that their best bet is to develop for Windows. (And, of course, the application developers, knowing that MS was part of the OS/2 project, had no reason to doubt them.)

      Of course, sometimes journalists notice that these things go on, and decide to sell lots of magazines by scooping and sensationalizing the story. I guess we're really glad that PC Magazine didn't stoop to that level, huh?

    21. Re:Microsoft shill ? by BerntB · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Almost 3 kB written less than 40 minutes after I posted... without answering my question!! You don't want to answer this simple question?

      How much do ad budgets influence reviews (and other content)? No, I don't believe zero -- or 10 percent, for that matter.

      it's hard to see how you could think that the size of someone's ad budget would be related to how they fared in hardware reviews.

      I explicitly used software as an example and the previous discussion was about Mirosoft/SCO. There was no need to waste your time discussing hardware. (And, yes, obviously there are influencing factors from reviews of beta versions. Etc, etc. Not an answer.)

      Frankly, if I had to give you one bit of advice about what you read (online or in print) it's to always read between the lines and never put your faith in just one opinion.

      This when I gave an example (from middle of the '90s!!) when reviews and articles where totally different from both user experiences and columnists that could write freely... (I even started it with "I lost my innocence when"!) Search Oct-94 to Mar-95 on groups.google.com for "word 6" and "macintosh".

      You are joking and/or condescending. Or just not answering a simple question with the tried and true method of starting a large discussion of other matters.

      --
      Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
    22. Re:Microsoft shill ? by BerntB · · Score: 1
      On closer consideration, I do think you answered my question of How much influence does a very large ad budget have over reviews and other content in the trade rags?

      That you wrote a long and eloquent reply without answering that simple question makes me believe two things:

      1. You do work for the press.
      2. You're not going to answer the question.

      Reading between the lines, those two points gives a very good answer! Thank you.

      --
      Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
    23. Re:Microsoft shill ? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      If you haven't noticed, PC Magazine is a labs-based publication, and it concentrates on reviews above and beyond anything else. It's pretty hard to review products that don't exist, isn't it?

      Look, there are two parties to blame for the death of OS/2 on the desktop: IBM, for failing to market it enough and for trusting Microsoft to do the right thing, and Microsoft for sticking in the knife and twisting it as much as it could. Blaming a magazine for it is laughable.

      If PC Magazine really was part of some "kill OS/2" conspiracy then those letters you read would never have been printed. On the contrary, you could argue that by printing them PC Magazine was showing potential OS/2 developers that there was a market for their products.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    24. Re: Microsoft shill ? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > hint: in my time I've done more than just read what they've got to say

      Yeah, I keep an emergency copy in my bathroom, too.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    25. Re:Microsoft shill ? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 2, Interesting

      1. Most freelancers get paid by the word, so why use two words when fifty will do?

      Seriously though, the reason why I didn't give a straightforward answer to your question is because there isn't one. All publications aren't equal, and some hold themselves to higher standards than others. The same is true of individual journalists: most and very professional and value their integrity above all else but, as the recent debacle at the New York Times showed, not all journalists respect the power they wield.

      2. I see as much banner/box advertising on Slashdot by Microsoft as I do by any other vendor. Does Microsoft's ad spend make a difference to the editorial coverage it receives here? No, not at all. The same is true in print.

      What can potentially make a difference is the relationship a journalist has with a vendor's press officers. It's a press officer's job to get a journalist what he needs and to keep a journalist happy. This doesn't mean envelopes full of cash or anything so seedy but it does mean occasional socialising (for example, at product launches). The vendor's hope that this buys them some influence. To a certain extent, it can (note, I said "can", not "does") but a bad product is still a bad product.

      Again, a good journalist keeps things professional. Just because someone buys you a drink it doesn't mean that they've bought anything more than that.

      3. The reason why Apple journalists didn't hesitate to pull punches when Microsoft produced a less than stellar version of Word was because it was from Microsoft: in a way, it was anti-Microsoft bias in action.

      Most Apple journalists aren't shy about hiding their feelings about Microsoft. From the "look-and-feel" trials to the Apple vs Windows battle for the desktop, they've got few reasons to sing Microsoft's praises. Their readers usually feel the same way too. So when Microsoft released a bad product, most Apple journalists weren't too slow to bring it to their readers' attention.

      That's perhaps an over-simplification, but it's a pretty accurate one.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    26. Re:Microsoft shill ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      quit ranting you big ranting ranter

    27. Re:Microsoft shill ? by BerntB · · Score: 1
      I guess the fault is mine. It is stupid to ask questions that people can't answer without condemning themselves.

      But since I've already admitted that I'm stupid, I'll try a last time anyway...

      Big advertisers pay a large sum of income of most magazines. The companies buying ads have total control of how they spend their ad money -- and getting good treatment in the articles and reviews is worth a lot of money to those companies.

      Are you seriously expecting anyone to believe your claims that, given the above common interests, there is no influence?

      (We're talking big advertisers here. Microsoft on "/." is hardly large.)

      --
      Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
    28. Re:Microsoft shill ? by RoLi · · Score: 4, Insightful
      A story about SCO that would be over 5 pages long when printed on paper that doesn't mention

      • that no normal being (meaning any non-anonymous entity and not some "anonymous donor") was so far able to buy the SCO license. In fact SCO won't sell you the license at all. Because SCO knows that they will get sued left and right if they would really sell them.
      • that SCO hasn't sued any Linux users so far despite promising (remember the 90-day ultimatum?)
      • that SCO's claims are pretty inconsistent (varying from millions of lines of code to dozens, changing from contract dispute to copyright violation and back)

      So no, you don't have to be a Linux zealot not to want to hear such a crappy work of journalistic spin.

    29. Re:Microsoft shill ? by Bob+Davis,+Retired · · Score: 1

      Did anyone EVER subscribe to Computer Shopper? There are very few magazines that have an ad / article ratio as high as Cosmo, but Computer Shopper is right up there.

    30. Re:Microsoft shill ? by m1kesm1th · · Score: 1

      As far as I read this, it seems the guy is saying he didn't like the way PC used its letters page to suggest or at least infer OS/2 was vaporware.

      Personally I think using the letters page is a fairly strong medium. A lot of people try to choose operating systems by word of mouth. However, the guy never suggested that OS/2 failed because of PC Magazine. It sounds like you're putting words into his mouth.

      I fail to see why (if PC Magazine was using those letters to give a negative light on OS/2's development), why they would not be printed. Numerous applications and games have been promised only to reappear years later and at the outset lots of people are interested, then interest fades, even if they are good when released.

      If letters were written, every artice can be justified and a 'conspiracy' as you put it, could not be proven easily. Yet to include these letters repeatedly is really a waste of space.

      Your suggestion that it shows developers that there was a market for their products, well it doesn't really show that does it? OS/2 developers already knew there was a market for their product (hence development). Its not really the developers that need convincing. Also, if the guy who wrote the previous post noticed it seemed negative towards OS/2, don't you think that the OS/2 developers would realise this?

      I don't even read the magazine myself, all my comments are reflected on the yours and the previous poster.

      I have worked with magazines and I understand the unspoken relationship they often have with advertisers. Often, its not even necessary, since most advertisers don't expect carefully worded articles or publicity articles. However, publishers do not tend to realise this and lack the backbone to stand up for fair and balanced journalism.

    31. Re:Microsoft shill ? by abulafia · · Score: 1
      But please show me the same courtesy as I've shown the original poster by responding to my comments in a rational manner without resorting to snide remarks just because you don't like what my I have to say.

      I apologize if you took offense to my use of the word 'rant'. Please consider it used as a somewhat colloquial generic identifier akin to 'missive', rather than the bad-breathed-bum-under-the-bridge shouting at god identifier you appear to have taken it as.

      I believe everything else I said falls under the 'rational manner' standard you're looking for.

      And it isn't so much about not liking what you say as pointing out arguments that defend their conclusions by assuming them.

      --
      I forget what 8 was for.
    32. Re:Microsoft shill ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm maybe they (and I) come here because there's plenty of other interesting stuff at slashdot than Linux?

      Also: speaking for my part I do not hate Linux although I do not think it's wildly superior to Windows. I've been happy to advocate Linux on many occasions. I first installed linux somewhere in 94-95 and my, was that a big difference to win3.1.

      It's the truly boring Microsoft bashing here that is getting to me... But it must be fun for you, so please continue. I'll be more than happy to respond... ;)

    33. Re:Microsoft shill ? by cmacb · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yes, I think I subscribed for about a year, and bought almost every issue for several other years. Before the big super stores, Comp USA, Microcenter, and even Best Buy etc had tons of computer equipment on display Computer Shopper was a good source of information on new products. I skipped the articles and read the ads for that very reason.

      That being said, I agree that ZD is fairly useless set of publications these days as are its parent CNet's offerings. Back when there were several viable operating systems and office suites they slanted their coverage toward Microsoft, probably to please their biggest ad customer.

      Yes, there are some people at CNet/ZD that are not big fans of Microsoft, but there are more that seem to know nothing but the standard Microsoft line-up and when mentioning any alternatives do so tentatively.

      I cancelled my paper subscriptions long ago, and only read their stuff online when linked to by Slashdot and the like. I occasionally check Anchordesk for its comedic value.

    34. Re:Microsoft shill ? by nattt · · Score: 1

      And, since when did Microsoft offer any kind of IP indemnity? He points out so called problems in Linux, but doesn't mention that his beloved Microsoft has even worse ones! The whole notion of suing an end user for IP infringement made by someone else is daft anyway.

      --
      -- oldthinkers unbellyfeel ingsoc
    35. Re:Microsoft shill ? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Big advertisers are going to advertise with you regardless of what you say. Dell advertises inside the front cover of every non-Apple magazine that I know of, Microsoft does the same, etc.

      Don't forget, these are big companies who outsource both their public/press relations and their ad buying. The people responsible for public/press relations will be a press agency, and the people responsible for ad buying will be a media agency. Although they might sound the same, two aren't related, and ad buying has nothing to do with editorial coverage and vice versa.

      As I mentioned before, a negative review will occasionally have a vendor throwing a tantrum, but they'll cut off an editorial team before they think about ditching their ads. After all, ads are how they send their controlled message ("buy this because blah, blah, blah") and stopping advertising is pretty much a case of cutting of your nose to spite your face, as its counter-productive to them.

      So, the black-and-white short answer is "no", but given what I've said previously about not all publications holding themselves to the same high standards, the shades-of-grey short answer is "maybe".

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    36. Re:Microsoft shill ? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      I find it hilarious that two people modded this post up yet failed to notice BerntB's second reply to the grandparent post, made only 20 minutes later, in which his message is completely different.

      When I replied to that second message, neither post had been modded, so it's interesting that people have selectively chosen to moderate a message that's negative upwards and leave a postive one that's by the same author unchanged. If there's any indicator of people showing bias or pushing an agenda then that selective moderation is it.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    37. Re:Microsoft shill ? by BerntB · · Score: 1
      So, it works for television -- but by some magic not for magazines?

      Thanks for trying.

      You could maybe write me off as too cynical.

      --
      Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
    38. Re:Microsoft shill ? by BerntB · · Score: 1
      Positive?! Read again!

      I wrote that you really can't write anything else.

      It would be like asking a suspect if he commited a serious crime. The only reason to answer "yes" would be to cut a deal -- if he's obviously going to get judged guilty anyway.

      You are right -- I don't deserve the Karma. My opinions are quite obvious. As most people working with computers for a long time, I could give a more examples of press behavior (e.g. ridiculously good treatment of Msoft during the trials).

      I was probably modded up as a dislike of the original article, which failed to mention that, given all the negative stuff from Grokklaw, the SCO case doesn't look good.

      --
      Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
    39. Re:Microsoft shill ? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      When a movie magazine or a newspaper review trashes, say, a Universal film, Universal doesn't retaliate by pulling advertising across the board from that publication. If it worked that way, then movie magazines and newspapers would have zero ads from movie studios: clearly, that's not the case.

      So, a bad review doesn't mean losing advertising, which means that the editorial independence of movie reviewers is respected by the studios. It's true in the movie business and it's true in the IT business too. Rank and file journalists don't worry about who's buying the ad space because they don't know about who's buying the ad space: that's someone else's job. Journalists just get on with their own stuff.

      Contrary to popular belief, journalists don't kow-tow easily and they don't always write what vendors would like them to write. Just like other publishers, ZD does and has taken a stand when faced with unscrupulous vendors, The graphics card manufacturer that produced drivers that had code designed to detect ZD's Winbench benchmark software running and execute portions of it from memory rather than actually executing it live found that out when ZD confronted them about it and gave them the opportunity to present new, more honest drivers for review or have the scam revealed. When the vendor refused, ZD published. The vendor withdrew their ads and, surprisingly, their reputation quickly tanked once their cheating became common knowledge.

      You seem to be saying that advertisers get their way with regards to content on TV. Well, perhaps they do, but rarely do they pull their ads because of something that's aired about them. From my limited knowledge (limited because it's not a common practice here in the UK; it seems to be a US phenomenon), advertisers shy away from controversy, and any association that could portray their products in a negative light.

      Often, this isn't done proactively, it's done reactively, after some moralistic group or another becomes offended at a TV programme and then actively seeks to get it taken off the air by thinly veiled threats of boycotts, etc to those advertisers whose products are featured in the ad breaks. Politically Incorrect got taken off the air not because it was disparaging about any advertiser but because, post-September 11, advertisers were over-sensitive about associating their products with a show that didn't swallow all the rhetoric, that dared to ask important questions and, above all, state unpopular but honest truths.

      If you can give me some examples of how a comment on a TV show led to a loss of advertising or how investigative programming like, say, 60 Minutes goes out of its way to avoid offending advertisers then I'd be very interested and grateful.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    40. Re:Microsoft shill ? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      Oh, I see, politely asking someone some questions and requesting common courtesies is now "flamebait".

      Perhaps the person who moderated this as such would care to look up the meaning of the word.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    41. Re:Microsoft shill ? by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

      You know, "PC Magazine" was aimed at home and small business users -- the classic Lotus/dBase/BASIC "Power User" crowd -- while IBM was selling OS/2 to "enterprise" IT Manager types.

      PCMag also mostly ignored Windows NT and SCO UNIX as well, barely covered Novell past login script tricks, and I don't think they ever mentioned "hobbyist" OSes like Yggdrasil, Slackware, or 386BSD.

      When IBM repositioned OS/2 for the home market with "Warp", PC Mag did give it quite a bit of coverage -- of course the OS/2 advocates hated that as well because the articles couldn't avoid pointing out the obvious (no apps, install problems, etc).

      Not that any of this matters because today's Ziff-Davis is about 3 owners removed from those days.

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
    42. Re:Microsoft shill ? by jejones · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but I recall the era when ZD was in the habit of buying and then destroying computer magazines, leaving a PClone-only wasteland. They bought Computer Shopper and then killed all the non-PClone coverage. The slant well predates the pontificators on zdnet.com.

    43. Re:Microsoft shill ? by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1
      To be honest, I can't recall the last time I bought a computer magazine. I guess it was over 3 years ago.

      Everything I want is online now.

    44. Re:Microsoft shill ? by BerntB · · Score: 1
      Advertisers have a large influence on the tone and content of television. This is well known. As you wrote:
      post-September 11, advertisers were over-sensitive about associating their products with a show that didn't swallow all the rhetoric, that dared to ask important questions and, above all, state unpopular but honest truths.

      Maybe you are right and e.g. the number of pro Microsoft opinions we've see out there are just because the people with certain views just happened to get those jobs. Lucky coincidence if you consider that getting the right content is worth lots of money to the rag...

      I could take up examples, but again -- if I am totally wrong you would write exactly the same thing as if I'm totally right.

      --
      Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
    45. Re:Microsoft shill ? by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1

      I don't know about computer mags, but many fashion mags apparantly will give a lot more coverage depending upon the advertiser spend.

    46. Re:Microsoft shill ? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      Please, do give examples. I'm being sincere when I say I'd like to see them. I have been 100 percent honest throughout this thread, and I'm being so now when I say I want to hear why you're so cynical (as you describe yourself).

      You started this conversation by asking me questions. I tried to give you answers but apparently not to your satisfaction. From some of your posts it's clear that, in your mind, you already were convinced of the answers before I even started to reply. Now when I'm asking a question you decide not only not to answer but to assume that whatever you say that I'll disagree with it regardless of its merits which, more than anything, I find to be a real shame. So I'll ask again, please, share your examples.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    47. Re:Microsoft shill ? by BerntB · · Score: 1
      1. Well, then, at last please acknowledge my point that there is a large and obvious common interest between ad buyers/sellers and getting the right content into magazines.

      (-: I didn't intend to sound like Chomsky, btw... :-)

      2. Let's take the article under discussion. There are lots of obvious problems with SCO's case (Novell claiming they are liars, the changing story, SCO claiming ownership of header files that are ANSI C standards(!), SCO promised a 100 days or so ago to start suing users in less than 90 days, etc, etc).

