SCO's Motion to dismiss Red Hat's Complaint Denied
Posted by
ryuzaki0
on from the well-isn't-that-special dept.
Soko writes "The scoop is on Groklaw - SCO's motion to dismiss is denied, and further activity in the case is now pending the outcome of the SCO vs. IBM litigation in Utah. If they lose against IBM, will there be anything left for Red Hat to kick around, though?"
does it matter?
by
jagilbertvt
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· Score: 5, Insightful
Just as long as SCO goes under in the end, does it really matter?
Re:does it matter?
by
cshark
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· Score: 2, Insightful
Well, it would be nice if IBM and all the others were exonerated. But no, I guess it doesn't really matter.
--
This signature has Super Cow Powers
Re:does it matter?
by
AKnightCowboy
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· Score: 5, Insightful
Just as long as SCO goes under in the end, does it really matter?
I wish Microsoft would just cut to the chase and buy SCO so they could take over the lawsuit. I guess it's better to sue by proxy to avoid anti-trust issues, but I think we're all reasonably aware of who is really behind this fiasco. Follow the money trail.
You are wrong if you are talking about the case in the article. The dismissal was of a TSG motion to dismiss the RedHat request for Declarative Judgement AGAINST TSG. By not dismissing it, the judge has said that TSG could still have the judgement go against them.
I do agree with you in that what is needed is a clear, unambiguous message to other would-be Microsoft serfs that doing stupid stuff gets you stepped on so firmly that there would be no other takes of the Proprietary Software pieces of silver.
That message should be delivered in the IBM case.
-- Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
Re:does it matter?
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1, Insightful
> I guess it's better to sue by proxy to avoid anti-trust issues
No, it's better to sue by proxy so you don't lose TONS of money. If the IBM countersuit and RHAT suit end with SCO owing billion-dollar judgements it won't matter to anybody since they'll be out of business. If MSFT owned SCO then they'd have to actually *pay* all that money.
(IANAL, but I think this point is damn obvious)
Irony in the worst
by
bwraith
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· Score: 5, Insightful
It seems like SCO is getting the royal rump treatment now after issuing it's first jab against the *nix community, just as it is stated on the groklaw boards "this is just the first nail to be slammed into SCO's legal coffin"
Let's hope this leads to a faster resolution of this most ridiculous case brought upon by SCO.
Public Opinion on the SCO case
by
ponds
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· Score: 5, Insightful
First off, I've seen alot less SCO news lately. I hope that this is a sign that it's almost over.
Now on to the meat of my issue, we who are in the know, not just Linux Users, alot of people that I know who cant stand anything but MS: we are fairly informed about the SCO case. I used to assume that the public felt that way as well, but I don't anymore.
We had a guest speaker in my infosec class last week, a professor from the University of Hawaii who wrote the textbook that we use.
Dr. Panko's speech at some point turned to OSS vs proprietary software in terms of security. Panko claimed that the argument that OSS code is more secure was bunk, because all OSS code he has seen is crappy code (I doubt this is an informed opinion), and that most of it is just stolen from proprietary software anyway.
Later in the speech someone asked a question regarding the subject of whether the security community will have to deal with MS's security methods forever. Panko quickly proclaimed that Linux is dying due to insurmountable legal trouble, and that they will likely never get out if it.
I think that we do not have a good view of what the uninformed think about the SCO case. And while the case is substanceless, the PR is not. We need to take every opportunity to inform non-geeks, with the ample factual evidence that is out there, that this is an example of a pump and jump stock scam based on frivilous litigation, and that our chosen innovation paradigm (Open Source) is legit.
Re:Public Opinion on the SCO case
by
dj245
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· Score: 4, Insightful
I wonder how much closed source software this guy saw. Judging from the comments about Microsoft's code leak (bad code, sloppy, etc..) OSS software can't be all that bad. I know that Microsoft's code leak was two years old Windows 2000 code, but still; a coder is a coder. If he pronounced OSS code as sloppy and bad code, he should say what he is comparing it to. Has he actually seen Microsoft's latest code?
I can say that my car shifts smoothly and corners nicely, but I have no basis for comparison since I have never owned any other car. Has he seen any proprietary code? Thats what I want to know.
-- Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
Re:Public Opinion on the SCO case
by
_Sprocket_
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· Score: 4, Insightful
Maybe you should read up more before you make your "bad code" comments.
...
