Slashdot Mirror


MS Word File Reveals Changes to SCO's Plans

jfruhlinger writes "Ah, the joys of 'track changes' in MS Word: metadata in a document obtained by Cnet reveals some earlier plans by SCO's legal team. Among them: to sue in February (their original target date), to sue Bank of America, to 'impound ... all Linux software products in the custody or control of Defendant through the pendency of these proceedings', and to accuse in court 'Linus Torvalds and/or others' of 'inclusion into one or more distributions of Linux with the copyright management information intentionally removed.' Good stuff." Also, SCO has announced a few new licensees including Computer Associates.

9 of 851 comments (clear)

  1. Freeware document metadata remover by frenetic3 · · Score: 5, Informative

    FYI... here's a free app that removes MS Word metadata (useful for sensitive docs for distribution)

    http://www.docscrubber.com/download.html

    -fren

    --
    "Where are we going, and why am I in this handbasket?"
    1. Re:Freeware document metadata remover by tomhudson · · Score: 5, Informative

      OpenOffice also removes it. That's why borked word docs opened in oo and resaved are so much smaller :-)

  2. Re:Bank of America? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    (Sorry for the anonymous post... none of this is confidential but I'd still like to keep my name separate from it...)

    1. We use AIX. Heavily. Like most banks do.
    2. We're rolling out Linux right now. I'm personally involved in this deployment, and we have made a big deal out of it, going as far as making a presentation at the last LWE about our Linux plans.

  3. Re:EV1 by HaloZero · · Score: 5, Informative

    Definately not. http://uptime.netcraft.com/up/graph/?host=kkk.com

    Almost all of their machines are *nix, and in violation of SCOs 'intellectual property'.

    --
    Informatus Technologicus
  4. Halloween X confirmed real. by eddy · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Blake Stowell, SCO's director of communications, acknowledged that the leaked memo is real." -- eweek

    --
    Belief is the currency of delusion.
  5. Microsoft HAS worked with EV1 by michael+path · · Score: 5, Informative

    Since you brought up Microsoft and EV1...

    There is a Case Study on Microsoft's web site here. This discusses the addition of several Windows-based servers to their Linux environment.

    So, are they bed buddies? You bet.

    -m.

  6. Re:lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    CA Says It Didn't Pay SCO No Stinking Linux Tax...details at http://blogs.cocoondev.org/dims/

  7. Re:University of California at Berkeley by k_head · · Score: 5, Informative

    RH does not offer indemnifaction. They offer to defend you if you get sued.

    --
    The best way to support the US war effort is to continue buying American products.
  8. Computer Associates claim is bogus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    The word within CA is that the SCO claim is a lie. The following article is doing the rounds internally - it claims to have been published but I can't find it on the web, if I did I would provide a link instead...

    CA Says It Didn't Pay SCO No Stinking Linux Tax

    The Linux faithful have been hammering Computer Associates as a heretic since the British publication Computer Weekly quoting the SCO Group's CFO Bob Bench identified CA Thursday as one of SCO's rare Linux licensees.

    CA senior VP of product development Mark Barrenechea says that Bench's claim is nonsense. CA has not paid SCO any Linux taxes, he said.

    Drawing up short of calling SCO a liar, Barrenechea claims that SCO has twisted a $40 million breach-of-contract settlement that CA paid last summer to the Canopy Group, SCO's biggest stockholder, and Center 7, another Canopy company, and has turned it into a purported Linux license.

    As a 'small part' of that settlement, Barrenechea said, CA got a bunch of UnixWare licenses that it needed to support its UnixWare customers. SCO, he said, had just attached a transparent Linux indemnification to all UnixWare licenses and that is how SCO comes off calling CA a Linux licensee.

    But when CA agreed to that settlement, Barrenechea said, 'It was not CA's intention to become a Linux licensee. It has nothing to do with CA's product direction or strategic direction,' he said.

    CA has absolutely no sympathy for what SCO is doing, Barrenechea said, and in fact, he said, reading from a formal statement, it stands in 'stark disagreement with SCO's tactics and threats.'

    Barrenechea and CA's Linux chief Sam Greenblatt are worried that CA will be tarred with the SCO brush and that CA's considerable Linux ambitions will be damaged by a disaffected, if not hostile, open source community when in reality CA has 'nothing to do with SCO's strategy and tactics,' they said.

    CA was the mystery company SCO was thinking of when it announced last August that an unidentified Fortune 500 company had supposedly become a Linux license. SCO privately described the deal as 'significant.'

    CA couldn't disassociate itself from the rumors that identified it as that licensee because of an NDA that the Canopy side had insisted on hedging in the $40 million settlement with, Barrenechea and Greenblatt said.

    Barrenechea said that SCO now regards that NDA as being off because of the legal discovery that's been going on in SCO's $5 billion suit against IBM.

    See, SCO lawyer Mark Heisse in a letter dated February 4 to IBM lawyer David Marriott at Cravath Swain identified CA, Questar and Leggett & Platt as Linux taxpayers.

    According to that letter, which is up on the Groklaw site, Heisse owed IBM a copy of the CA agreement on CD.

    Barrenechea said that SCO was dropping CA's name to associate itself with the 'third-largest software company in the world' and build support for its 'lost cause.'

    But according to Barrenechea, not only are SCO's IP ambitions doomed, but its Unix interests are a 'trailing negative' on the road to dropping from 10% of the market to 3%-5% in a few years and then 'SCO will be irrelevant,' he said.

    By the way, CA doesn't have enough UnixWare licenses to cover all its Linux servers, Greenblatt said.

    In answer to CA's contentions, SCO said its lawyers think that CA has a Linux license.

    Meanwhile, Bench also told Computer Weekly, whose story was picked up by sister paper InfoWorld and maybe other properties in the IDG stable, that SCO had signed between 10 and 50 Linux licenses.