      Realistically, even with the US' law courts seeming to be a bit of a dice game, SCO can't have much of a chance -- they would have presented a more consistent story from the beginning.

      The author could as well discuss how to invest the money gained from helping rich Nigerians export money caught in a bank account by their father's death.

      3. Microsoft went out a few months ago and claimed they were having security problems mainly because of Windows having the largest population and that making them the most tempting target. Any other O/S that was larger would have the same problem.

      I didn't see journalists doing the trivial follow up question -- "But Apache has 2-3 times as large installed base as your web server, yet your web server gets many more attacks?" Or even mentioning the statistics of OpenBSD.

      4. And one thing I've always wondered.

      Apple bought (using stock) information from Xerox on the Star (which was based quite a lot on research, not all done in Xerox). Then Apple rebuilt the interface so much it was half Apple's work.

      Then the Pepsi guy (whatever his name is) fouled up and signed a deal that allowed Msoft to sell Excel and Word on other platforms. M-soft used that to win in court and copied the whole GUI experience (including xeroxing Apple's APIs) -- without a license from Xerox.

      That description is not controversial, but I've never seen an article discussing it. I've literally heard dozens of people claiming "Apple stole it from Xerox and Msoft also copied it". There is only one interested in that version of reality, which also happens to be a large ad buyer.

      --
      Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
    48. Re:Microsoft shill ? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      I was hoping that you were going to provide me of examples of TV advertising money directly influencing content but you chose not to do that. Ho hum. I'll give you my personal opinion of the points that you've chosen to raise.

      1. I still fundamentally disagree with you (because, after initially questioning me on this, it's later become clear that you had made up your mind about it beforehand) on ad buyers/sellers. A bad product is a bad product, and won't suddenly become a good product just because an advertiser buys an extra six pages.

      If you don't believe me on this, so be it. If I haven't convinced you already that there's a Chinese wall between editorial and ad sales teams then there's clearly nothing more that I can do to change your mind and I'm not going to bother even trying. What I will say is that it irks me (in a small way) that you started this conversation with an open question but a closed mind.

      2. The article (which seems so distant now) isn't about the merits of SCO's case, it's about indemnification. This isn't an article weighing up the pros and cons of SCO's position (although the author does touch on those briefly, and he does say that SCO's case is shaky to say the least), it's about what a business can do to indemnify itself from any risk whatsoever no matter how small that risk might be.

      Countless other articles have talked about how flimsy SCO's position is, etc, and this article doesn't pretend to be yet another one of those. It's a discussion about how a business can mitigate the risks a business might face if SCO's case is legally found to have merit. No more, no less.

      A lot of people have written a lot of stuff here about the article, yet most of them seemed to have missed that salient point.

      Personally, I think SCO is up shit creek without a paddle, but I'm not a judge in this matter, so my opinion is worth jack shit. But, hey, feel free to quote me on that.

      3. A lot of column inches have been written about the security (or lack thereof) of Microsoft's software and, to a certain extent, Microsoft does have a valid point when it says that it's software is targetted more because it's more popular. If the C64 was the most popular platform on the planet and Windows was a niche OS then I'd expect to see a lot more C64 viruses and exploits than Windows ones: wouldn't you?

      Of course, Windows' popularity and market share isn't the whole story but given the other factors concerned (that Microsoft's OSes are easy targets, especially when you consider how unsecure an out-of-the-box installation is), what other feeble defence is going to mount?

      How many times do you want people to write the same thing over and over again, that Microsoft's products aren't as secure as they could be?
      And you forget that trojans, etc don't descriminate: we aren't just talking about servers, we're talking about desktops too. Any PC that's connected to the internet is a potential target, not just servers. So why waste time comparing the total number of Windows installations to the total number of Apache and BSD installations?

      4. Don't ask me. Xerox was the one that had the ball and fumbled it. Ask them.

      I'm sure at some point in time a group of Xerox company lawyers have sat down, discussed the same things and decided that they either didn't have a case or at least that their case was too weak to fight. Suffice to say that there's a long list of things that Xerox could have or should have done but didn't.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    49. Re:Microsoft shill ? by BerntB · · Score: 1
      Regarding point 1, I didn't want you to yet again claim that there is no influence of the content to get more advertising money.

      I wanted you to acknowledge -- as a start -- that there is an obvious common interest between ad buyers/sellers to get magazine's contents to give a good light on the big advertisers. What ad buyers want is exposure -- if they get more in one place for their money they'll certainly be interested. And it is obviously in the sellers interest to make the buyers happy. Usually, the sell eyeballs as much as magazines.

      It is quite obvious that you're not going to answer this obvious point seriously -- you instead disagree with something else (that ad buyers do get that influence).

      Point 2 -- you can write investment tips for what you earn by helping Nigerians transfer money if you at the same time write the Nigerian letters are shams in other articles?

      Point 3 you reiterated what I said exactly, but better written. But without discussion of my point -- "why didn't any article I saw discuss the total lack of credibility in the argument?" (And, yes, I do expect journalists to repeat something relevant to disprove a quote from a company that is doing an obvious dishonest argument.)

      Now, I wouldn't get a job as a journalist so you might have totally misunderstand? But why didn't you ask for an explanation, then?

      I think your way of not answering on this point should be in some book on political arguments. I get more impressed every time I read it. You really write well and give an impression that you've answered it fully with correct facts -- and ignore the main point!

      I'm impressed. You don't exactly impress me as honest, but this is oriented to other people reading it, right? Never mind, I don't think I want to learn.

      Point 4 -- ???

      You misunderstood the point and thought it was about Xerox -- not about how the story was handled by journalists? (Why would I write that as an example?!?!)

      (Sigh, I don't follow television enough, but I've heard lots of examples through the years when content of a channel was changed around to make advertisers happy. I guess any more discussion will be you refusing to answer my point 1 etc and demanding answers from me on this?)

      --
      Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
    50. Re:Microsoft shill ? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      I'm getting tired of this now. You accuse me of not addressing issues directly but when I do you call me a liar. You're either the best troll I've ever seen or incapable of accepting that perhaps the world doesn't exactly match your view of it.

      I've given you examples of how publications have told vendors to go take a running jump, clear evidence that they aren't in the back pockets of the people who pay for the ads. I've shown how the people who do one thing have nothing to do with the people that do the other thing. Yet you're still insistent that that's not true.

      Tell me, what proof have you supplied that Ziff-Davis or any other IT publisher tailors its content to suit its advertisers? What first-hand knowledge do you have that publications and journalists are little more than obedient sheep that do what they're told?

      Frankly, I'm bored of providing rational, considered responses to your questions only to have you say "hmm, that's nice, but you didn't answer the way I wanted you to answer and, by the way, you're a liar".

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    51. Re:Microsoft shill ? by BerntB · · Score: 1
      rational, considered responses
      I can agree with that. But relevant? No.

      As I started with, it is meaningless to discuss things that people would never admit -- if true.

      The only thing you can measure is how honest their discussion methods are.

      --
      Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
    52. Re:Microsoft shill ? by BerntB · · Score: 1
      In 3 attempts I couldn't get you to discuss (much less acknowledge) the trivial observation that ad sellers have an interest in keeping ad buyers happy.

      That is, if the ad sellers could influence the content of their media (what is written, what is reviewed, etc) they would earn money on it by keeping the ad buyers happy.

      Not necessarily that they do that, but there is an obvious conflict of interests.

      I guess that the problem could be my communication skills... anyway, I do agree, there just isn't anything coming out of this, though I will remember your answer to my third point for a long time!

      --
      Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
    53. Re:Microsoft shill ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However, living in the real world, it's a bit difficult to run a series of IT publications without writing about Microsoft and its products given their dominance in both the enterprise and the consumer markets.

      Writing about Microsoft and its products is very different from praising them even when in reality they suck and from making excuses for all Microsoft's behaviors. That is what objectivity and honesty are for. Truth does not depend on advertisement dollars. Heck, they can have issues with nothing but Microsoft products but when the products are bad, they say so and vice versa, then they have integrity. Even if they have one page review of MS product and claimed that it is the best in contrast to the fact, then they are MS shill. The concept of objectivity is not hard to learn.

      Another annoyance is the constant insults to describe non-Windows users. Why does it always have to be Mac zealots and open source cults or fanatics? The fact that Windows users keeps returning to Microsoft after being screwed over and over is more zealotish and cultish and psychologically disturbing.

  6. Just Another Analyst by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Move along, there's nothing to see here, just another analyst mouthing off without actually doing his homework.

    When will they learn to read Groklaw?

  7. When do you need indemnification? by Col.+Klink+(retired) · · Score: 1

    According to the article, I need indemnification any time I use someone else's intellectual property. It's a good thing I bought indemnification from the MPAA, otherwise Art Buchwald would have sued me when I watched Coming to America.

    --

    -- Don't Tase me, bro!

    1. Re:When do you need indemnification? by ogre57 · · Score: 1

      Curious, when will MS announce they are indemnifying IE users from Eolas? Or Windows users from SCO for that matter (eg. errno.h)? Ditto for .. expect there are lawsuits pending against Apple, Oracle, Adobe, Sun, HP, etc, etc. Not just picking on MS, any other software.

      Point: Software normally has no indemnification and no warranty. Zero, zip, nada (read the EULA sometime). So why is it considered such a big issue in this case, but none of the others?

  8. SCO Code in Linux by ksuMacGyver · · Score: 5, Funny

    So is SCO claiming that their code is in the least safe operating system?

    I can see why no one wants to pay $699 for it! ;)

    --

    Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam

    Interested in AI? MACR
  9. What did SCO buy--Unix or the Brooklyn Bridge? by IgD · · Score: 5, Insightful

    http://techupdate.zdnet.com/techupdate/stories/mai n/What_did_SCO_buy.html

    This was another garbage article by Berlind IMHO. Even if SCO did "own Unix" (which it does not!) The whole idea is irrelevant. None of "Unix" got put into "Linux". Even if a few lines out of millions got copied in the there, the concept of "de minimi" applies. Such as small amount is in there that it is irrelevant. Case closed.

    1. Re:What did SCO buy--Unix or the Brooklyn Bridge? by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1, Insightful
      But that is irrelivant.

      From the article ...

      "
      How much is your job worth to you?
      When you think about it, there's a business risk associated with every decision you make. It's usually either financial or legal in nature. As you look at the various forms of protection (Linux alternatives, licenses from SCO, indemnification, open source insurance, and defense funds), weigh the total cost of protection versus the risk of being sued by SCO (or maybe someone else).

      Likewise, as a user of Linux, protecting yourself from an SCO-law suit could easily be a waste of money. Virtually all of the forms of protection listed in this special report are reasonably priced when you consider the potential harm if you have no protection and are successfully sued by SCO.

      Most companies using Linux (not including embedded Linux-based appliance makers, which could have more significant risk) could easily bury the cost of protection in their IT budget without anyone batting so much as an eyelash. But, you can't bury the damages in the hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars, or the pink slip that goes with them.

      Basically, you have one question to ask yourself: How much peace of mind do you have now and how much more are you willing to spend for a little extra?
      "


      I agree SCO is full of shit. However would I bet my job on it? Certainly not. If I were ( I am not) an IT manager I would simply not put any Linux systems in and prefer FreeBSD or Solarisx86 until dust has settled with the case. Its not worth getting fired if there are no IT jobs left. I feel appreciative that I work as a computer lab assistant at a college now then flipping burgers at a McDonalds.

      The case is almost done anyway and I believe the judge should rule soon. Does anyone know when? If things work out soon they should be dead anyway but next summer or early fall. This is when they run out of cash and close shop. This also assumes its not settled or thrown out by then.

      After that I would be more then happy to install Linux again.

    2. Re:What did SCO buy--Unix or the Brooklyn Bridge? by TheLittleJetson · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If I were ( I am not) an IT manager I would simply not put any Linux systems in and prefer FreeBSD or Solarisx86 until dust has settled with the case.

      Ah, but let's not forget that Darl has hinted at similar lawsuits with BSD variants... Personally, I would not even blink at this... Your IT business is not going to get sued by SCO even if they win this. You'll just get billed. IBM is not being sued for using Linux, they're being sued over a licensing/contract dispute.

    3. Re:What did SCO buy--Unix or the Brooklyn Bridge? by kfg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Done? Rule? Dude, the case is still in discovery. It hasn't even started yet.

      The issue of whether SCO even has standing to sue, i.e. does Novell trump them, is a preliminary issue to be decided before the case even goes forward, and that alone could take several months.

      KFG

    4. Re:What did SCO buy--Unix or the Brooklyn Bridge? by mr_majestyk · · Score: 1

      Even if a few lines out of millions got copied in the there, the concept of "de minimi" applies.

      If you are going to start throwing legal terms like "de minimi" around, you had better reveal your legal credentials, or use a proper disclaimer like IANAL. Well, are you?

    5. Re:What did SCO buy--Unix or the Brooklyn Bridge? by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 4, Informative

      In that article the guy talks abuot "what is UNIX", and whether a UNIX clone could be built without looking at UNIX source.
      1) Linux is API compatible with UNIX. How? Because they read the standards and the man pages. I keep on bringing up that some code that uses select() for timing breaks on Linux because they copied the man page and not the code. Their cleanroom version was copied from the old BSD manpage, and is not bug-compatible to the way that BSD implemented it.
      2) They don't even need to be cleanroom, they can just use the BSD code.

      What a freakin' moron. Two uninformed pieces.

    6. Re:What did SCO buy--Unix or the Brooklyn Bridge? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      How much is your job worth to you?
      When you think about it, there's a business risk associated with every decision you make. It's usually either financial or legal in nature. As you look at the various forms of protection (Linux alternatives, licenses from SCO, indemnification, open source insurance, and defense funds), weigh the total cost of protection versus the risk of being sued by SCO (or maybe someone else).


      Unfortunately, this just shows how bad the world has become, that companies are advised to just give in to blackmail, instead of standing up for their rights...

      And I am afraid it might just go downhill from here...

      Please, somebody wake up the politicians...please...

    7. Re:What did SCO buy--Unix or the Brooklyn Bridge? by zurab · · Score: 1
      I agree SCO is full of shit. However would I bet my job on it? Certainly not. If I were ( I am not) an IT manager I would simply not put any Linux systems in and prefer FreeBSD or Solarisx86 until dust has settled with the case.

      You don't have to bet anything on it. If you are an IT manager, you go to your company lawyer and ask a question like this one: if I buy a software from vendor A, and then vendor B sues vendor A for some obscure contract violation, can I be held responsible for copyright infringement? IANAL, so ask your lawyer!

      If you want a copyright parallel, here's one I've mentioned couple of times here before:

      - you buy book A from author AAA
      - author of book B sues author AAA for contract violation/copyright infringement
      - judge finds in BBB's favor
      - can author BBB come after you (and everyone else who bought book A) to make you pay more for the book you've already bought?

      Of course not - I've never heard of copyright law that works that way. SCO is full of FUD; talk to your lawyer. You don't bet/risk your job by talking to your lawyer and following their advice.
    8. Re:What did SCO buy--Unix or the Brooklyn Bridge? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe that point was made in the article, and that the ultimate conclusion was that eventually you would have to upgrade and that would force you into paying them if they win the case.

    9. Re:What did SCO buy--Unix or the Brooklyn Bridge? by pboulang · · Score: 1
      Even if a few lines out of millions got copied in the there, the concept of "de minimi" applies.

      If you are going to start throwing legal terms like "de minimi" around, you had better reveal your legal credentials, or use a proper disclaimer like IANAL. Well, are you?

      Oh god, why does my inner dialogue read this as if I were on the Austin Powers set?! And no, it wasn't a term I envisioned being thrown around..
      --

      This comment is guaranteed*

      *not guaranteed

    10. Re:What did SCO buy--Unix or the Brooklyn Bridge? by zurab · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I believe that point was made in the article, and that the ultimate conclusion was that eventually you would have to upgrade and that would force you into paying them if they win the case.

      I don't understand - who would have to pay SCO for what? If IBM violated their contract with SCO, it would be only IBM who is responsible for SCO's alleged damages, not me, you, Linus, Red Hat, SUSE, or unrelated 3rd parties.

      Also, it is important to note that SCO is not even alleging copyright infringement with regards to Linux. All they are alleging is contract violation against IBM for what they call a "derivative" code. That code is copyright IBM! That's not even being challenged. It's unclear to me what legal principle they would or could use to go after anybody else than IBM (or some other licensee). Nobody so far has drawn that hypothetical line, and neither did ZDNet in this case. IMO, anyone arguing in that direction should either draw that line, or stop FUDding around!
    11. Re:What did SCO buy--Unix or the Brooklyn Bridge? by Chemicalscum · · Score: 1
      I feel appreciative that I work as a computer lab assistant at a college now then flipping burgers at a McDonalds.