"...the quality of the code is generally excellent. Modules are small, and procedures generally fit on a single screen. The commenting is very detailed about intentions, but doesn't fall into "add one to i" redundancy..."
The article also notes:
However, not everything is so rosy. Some of the modules are clearly suffering from the hacks upon hacks mentioned earlier. As someone who struggled immensely trying to get the MSInet control working not long after this code was released, it's a relief to see that the inet code is as bad as I thought.
Although it goes on to say that most of these hacks seem to be due to backwards-compatability. However, having said that, bad code is bad code. A hack is a hack. And it would seem that indeed, even the vaunted Microsoft produces its share of hacks.
It would seem this has less to do with Open Source vs. Proprietary software than simply being the nature of the beast.
"If" they lose against IBM?
by
JessLeah
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· Score: 4, Insightful
If they DON'T lose against IBM, we will have a lot to worry about.
Let's hope and pray to $DEITY_NAME that SCO will lose. As I'm now 100% sure that SCO is just Microsoft's puppet, realize that this isn't just SCO (a piddly little company) versus IBM (a behemoth). It's Microsoft versus IBM. I'm pretty scared... how 'bout you?
Re:"If" they lose against IBM?
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1, Insightful
This isn't about SCO as "puppet" of Microsoft. Rather, SCO's a horse on which Microsoft has bet a lot of money. Whether SCO wins their cases or not is probably irrelevant to Microsoft. Microsoft (via financing SCO's legal warchest) has successfully discouraged many home and enterprise users from even considering a Free *nix or OSS. Previous posts (e.g., the guest lecturer for someone's CS class) suggest that's a fair assessment of general public perception. As such, they've already won, regardless of the outcome of the various related lawsuits. Until Halloween '04 -- or whenever the memos from Billy G saying otherwise are finally leaked -- it's best to assume that the MS connection is evidence of little more than well-funded FUD.
This sucks !
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 5, Insightful
No, really, this sucks.
RedHat tried to get SCO to shut the f**** up until the SCO vs IBM trial has gone through. The judge answers that although their claim (of SCO being a liar scaring their customers), they have to wait and see until the other trial is over. In other words, SCO may carry on lying and RedHat can do nothing but cry over their and Linux' reputation until IBM is done. And when IBM is done, there'll be nothing left of SCO for RedHat to be compensated with. No, really, this is not a victory for RedHat...
Stephane
Re:This sucks !
by
IPFreely
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· Score: 3, Insightful
RedHat should request a temporary restraining order until the outcome of the IBM case.
Since the purpose of the RedHat case was to make SCO shut up, and the case has been delayed pending the IBM case, then RedHat is being denied justice pending another case. Since SCO started the IBM case, they are effectively in the drivers seat on both. That denies RedHat justice, under the control of SCO. RedHat should get something, like some type of temporary restraining order against SCO at least until SCO clears up their IBM case.
-- There is nothing so silly as other peoples traditions, and nothing so sacred as our own.
"Will there be anything left to kick around..."
by
truthsearch
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· Score: 4, Insightful
If they lose against IBM, will there be anything left for Red Hat to kick around, though?
Red Hat isn't looking to kick them around after they lose to IBM. Red Hat has a few goals: bring more of SCO's actions to light and into court by putting them on the legal defensive; helping IBM by bringing these things to light and legitimizing IBM's arguments if they win; hedging their bets in case IBM loses (if IBM loses, Red Hat's in big trouble, so this pre-emptive strike may help protect them or at least raise money for their future legal defense).
I think all Red Hat cares about is IBM winning. After they win it doesn't matter if there's anything left to kick around.
Re:does it matter? YES.
by
WhiskerTheMad
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· Score: 5, Insightful
In short, YES.
Remember, SCO's purpose here is not to win, or even survive, it's to spread disinformation and fear about open source and Linux. The *real* win comes when SCO is exposed as the passel of lying, greedy, goat-molesting asshats they are, and when their claims about "IP Problems with Linux" are shoved firmly where they belong (namely, certain executives' orifices.
Orifices? Orifii? What's the plural of orifice? Anybody?
-- Love your country always, but respect your government only when it deserves it. -- Mark Twain
First, they distribute Linux under the GPL. Then a while later, they go around telling people they owe $699 to them or they have to stop using Linux. How is that not extortion?
-- I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
SCO's Motion to dismiss Red Hat's Complaint Denied
by
DFJA
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· Score: 2, Insightful
There's a lot of speculation on Groklaw as to whether this is good or bad for SCO (and Red Hat).
My view is that everyone will ultimately be a loser in this whole saga, except for the lawyers. If Red Hat, IBM, Novell etc. win the arguments in court, they are unlikely to get any money from SCO as by then they will have been bled dry.
(unless Microshaft or a.n.other give them another wodge of money).
-- 43 - For those who require slightly more than the answer to life, the universe and everything.
IANAL either, and yes they are over separate issues.
IBM is being sued by SCO for breaking "...its contract by allowing parts of SCO's Unix V source code, licensed to IBM for use in AIX, to be used in the rival Linux operating system kernel.", wheras RedHat is suing SCO for "...making unsubstantiated and untrue public statements attacking Red Hat Linux and the integrity of the Open Source software development process..."
However, a victory for SCO (and such things have happened in recent legal history) would push their share price (and general-public opinion of them) ever upwards, and set a precident that would then have to be overturned...
however, I think it worth noting that SCO has essentially been screaming from the ramparts "We are SCO, we are greedy morons, we deserve to be removed from existence."
I just wanted to say that before a slew of soi-trolls began yammering about how biased/. is.
-- "A witty saying proves nothing." ~Voltaire "d'Oh!" ~Homer
Playing the two cases off each other...
by
Vexler
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· Score: 3, Insightful
I like the idea that the judge is playing the cases off each other, probably wanting to see the Utah case as a precedent with which she can then use against SCO. If it doesn't go fast enough, though, she reserves the right (wisely) to proceed without it (probably thinking that SCO doesn't have a chance in Delaware either). In either case SCO may have just hit the point of no return: The hand's stuck in the cookie jar, and now the question is not whether to deny that it did it, but to see how much of their collective hand gets lopped off.
SCO in context to the article
by
stecoop
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· Score: 2, Insightful
Enough tangents and wishing SCO to simply vanishing - it's going to be around a little while.
The issue at hand in the article and context is SCO will not be battling Red Hat and IBM at the same time. The case against SCO from Red Hat wasn't dismissed but deferred. Red Hat claims damages from SCO in regards to harming the Linux kernel because of the lawsuit and publicity towards suing IBM over the Unix core system.
In context against IBM - that is another story and we'll be seeing that unfold. In my opinion that is going to be a tough case to win for SCO. Remember SCO was a happy go lucky company and then Linux IPO Caldera Systemsbought SCO. I can't see a Linux company coming to power and suing others over the Unix System even though IBM already had a license for the Unix core system.
Now back to Red Hats Case. RH is suing SCO basically over the suite against IBM. I seriously doubt that RH will win this case because the grounds of suing someone because you sued someone. RH is must prove malice in the context of SCO public statements. This is very hard to prove.
The break it down here is what's going to happen. First RH has to wait, IBM will win, RH will lose the Case against SCO, SCO will loose market share from other litigation cases yet to be determined.
This ruling is NOT good for RedHat
by
bug
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· Score: 5, Insightful
It seems like most of the conclusions regarding this ruling, including that from Groklaw, are that this is good news for RedHat. I simply can't understand that. Sure, the judge ruled against SCO's motion to dismiss, but on the other hand, the judge ruled that no further action can be taken until the IBM case is resolved. That's not going to happen for months or years.
Most of the point of the RedHat vs SCO lawsuit is to eliminate the FUD surrounding Linux. This would allow RedHat to continue to market its products without its prospective customers shying away due to potential legal issues. When the judge ruled that the case is effectively on hold until the IBM case is decided, the judge effectively denied RedHat its best legal opportunity to end the SCO FUD machine in any useful timeframe. As the old saying goes, "justice delayed is justice denied."
they are wasting out of money anyway
by
auzy
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· Score: 2, Insightful
I doubt SCO will have any money left by the end of the IBM case to be honest (they will have to file for bankrupsy before then)
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=SCOX&t=3m&l=on&z=m &q=l&c= I expect the climb in that graph to start dropping again quickly cause of this..
At some point SCO will have to give up anyway..
The funny thing about this whole lawsuit is that even if SCO by some off chance wins, IBM will just sue them anyway again.. And there must be at least a few hundred pending lawsuits against SCO now in every country (which are waiting the conclusion of this case). What I predict will happen is that these lawsuits will be emphasised more close to the end of the lawsuit, and SCO's stocks will drop like a brick at that point forcing them to completely cut back their operations and sell everything to make it through this case.