      The case is almost done anyway and I believe the judge should rule soon. Does anyone know when? If things work out soon they should be dead anyway but next summer or early fall. This is when they run out of cash and close shop. This also assumes its not settled or thrown out by then.

      After that I would be more then happy to install Linux again.

      With such a chicken shit scared attitude you ought to be flipping burgers at McDonalds (an SCO customer).

      This is just the sort of attitude SCO is trying to achieve to benefit SCO and Berlind's paymasters.

      Fortunately it seems that people who have real money to invest in IT aren't taking your attitude and Linux expansion is continuing unabated. However with such a risk averse attitude if you don't end up flipping burgers at McD's you will still be a computer lab assistant at a college until you retire.

  10. ADD MOD TO LAMESNESS FILTER by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Someone needs to modify the lameness filter to remove this crap....

  11. Wait, there is no need for Indemnity by tdwebste · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    If we only wait a little longer soon, we will see there is no need for Indemnity from SCO's threat.

    So the whole article by ZDNet is pointless.

    However there is a real problem on the horizon, and that is software patents. SCO is a dead horse, and a waste of time.

    Support the fight against BAD patents.
    http://www.ffii.org/

  12. One Interesting Paragraph... by netsharc · · Score: 4, Interesting
    It's worth stating that there are a couple of ways to actually avoid getting sued altogether. This may be a really good option if you work for an image-conscious company that avoids the legal limelight like the plague. One is to simply to pay SCO $699 per server for a perpetual license or $149 per server for an annual license. According to SCO's Stowell, "The license that we are offering to commercial end users of Linux is called the SCO Intellectual Property License. The end user is provided with a license that allows them to run SCO's intellectual property as it is found in Linux in binary form only. This license is meant to apply to any version of Linux (based on the 2.2 kernel and later) that is being run in a commercial environment."


    Argh, has the legality of SCO asking for that money even been established? Yeah sure I'll skip the corp-lawyers and take the advice of a fucking net-journalist and fork over the dough. Is it even to get SCO to accept the money?
    --
    What time is it/will be over there? Check with my iPhone app!
    1. Re:One Interesting Paragraph... by pez · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I was actually reading the article with great interest until I read the paragraph you quoted above. After that, thoughts of "how much is this writer getting paid to write this?" started dancing in my head.

    2. Re:One Interesting Paragraph... by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Argh, has the legality of SCO asking for that money even been established?

      Yes. They are legally allowed to ask for the money.

    3. Re:One Interesting Paragraph... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Another interesting question to be asking is whether paying said money actually protects you in any fashion from being sued by SCO. First off SCO has shown they are ready and willing to terminate interminatable licenses at any time with anyone. Second off SCO has shown great interest in trying to legally implicate even further anyone who gives them money. Witness their recent incident in which all SCO UNIX licensees recieved a letter saying "Certify to us you are not using any linux installations containing SCO code, or we will terminate your license".

      It's like kidnappers. Show them you're willing to cooperate by handing over the ransom, they'll just ask for more...

    4. Re:One Interesting Paragraph... by pavera · · Score: 3, Funny

      I guess this writer forgot to find out that you still can't purchase these licenses from SCO, their sales people still can't sell them, or know how to sell them to people

    5. Re:One Interesting Paragraph... by majorflaw · · Score: 1

      And any Linux user is legally allowed to tell them to go scratch. (IAAL)

    6. Re:One Interesting Paragraph... by zcat_NZ · · Score: 1

      Kidnappers usually get one chance.. swap cash for kin, and it's much safer and easier to grab someone else the next time around.

      I'd be thinking Nigerian Scammers. You pay them a little to begin with, and once they have you hooked the 'requirements' keep getting bigger and bigger.
      And you're always just one payment away from having the deal closed.

      --
      455fe10422ca29c4933f95052b792ab2
    7. Re:One Interesting Paragraph... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. They are legally allowed to ask for the money.

      Sure, if their customers are using SCO Unix(tm) OpenServer. I read ads all the time telling me to upgrade some piece of software. Why doesn't SCO advertise. Why doesn't SCO promote their products. Because nobody's 'buying it' and you can't sell litigation.

    8. Re:One Interesting Paragraph... by veldstra · · Score: 1

      What the editor forgot to mention on the strategy is that if you buy a license from SCO, you basically allow anyone to sell you a license for anything.
      I can go over the kernel code, and see if there's a for-loop which increments i until it reaches the value of 'j' or something like that. Almost any programmer wrote something like it, and everyone can start invoicing you, and you have to pay each and everyone, just to avoid a lawsuit? Sounds a bit silly to me, but if there are company's like that, show me, I'd be more than happy to start up a little extra income this way.

    9. Re:One Interesting Paragraph... by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      Well, It may be illegal action to sell intellectual property you don't own. I Germany they got an injunction from the court.

      I think we could also file a criminal lawsuit against those responsible.

      Invest in competition law lobbying and you will get rid off monopoly-based exploitation and inappropriate use of media.

  13. A - Its ZDNET; B - Its an opinion piece by holy_smoke · · Score: 5, Insightful

    'nuff said.

    --
    Is the juice worth the sqeeze?
    1. Re:A - Its ZDNET; B - Its an opinion piece by crazyphilman · · Score: 1, Funny

      Besides, LOOK at the guy. He's SOOOOO happy about his square "I work for a dot-com" glasses... What is UP with the square glasses, already? Why is it everyone I see online or off who wants to grab a little geek cred buys square glasses? Did I miss a memo?

      --
      Farewell! It's been a fine buncha years!
    2. Re:A - Its ZDNET; B - Its an opinion piece by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, what kind of blind freak are you? They are rectangular, not square. Maybe it's you who needs the glasses!

      BTW, I work for a dot-com, and I wear rectangular glasses too. You know you want to join the dark side!

    3. Re:A - Its ZDNET; B - Its an opinion piece by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is it everyone I see online or off who wants to grab a little geek cred buys square glasses? Did I miss a memo?

      There's this thing called "fashion"... I realise you may not have heard of it, but basically the idea is that people choose to wear similar clothes and accessories to the ones their role models wear.

      That's why I regularly dress up as a penguin, for example. No, wait...

    4. Re:A - Its ZDNET; B - Its an opinion piece by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's true... But I did miss the memo. My glasses are round. Sigh...

    5. Re:A - Its ZDNET; B - Its an opinion piece by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fashion... I think I've heard about that somewhere. I thought it was a communist plot...

  14. It is an uninteresting - non-article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    The article starts by saying that the author actually had a dinner with the VP of a biiig company. Wow! Is that relevant? No I don't think so. Then what happens: a confusing article about the various indemnification schemes.

    "Wow"

    as if that is relevant. Nobody on this planet except Darl and maybe his pet-hamster believe that SCO has any chance of winning. Simply because they are wrong and everybody knows it.

    Now tell me BIG AUTHOR, why do you think that readers are interested in such a confusing article. Do you want to look 'smart' or something? Or did you just want the world to know how big a tech-journalist you are, dining with a suit?

    *impressed* (please allow me a yawn, ok)

  15. 10-Q worries? by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 4, Informative

    I stopped caring when the guy took the 10-Q filing as a strong piece of evidence against Linux. 10-Q filings need to include EVERYTHING, essentially in "the sky is falling" mode, just in case it does happen and the SEC gets hard core, or even shareholder lawsuits. Yeah, there's always the off chance that SCO might win, but to take this warning in the 10-Q as strong evidence gives strong evidence he doesn't know what he's talking about.

    1. Re:10-Q worries? by nelsonal · · Score: 2, Funny

      I usually get a kick out of reading a few of those risks on the way down to the financials and (notes where the really important stuff is). I love the boilerplate ones were the comapny states that all their customers might well just up and stop purchasing their products. Incidentally, there was a pretty funny column on Slate a while ago that grabbed an old filing for Martha Stewart Omnimedia, that detailed the material risk that Martha might do something stupid and tarnish her image and thereby impact the value of the company.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    2. Re:10-Q worries? by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 1

      I can't wait for some mix song to start looping the line from Fight Club "Fuck Martha Stewart". Anyone hear of one yet?

    3. Re:10-Q worries? by LostCluster · · Score: 1

      The fact that SCO's FUD has reached the point of 10-Q filings is a milestone marker of how seriously they're being taken. Sure, it's a low threshold to get into that list of worries, but they've made it and it means the worry-obsessive business people are now starting to buy the FUD.

      Has anybody bothered to compute the business damage to the economy if SCO were to win? The remote possiblity that we could land in the warped world in which that happens just might talk some people into buying SCOX as purely a hedge play. If SCO wins, then the SCOX stock shoots up to cover what's sure to be massive losses elsewhere in the portfolio. If SCO loses, it's just treated like an insurance premium for a year that the house didn't burn down.

  16. Lame article... by GoMMiX · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Reading the same FUD crap over and over through 'normal' media outlets is really getting old.

    Though, I must admit, this is probably one of the better FUD articles I've read. Rather, it takes a new approach...

    "Hey, normal users don't need to worry - you're safe. It's the big companies that have to worry. Just forget about it, and let SCO do their thing."

    I'm not sure -- but it appears to me that the article is somewhat geared towards telling normal Linux users to abandon concern for the SCO situation and let the corporations take it all on alone.

    Perhaps a new FUD tactic attempting to break up the community?

    Regardless, I have a headache after reading it. 99% of the information in that article I've read 20 times already - with the only exception being the articles strong attempts to alleviate any concerns that normal Linux users may have of being sued.

    1. Re:Lame article... by MathFox · · Score: 1
      Yes, this author of this article clearly did more research that just copying a SCO press release and phoning two "analysts". The problem is that he selectively uses the sources that support his position. (A bit like saying that Linux has 7 times more security breaches that Windows, if you ignore virusses and worms.)

      He mentiones Red Hat's 10-Q, without mentioning SCO's filings that essentially warn that the company could be liquidated when licensing income stays low. IBM doesn't seem worried about the turns that their lawsuit takes...

      There are several parties that have a financial interest in damaging Linux. SCO has lost a lot of their Unixware and Open Server customers to Linux. Microsoft fears Linux because it grows faster on the server market that Windows and it is a serious competitor in the embedded and telephony markets. Linux is even eating at the margins in the desktop market.

      I have the feeling that all this indemnification FUD is designed to make Linux more expensive. Linux is not "gratis", it cost time to download, install, configure and manage. These are costs that every OS bears though.

      You could be right that market forces are trying to split up the Open Source movement... and use "the media" as proxy.

      --
      extern warranty;
      main()
      {
      (void)warranty;
      }
  17. Lets count by savagedome · · Score: 1

    back up SCO's claims than any of their other supporters have

    The number of other supporters is not a very large number.

    Actually, let me put it this way. Its a small number.

    Really speaking, its a very small number.

    Technically, so small that you can count on your fingers.

    Possibly even using only fingers on one hand.

    Well, only on the left hand pinky per se. His name is Darl.

  18. SUN's hand is revealed by Performer+Guy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It is very telling that Sun was pushing the indemnification angle in this timeframe. This really sheds some light on their funding of SCO as a means to further their own hidden adgenda. Like Microsoft they appear to have used SCO to attack Linux by proxy and advance their own business. In SUN's case it is particularly mendacious as they pose as a Linux ally while working against our interests.

    1. Re:SUN's hand is revealed by black+mariah · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Riiiiiight. Nice paranoia there. Exactly how is hurting Linux in the best interest of Sun? What, do you think that it will increase the number of Solaris installations? Maybe they want one less Java virtual machine to have to keep up to date? Please, and I'm being serious here, give me ONE GOOD REASON that Sun would want anything to happen to Linux.

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    2. Re:SUN's hand is revealed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhhh.. Maybe because they were the dominant Unix vendor for the last decade or so, and now they are seeing an increasing percentage of their business go to Linux on cheap x86 hardware.. Maybe because the pricing pressure that has caused pushes their profit margins even lower...

      They see all those Linux servers deployed today, and calculate the lost Solaris sales.

    3. Re:SUN's hand is revealed by black+mariah · · Score: 1

      This completely ignoring that Sun themselves is deploying many of those Linux servers. Want to take another shot?

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    4. Re:SUN's hand is revealed by dbIII · · Score: 2, Interesting
      It is very telling that Sun was pushing the indemnification angle in this timeframe. This really sheds some light on their funding of SCO as a means to further their own hidden adgenda.
      Great - a conspiracy theory. So Darl or his secret masters have an expert master plan to topple linux and IBM, which somehow involves looking stupid for a really long time before the final few seconds of the court case when all will be revealed. I don't think there is a hidden agenda.

      The secret masters are still in beta.

    5. Re:SUN's hand is revealed by -tji · · Score: 4, Informative

      McNealy has been spewing FUD since SCO first announced their lawsuit. This guy's talk prior to the lawsuit would imply that Sun was not just responding opportunistically. They knew about it beforehand, and maybe even contributed to it.

      See this article for some McNealy FUD right after SCO started this. Such as:

      "We think open source is wonderful and good, but we also believe in copyright and the rule of law," McNealy said.

      "We paid a big, big bag of money a decade ago to get IP (intellectual property) rights to do what we wanted to do with Solaris," he said at a press conference announcing a new line of Intel-based servers on Monday. "We've got a free and clear SCO license. Your audit committee won't get a letter if you are using Solaris." said Sun chairman Scott McNealy.

      Compare that to HP's response at the same time:

      "HP is unaware of any intellectual property infringement within Linux. The complaint is focused on alleged inappropriate behavior by IBM, it is not about infringement by Linux itself of SCO's IP rights."

      and Larry Ellison was quick to point to Microsoft as one of the groups behind the scenes:
      "All Bill (Gates) says is, 'Give me the opportunity to innovate,' and once again Bill is innovating," Ellison said during a press conference announcing an alliance between Oracle and Sun to promote Sun's Intel-based servers. "You've seen advanced bundling and now you are seeing extreme litigation...They know a lot about extreme litigation."

    6. Re:SUN's hand is revealed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are you talking about? Sun is nowhere close to the major vendors deploying Linux servers (IBM, HP, Dell). Any Linux related business at Sun is a miniscule portion of their revenues.

      Sun made announcements supporting Linux in the past, then they changed their mind and stopped supporting Linux. They keep waffling on it. Their sales guys pushed the high price/profit/commission Solaris stuff. Because of their internal and external Linux confusions, they have not convinced their customers to buy it from them. So, they are not a major Linux vendor.

      Any of their Linux efforts have been decidedly half assed, because they can't decide whether to embrace Linux or compete with it. They would rather compete with it, but they know it will crush them if they do.

    7. Re:SUN's hand is revealed by Performer+Guy · · Score: 1

      READ what he was saying, they did pump money into SCO, or have you missed that part.

    8. Re:SUN's hand is revealed by gnuru.org · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Riiiiiight. Nice paranoia there. Exactly how is hurting Linux in the best interest of Sun?

      Oh, come on! Sun's business model is stuffed. Sun is haemorraghing cash. Sun's flagship product, Solaris, is good, but it's expensive. Why run Solaris, when for most tasks, Linux is just as good, costs less and runs on cheaper, commodity, Intel hardware?

      Linux is destroying Unix sales and of all the Unix vendors Sun has the most to lose. They had originally tried putting Linux in the low-end niche, which is why the bought Cobalt. But that hasn't worked and more and more companies are moving their high-cost Solaris servers to low-cost Linux ones. Sun has much to gain if SCO win.

    9. Re:SUN's hand is revealed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RTFA you post.

      Funding a companies efforts, is not the same as buying insurance for Solaris. Basically Solaris isn't doing brilliantly, but it is more expensive. Gucci don't mass market to everyone. I'm not saying Solaris product is better, but Sun were trying to add a * to its product. Possibly the reaction by the open source community spurred other vendors of Linux (Sun still are vendors of linux, though other people state otherwise) to the no go situation. Additionally they also have a vested interest in Linux, other distributions they bought the rights to.

      Pretending you knew about something before it happened is all part of the corporate game. However, though the article states this, Ihaven't seen any evidence it happened years ago, nor was there any mention of this. Even in the articles with Darl it suggests it was his idea to pursue the intellectual property.

      Either this is extremely forward thinking by Sun (they know before SCO?) or its fabricated. They could have bought it anytime, just because he states years ago, doesn't mean he did. SCO are unlikely to correct him are they?

      Personally I think Sun don't really care too much what happens. Either way it won't affect them and maybe thats the way they'd like it. I can understand that as a businessman.

    10. Re:SUN's hand is revealed by Haeleth · · Score: 1

      Exactly how is hurting Linux in the best interest of Sun? . . . Please, and I'm being serious here, give me ONE GOOD REASON that Sun would want anything to happen to Linux.

      Well, you see, they've got this new product called the "Java Desktop", and if Linux continues to grow in popularity on the desktop, they won't sell as many copies. So they need to destroy Linux so they can sell their Java Desktop.