So, what is happening now is irrelevant, its what happens near the end of the case where things will really warm up
SCO lucks out again
by
wardk
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· Score: 2, Insightful
So SCO gets to defame Redhat with FUD and old fashioned lies until the IBM case is completed. Redhat gets no immediate relief.
This is a small gain for Redhat on one side (as if anyone thought this would get dismissed), but a bigger loss for Redhat on the other (as if we thought RH would get screwed for possibly 2 more years with no recourse).
Re:*If* they lose?
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1, Insightful
When is the last time you observed the US legal system doing the right thing, according to common sense? I wouldn't count on *anything* until the fat lady sings.
Novell != SCO
by
Saeed+al-Sahaf
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· Score: 5, Insightful
With publicly owned corporations, nothing is for sure when it comes to profit; remember that the boards of directors of all publicly traded companies are tasked with maximizing stockholder value.
That said, I don't think Novell would take the SCO route, all the signs are against it, and they have seen what is going to be the fate of SCO. But this is still a good point, a good reason that we really NEED the IBM issue to come to it's complete end.
-- "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
Re:No
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 2, Insightful
Note that an anonymous tip would be very different from getting a bunch of (obviously not legitimately obtained) documents and handing them to the police, who then wouldn't be able to use them.
What about handing them to, say, the Economist? That might be even worse for Darl than if they wound up in the hands of the police.
Re:Slashdotters, feel free to examine Panko websit
by
menace3society
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· Score: 2, Insightful
He definitely, ah, favors Microsoft.:-) Very unusual for a security guy.
Not really. This way he'll always have a job.
Re:Anything left to kick around?
by
SCHecklerX
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· Score: 4, Insightful
I'm probably not alone in this but the "peeing calvin" stuff is quite an annoyance to most people who have read and enjoyed watterson's work.
Or just google for 'bill watterson peeing OR pissing'
Take the time to read and understand the original comics, and you might see my point of view.
Re:Hint at the market reaction ....
by
zCyl
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· Score: 2, Insightful
Hmmm...Maybe IBM should just buy SCO and Novel. This way, no mater which company is determined to have the rights to the IP code in question, IBM will own it all. Problem solved.
Except that the people running IBM are a little bit smarter than that. They have invested in the success of Linux, and thus have a vested interest in crushing any public impression of weakness of the GPL in the courts. For the price of just legal fees, this is a much better deal for them than buying a stock that's overvalued by about tenfold.
SCO's licensing behavior, as IBM has been pointing out in their Counterclaims to the SCO lawsuit (Counterclaim 6, para. 142-147 is especially relevant), violates the GPL, because SCO distributed Linux and other GPL software, then attempted to alter the terms of the license using SCOsource.
Paragraph 147 shows what kinds of damages open source developers have a right to expect:
147. As a result of SCO's breaches of the GPL, countless developers and users of Linux, including IBM, have suffered and will continue to suffer damages and other irreparable injury. IBM is entitled to a declaration that SCO's rights under the GPL terminated, an injunction prohibiting SCO from its continuing and threatened breaches of the GPL and an award of damages in an amount to be determined at trial.
SCO is unpopular with "the/. crowd" precisely because a significant number of them are Linux and open source developers. Yes, all open source projects get tarred with the same brush in the non-tech public (read: investors) when SCO claims the GPL is unconstitutional and threatens to sue end-users. These guys aren't multimillionaires being bankrolled by M$ and don't have the money, time, or ability to get into a legal fight with SCO. They all lose customers and support until the lawsuits are over. When the Yankee Group publishes yet another TCO study that says "Linux is great, but, oops, the costs of indemnity from legal challenges pending in the courts forced us to revise our cost estimate upward," businesses learn that Linux is risky until the court cases are over. Developers lose.
Someone must be responsible! Someone must pay for this damage! The thought that Darl McBride, Canopy, M$ et al. will come away from these lawsuits, no matter what, with their reputations, fortunes, business practices, quotidian lives intact is like a maddening thorn in the brain of "the/. crowd". That's why everyone keeps asking about criminal charges... not because they really hope to see these people in jail, but because they are yearning for justice.
--
Q: What did the comedian say to the crowd?
A: If I knew, this joke would be funny.
Re:does it matter? YES.
by
SillySlashdotName
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· Score: 4, Insightful
As bad as it might sound I think a company will have to buy the IP rights to UNIX in order to shut SCO up. SCO will not win this case and the value of the "company" will drop. At this point someone will buy them.
Why would anyone buy them? I am serious.
What does TSG have that is worth ANYTHING to another business? Their claim to the IP that is supposedly in Linux is being fought in court, and TSG has not yet shown they will (or even could possibly on a day when the weather forecast in Hades is particularly chilly) prevail in their claims of ownership.
They don't own office space (rented from Canopy), real estate (rented from Canopy), office furnishings (rented from Canopy), inventions or patents that are in demand. They don't have any key technology, resources, or even executives that have a clue. Why would anyone want to buy TSG?
With a book value of $1.31 per share, buying them AT MARKET would entail a premium of about 840% over what it would cost to start over from scratch.
The only asset they have is a lawsuit against IBM that, IF they win (not bloody likely, from what I have been reading) could be worth about 20 times their current market capitalization. Other than some Microsoft shills (Enderly? Didio?) they are not convincing many that they have any chance of winning, though - and I really think the Microsoft shills are not convinced, they are just selling their integrity to the highest bidder.
Again, why would anyone buy them?
I do agree, though, that it would be nice for SOMEONE to shut them up. SEC, DOJ, are you listening?
-- Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
Worthless lazy judge?
by
walterbyrd
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· Score: 4, Insightful
Beer company A falsely claims that the employees of beer company B are urinating in company B's product. How unfair is that to company B?
Now imagine that company A's claims are headline news in dozens of publications for over a year. Sure, company B could call company A a liar, but a lot of people will avoid beer from company B, just to be safe.
The scox case is exactly like that. Msft/scox is loadly claiming that Linux is "contaminated" with UNIX code. Yet, after an entire year, scox offers no evidence.
After sitting on scox's laughable motion to dismiss for over six months. The judge *finally* declares: "I'm too stupid and lazy to set a court date, or to tell scox to lay off the unproven statements against scox's competitors. So, I'll just allow scox to unfairly bash the competition, maybe Utah will do something and spare me the trouble."
This decision could not have possibly been more favorable to scox. Maybe the USA could learn something from Germany's justice system.
Re:Why it matters
by
cshark
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· Score: 2, Insightful
Nothing except the fact that Novell has more to gain from the openness of linux than otherwise. Novell has had financial problems in the past, but I don't think they would ever do anything that would cause the company to implode the way sco has. Besides, Novell has partnership agreements with IBM and others that will keep their linux strategy, or some variation of it strong for years to come.
If you're going to worry about Novell, worry about the fact that they're integrating Mono directly into Suse to create a hybrid.NET capable operating system. Worry about the fact that Microsoft has patented almost every patentable aspect of the.NET framework, and could slap Novell with a cease and decist at a moment's notice. C# may be an open standard, but it's still subject to patents, and last I checked ADO.NET was not part of the C# standard. What Xamien's done is nothing short of cloning the next generation of Windows systems on Linux. And if that doesn't scare you, nothing will.
--
This signature has Super Cow Powers
Re:Anything left to kick around?
by
Le+Marteau
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· Score: 2, Insightful
I'm probably not alone in this but the "peeing calvin" stuff is quite an annoyance to most people who have read and enjoyed watterson's work.
Those Calvin sticker perform a useful service. Whenever I see one, I immediatly know the driver is a jackass, and I give him wide berth. Kind of serves the same purpose as those old "Baby On Board" signs.
-- Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
Just as long as SCO goes under in the end, does it really matter?
It seems like SCO is getting the royal rump treatment now after issuing it's first jab against the *nix community, just as it is stated on the groklaw boards "this is just the first nail to be slammed into SCO's legal coffin"
Let's hope this leads to a faster resolution of this most ridiculous case brought upon by SCO.
First off, I've seen alot less SCO news lately. I hope that this is a sign that it's almost over. Now on to the meat of my issue, we who are in the know, not just Linux Users, alot of people that I know who cant stand anything but MS: we are fairly informed about the SCO case. I used to assume that the public felt that way as well, but I don't anymore. We had a guest speaker in my infosec class last week, a professor from the University of Hawaii who wrote the textbook that we use. Dr. Panko's speech at some point turned to OSS vs proprietary software in terms of security. Panko claimed that the argument that OSS code is more secure was bunk, because all OSS code he has seen is crappy code (I doubt this is an informed opinion), and that most of it is just stolen from proprietary software anyway. Later in the speech someone asked a question regarding the subject of whether the security community will have to deal with MS's security methods forever. Panko quickly proclaimed that Linux is dying due to insurmountable legal trouble, and that they will likely never get out if it. I think that we do not have a good view of what the uninformed think about the SCO case. And while the case is substanceless, the PR is not. We need to take every opportunity to inform non-geeks, with the ample factual evidence that is out there, that this is an example of a pump and jump stock scam based on frivilous litigation, and that our chosen innovation paradigm (Open Source) is legit.