      This new Sun OS is really cool, it's a pity it won't have a chance of catching on unless they can destroy Linux. It uses Gnome as its desktop, see, and it's all based on this great kernel written by some guy from Finland...

    11. Re:SUN's hand is revealed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, what are you smoking??

      You proved his point in your first sentence: Basically Solaris isn't doing brilliantly, but it is more expensive.

      Yeah, that's why they don't like Linux. Solaris isn't doing well, and it's expensive - so competing with a free OS with similar capabilities is definitely not what Sun wants to do.

      HP is also a Unix vendor. Why were they not doing the same thing?

      Why are there so many Sun apologists on slashdot?

    12. Re:SUN's hand is revealed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      I'm sure that the Java Desktop will be every bit as important to Sun and contribute just as much revenue as their previous JavaStation products.

      It's a side project for them. Their revenue is made on the server side. I'm sure they love this free operating system that is similar to their own OS. I'm sure that they love it running on CPUs that are faster than theirs, but cost a fraction of the price. I'm sure they love all the statistics about the growth of Linux servers, as their market share shrinks.. Yeah, you're right, they love Linux.

  19. Author seems to be pro-SCO by unboring · · Score: 3, Insightful
    That's the impression I got after checking out the other articles written by the author (David Berlind) on the website archives. He has a few interviews with high-ranking SCO employees. Most of the articles are written from the SCO viewpoint too, IMO.

    Moreover, in this article too, nowhere has he questioned the validity of SCO's claims. He seems content to criticize other companies for their indemnification programs.

    1. Re:Author seems to be pro-SCO by nomadic · · Score: 4, Funny
      Moreover, in this article too, nowhere has he questioned the validity of SCO's claims. He seems content to criticize other companies for their indemnification programs.

      He says:
      If you take some time to study the case, however, I think you'll find that SCO's claims are not as easy to dismiss as some people would lead you to believe. Could those claims eventually be dismissed? Absolutely. I'm just not sure that it's the slam-dunk that SCO's opponents and water cooler discussions make it out to be.


      He explicitly states that SCO's claims could be dismissed. The point of the article is simply to explain how linux users can be protected if this isn't the case.
    2. Re:Author seems to be pro-SCO by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sure. He says the claims could "absolutely" be dismissed. That is hardly a careful review of the claims at issue. Yet he goes on to ask "How much is your job worth to you?"

      Now - to be fair he does note "...as a user of Linux, protecting yourself from an SCO-law suit could easily be a waste of money." But by the time he's done with the article he's advising " Basically, you have one question to ask yourself: How much peace of mind do you have now and how much more are you willing to spend for a little extra?"

      The overall message is that a prudent IT manager would be finding a way to spend money on some form of legal protection. And when trying to figure out where to put that money - SCO's licensing offer seems to be fairly iron-clad and cheap, all things considered.

      Which, some would point out, seems to be the whole point of SCO's actions. That - and put out the message that Linux is too dangerous for the Enterprise. Which seems to be an undertone to this whole article.

  20. Catering to the PHB by Gothmolly · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Given the current state of our collective PHBs, the kind that aren't technical, and both fear and resent their more technical employees, this article attempts to soothe their fears. Just pay up, and you won't have to worry. Don't bother asking your developers and/or legal staff for pesky details and long-winded explanations. Just sweep the cost under the rug, as it were. Don't worry, Mr. Manager, you can sleep soundly at night, knowing that through your failed initiative, Darl McBride is a richer man. Heck, your own stock portfolio might event perform better now.

    --
    I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
  21. indemnification or not... by perlchild · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I found an interesting contradiction in this article... In one line he speaks of the defense fund for developers, and mentions they aren't likely to get sued. And in another he mentions Linus Torvalds and Andrew Morton by name as likely to get sued... Just who did he think they are? Another case of someone WAYYYYYYYYY out of their depth...

    What he probably meant to say was "my intended audience of (frightful?) enterprise users of Linux are NOT developers, so they don't want to know who is gonna get sued, they only care if they are gonna get sued..."

    I also found it odd(in the sense that it indicates his research was skewed as not to sound alarmist) that he spent so little time speaking about how vital a part of a proper support contract indemnity used to be (in Mainframe and Minicomputer environments, which aren't as plentiful now) and are now being forgotten because people think anyone MCSE can run what they call "a departmental server" on 2000$ hardware with no backup or redudancy... As for indemnification I always thought a good rule of thumb was if your computers systems total 50000$ of book value, or handle more than a million a year in money value, you should either get indemnification, or negotiate an equivalent value out of your support contract(equivalent to the indemnification, not the 50000)

    If anything, we live in interesting times...

    1. Re:indemnification or not... by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 1

      If anything, we live in interesting times...

      "May you code in interesting times..."
      -- text string embedded in old MacOS System file (MacOS 7 at least).

    2. Re:indemnification or not... by black+mariah · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Nice way to not pay any attention. He first states that he doesn't believe developers to be under any fire because they will simply replace the infringing code. He later states that SCO HAS TALKED ABOUT SUING TORVALDS AND MORTON. He does NOT say that they are likely to be sued. Someone mod this down to about "-9 Didn't pay much attention".

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    3. Re:indemnification or not... by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      How could Linus get sued? I will probably have my geek license removed for not knowing, but doesn't Linus like outside the US?

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    4. Re:indemnification or not... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, he lives in the US.

    5. Re:indemnification or not... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I will probably have my geek license removed for not knowing, but doesn't Linus like outside the US?

      Outside the US is a pretty big set of places. I expect he likes some of it but not all of it.

    6. Re:indemnification or not... by jrumney · · Score: 1
      I found an interesting contradiction in this article

      Only one? I think you need to back and read it again!

      My favorite was when he said that if it was as simple as a few lines of copied code, it would be easy to dismiss this as frivilous. But no, he has kindly studied all the facts for us, and discovered that SCO might not even have any rights over SYSV let alone Linux. So we'd better pay up our $699 per server because the risk is too complicated for us mere readers to understand.

  22. People are easily confused.... by ewe2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    by the complications surrounding indemifying Linux because they don't understand the nature of Linux distributions. Linux and a distribution are not the same, yet Berlind keeps confusing the two in the case of HP, Sun and IBM, even though two of them contribute code and the other offers Linux on its hardware via Red Hat; one of them is suing SCO and the other two are indemifying against SCO lawsuits.

    I don't see anything wrong with Red Hat's position; the software business is after all a get-rich-quick-via-litigation arena these days, and they are a valid target. So I don't buy Berlind's arguments of a preemptive strike either.

    I'm not arguing against indemnity per se, but, especially in reference to Linux, I don't think anyone really knows how to measure it as an insurance cost; the estimates are currently wildly high or low. There would be a high barrier to entry from most insurers point of view in any case, which is why the big companies do a lot of research and wait to be sued over a product rather than take out a policy and cross their fingers.

    --
    insecurity asks the wrong question irritation gives the wrong answer
  23. I think the really important question here is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Red Hat needs to provide indemnification to their customers, why not Microsoft?

    I've yet to see anyone supporting SCO in any fashion provide a satisfactory explanation to that one.

  24. He doesn't think much of SCO's chances... by M.+Silver · · Score: 3, Interesting

    For many, the answer to these questions has to do with the likelihood that SCO might succeed in its legal endeavors. It's like basing the decision to get collision insurance for your car on the likelihood that you're going to get into a fender bender while traveling down a desolate stretch of highway.

    That is to say, he doesn't sound like he thinks SCO might succeed (it's a "desolate stretch of highway"), but that perhaps you should get indemnification *before* more "traffic" (somebody with a legit claim... say, somebody with a "defensive" patent...) comes along.

    --

    Slashdot's token middle-aged housewife
  25. American FUD by k4_pacific · · Score: 5, Funny

    Some time ago, I posted this to Groklaw, I've since updated it some, so here it is again. It can be sung to the tune of Don McLean's "American Pie" (sort of). You'll have to excuse the scarcity of carriage returns in the below text. Slashdot would not allow me to post with them, saying the lines were too short. Anyway, enjoy!

    A long long time ago, I can still remember how Unix used to be so great, tape drives were as big as cars for saving files, known as tars and perhaps, we could save it from its fate

    But Richard Stallman surely shivered when Windows NT was delivered, with icons on the desktop and a flying toaster backdrop

    But I can't remember if I cried such great relief I felt inside, we had IBM on our side the day Caldera died

    *Bye Bye Mr. Darl McBride, claimed there's Unix in our Linux but we know that you lied, and them Redmond boys are cursing Samba and WINE, thinking this'll be the way that they die, this'll be the way that they die.

    Did you use the kernel source? Well the GPL you can't enforce. Just because I said it is so, we'll sue you if you don't desist, its not a slap across the wrist and that's the FUD that's coming out of SCO

    Well, he belongs in a prison cell, or in the fiery pits of hell, his name is Darl McBride, and he'll take you for a ride, his SCOsource license costs a grand, but no one's got one in his hand. We all told him to go pound sand, the day Caldera died, we were singin'
    repeat *
    Didio came to spread the FUD, and SCO was after Linus's blood, but that's not how its going to be, cuz PJ came and did her blog, and Darl I'm sure, that dirty dog, reads it all, quite religiously

    In Las Vegas back in August, SCO tried hard, tried with earnest to prove Linux wasn't free, but they showed us BSD. We all laughed and we all reeled, when we observed what they'd revealed. So now they keep their claims all sealed, the day Caldera died, we were singin'
    repeat *
    Then they released some header files, and that left them on the tiles, cause the files contained not a line of code. You can't lay claim to 123, its just a number you can see, that simply tells the program how to load

    It's public knowledge, for all to know, that's what was told by us to SCO, but did those fools believe it? They just could not conceive it. We own Unix and all the works, all its traits and all its quirks, and then they called us stupid jerks, the day Caldera died, we were singing
    repeat *
    And now they're suing Novell too. They'll sue me and they'll sue you. They're saying this in every place. They are fighting against our IBM, and fighting the owners of RPM, but they don't have a solid case

    It's gonna bust its gonna break, investor's money they plan to take. Stock won't be worth a dime, and it will be a crime. Insider trading we'll all cry, Linux was just their alibi, Darl and Kevin the feds will try the day Caldera died, we're a singin'
    repeat *
    When times were dark and things were glum, Darl had Linux by the thumb. Someone had to save the day. But like an episode of Scooby Doo, PJ and friends all came through, and Linux is here to stay

    But back in Utah, so it seemed, SCO did cry, and then they screamed. They couldn't match a token, no copyrights were broken, and the OS I admire most, is free to all, from coast to coast, and SCO is but a distant ghost, the day Caldera died, and we were singin'
    repeat *

    IANAL or a poet or a musician. So there.

    --
    Unknown host pong.
    1. Re:American FUD by kfg · · Score: 5, Funny

      Dear Sir,

      I am a founding board member of the nonprofit corporation that acquired the rights to the coffeehouse in which Mr. McLean first performed American Pie. As such, in our opinion, American Pie is a derivative work of our orginization.

      Please remit a check for $699 dollars to me immediately.

      Oh, yeah. Make it out to "cash," 'K?

      KFG

    2. Re:American FUD by mellonhead · · Score: 1

      Where the hell were you when Stallman wrote "The Free Software Song"?

    3. Re:American FUD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      IANAL or a poet or a musician. So there.


      It really shows.

      Well, let me be slightly more constructive and say that in the future you should try to at least match the number of syllables in each line of your words to the lines in the original. That makes it much less awkward to try to sing it to the music. If you get that down, try to match the meter as well.

  26. OMG this is funny (link) by holy_smoke · · Score: 5, Funny

    Maybe not related but d@m funny! SCO street photo at Groklaw

    --
    Is the juice worth the sqeeze?
    1. Re:OMG this is funny (link) by Zocalo · · Score: 3, Informative
      Higher resolution GPL'd versions more suitable for use as wallpaper can be found here for a preview courtesy of KDE-Look and here for the actual pics ranging from 800x600 upto 1600x1200. The latter link looks like it might be a personal server, so anyone got a mirror?

      To quote the lead comment on Groklaw... "priceless!" ;)

      --
      UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
  27. in other new... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    David Berlind sells his sco shares 2 days after posting artilce :)

  28. Let me get this straight.... by malchus842 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ZDNet is, effectively, advising their readership to pay protection money to SCO, in order to protect their image? Gee, that's a nice house you have there, be a shame if something happened to it. And those are nice kids you have...be a shame if something happened to them.

    Give me a break. First of all, what are your chances of actually being sued by SCO? Fairly slim, I suspect. And even then, a simple motion that says "Your honor, Novell claims they have the copyrights to this material, and SCO is involved in legal process with them. Until such time as SCO can demonstrate that they actually own the property they are claiming, I move the case be placed on hold.

    Second, so SCO sues you - I don't believe that they can win (see Groklaw for exhaustive details. You don't look bad to anyone except perhaps a few SCO or MS shills. Everybody else thinks you are a hero!

    Finally, even assuming that SCO does own the copyrights, they still have yet to prove that any of their code is in Linux. That's what the IBM lawsuit is all about. And if you check the analysis on Groklaw, SCO is digging their own grave at warp speed.

    Ziff Davis is being irresponsible and is givnig VERY bad advise.

    1. Re:Let me get this straight.... by kfg · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Give me a break. First of all, what are your chances of actually being sued by SCO? Fairly slim, I suspect. And even then, a simple motion that says "Your honor, Novell claims they have the copyrights to this material, and SCO is involved in legal process with them. Until such time as SCO can demonstrate that they actually own the property they are claiming, I move the case be placed on hold.

      Nah, you don't even have to do that. Things are going roughly the way I predicted a while ago. SCO threatened Lehman Brothers and they responded, in essence:

      "Dude, you got the wrong party. We use Red Hat. If you have issues with your IP in Red Hat you have to resolve them with them. Now run along."

      Red Hat is the one to bring up the Novell issue. The end user is the lowest man on the precedence totem pole and you work up from there.

      Oh, wait. Red Hat has already sued SCO. Go figure. Well, that settles it. The issue of SCO's IP in Red Hat is already before the court.

      KFG

    2. Re:Let me get this straight.... by jeti · · Score: 1

      Finally, even assuming that SCO does own the copyrights, they still have yet to prove that any of their code is in Linux. That's what the IBM lawsuit is all about.

      No. It's not. The case is about whether IBM has the legal right to integrate their own code into Linux.

    3. Re:Let me get this straight.... by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      It is a useless advice too, since noone can actually buy 'Linux Licences' from SCO, SCO does not sell them.

    4. Re:Let me get this straight.... by malchus842 · · Score: 1

      Uhm, yes, it is. SCO's latest amended complaint makes it clear that the issue is that SCO believes IBM is violating their copyright. SCO has a novel theory that AIX and Dynix are derrivative works, in and of themselves, and that ANY part of those derrivative works is covered by SCO's copyright and license agreement. Go to GROKLAW and see.

  29. Seriously... by fr0z · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why does anyone still believe in these "analysts" any more? And I fail to see how an opinion piece by a former Microserf in a Microsoft-mouthpiece is news...just more of the good ol' FUD from the same ol' sources...

    --
    Never underestimate the predictability of human stupidity...
    1. Re:Seriously... by black+mariah · · Score: 1

      Why does anyone still believe in these "analysts" any more? And I fail to see how an opinion piece by a current Linux advocate in a Linux-mouthpiece is news...just more of the good ol' FUD from the same ol' sources...

      Apply this to Groklaw, Newsforge, Slashdot, and so on.

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
  30. Threats are cheap. Where is the proof? by spinel · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You should never give money to a terrorist. What is the purpose of indemnity? Does SCO own any copyrights to System V Unix? A lot of people want to know. It seems unlikely that SCO owns any copyright to IBM's code but you never know with certainty what a judge will do. I think if SCO had any real hope in the courtroom they would not talk so loudly to the press. I am not altogether on IBM's, Red Hat's or Novell's side but none of them make several outlandish press announcements a week while they let their business go down the sewer. It may take a long time but when this is done SCO and Darl will be very dead. If Novell really gets 95% of license sales and lawyers get 20% what does Darl get? It doesn't look good for the stockholders.

  31. A question for SCO. by jms · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The next time someone here finds him or herself at a SCO question-and-answer session, I would appreciate if you would ask the following question:
    Part of IBM's countersuit against SCO alleges, in effect, that SCOs entire product line infringes on various IBM patents. What steps does SCO intend to take to indemnify their customers in case SCO's products are found to infringe on IBM's patents?
    1. Re:A question for SCO. by nomadic · · Score: 5, Funny

      I thought SCO avoided that pitfall by not having products anymore.

    2. Re:A question for SCO. by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      They have a contingency plan of eliminating all customers as well, which was set in motion a long time ago.