If IBM lose, won't it have a detrimental effect on the Red Hat case?
g &m ode=basics&selected=SCOX
And none of this seems to be having much effect on the SCO share prices...if anything, then end of March saw an upswing in their value...
http://quotes.nasdaq.com/quote.dll?page=chartin
If they DON'T lose against IBM, we will have a lot to worry about.
Let's hope and pray to $DEITY_NAME that SCO will lose. As I'm now 100% sure that SCO is just Microsoft's puppet, realize that this isn't just SCO (a piddly little company) versus IBM (a behemoth). It's Microsoft versus IBM. I'm pretty scared... how 'bout you?
Honey, I shrunk the Cygwin
No, really, this sucks.
RedHat tried to get SCO to shut the f**** up until the SCO vs IBM trial has gone through. The judge answers that although their claim (of SCO being a liar scaring their customers), they have to wait and see until the other trial is over.
In other words, SCO may carry on lying and RedHat can do nothing but cry over their and Linux' reputation until IBM is done.
And when IBM is done, there'll be nothing left of SCO for RedHat to be compensated with.
No, really, this is not a victory for RedHat...
Stephane
If they lose against IBM, will there be anything left for Red Hat to kick around, though?
:)
Red Hat isn't looking to kick them around after they lose to IBM. Red Hat has a few goals: bring more of SCO's actions to light and into court by putting them on the legal defensive; helping IBM by bringing these things to light and legitimizing IBM's arguments if they win; hedging their bets in case IBM loses (if IBM loses, Red Hat's in big trouble, so this pre-emptive strike may help protect them or at least raise money for their future legal defense).
I think all Red Hat cares about is IBM winning. After they win it doesn't matter if there's anything left to kick around.
Of course the usual IANAL applies...
Developers: We can use your help.
In short, YES.
Remember, SCO's purpose here is not to win, or even survive, it's to spread disinformation and fear about open source and Linux. The *real* win comes when SCO is exposed as the passel of lying, greedy, goat-molesting asshats they are, and when their claims about "IP Problems with Linux" are shoved firmly where they belong (namely, certain executives' orifices.
Orifices? Orifii? What's the plural of orifice? Anybody?
Love your country always, but respect your government only when it deserves it. -- Mark Twain
First, they distribute Linux under the GPL. Then a while later, they go around telling people they owe $699 to them or they have to stop using Linux. How is that not extortion?
I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
There's a lot of speculation on Groklaw as to whether this is good or bad for SCO (and Red Hat). My view is that everyone will ultimately be a loser in this whole saga, except for the lawyers. If Red Hat, IBM, Novell etc. win the arguments in court, they are unlikely to get any money from SCO as by then they will have been bled dry. (unless Microshaft or a.n.other give them another wodge of money).
43 - For those who require slightly more than the answer to life, the universe and everything.
IANAL either, and yes they are over separate issues.
;)
IBM is being sued by SCO for breaking "...its contract by allowing parts of SCO's Unix V source code, licensed to IBM for use in AIX, to be used in the rival Linux operating system kernel.", wheras RedHat is suing SCO for "...making unsubstantiated and untrue public statements attacking Red Hat Linux and the integrity of the Open Source software development process..."
However, a victory for SCO (and such things have happened in recent legal history) would push their share price (and general-public opinion of them) ever upwards, and set a precident that would then have to be overturned...
Noting is certain in love and law
however, I think it worth noting that SCO has essentially been screaming from the ramparts "We are SCO, we are greedy morons, we deserve to be removed from existence."
I just wanted to say that before a slew of soi-trolls began yammering about how biased /. is.
"A witty saying proves nothing." ~Voltaire
"d'Oh!" ~Homer
I like the idea that the judge is playing the cases off each other, probably wanting to see the Utah case as a precedent with which she can then use against SCO. If it doesn't go fast enough, though, she reserves the right (wisely) to proceed without it (probably thinking that SCO doesn't have a chance in Delaware either). In either case SCO may have just hit the point of no return: The hand's stuck in the cookie jar, and now the question is not whether to deny that it did it, but to see how much of their collective hand gets lopped off.
Enough tangents and wishing SCO to simply vanishing - it's going to be around a little while.
The issue at hand in the article and context is SCO will not be battling Red Hat and IBM at the same time. The case against SCO from Red Hat wasn't dismissed but deferred. Red Hat claims damages from SCO in regards to harming the Linux kernel because of the lawsuit and publicity towards suing IBM over the Unix core system.
In context against IBM - that is another story and we'll be seeing that unfold. In my opinion that is going to be a tough case to win for SCO. Remember SCO was a happy go lucky company and then Linux IPO Caldera Systems bought SCO. I can't see a Linux company coming to power and suing others over the Unix System even though IBM already had a license for the Unix core system.
Now back to Red Hats Case. RH is suing SCO basically over the suite against IBM. I seriously doubt that RH will win this case because the grounds of suing someone because you sued someone. RH is must prove malice in the context of SCO public statements. This is very hard to prove.
The break it down here is what's going to happen. First RH has to wait, IBM will win, RH will lose the Case against SCO, SCO will loose market share from other litigation cases yet to be determined.
It seems like most of the conclusions regarding this ruling, including that from Groklaw, are that this is good news for RedHat. I simply can't understand that. Sure, the judge ruled against SCO's motion to dismiss, but on the other hand, the judge ruled that no further action can be taken until the IBM case is resolved. That's not going to happen for months or years.
Most of the point of the RedHat vs SCO lawsuit is to eliminate the FUD surrounding Linux. This would allow RedHat to continue to market its products without its prospective customers shying away due to potential legal issues. When the judge ruled that the case is effectively on hold until the IBM case is decided, the judge effectively denied RedHat its best legal opportunity to end the SCO FUD machine in any useful timeframe. As the old saying goes, "justice delayed is justice denied."
I doubt SCO will have any money left by the end of the IBM case to be honest (they will have to file for bankrupsy before then) http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=SCOX&t=3m&l=on&z=m &q=l&c= I expect the climb in that graph to start dropping again quickly cause of this..
At some point SCO will have to give up anyway..
The funny thing about this whole lawsuit is that even if SCO by some off chance wins, IBM will just sue them anyway again.. And there must be at least a few hundred pending lawsuits against SCO now in every country (which are waiting the conclusion of this case). What I predict will happen is that these lawsuits will be emphasised more close to the end of the lawsuit, and SCO's stocks will drop like a brick at that point forcing them to completely cut back their operations and sell everything to make it through this case.
So, what is happening now is irrelevant, its what happens near the end of the case where things will really warm up
So SCO gets to defame Redhat with FUD and old fashioned lies until the IBM case is completed. Redhat gets no immediate relief.
This is a small gain for Redhat on one side (as if anyone thought this would get dismissed), but a bigger loss for Redhat on the other (as if we thought RH would get screwed for possibly 2 more years with no recourse).
When is the last time you observed the US legal system doing the right thing, according to common sense? I wouldn't count on *anything* until the fat lady sings.
That said, I don't think Novell would take the SCO route, all the signs are against it, and they have seen what is going to be the fate of SCO. But this is still a good point, a good reason that we really NEED the IBM issue to come to it's complete end.
"Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
Note that an anonymous tip would be very different from getting a bunch of (obviously not legitimately obtained) documents and handing them to the police, who then wouldn't be able to use them.
What about handing them to, say, the Economist? That might be even worse for Darl than if they wound up in the hands of the police.
He definitely, ah, favors Microsoft. :-) Very unusual for a security guy.
Not really. This way he'll always have a job.
http://www.usedwigs.com/weekly_32.html0 01/0001.html
http://www.annoying.com/nightmares/obsessive/02/0
http://www.offthekuff.com/mt/archives/002681.html
Or just google for 'bill watterson peeing OR pissing'
Take the time to read and understand the original comics, and you might see my point of view.
Hmmm...Maybe IBM should just buy SCO and Novel. This way, no mater which company is determined to have the rights to the IP code in question, IBM will own it all. Problem solved.
Except that the people running IBM are a little bit smarter than that. They have invested in the success of Linux, and thus have a vested interest in crushing any public impression of weakness of the GPL in the courts. For the price of just legal fees, this is a much better deal for them than buying a stock that's overvalued by about tenfold.
SCO's licensing behavior, as IBM has been pointing out in their Counterclaims to the SCO lawsuit (Counterclaim 6, para. 142-147 is especially relevant), violates the GPL, because SCO distributed Linux and other GPL software, then attempted to alter the terms of the license using SCOsource.