  32. Paid Advertisement? by Slavinski · · Score: 1


    I just have to wonder if it is a paid advertisement or not?
    I would gander that he might have stock in SCO??
    While he glossed over the facts of the case,
    I could not help but hear the council of SCO during
    the recent court details arguing the "merits."
    By the way, the judge is not a he but a she, Mr. Berlind [paragraph 30].

  33. ZDNet Take a Windows Shaded View by SirChive · · Score: 1

    ZDNet are Windows Camp Followers. They see everything through a Redmond colored prism.

    Spinning reality to make Linux look scary or dangerous is nothing new for them.

  34. Compare with SCO's S-3 by Xenographic · · Score: 5, Informative

    Take a look at this article from a week or two ago on Groklaw.

    PJ compares SCO's worst case scenarios with those of RedHat, IBM & co.

    It makes for much more interesting reading than many of the other legal filings I've read... Note how in that article, SCO describes quite a few ways in which its business could fold, compared to rather bland statements that something bad might happen in the off chance SCO ever actually prevailed with some bit of their case.

    It's kind of fun to read all the various ways in which SCO might be liquidated, though. I wonder which of them will happen?

  35. Cultish?!?!? by OnBeyondBeing · · Score: 5, Funny


    Mr. Berlind wrote that we open source-ers are 'cultish.'
    That's ridiculous.
    I say we hex him.

    1. Re:Cultish?!?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, the cultish people I know NEVER use the tag. I think it is something they are trained to do so other members can be identified.

  36. SCO Linux? by elusus · · Score: 5, Interesting
    In that worst-case scenario, distributing any version of Linux without a license from SCO or 100 percent clean room-developed code would be illegal.
    But Linux can't be distributed under any license but the GPL. So an SCO licensed "Linux" would contain no lines of Linux code outside the code in question. So the choices should SCO win are a clean room implementation or no legal Linux at all. This is precisely the kind of statement that people like the author use to cloud the issue, not clarify it.
    1. Re:SCO Linux? by menscher · · Score: 1
      But Linux can't be distributed under any license but the GPL.

      If SCO wins this case, it would essentially invalidate the GPL, making your point irrelevant.

    2. Re:SCO Linux? by Xoid629 · · Score: 1

      How? Or do you mean a case other than the one in which SCO is accusing IBM of copyright violations, which do not appear to have anything to do with the GPL?

    3. Re:SCO Linux? by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1


      If SCO wins this case, it would essentially invalidate the GPL, making your point irrelevant.


      Has SCO's legal team mentioned the legality of the GPL in court? I've heard SCO make noise outside the courtroom about it - but what they say in public and what they claim in court have been very different.
    4. Re:SCO Linux? by black+mariah · · Score: 1

      Incorrect. It would have no bearing on the GPL whatsoever. I don't know how the hell anyone can make the leap that an SCO win invalidates the GPL. All it means is that IBM put code owned by SCO into Linux. How does that effect the GPL in any way?

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    5. Re:SCO Linux? by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      I think the grandparent meant that it would invalidate the GPL on linux... Since if a judge says SCO owns copyright to linux - god i hope not - linux could no tbe livesned under the GPL, because the people who put it there would have no right to have done so.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    6. Re:SCO Linux? by black+mariah · · Score: 2, Insightful

      SCO isn't claiming to hold the copyright on Linux. They are claiming that IBM placed code into Linux that they did not have a right to. This does NOT mean that SCO claims ownership of every piece of Linux code. It means that, IF they win, they can have the code removed from Linux. The rest of the code is owned by whoever contributed it.

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    7. Re:SCO Linux? by way2trivial · · Score: 1

      I bet, if they clearly identified all bits of code they claim as their property- it would come out, right or wrong, just to end this crap.

      --
      every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
    8. Re:SCO Linux? by elusus · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure the details of the case support that point. If IBM had a contractual obligation that gave ownership of the code they developed for AIX to SCO then SCO has the ownership rights to the code. Then the case isn't a copyright case, but a case concerning contract law. It may turn out in the process that the GPL is evaluated for its legal standing (especially considering SCO's distribution of Linux containing the code in question), but it might turn out that the judgement could go SCO's way and not invalidate the GPL. In that case any Linux containing code by IBM would be illegal, but Linux without code by IBM would be legally distributed under the GPL.

      SCO says they're challenging the GPL. But in court it appears they're really just challenging IBM and the nature of the licensing and contractual agreements between the two companies ... so far.

  37. Berlind is almost as big a joke as Darl by dukbil · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I have run into this joker's silly opinions before, and this one is par for the course. Just read a few of his other opinions, if you can get through them, and his total irrelevance, on ANY subject, will be apparent. Shortly after his appearance at ZDnet a couple of years ago, I deleted them from my bookmarks.

  38. MOD PARENT +1 FUNNY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LOL...always the best geek humor here on /.

  39. The article does not by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The author avoids thinking about the case, and instead treats the outcome as a black box whose final outcome is too mysterious to even think about. This is not your standard contract dispute, this is SCO getting desperate. The proof of that comes in their laughable attempts to show any proof of stolen code, their continually varying claims, line counts going from millions to dozens, switching from contract to copyright claims, contradictions from one press release to the next, lying to the judge, idiotic remarks about the GPL being unconstitutional and a danger to national security ... no one who has a valid claim wanders over such a large map without ever getting to the point. SCO's behaviour is more like a drunken walk or Brownian motion. They have no goal except to keep walking.

    Perhaps there is some doubt as to how much of the copyright Novell and SCO actually own, perhaps some of the finer points are in doubt too, but there are far too many clear cut lies from SCO, and that AT&T statement from 1985 really cuts the ground from underneath them.

    Once you get that in perspective, the reason to not offer indemnification makes a lot more sense.

    1. Re:The article does not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your post is a great example of what he talks about in the article. People shouldn't decide that SCO's case has no merit based on the ramblings of Slashbots with no legal (or any other) knowledge.

    2. Re:The article does not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea. "Slashbot". Ha! That's showing them. Them and their free OS and their techie jeans-wearing cult. Now hurry along - buy them licenses. Not everyone can buy SCO stock, you know.

    3. Re:The article does not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A nonymous Coward" != "Anonymous Coward"

      <nelseon>Ha, Ha!</nelson>

    4. Re:The article does not by c1ay · · Score: 1

      nelseon != nelson either Ha, Ha!

      --

  40. An easy reason to NOT give in to indemification by Felinoid · · Score: 2, Interesting

    SCO has not yet made the case in cort. Not to defend Microsoft more than I have to but Microsoft is in cort a lot and many times for bogus IP rights issues. Actualy at any given time at least one of the big players is fighting some sort of IP rights clame made by a much smaller company.

    If your thinking of a one time indemnification then yeah SCOs deal looks pritty sweet but let's get real here that isn't how things will go down if SCO makes a good chunk of change from SCOs liccensing. In fact it's more of a lose lose situation for anyone who forks it over.

    If SCO wins the case there are many other issues to deal with and you've already set yourself up for a bunch of collage students and IT profesionals to stick hands out expecting a cut.

    If SCO loses you've set yourself up for every Tom, Dick and Herry who thinks they can take on Microsoft, Intel or Apple to seek an liccens from YOU reguardless of how stupid or anil the clame may be.

    Pony up... It's not the drop of blood you think it is.

    On the other hand the corts could deside this practace is illegal.
    Then your just out the cost of the one liccens.

    --
    I don't actually exist.
    1. Re:An easy reason to NOT give in to indemification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SCO has not yet made the case in cort.

      I would say that in your refusal to acknowledge SCO's legimiate intellectual property claims, you are courting with disaster. When you get into a high-stakes legal game with SCO, you're not playing on your home court and their highly-paid legal professionals are likely to tear you to pieces. Rather than whining about SCO, you would be better advised to walk down the court to your local software store and purchase a copy of a fully-licensed operating system such as Windows XP.

  41. Most IT 'Analysts' are idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I can't count the number of Gartner, IDC, Forrester and other 'experts' I've had my clients drop their services.

    IT Analysts are one of the biggest scams going.

  42. "Go Ahead, Make My Day" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    How did slashdot miss this article?

  43. Why??? by OneFix · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Any infringement (if it even exists) is still SCO's fault. SCO has still not given us exact line numbers or snippets of code. They have made statements without backing them up and claim that Linux is still hurting their IP.

    The only thing we've seen are claims that are nothing short of saying anything IBM has touched is stolen from SCO...It's obvious that SCO has no plans to actually cooperate with the kernel dvelopers, as there has really been no attempt at contacting the developers directly...

    There's really no reason for this type of speculation until the courts actually make their decision...this article seems to assume that SCO's claims are as good as gold...To be honest, SCO doesn't look to be moving on their end...

    1. Re:Why??? by jadel · · Score: 1
      SCO has still not given us exact line numbers or snippets of code.
      This is no longer true. As part of the IBM court case discovery process, SCO has revealed a number of lines of code it claims are infringing - primarily RCU code from DYNIX (don't forget that this code is owned by IBM after the sequent acquisition and that they own the patents that cover RCU as well. SCO are still claiming that this is a significant misuse of their "IP", and that as soon as IBM provides them with the code to AIX they will be able to show much more infringing code.)
      According to Groklaw SCO are now also using DMCA threats against Linux using companies.
      That sort of thing makes businesses nervous.
    2. Re:Why??? by OneFix · · Score: 1

      No, this is not what I'm talking about...I wanna see...

      "Here's the code from System V...now here's the (more than 10 continuous) lines of code from the Linux 2.4.X Kernel"

    3. Re:Why??? by jadel · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately (fortunately?) it doesn't exist (IMHO of course.) SCO are just using the argument that Dynix and AIX are derivatives of System V and so all the code belongs to them. IANAL but I have studied a little bit of (Australian - hell it's all the Berne convention anyway) copyright law, certainly enough to conclude that SCO are utterly barking mad.
      Until the court case is played out to it's grim and ugly conclusion (I give them a miniscule but non-zero chance of winning) this is going to keep hanging over the heads of everyone who uses Linux - or BSD for that matter.

    4. Re:Why??? by OneFix · · Score: 1

      this is going to keep hanging over the heads of everyone who uses Linux - or BSD for that matter.

      It's already happened. Back in 1992, AT&T sued BSDI... The end result of the suit was that BSD was able to call itself UNIX and AT&T was able to keep the BSD code they had in System V...

    5. Re:Why??? by jadel · · Score: 1
      From Groklaws quote database
      "But what about BSD?" I asked. Sontag responded that there "could be issues with the [BSD] settlement agreement," adding that Berkeley may not have lived up to all of its commitments under the settlement.
      "So you want royalties from FreeBSD as well?" I asked. Sontag responded that "there may or may not be issues. We believe that UNIX System V provided the basic building blocks for all subsequent computer operating systems, and that they all tend to be derived from UNIX System V (and therefore are claimed as SCO's intellectual property)."
      SCO Owns Your Computer by Trevor Marshall
      So yes, I do think that the BSD people are still exposed to some extent - I don't think SCO have a leg to stand on, but I don't think they have a leg to stand on with IBM either and that sure hasn't stopped them.
  44. This Guy is not a Lawyer. by ABaumann · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This guy is the Executive Editor of Tech Update. He got his degrees in Computer Information Systems. (and he wears those stupid emo glasses) Why is he talking about the legal issues of the whole SCO debate?

  45. Rolling eyes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Another clueless hack with a word processor.

    I guess most people realize this guy knows little about computers, and nothing about law, so his main claim to fame is...that he is a journalism major writing for Ziff-Davis? That means his rant is just a nicely worded Slashdot troll.

    He writes like he knows something when in fact he's being completely uncritical of not only *fact* but recent events. Particularly how SCO's lawsuit has completely changec character and is now down to 60 lines of code that they claim were copied.

    SCO's case is on its last legs, but he talks as if SCO is an aggrieved party looking for a little love.

    Lets do some digging on this chump and see what other jems he is pushing on an unsuspecting public.

    1. Re:Rolling eyes by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      Right. Essay test.
      It reads a lot like an essay by someone who hasn't really read up on the subject matter and is bullshitting his way through it.

    2. Re:Rolling eyes by JEB_eWEEK · · Score: 1

      Hey, David Berlind doesn't write for Ziff Davis. He works for CNet.

  46. Another option to giving SCO dollars now by rcpitt · · Score: 1
    I don't know about the US, but here in Canada we have (AFAIK + IANAL) the option of paying something "into court" pending the outcome of a case. In this case it might be possible (you'll have to determine whether you deem it prudent) to pay your SCO license amount "into court" pending the outcome of the case(s) of whether SCO owns whatever they claim and that a user (as opposed to a distributor) is liable for using what they claim is theirs. In the event their case is turned down/dismissed/etc. you get your money back and all is well.

    In the case that they prove their claim you are also covered, having paid your dues up front.

    Of course I'm of the opinion that Darl et al belong back under the rock they crawled out from under and won't be availing myself of such an out, personally.

    --
    Been there, done that, paid for the T-shirt
    and didn't get it
  47. MOD DOWN - OFFTOPIC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  48. Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    He says "If you take some time to study the case"

    let me translate:

    1) I, wise sage, have studied the case
    2) You, stupid dope, have not
    3) I conclude there is much to this lawsuit and it will be difficult to dismiss

    He's so full of shit that he burps brown.

    THe point of the article is to say:
    Wow, this is complicated, you can't understand it. FOrtunately, I do understand it and let me tell you, this looks really difficult for you if you use Linux.

    He ignores that fact that SCO has changed their tune in the lawsuit; they no longer claim they own Linux/Unix/AIX; they're saying "Oh look, shiny!"

    Please stop trying to defend this guy; he's a moron with a word processor.

    1. Re:Wrong by black+mariah · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      So exactly how much of the lega filings have YOU read, anonymous pussy?

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    2. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your momma didn't have such a big mouth with me. Well, she did, but only for a while, and she swallowed.

      But she did keep calling out "Oh massa! Massa!" every time I took a stroke.

  49. Yawn. Enough winking, let's dance by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I want this thing to go to court so we can hear arguments that actually have consequences. Really, no matter how it ends, it ends well for open source. If the very best thing happens, SCO is vaporized in the markets after the judgement against it. In the very worst case, IBM gets hammered, linux essentially becomes quasi-legal, and we can embark on the largest and most productive exercise in civil disobedience in a generation.

  50. email to the author by hankaholic · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I just sent an email to the author of the article:

    In your article, "The SCO legal train: Know your options", you suggest that legal indemnification is something that end-users should be concerned with.

    However, what you didn't explain is exactly what SCO could sue end-users for doing. As SCO continued to distribute the Linux kernel under the GPL even after filing suit against IBM, they really cannot argue that end-users are infringing upon their copyrights. After all, the GPL provides explicit permission to redistribute under certain conditions.

    If end-users didn't actually break the law, SCO has no case against them. "They should have paid us" isn't a strong core argument for the prosecution unless law was actually broken.

    What exactly do you believe that SCO can sue end-users for doing?

    --
    Cheers,
    Chet
    I'll post any response I get ;)
    --
    Somebody get that guy an ambulance!
    1. Re:email to the author by bersl2 · · Score: 2

      Also sent the dude email. Mostly it was sending him the best early comments on this story, so he could read some of our opinions (claimed them as definitely NOT mine), with a link to this page and to Groklaw. Told him to base his opinion on actual facts instead of SCO press releases. End of message.

    2. Re:email to the author by lakeland · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Here is my letter:

      Hiya,

      Apparently unlike your other readers, I quite liked your article "Know your
      options". One point you didn't mention is that imdemnification is so rare as
      to be almost nonexistant throughout the software industry. Microsoft does
      not imdemnify windows users; Apple does not imdemnify Mac users; Sun does not
      imdemnify solaris users; IBM does not imdemnify AIX users; and HP does not
      imdeminfy HPUX users! Who does offer imdemnifiation? Well, some of these
      companies will imdemnify if the client wants it enough (I only know for
      certain with HP, but would be unsurprised to find they all will). Given
      this, it seems more than a little odd to expect any imdemnification of Linux
      users. I think the only reason anybody is getting linux imdemnification now
      is that the cost _in this case_ is lower than the PR value.

      As for the relative merits of the case, I personally have read an awful lot,
      and am pretty damn confident. Here's the hurdle race I see SCO needing to
      run in order to demonstrate that I owe them money on an ongoing basis:

      a) SCO owns UNIX rather than Novell.
      b) SCO manages to overturn AT&T's statement on derivative works and
      c) convince the judge that AIX is a derivative work
      d) SCO convinces another judge that since AIX is derivative, any code based on
      AIX (such as RCU in linux) is therefore derivative.
      e) Somehow the IBM contrabutions cannot be removed -- perhaps they've been
      copied to too many places, making it is impossible to ensure all traces are
      eliminated.
      f) SCO manages to convince a judge that the GPL is meaningless, rendering it
      functionally equivilant to the public domain.
      g) Having succeeded at destroying linux and the GPL, most programs runs on
      other more obscure operating systems (BSD, Hurd, etc.). After the GPL is
      rewritten to revalidate it, SCO would have to start again against whichever
      OS people jump ship to.

      For the first hurdle, I'm guessing odds are 50/50. Beyond that I see every
      single hurdle to be huge, I would consider a case based on even one to be a
      long short. To try and jump all of them, well winning the lottery six tmes
      in a row sounds more likely... Having said that, even if SCO gets past the
      first hurdle they can expect to achieve quite a bit of damage to the linux
      community.

      But the purpose of this letter was to point out that imdemnification just
      doesn't happen, not to discuss SCO's chances of success at repositioning
      itself as a linux parasite.

  51. yet another clueless journalist by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 2

    He needs to read more Groklaw. Pity, his article is long enough that he could have backed it up with research.

    First, regardless of who owns SysV, SCO can't find any of it in Linux. Therefore, the "who own SysV?" question is moot.

    Second, this case hinges on SCO's alleged contracts with IBM. I'm not a party to those contracts. If IBM put stuff into Linux that they weren't supposed to, then, that's a tussle between IBM and SCO. Not "me and SCO", or "Lehman Bros. and SCO". IBM and SCO. Period.

    SCO's case rests on their bastardized idea of "intellectual property" that no lawyer that I know of (outside of their paid counsel) has bought into. Plenty of lawyers are laughing at them.

    My feeling is that the "SCO case", and I mean all of it, will be over far quicker than most people think. It'll be sudden, unexpected, and leave everybody with their jaws dropped. You heard it here first...

    1. Re:yet another clueless journalist by black+mariah · · Score: 1

      As if Groklaw is the epitome of unbiased journalism.

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    2. Re:yet another clueless journalist by dmaxwell · · Score: 2, Informative

      Unbiased? No but they do freely admit their bias. On the other hand you can't fault Groklaw for not being thorough. Groklaw at least does a good job validating their bias.

  52. I agree with the author... by TFloore · · Score: 2, Informative
    when should you start seriously looking for shelter?
    My answer? Probably on the day that a judge announces that he agrees with SCO's interpretation of what it acquired from Novell.
    Or, put another way...

    You don't need to worry.

    Read Groklaw. Sit back. Laugh.

    Worry? I don't think so.
    ==
    --
    This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is... Oops. Frank, I've got your sig again! Where's mine?
  53. Warnings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's ZDNet, aka "We Love Microsoft"Net. So anything they can do to promote FUD against Linux is good for them.

  54. If not, DoD will discuss licences with them. by leonbrooks · · Score: 4, Funny

    "OK, so you want to come at this the hard way? No problem." (-:

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  55. Fight Fire With Fire by femto · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Not that I think SCO actually has more chance than a snowball in hell, but *IF* SCO happened to win, the the case would extended the definition of a derivative work to an extent never seen before.

    This could open an avalanche for copyleft. It would mean any code which has ever been *near* any copylefted code would be owned by copyleft. Removing the copylefted code would be no remedy. The FSF would have field day chasing down all past GPL violators and any company which has even looked at GPL code (the majority, even if they won't admit it or actually used it?). The opportunity for retribution against the Darl McBrides of this world would be fantastic, and make others wish the SCO case had never happened.

    1. Re:Fight Fire With Fire by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      Yes, and indeed we shall not support SCO Unix with gpl code again. The whole company has to die.

  56. Investment purhaps? by amitti · · Score: 1

    Purhaps he invested in SCO..?

    I wouldn't be suprised if someone didn't try to take advantage of their situation, convince people to buy licensing and pull their money before it all comes tubbling down. I'm not saying he did, it'd be pretty stupid to try to pull something like this off with after Enron and with Martha Stuwart in court right now..

    People are pretty stupid sometimes though, I'm not entirely immune myself though. I'm just not, say, Darl stupid.

    -Aaron Mitti

  57. Berlind's trying to present a "balanced" view by leonbrooks · · Score: 4, Interesting
    "One teaspoon full of pure truth on this tray... one teaspoon full of rancourous bullsheeite on this tray... good-golly-gosh, they're nearly balanced! Who can tell what the outcome will be?"

    It's an easy game to play until you notice that you have to include the quality of the evidence somewhere in the equation. At which point TSG's case goes all wahoonie-shaped.

    I can just about imagine the IBM legal office examining TSG's amendmended complaint (I'm pretty sure they want to nail TSG's hide to the shed, if possible, no quarter asked or given): "Amendment fourteen!" <pause> <raucous laughter> "No! Wait! Wait! Amendment eighteen! Amendment eighteen! Unnnnn-believable! <bwaaaaah-hah-har!> Get a load a'tha' second sentence! Whoooe!" <more raucous laughter> ...

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Berlind's trying to present a "balanced" view by Antaeus+Feldspar · · Score: 1
      Yes, I was impressed/bemused by the clever weaseling of the article, never coming out and saying "SCO's actually got a solid case, you guys!" but implying it by giving undue amounts of attention to the unlikely outcome that SCO can get anything to stand up in court, and stuff like the following:

      Clearly, if you believe you need protection, you should arrange for it before you get sued.


      Notice how he's not even coming out behind the dubious proposition "You need protection from a company that so far hasn't substantiated even one of their claims in court", he's saying "If you believe you need protection..."

      It's a clever use of the Existential Fallacy: the non-existent merits of SCO's case can be implied to exist by the way he's talking as if SCO is actually likely to win. Meanwhile, he never mentions the much, much more probable case of what will happen to people holding SCO stock when the SEC probes the company's behavior to prove a pump-and-dump case, or when suits are filed against SCO for misappropriating every single line of Linux code that was not written by SCO. Since, in reference to the millions and millions of lines that SCO has claimed were copied verbatim, they now claim they can't possibly identify one without IBM delivering to them every version of AIX ever -- Berlind's article is taking the position of an extreme devil's advocate but pretending to be useful information, instead of far-fetched speculation.
      --
      If people are to respect the law, perhaps the law should begin by respecting the people.
  58. Yup, the appropriate "old saying" is... by leonbrooks · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ..."once you pay Danegelt, you never get rid of the Dane".

    There's an idea for a new term, "thescogroupgelt"... hmm, doesn't roll of the tongue too well. How about "canopygelt"? (-:

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:Yup, the appropriate "old saying" is... by dmaxwell · · Score: 4, Funny

      The "scogelt" rolls of the tongue acceptably well.

    2. Re:Yup, the appropriate "old saying" is... by Vengeance · · Score: 1

      Darlgelt?

      --
      It was a joke! When you give me that look it was a joke.
    3. Re:Yup, the appropriate "old saying" is... by cpuffer_hammer · · Score: 1

      And for a more poetic version (no don't run screaming this is a cool poem).

      Kipling published this in the paper when Chamberlain returned from paying danegelt in the from of "Poland" for "Peace in our time" to the National Socialists of Germany and you know what that got us.

      http://whitewolf.newcastle.edu.au/words/authors/ K/ KiplingRudyard/verse/english_history/danegeld.html

  59. Moronic Op piece by pavera · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This piece completely forgets that SCO just removed all of the Unix is in Linux parts of their case, and now it is only that AIX and Dynix are in Linux, which SCO has no reason to believe they actually own, and if a judge finds that code developed by IBM and Sequent is actually owned by SCO well, I'll have to move to a different country, based on that ruling code developed using Microsofts MFC is owned by microsoft, code developed using Qt is owned by trolltech, and so on and so on...

  60. I prefer ALIAN by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    "A Lawyer I Am Not". I guess Kiwis could use "ALIEN"... (-:

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  61. Netware as GPL? IBM writing a clean kernel? by The+Good+Jim · · Score: 5, Insightful
    He's a bit hard to take seriously -

    - IBM urgently writing a 'clean' kernel, when they don't know what is tainted?

    - Novell releasing NetWare as GPL? Who would migrate to NetWare simply because Linux was no longer an option?

    Both of these silly suggestions imply people want to run Linux for its kernel - whereas most people have limited interest in the kernel, but want an OS to let them run applications.

    The information on indemnification wasn't bad, but the legal advice is essentially "Stop and think - accidents can happen to you". FUD

  62. No, they are not. by leonbrooks · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They aren't allowed to ask for the money, because of why they're asking for the money.

    They're asking for you to pay for their "intellectual property" in Linux, and there isn't any. The short name for what they're doing is "fraud", and yes, it is illegal.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
    1. Re:No, they are not. by black+mariah · · Score: 1

      They're asking for you to pay for their "intellectual property" in Linux, and there isn't any.

      If you have some sort of judgement in the case the rest of the world hasn't heard about, feel free to share it. Last I heard nobody WHO IS IMPARTIAL (i.e. not fucking Groklaw or Slashdot or SCO) had made any firm statements either way.

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
  63. ZDNet is CNET, not Ziff Davis by isdnip · · Score: 3, Informative

    The article, which was truly stupid, ran on ZDNet. While that sounds like Ziff-Davis, it's not. ZDNet is part of CNET, a separate company; they bough it from Ziff-Davis several years ago. Ziff-Davis still puts out PC Magazine (pcmag.com) and Extreme Tech, among other things. Sort of like how Lycos owns Wired.com, not Wired magazine, though those two still have a working relationship that is not apparent between ZDNet and CNET.

    Among CNET properties, ZDNet seems to be oriented towards Windows-loving IT pros. Maybe that's part of its Ziff-Davis heritage, or just a marketing decision.

  64. "Analysis" Has No Analysis by jc2000 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The author says that those who dismiss SCO's claims haven't really analyzed their merits, but have relied on the opinions of others. But he doesn't do any merits analysis either. He just looks at who has indemnified their users and who hasn't -- that is, the opinions of others -- and suggests there is something significant in IBM's and Red Hat's failure to offer indemnification.

    There isn't. Whether you distribute proprietary software or GPL'd software, there is always a nonzero risk that some of your code, one day, might be held to infringe someone else's intellectual property rights. Indemnifying against that risk therefore has nonzero cost. Proprietary software vendors can cover that cost in the license fee they charge for the software. But GPL software vendors do not and cannot charge a "license fee" for the software.

    Obviously, GPL software vendors can and do charge for other things, such as maintenance and support, access to FTP and web sites, or even copies of the program. But they cannot charge a "license fee" for the right to obtain or use the program. If you can't and don't charge a license fee for the code, you shouldn't be expected to provide either a warranty or an indemnity.

  65. FUD, FUD and more FUD by vidawho · · Score: 0, Troll

    From the article: "SCO is a tiny company in Utah, with opposition that includes some of the largest companies in the world, millions of Linux users, and the leaders of the cultish open source movement. As a result, the opposition's message often drowns out SCO's. I'm not saying that the opposition is wrong, but, short of understanding the merits of the case, a lot of people are siding with SCO's opposition because its bigger, louder, and consists of voices that many people find to be credible." Yeh Right!!!Which news outlets have u been reading -Berlind??...I am sure every1 here thinks that the main stream press are on SCOX's side or if u were reading only Groklaw and the like and you still were weren't able to grok it, too bad u ought to get your head checked and stop shooting ur mouth off like this

    1. Re:FUD, FUD and more FUD by black+mariah · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Considering you can't even properly form a motherfucking sentence, I'd say he's a bit more reliable than you are.

      There really needs to be a "-1: Posted by a Fucking Moron" moderation.

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
  66. Dude. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's Ziff-davis. Ziff-davis prints things like this on a regular basis. This isn't just attacking them becuase they attacked linux. It is that they have so repeatedly, consistently, and in a journalistically poor manner attacked linux that it is fair to say that they are not a source to be trusted on the subject of anything relating to linux in any way.

  67. Feel for the tech journalist by 0x0d0a · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I guess most people realize this guy knows little about computers, and nothing about law, so his main claim to fame is...that he is a journalism major writing for Ziff-Davis? That means his rant is just a nicely worded Slashdot troll.

    To be fair, to write a really good summary of what's going on, you'd need to be skilled at law, software development, and journalism, and I'm fairly convinced that anyone that's really competent in all three areas is not going to be making a living as a journalist.

    The degree of uninformed commmentary all over the place means that few people *do* have a good handle on what's going on. From what I can get from reading this guy's archive, he tends to hobnob with CEOs/upper management of tech companies, who naturally are going to happily feed him whatever line they think will best manipulate him. He isn't going to sit down and start reading through legal code.

    So, is he uninformed and parrotting BS? Sure. On the other hand, are *most* people involved? Sure. The only people that I'd really claim to know what's going on are in IBM's legal team -- and those folks, beside having an obvious bias, take the approach of not saying anything that might be wrong. Lawyers are conservative about making statements. Journalists, on the other hand, need to make impressive announcements and insights on a constant basis. Does this mean that accuracy suffers? Sure. But if it didn't, they wouldn't get paid.

    I agree that anyone at this point that's worried about using Linux because of SCO is pretty much either uninformed or awfully paranoid. I've keept a reasonably close eye on groklaw and other parties involved -- and I've never even coded on the sections in question or taken any civil law courses. I think that Slashdot *was* overeager to pronounce SCO full of hot air, but at this point, they really have no case against Linux users. There are so many counterarguments that could be used if even one failed that would blow away their argument that it isn't even funny.

    IBM shareholders might be a bit worried about the continuation of AIX, which is more at risk than Linux, but honestly, I still wouldn't lose any sleep over it if I had a bunch of AIX deployments. Given the data that's come up from Novell and IBM, and how weak SCO's arguments have been once in the light, this case shouldn't have been a worry for at least a month or two now.

  68. Looks nice and brisk there... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    ...pile of snow at the end of the carpark and all (he says, looking out the window at approx 30degC blue skies), perhaps (and I haven't redone this for hires yet, I started with the GrokLaw one) the DoD could fix that for them at the same time as resolving any outstanding licence issues with their new Linux cluster?

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  69. I'm in the wrong business by HangingChad · · Score: 4, Insightful
    If people are making money writing tripe like that then I'm working too hard for a living. He avoids any real discussion of the merits of SCO's case. Just read what Novell has been posting on their web site. Read the IP primers Groklaw has put online. Berlind, you're a fear mongering hack.

    Certainly it's complicated but not beyond human reason to comprehend. Let's take just one line:

    IBM's AIX has a different question mark over it. Nonetheless it's a question mark

    This says one thing loud and clear: You've never worked with IBM on a project. They're as Death Star about IP as anyone I've ever worked with. And that was WAY before the SCO business ever surfaced. That's not even going into detail on the merits of SCO's case. But he didn't have to, so neither do I.

    weigh the total cost of protection versus the risk of being sued by SCO (or maybe someone else).

    Spoken like a true low-level pussy. You can get sued these days whether the other side has a case or not. Some cases are just to keep you distracted while one of their partners moves in on your deal. If the threat of litigation puts you off these days, you might as well consign yourself to a life of being someone else's bitch because that's all you're going to be. If the other side knows that's all it takes, they'll make it a reality.

    And before anyone steps up and says that's easy for me to say because I've never been sued...screw you. I've been through it twice already. Litigation is just another business tool today so learn to deal with it. Best thing you can do is keep your professional liability insurance paid up and learn how to find the "oh, shit" lawyers (they're not even always the most expensive). The ones who send out a letter and the other side goes, "Oh, shit, not them." Just the name on the letterhead can make you a bigger pain in the ass than you're worth. I spend time down at the courthouse talking to lawyers, ask them who they hate to see coming. After a while a handful of names will surface. They're usually bastards, but they're your bastards. It makes a difference. Lot of firms just run up the charges and don't really do the work. You have to find the ones that actually work for their 300/hour. Talk to the court house people. Who files the most appeals when they lose, those people are motivated to win.

    Plan for it. Budget for it. It's going to happen even if you're St. F'ing Peter. You'll get through it.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    1. Re:I'm in the wrong business by DarkHelmet · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Quote the article:

      weigh the total cost of protection versus the risk of being sued by SCO (or maybe someone else).

      And then your response:

      Spoken like a true low-level pussy. You can get sued these days whether the other side has a case or not. Some cases are just to keep you distracted while one of their partners moves in on your deal. If the threat of litigation puts you off these days, you might as well consign yourself to a life of being someone else's bitch because that's all you're going to be. If the other side knows that's all it takes, they'll make it a reality.

      As much as I love your don't-take-shit-from-nobody stance towards lawsuits and the like, in many cases the choice you make affects more people than just you. In my case, I'm Chief Technical Officer of a small web design firm. I have the option to use a Linux or a Windows server. Which server do I install? If I install Linux, what are the odds that SCO will go after me? If SCO *does* go after me, for how much?

      In my scenario, the chance that SCO will go after my company is extremely small, say 1/10000. If we decide to pay the $700 to make them go away, with probability this factors to an additional $0.07 to factor into Total Cost of Ownership. Big deal. I personally like my odds.

      If your legal fees end up going over what the other side is asking for, it's not worth it.

      If you're a 15 year old kid downloading mp3's and get busted by the RIAA, do you fight it through? Or do you negociate to minimize the dent in your college fund?

      In the case of a company like Google, a suit from SCO will most likely claim 5-7 million in damages. A large company with a lot more to lose will be sure to fight the fight to the bitter end.

      It's basic bean counting. It's how business works nowadays.

      And finally:

      Some cases are just to keep you distracted while one of their partners moves in on your deal.

      Your stance is fight the good fight. If the company suing you is trying to distract you, they'll do a pretty good job of it if you fight tooth and nail at it.

      Calculate your risks. It might save you a pretty penny or two ;-)

      --
      /^[A-Z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Z0-9.-]+\.[A-Z]{2,4}$/i
    2. Re:I'm in the wrong business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      " In my case, I'm Chief Technical Officer of a small web design firm"

      Translation:

      We're got 4 guys, and unfortunately, I'm the one who doesn't code, and I sound horrible as a receptionist.

  70. OT: Has anyone checked OpenUNIX for violations? by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I recall OpenUNIX (UnixWare 8) being sold as the great melding of UNIX with Linux. I know they have a lot of GNU userland tools (always have; I hit the Skunkware site regularly when I had to work on OpenServer 5) but part of me thinks they tried to meld some kernel stuff as well. They claim that their Linux compatibility stuff in the kernel is cleanroom, has anyone checked? People can ask for specific code modules instead of the general fishing expedition that SCO is doing.

  71. Mod points! Where are my mod points? (-: by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    Yes, +1 Funny. (-:

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  72. Amazon and anonymity... :-) by BerntB · · Score: 4, Funny
    It would be interesting to see if most Anon comments to a story like this are written by the same person (like the temporary Amazon bug.)

    Wouldn't that be a wonderful (temporary) bug in slashcode, too? I am willing to implement the bug myself, just to see what grubs are found beneath the rocks...

    Pretty please with lots of sugar Cowboy Neal et al?

    --
    Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
    1. Re:Amazon and anonymity... :-) by Uthiroid · · Score: 1

      Yes it might, but just so you know, that is a real account you replied too....

    2. Re:Amazon and anonymity... :-) by BerntB · · Score: 1
      Yes it might, but just so you know, that is a real account you replied too....

      I commented on this, which is an Anon post.

      Did you make a mistake or did I misunderstand you?

      --
      Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
    3. Re:Amazon and anonymity... :-) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was probably browsing at +1 or so,
      and saw your reply nestled up under-
      neath that of "A nonymous Coward", and
      presumed you had replied to that post,
      and mistaken it for one from the ever
      present "Anonymous Coward".

      So I think he was mistaken.

      j

    4. Re:Amazon and anonymity... :-) by Uthiroid · · Score: 1

      I accept full responsibility for this mistaken mistake. I always wondered what that parent button was for....

  73. Open source is cultish? My response.... by borgheron · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Dear Sir,

    I would like to point out something:

    "SCO is a tiny company in Utah, with opposition that includes some of the
    largest companies in the world, millions of Linux users, and the leaders of the
    cultish open source movement."

    Why is it that anytime there is something in the world that doesn't fit a mold
    which is familiar to the layperson it is considered "cultish"?

    I like GNU/Linux because it helps me run my business and because of all of the
    other advantages of open source and free software and because I dare to be
    different and think that some ideas should be free and open to the public.
    Our founding fathers believed this. Why is it so hard to convince people
    these days.

    I do not think that makes me a member of some cult. If it does, then this
    country is truly in deep trouble when it comes to personal freedoms.

    Aside from the glaring inaccuracies and omissions, which I won't bother to
    point out since the refutation of most of what SCO has said is on the net for
    all to see, you're article disappoints me because it resorts to this type of
    name calling to prove it's point.

    What most people interpret as "cultish behavior" is the love and the attachment
    which Linux users have to the operating system that they have worked so hard to
    create. This sentiment is prevalent in many other communities. Last time I
    talked to a die hard windows fan, I could swear I was talking to a cult member. :)

    Please remember, that by stereotyping an entire community, such as you have
    done in your article, you seek to diminish it's voice.

    Good day, GJC

    =====
    Gregory John Casamento -- CEO/President Open Logic Corp.

    --
    Gregory Casamento
    ## Chief Maintainer for GNUstep
  74. At least he's "only" a zero... by leonbrooks · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...whereas Enderle's about a minus 7 and Didio's about a -3i. And yes, I do mean "i" in the mathematical sense, since Planet Laura seems to have left the solar system. Not sure how to rate Daniel Lyons, his bias is obvious and unforgiving but mild and he hasn't said much lately. Maybe a -4.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  75. My Indemnity by Magic5Ball · · Score: 1

    http://smokeping.planetmirror.com/pub/openlinux/Op enLinux/3.1.1/Workstation/

    If I have a copy of Linux they distributed (and presumably licensed), and upgraded the kernel by patching up to -current, am I safe?

    --
    There are 1.1... kinds of people.
  76. Indemnification?-End Users have no liability! by falltime · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The whole notion that an end-user would owe SCO anything (even if it was there code) is ridiculous. By way of example - if you buy a car and it turns out that it was stolen ( assuming you reasonably had no idea) you have NO LIABILITY - you do have to give the car to its rightful owner (ie stop using it) but you dont owe the real owner the depreciation that occurred while you were using it. Because it would be UNFAIR, since you bought it in good faith. So if Sco establishes owenrship (which it apparently cant), then users would have to cease to use it. THATs IT - the only possibility (and it isnt really one) is that by notifying users today, some crazy judge could say that from the time you were otified till the time you stopped using it you are liable. Thats not likely because the notice from SCO has provided no details that really provide notice that SCO is the owner. In addition even if that worse case senario occurred the UPPER limit on damages has been established $149 a year per useage. And even that wouldnt be likely since SCO's pricing is arbitrary and no Judge would rule 60 lines is worth $149 - unless it was some trade secret - which has been dropped. The whole end-user thing is a red-herring since no owner of IP is going to sue end-users, for the above reasons and the reason why majority of Software Companies dont offer indemnification, is b/c they dont want the nuisance of every ambulance chaser making a run at their very deep pockets

    1. Re:Indemnification?-End Users have no liability! by LostCluster · · Score: 1

      By way of example - if you buy a car and it turns out that it was stolen ( assuming you reasonably had no idea) you have NO LIABILITY - you do have to give the car to its rightful owner (ie stop using it)

      Apply that to a business-critcal IT system. If SCO wins, any end-user company has some rather bleak options:

      A: Pay SCO... shudder.
      B: Halt business until the system can be rebuilt SCO-free... that's lost revenue, and the risk that the company will never be able to restart at all because their competitors absorb all the customers while they're down.
      C: Cut over to the SCO-free fallback plan... but that assumes you've got one. Building such a plan costs money in the here in now that's wasted in the more likely situation that SCO doesn't win.

      It's not so much legal copyright liability, but the liability that comes from the risk that a business might be disrupted by a calamity. Most businesses like to have some sort of insurance that tells them they'll be okay in the event of such a disaster.

  77. told 'ya so by mabu · · Score: 2

    Don't say I didn't tell you so when IBM *SETTLES* with SCO so that it appears to korporate amerika as the only "legitimate" Linux source.

    I urge Slashdotters to not be blinded by their idealism and realize that this is a corporate battle for shareholder interests. What's "right" has absolutely no fucking thing to do with this argument. None of the parties involved are motivated by "rightness"; they are motivated by profit.

    Make sure if you support any effort to fight SCO that it's contingent on ** NO SETTLEMENT ** !!

    1. Re:told 'ya so by AveryT · · Score: 1

      Nice try but IBM is not a Linux source since it doesn't have its own distribution.

  78. Legal question by endersdouble · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Let's say I'm stupid or work for a company which absolutely, completely as the author said "wants to avoid the legal limelight", and I buy a SCO license. A month later, a summary judgement is released--SCO is smoking something really strong. Case dismissed. Is there any legal recourse to get my $699 back?

  79. Idemnified Operating Systems by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 2, Interesting
    From the article:

    If you've been accepting solutions from your providers without using your buying power to establish indemnification, you are putting yourself at unnecessary risk. For the many savvy IT shops (GE is rumored to be one), such negotiations are par for the course.

    This seems to imply that idemnification is something out of the ordinary. After all, acording to Berlind, one should be leveraging one's buying power to get it.

    So the question that I get from this is - who offers idemnification as a standard part of their license? Which OSes are "safe"? How "safe"? And were they always like that or is this something they jumped on when SCO began its campaign?
  80. quick help for berlind by jjohn_h · · Score: 2, Informative

    David Berlind argues as if his reasoning would apply to all
    the three SCO court cases on the roll. It does not.

    The first case (IBM) is based on allegations of contractual
    infringements. And the alleged infringements rely on a new
    definition of derivative work: since AIX is a derivative of
    Unix System V any components extracted from AIX (whether
    they have common code with UNIX System V or not) are a
    derivative. Accordingly, IBM's contributions to Linux out of
    AIX are a violations of SCO' rights. Or so they hope.

    The second case (RedHat) is a request for a declaratory
    judgment that RedHat distro does not violate SCO copyrights.
    SCO is trying to have the case dismissed but in this respect
    will certainly fail. When the case really starts, the only
    way for SCO to avoid defeat is to show that their copyrights
    have been infringed: they have to show common code between
    their Unix and RedHat's Linux. They will pass.

    Finally, the only case where Berlin's cogitations apply:
    Novell vs. SCO. The current case is actually about slander
    of title and as such will be dismissed. But it will
    resurface quickly as a contractual dispute and there indeed
    the judge will have to decide whether SCO bought the
    Brooklin bridge.

    In between, Berlin manages to call Linux an unauthorized
    close: meaning what, who should have authorized it, on the
    basis of what? He does not clarify any issues in the SCO
    saga but throws up a new question: is he naive or dishonest?

  81. Cool down a bit by ajayvb · · Score: 2, Interesting

    While I won't call this article the most well-informed or well-written ones, let's see, isn't this a good executive summary?

    The suits upstairs say

    " You tell me SCO won't win? But what do we do if it does?"

    With Tux wearing a suit, these are the kind of questions that have to be answered. Risk assessments and "what-if" scenarios need to be thought out. SCO will lose, but companies may need to make plans to present to boards (though they may never get around to doing anything about it).


    btw, I am not a conspiracy theorist, but this is an impressive F.U.D. program. I could almost swear Redmond was behind this.

  82. Parallel Case by Lucidus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This may sound off-topic at first, but please bear with me.

    The logic in the article reminded me of the Y2K situation. At the time I was Chief Financial Officer for a mid-sized non-profit organization, and I was approached repeatedly by attorneys and accounting firms with the same argument: there MIGHT be a problem, and if you cannot show that you took appropriate steps to deal with it, you could be held negligent.

    Of course, what they wanted was for me to hire them to perform an audit of our computer systems and hardware, in exchange for a hefty fee. Instead, I simply pointed out that I was better qualified, and better positioned, to evaluate our risk exposure than any lawyer or outside accountant, and that I had already done so to my own satisfaction. (I did keep records.)

    Similarly, IT managers running Linux should be quite competent to determine what risk they face from SCO without the need for legal counsel. Most of them, obviously, have decided that the risk is not sufficient to demand indemnification.

  83. I instantly believe you! by Erik+Fish · · Score: 1
    This article is indeed sobering news! I'm going to immediately cut a check-- Wait a minute...this ad at the top of Slashdot's page is telling me that Linux isn't worth a hill of beans compared to Windows anyway, so why should I pay SCO a dime when I can just ditch linux and go MS?

    I've heard about this "TCO" thing once or twice and-- Holy crap, the graph in that ad moves!

  84. Bravo! by SeanAhern · · Score: 1

    Bravo! Very nice cover! I laughed many times reading (singing) it to myself.

  85. MOD PARENT UP by rock_climbing_guy · · Score: 1

    Congratulations! Thats the most insightful thing I've heard all day. It's definately more interesting than anything in the linked article.

    --
    Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
  86. Major flaw in this article by njdj · · Score: 5, Interesting

    he does seem to have made more of an effort to try to find reasons to back up SCO's claims than any of their other supporters have.

    He ignores the fact (admitted by SCO) that SCO distributed Linux under the GPL. That's one very good reason why his article is hogwash. Many people already have an SCO license ... and that license allows them to redistribute it without fee, to anybody.

    So despite the author's attempt to sound serious, balanced, objective, responsible, etc: he's just another FUD merchant.

    1. Re:Major flaw in this article by Alomex · · Score: 2, Informative

      RTFA. He explictly addresses this issue in the backgrounder to his latest article.

  87. SCO is in no shape to sue anybody by Animats · · Score: 2, Informative
    Before SCO can successfully sue end users, they have to win the Novell suit and the IBM suit and the Red Hat suit.

    If they lose the Novell suit, they don't have rights to UNIX they can enforce against others. If they lose the IBM suit, their wierd legal theory under which IBM "contaminated" Linux with IBM-developed code to which SCO has contractual rights goes away. And if they lose the Red Hat suit, there's an injunction against them preventing them from sueing end users.

    So quit worrying.

    1. Re:SCO is in no shape to sue anybody by LostCluster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem is some PHB is going to ask...

      "Well, what do we do if SCO does win the Novell suit and the IBM suit and the Red Hat suit?"

      Business people don't like risks they're not protected from. It's not likely that the warehouse is going to burn down, but they keep it insured just so that they don't have to run the financial risks associated with that happening. They're not going to take "That won't happen." for an answer, they're going to want a plan for the "What if...".

      If you have a disaster recovery plan for an earthquake but you're not in California... your PHB is going to want you to have a recovery plan for SCO too.

  88. No shit... by benjamindees · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I read that article in disbelief as the author continued to suggest that *end-users* needed indemnification from lawsuit. He even compared it to buying a car that contained some sort of unlicensed patented technology as though using something that you bought leaves you open to legal liability. Has this *ever* happened? What complete and utter horseshit!

    At *most*, the "indemnification" that a company or end-user would require would be some sort of guarantee that, should they be required to stop using any part of Linux, an alternative would be available. I think the weakness of SCO's case and the response of the community has already allayed those fears.

    In fact, that's the entire reason for using Open Source as opposed to closed alternatives. Everyone knows that, should just about *any* part of Linux or any other Open Source project be encumbered, a suitable replacement will be found.

    --
    "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
    1. Re:No shit... by MathFox · · Score: 1
      There is a subtle but very important difference between copyright and patent law:
      • Patent law allows the patent holder to forbid production and use of his invention
      • Copyright law allows the copyright holder to limit copying (or public performance) of its creation. A copyright holder can not restrict private use of its creation.
      The worst case (and the David Berlind states that correctly) is that Linux distribution is forbidden and that you can not legally upgrade your system without paying SCO. (10% chance)
      --
      extern warranty;
      main()
      {
      (void)warranty;
      }
  89. Simple answers to the punchline: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "Basically, you have one question to ask yourself: How much peace of mind do you have now and how much more are you willing to spend for a little extra?"

    The answers would be plenty and absolutely NOT $699/machine.

    There now, wasn't that easy?

  90. One Possible Logic Trail by VernonNemitz · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I note something that didn't seem to get mentioned it in the article about indemnification. That is, Novell has dredged up an official AT&T interpretation of a particular paragraph-in-the-contract.

    I think that this disputed paragraph is the foundation upon which SCO is basing 99% of its claims. What I most seriously wonder is, "OK, suppose the judge gives SCO full rights to Unix. But most of the Unix contracts out there are based on an AT&T contract, and AT&T has provided a specific interpretation of a critical paragraph. Can SCO change the interpretation of this particular paragraph, JUST because they now own Unix?"

    What I think is that those who obtained those AT&T-type contracts will argue that they are operating under the AT&T interpretation, which they were contractually allowed to do when they signed those contracts!

    I do not think that the judge will grant SCO the right to arbitrarily alter the interpretation of the disputed paragraph in those contracts without some sort of advance notice -- and no such notice was given (just lawsuits). The net result is that, for example, IBM may have to STOP moving AIX and Dynamix code into Linux, but that all previously-moved code will be "grandfathered".

    For Linux, that net result means that SCO can be ignored, and no indemnification nor insurance need be paid to anyone.

  91. SCO by pedicabo · · Score: 1

    I think that being nice to a condemned man is just an extreme case of hedging your bets. Besides, who would read another article criticising SCO.

  92. SCO Insurance by LostCluster · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It seems like what people are most worried about is the unlikely situation in which SCO's claims hold up in courts, and theyfore somebody's going to have to pay. For those who have billion dollar businesses on the line, even a slight risk of something this huge still has to be accounted for.

    The odds of SCO's success at this point are hard to compute. It's not quite zero yet, as much as we'd like it to be. When you multiply those odds by what's at stake for a business with deep pockets, you end up with a pretty sizable sum that the business most likely will be willing to part with as an insurance premium for somebody else to assume the risk.

    Gotta wonder if there's any betting window in Vegas that's trading the odds on SCO doing anything...

  93. Re:Open source is cultish? My response.... by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 1

    Our founding fathers believed this.

    The founding fathers of your cult !?

    --

    In Soviet America the banks rob you!
  94. Risk Management by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    This may be the faith of the Linux (full of idiots on its side), but the guy doesn't talk about who is right or wrong. The guy says that, the risk that people want you to believe in is higher. You can't dismiss it as many linux zealots do. Of course there are clever people who dismiss it with reasoning, but overall we hear more from zealots rather than serious sources. So the guy says that, there is a risk and here is how you deal with that risk. He doesn't say SCO is right, or wrong, but he says there is definitely a risk. That risk varies from company to company, and he seriously helps you to make a serious decision. Nobody in Slashdot who gives legal advise will come and pay for the companies' legal costs or damages if SCO is succesfull. That's something people are aware of. So simply dismissing SCO's case based on Slashdot is not a smart move. Afterall Slashdot is not for legal and business stuff, it is about laughing and making jokes.

  95. Why worry now? by shifrbv · · Score: 1
    Let say sco gets lucky and wins all challenges. Any of you will consider switching to openServers? Come on!

    In the meantime I am working to get rid of last 16 SCO boxes at my work.

    I don't really care if SCO wins or looses, I am just tired of working with P.O.S. Unix that stuck in 80's. OpenServer sucks plain and simple. New code will run on Linux, with few changes in base classes - could run on XP.

    SCO better watch out. If they spending all the money on exec and legal aid - they small market will erode.

    Brian

  96. Re:Open source is cultish? My response.... by borgheron · · Score: 1

    Our founding fathers (of the USA) believed in the freedom of information.

    In the constitution there is a clause which serves as the impetus for both copyright and patent. It goes: "To promote the useful arts, the government will allow the securing for a limited time the exclusive right to a work to it's author" (or something like this).

    Original the term of Copyright was 14 years and the term of a Patent was 20 years and it was very difficult to get an extension on a patent by filing a "similar" patent with trivial improvements on the same invention. In addition Patents could only be issued on actual physical inventions, not ideas like today.

    Both of these systems were meant to serve the public good by ensuring a healthy public domain. In essence, the founding fathers believed in the freedom of information.

    Today both of these systems have been perverted horribly into something that is used to take advantage of the public and what's worse, the public is starting to believe the rhetoric of the very perverters who have made these systems so ugly. They are starting to believe that anyone who goes against this is "cultish".

    As further proof of our founding fathers' belief in this, take the story of the "Franklin stove". Benjamin Franklin created a very useful stove to keep houses warm. He was offered a retroactive patent on it, but refused since he believe that such information should be free to all.

    Search the net, I'm sure you can find a reference to the story. :)

    Thanks, GJC

    --
    Gregory Casamento
    ## Chief Maintainer for GNUstep
  97. You need to know what the PHB is reading. by twitter · · Score: 1
    Of course it's nonsense, but you have to know a little about it to be able to refute it. Despite the author's contention that SCO is a "tiny company", their malice is what your boss reads in the Wintel trade rags like ZDNet. The same superficial and midless pap comes accross other more reputable publications when their journalists are confused by the noise being made. This particlular piece of "research", while disclosing no facts, does a good job of encapsulating the current M$, $CO FUD.

    When your boss asks you why you don't need to be indemnified, from reading the above posts you can answer him. I like the simple fact that SCO released and published Linux under the GPL. You can also tell them that you don't ever have to resort to cult practices except when dealing with closed source junk like an NT server.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  98. Re:Open source is cultish? My response.... by Kjella · · Score: 1

    "SCO is a tiny company in Utah, with opposition that includes some of the
    largest companies in the world, millions of Linux users, and the leaders of the
    cultish open source movement."

    Why is it that anytime there is something in the world that doesn't fit a mold
    which is familiar to the layperson it is considered "cultish"?


    Say what you want, but I don't take that as particularly negative. The OSS movement seem to revolve around certain "icons" such as Linus, Cox etc., and some good ideals binding a group of people together without any formal association. Here's a couple definitions I came across:

    "3. An especially extravagant admiration for a person, idea, etc.
    4. Something which is popular and regarded as particularly significant by a certain group of people: a fashion, craze or fad."

    Maybe it's something with the US where "cult" means something religious and negative like Waco, Texas, but I take that more as a form of organization than anything else. I've got no problem e.g. saying there was a cultish civil liberties movement around Martin Luther King.

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  99. Declaratory Judgments by Snorklefish · · Score: 2, Insightful
    David Berlind writes:
    According to lawyers I spoke with, company's [sic] that haven't been sued don't altruistically seek declaratory judgments absolving them of wrongdoing because "enough is enough." They do it because they see a looming risk as a material threat to their business.
    Not quite. If companies only brought lawsuits when they they faced "a material threat to their business," then we'd have a whole bunch of unemployed lawyers. For Red Hat, SCO is a pest, not a "material threat," and its worth something to get rid of a pest.

    It's also shrewd for Red Hat to sue SCO. After all, Red Hat could have left it too IBM and Novell to fight the battle for them. Red Hat, however, knows lawsuits and SCO are all about the Benjamins. By joining the fray, Red Hat forces SCO to hire even more high-priced lawyers.

    Ultimately, Berlind may be right about Red Hat being a canary in the Linux coal mine, but with its stock price up 200% in the past year, its singing quite nicely.

  100. And any smart guy would reply by maroberts · · Score: 1

    We'll pay their license fees when the title is clear in 15 years time!

    Businesses are not protected against ELE asteroid strikes, which is about as likely as SCO winning.

    You'll still only owe one lifetime fee whether its now or in the future. Also, if it looks like SCO is going to win, you should start planning a migration to $NEWOS around about now (like say BSD)

    --

    Donte Alistair Anderson Roberts - hi son!
    Karma: Chameleon

  101. Computer Shopper by tkrotchko · · Score: 1

    Believe it or not, there was a time *before the internet*.

    Before the internet, there was no place to look for cheap computer gear.

    Where to find MB's? Disks? Video cards? Surplus gear?

    Imagine you couldn't google for anything.

    Enter computer shopper. Computer shopper was all ads, and that's what you wanted. I wish I'd saved a copy from those days because it was physically huge.

    But the internet killed it off. But it served its purpose.

    --
    You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    1. Re:Computer Shopper by AlaskanUnderachiever · · Score: 1
      Ahh. . . for the days when Computer Shopper had a list of your "local BBS" numbers in the back and was

      FIVE HUNDRED FREAKING PAGES LONG

      Physically huge doesn't even begin to suggest how mammoth that thing was at it's peak ad volume. I believe an entire year of it's current issue bound into one magazine would be a fair approximation. It was worth the money back then too. I can't think of a single other source for that many computer retailers at the time.

      --
      Find out about my new childrens book: SS Death Camp Criminal Batallion Go To Monte Carlo For The Massacre
    2. Re:Computer Shopper by Bob+Davis,+Retired · · Score: 1

      I used Computer Shopper, but I never bought it. We have libraries for a reason.

      I could never find an actual article in that mag. Just ads.

  102. Indemnication against vampire attacks? by The+Monster · · Score: 4, Insightful
    If I sell you a newspaper with a plagiarized article . . . no one can legally approach you for more license money later, since you never committed a crime
    This guy even offered up a similar scenario:
    Imagine, for example, buying a car and finding out a couple of years later that the inventor of the windshield wiper was suing you for the misappropriation of the patent. Wouldn't you want the company that sold you the car to accept responsibility for the claims?
    They already do -- in this case Anderson or her heirs would go after the manufacturer.

    #include <ianal.h> //But I read a lot of Groklaw

    I can't imagine any legal theory under which such a suit wouldn't be summarily dismissed, and I wouldn't be surprised if the dismissal were with predudice and possibly even sanctions against the filer. Of course, given the RIAA's success at terrorizing people for downloading music (not distributing it) such a theory may somehow exist.
    --

    [100% ISO 646 Compliant]
    SVM, ERGO MONSTRO.

  103. Beg to differ by leonbrooks · · Score: 2, Interesting

    OS/2 was considerably more user-friendly than MS-Windows 3.1, not to mention incomparably more consistent. And set against any 3.X/9X/ME version of MS-Windows, it never crashed. It only lost points because it was different to the DOS-based abominations which had gone before.

    Then we get to MS-Windows 95-ish and the advent of the "short cut" AKA symbolic link - which breaks if you move the target object - not so with OS/2's equivalent.

    After that we can go on to discuss relative esoterica like efficiency and programmability (contrast REXX against COMMAND.COM, for example). MS-Windows was just so totally outclassed in technical terms that it was beyond funny - in some ways it's still outclassed even though development on OS/2 has essentially been frozen for five years.

    OS/2, however, was hobbled by Microsoft and jilted by IBM for marketing reasons. Politics betrays another fine soldier. As usual.

    Disclaimer: I went straight from MS-Windows For Workgroups 3.11 to Linux. I have no vested interest in supporting or promoting OS/2.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  104. and the stupid 10Q comment by eshefer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I agree.

    the article is basicly superfluios verbage that is well written but says almost nothing of any substance.

    One of the points that had me laughing out loud was this:

    "A review of the company's quarterly 10-Q filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission reveals an increasing concern over SCO's legal actions, the risks they pose, and Red Hat's options and the potential consequences should the outcome favor SCO."

    anyone who has a remote understing of what the risk portions of the 10-Q and other SEC documents means knows this is is total and absolute bullshit. publicly traided companies HAVE to account for any possible - percivable - source of threat to the future well being of the company, useally overstating those posible threats to the point of absurdity. I have yet to see a "alien abduction of key executive officers might harm our future revenus" clause in a 10-Q but I would'nt be surprised in te least to see it..

  105. SCO agreed to the GPL by distributing Linux by xiphosuran · · Score: 1

    By distributing Linux while asserting an IP claim that violates the terms of the General Public License, SCO has opened itself to claims from every programmer who ever contributed to Linux. They have broken the contract that allows them to distribute the work of thousands of writers of code. They are trying to steal the work of these thousands of authors. The relevant part of the General Public License:

    "You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Program is void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License. . . . You are not required to accept this License, since you have not signed it. However, nothing else grants you permission to modify or distribute the Program or its derivative works. These actions are prohibited by law if you do not accept this License."

    http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html

  106. You do not have a point. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can claim "strawman" all you want, but a magazine that is devoted to Windows isn't going to cover other operating systems. Your analogy is flawed. Case closed.

  107. You haven't deleted enough parties to the case... by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    ...and never will, because you have confused impartiality with mildness.

    As, it seems, has Mr Berlind. TSG's case is fundamentally screwed, usually several layers deep, at every turn. That's not a mild statement, but it is a factually correct one. The only way you can doubt it is to treat TSG's blatherings as if they had legal weight.

    If TSG had any evidence, they would have produced it pretty much instantly instead of pussyfooting around with peep shows and the marginal crap they've finally admitted to after an entire year of this.

    If TSG really wanted anyone to buy a license, why have no end-users done so? I tried to buy a licence some months ago, just to see if I could, and they wouldn't sell me one, and they won't sell me one now. They won't even identify the specific "intellectual property" I'm supposed to be licencing. But they will tell me that I'm in legal jeopardy if I don't. Spot the deliberate mistake?

    PS, your journal sucks too. (-:

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  108. Insurance Option by Karl-Friedrich+Lenz · · Score: 2, Informative

    One of the options the article discusses is to pay insurance premiums to prepare for the coming great onslaught of software patent litigation against open software projects.

    The European Union has published a study on patent litigation insurance in March 2003. You can find it on their page on the Community Patent.

    That study says that all experiments with this kind of insurance have not been particularly successful and have failed to provide adequate cover at affordable premiums.

    I don't know if insurance or indemnification schemes will solve the problems ahead. However, both seem to be aimed at sharing the burden of dealing with litigation risks. That should be the basic idea. Just as people work together to develop great open source software, people should work together to defend it against litigation risks.

    See also this post on my blog.

  109. And there are plenty of other alternatives by maroberts · · Score: 1

    like BSD and by the time the case is finished, even Hurd may be working!

    Of course Hurd may have to be released under a license other than the GPL, as SCO may have proved it invalid on the way to winning.... maybe RMS can just add a 1c license fee to it, and thus say he's profiting.

    --

    Donte Alistair Anderson Roberts - hi son!
    Karma: Chameleon

  110. man what a mess.. by w4rl5ck · · Score: 1

    I think he should have thought about the likelyhood of the outcome he outlines - that SCO might own everything that is "derived work" since the first Unix System has been build.

    I think that is what he suggests; any other outcome of the process, even bad for IBM, would simply lead to a code replacement of the infriged code parts of the linux kernel.

    I don't see any (read, "any") chance for SCO to totally destroy the GPL. At least, I'd take a plane from germany to SCO headquaters and throw some stones by my own hands. If nothing else can be done.

    BTW, I don't like viruses and DDOS attacks - they achieve nothing. but some stones might as well... ;)

  111. You could always read by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Not only would reading groklaw help, so would reading reports in general.

    And reading my actual posting name would help too.

  112. Re:Open source is cultish? My response.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
    you're article disappoints me...

    your

    prove it's point.

    its

  113. Didiots by dmaxwell · · Score: 1

    PJ at Groklaw coined the term "didiot" for "analysts" who seem to be excessively ignorant of their subject matter and/or behave like paid shills. It also works as adjective and adverb as in "Enderle has another didiotic troll up on Linuxinsider."

  114. MODERATORS ON CRACK by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    So, which one of you freaking idiots moderated this guy as flamebait and the parent as Interesting, when in fact the parent is wrong, so he is overrated and a flamebait or a troll and the parent is informative?

  115. What is he saying here? by Uzziel · · Score: 2, Interesting
    One paragraph from the end of the story:


    Likewise, as a user of Linux, protecting yourself from an SCO-law suit could easily be a waste of money. Virtually all of the forms of protection listed in this special report are reasonably priced when you consider the potential harm if you have no protection and are successfully sued by SCO.


    Huh? He's saying that all forms of protection listed are both a)reasonably priced and b)could easily be a waste of money.

    Um, thwap me with a wet noodle, but that seems contradictory.

    Reading the article made my blood heat up because I am so pissed at SCO for what they are doing. But I think the reporter really did do a pretty even-handed job of addressing the indemnification issue alone (in spite of the above paragraph).

    It didn't seem to me that he was really addressing whether or not SCO has a case, but the practical business decisions arising from their lawsuit.

    In the end of course, SCO does not have a case and will not win any of their pending lawsuits.
    1. Re:What is he saying here? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      As I happen to own licenses to SCO Unixware 7, I'm not worried in the least. *I* won't be the Linux user sued.

      That said, I replaced my Unixware machine with Linux years ago.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  116. SCO cant win 3 LAWSUITS *1000 - 1 odds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.mayorwager.com/casinos.htm

    NOVELL
    IBM
    RedHAT

    Online Gambling - you pick the game!
    Lawsuits accepted

  117. Jack Nicholson by 955301 · · Score: 1

    My mind conjured up the voice of Jack Nicholson wielding this speech as I read it. Pretty funny stuff.

    You think we could get him to create a recording for us?

    --
    You are checking your backups, aren't you?
  118. Nice one, old son! by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    Here's your link again without the /.-induced space in it.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  119. Shills by Ogman · · Score: 1

    ZDNet cannot be trusted to have an unbiased opinion about anything, since they long ago proved themselves complete shills for microsoft. I had to stop reading the site after Dave Coursey spent a week fawning over Bill Gates because he sat within 50 yards of him at a dinner.

    --
    But Officer, I DID read the f**king article!
  120. This is a very important point... by freeBill · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...because in order to rule in favor of SCO the court would have to redefine "derivative work" in such a way as to create major problems for just about every piece of software out there.

    Who would own Norton SystemTools? Who would own Netware? Who would own OSX? Who would own Windows?

    If the answer to all of these questions was "SCO," would it be the end of the IT industry as we know it? Why isn't anybody indemnifying me against that?

    --
    Eternal vigilance only works if you look in every direction.
  121. Typical mix of facts and imagination by StoneLion · · Score: 1

    David Berlind can take 2,000 words to analyze a situation and leave you saying, huh? Leaving aside the poor editing and bad grammar, the content of this piece is highly suspect. Berlind has a history of writing fiction disguised as commentary. See http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/28/21712.html and http://techupdate.zdnet.com/techupdate/stories/mai n/0,14179,2861123,00.html, among many others.

  122. Re:Open source is cultish? My response.... by borgheron · · Score: 1

    ThAnKS. ;)

    --
    Gregory Casamento
    ## Chief Maintainer for GNUstep