Paragraph 147 shows what kinds of damages open source developers have a right to expect:
SCO is unpopular with "the /. crowd" precisely because a significant number of them are Linux and open source developers. Yes, all open source projects get tarred with the same brush in the non-tech public (read: investors) when SCO claims the GPL is unconstitutional and threatens to sue end-users. These guys aren't multimillionaires being bankrolled by M$ and don't have the money, time, or ability to get into a legal fight with SCO. They all lose customers and support until the lawsuits are over. When the Yankee Group publishes yet another TCO study that says "Linux is great, but, oops, the costs of indemnity from legal challenges pending in the courts forced us to revise our cost estimate upward," businesses learn that Linux is risky until the court cases are over. Developers lose.
Someone must be responsible! Someone must pay for this damage! The thought that Darl McBride, Canopy, M$ et al. will come away from these lawsuits, no matter what, with their reputations, fortunes, business practices, quotidian lives intact is like a maddening thorn in the brain of "the /. crowd". That's why everyone keeps asking about criminal charges... not because they really hope to see these people in jail, but because they are yearning for justice.
Q: What did the comedian say to the crowd?
A: If I knew, this joke would be funny.
As bad as it might sound I think a company will have to buy the IP rights to UNIX in order to shut SCO up. SCO will not win this case and the value of the "company" will drop. At this point someone will buy them.
Why would anyone buy them? I am serious.
What does TSG have that is worth ANYTHING to another business? Their claim to the IP that is supposedly in Linux is being fought in court, and TSG has not yet shown they will (or even could possibly on a day when the weather forecast in Hades is particularly chilly) prevail in their claims of ownership.
They don't own office space (rented from Canopy), real estate (rented from Canopy), office furnishings (rented from Canopy), inventions or patents that are in demand. They don't have any key technology, resources, or even executives that have a clue. Why would anyone want to buy TSG?
With a book value of $1.31 per share, buying them AT MARKET would entail a premium of about 840% over what it would cost to start over from scratch.
The only asset they have is a lawsuit against IBM that, IF they win (not bloody likely, from what I have been reading) could be worth about 20 times their current market capitalization. Other than some Microsoft shills (Enderly? Didio?) they are not convincing many that they have any chance of winning, though - and I really think the Microsoft shills are not convinced, they are just selling their integrity to the highest bidder.
Again, why would anyone buy them?
I do agree, though, that it would be nice for SOMEONE to shut them up. SEC, DOJ, are you listening?
Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
Beer company A falsely claims that the employees of beer company B are urinating in company B's product. How unfair is that to company B?
Now imagine that company A's claims are headline news in dozens of publications for over a year. Sure, company B could call company A a liar, but a lot of people will avoid beer from company B, just to be safe.
The scox case is exactly like that. Msft/scox is loadly claiming that Linux is "contaminated" with UNIX code. Yet, after an entire year, scox offers no evidence.
After sitting on scox's laughable motion to dismiss for over six months. The judge *finally* declares: "I'm too stupid and lazy to set a court date, or to tell scox to lay off the unproven statements against scox's competitors. So, I'll just allow scox to unfairly bash the competition, maybe Utah will do something and spare me the trouble."
This decision could not have possibly been more favorable to scox. Maybe the USA could learn something from Germany's justice system.
Nothing except the fact that Novell has more to gain from the openness of linux than otherwise. Novell has had financial problems in the past, but I don't think they would ever do anything that would cause the company to implode the way sco has. Besides, Novell has partnership agreements with IBM and others that will keep their linux strategy, or some variation of it strong for years to come.
.NET capable operating system. Worry about the fact that Microsoft has patented almost every patentable aspect of the .NET framework, and could slap Novell with a cease and decist at a moment's notice. C# may be an open standard, but it's still subject to patents, and last I checked ADO.NET was not part of the C# standard. What Xamien's done is nothing short of cloning the next generation of Windows systems on Linux. And if that doesn't scare you, nothing will.
If you're going to worry about Novell, worry about the fact that they're integrating Mono directly into Suse to create a hybrid
This signature has Super Cow Powers
I'm probably not alone in this but the "peeing calvin" stuff is quite an annoyance to most people who have read and enjoyed watterson's work.
Those Calvin sticker perform a useful service. Whenever I see one, I immediatly know the driver is a jackass, and I give him wide berth. Kind of serves the same purpose as those old "Baby On Board" signs.
Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs