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More Responses to de Tocqueville Hatchet Job

akahige writes "Fresh from the debunking of the 'Linus couldn't possibly have written an OS without ripping someone off' book published by the Alexis de Tocqueville Institution, Tanenbaum has published an email he got from the consultant hired to do the code comparison between MINIX and Linux. Among other juicy comments, 'pay no attention to this man.' (There was no stolen code, either.) In related matters, ESR was apparently sent a pre-release excerpt of the book which he completely eviscerates with his usual zeal. Another story on NewsForge." See our previous stories if you're coming to this late.

18 of 435 comments (clear)

  1. Code obfuscation by prostoalex · · Score: 4, Interesting
    ESR says:

    In your discussion of obfuscation software, I hope it is simple ignorance rather than intentional deceit that prevents you from noting that open-source code has none of the characteristics of obfuscated code, and that obfuscators are therefore irrelevant to the question you are supposedly addressing.

    Anyone who has the book know what the ADTI's claim on code obfuscation was and why the issue was even mentioned?
  2. Like it or not, Linux owes a lot to MINIX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Hi -

    I know there is a tendancy here to deify Linus, and he deserves so much credit, but Linux overall owes a lot to MINIX. I worked with MINIX back around 1989 and Hendricks should be given a lot of credit for helping to get the whole open source movement rolling.

    TWR

  3. Re:Sorry but by Omnifarious · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The way you are all so frenzied trying to defend from this accusation, only convinces me that there is something to it.

    Actually, this strongly resembles the process I've seen when an Open Source project dissects a tricky bug. Everybody posts their opinion and analysis on it, and eventually, someone figures out the exact answer and the problem is solved. Kind of like scientists figuring something out too.

    Of course, something like this is so fuzzy that there isn't really 'a solution'. But the process is still similar.

  4. Re:Copy of email, /. effect by AKAImBatman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I hope Mr. Brown is getting compensated well, because he's soon going to find that's he's completely destroyed his career. I seriously doubt that anyone will wish to obtain his services after this fiasco.

  5. Re:Sorry but by nelsonal · · Score: 5, Interesting

    That reminds me of the exact time I realized that Linux would overtake MS. It was while reading an article the Economist published a few years ago that profiled something related to Linux. Their summary conclusion was it's small but we wouldn't bet against it as this is the same method that scientists have been using for the last few centries.

    --
    Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
  6. And of course MS funds it by metalhed77 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Microsoft in the past has supplied funding for the institution, which has published anti-open-source papers. In an eWEEK.com interview, senior fellow Gregory Fossedal refused to say who, if anyone, is sponsoring the institution's Linux project. "We don't discuss our funding," he said.


    From here
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    Photos.
  7. The sad part by JanneM · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The sad part of this is that it really makes little difference just how much people rip into this piese of literary excrement. Since it is "published" the majority of its intended audience will never even hear a whiff of any criticism, no matter how much we holler here.

    Compare to the thriving business of fortune telling or psycics (or evangelists), or of convinced political partisans. Debunking is happening continuously, but it doesn't even make a dent in these charlatans pocketbooks, as their marks do not hear about it anyway. They just aren't consumers of the kind of media that will publish anything critical of their chosen belief.

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    Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
  8. I am curious... by beakerMeep · · Score: 3, Interesting

    could linus sue these guys for libel? not that I would advocate that but I was wondering whether there would be legal basis for such a suit.

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    meep
  9. Also on Groklaw by Xenographic · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Heh, you should read PJ's take on it, as this story is also covered on Groklaw

    Speaking of which, has anyone else noticed the singular omissions Brown of AdTI is making here? One might think that he was acting with a reckless disregard for the truth, which counts as evidence of "actual malice." Not that that should be surprising to us, as those on SCO's side of things have been known for defaming people before (see my sig or journal), but it might be a basis for a lawsuit, even though Linus is likely a "public figure" ... Of course, IANAL.

  10. The Interesting Bits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In fact, all hackers condemn IP theft - this is what distinguishes us from the cracker/phreak subculture. Even the FSF faction that thinks proprietary code is evil has repeatedly and publicly condemned piracy and stealing other peoples' code. They want to destroy the proprietary system, but they insist on doing it by their own efforts, not by theft.

    Mostly true, but not intirely. Freesource hackers seem all be against stealing proprietary code but I seem to remember stallman endorsing music "piracy" during one of his speeches.

    You claim that "To date no other product comes to life in this way", presenting Linux as a unique event that requires exceptional explanations. This is wrong. Many other open-source projects of the order of complexity of the early Linux kernel predated it; the BSD Unixes, for example, or the Emacs editor.

    Wow. Stallman never ceases to impress me. I knew that gcc was as large and complex as linux but I never realized that emacs was too.

    Torvalds's ambiguity about "GNU/Linux" in 2001 was not complicated; he dislikes the term rather strongly but was at the time reluctant to get into a political scrap with Stallman, whom he personally dislikes. The dislike has since hardened and become sufficiently public that I am not betraying a confidence by writing this.

    Sad that they don't get along. Linus is such a happy go lucky guy that it seems out of character for him to dislike anything.

  11. Re:There's no doubt about it by Sloppy · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Yeah, I read the flame war. And Tanenbaum was right and Torvalds was wrong.

    From the funniest movie of all time:

    Sonja: "Sex without Love is an empty experience."
    Boris: "Yes, but as empty experiences go, it's one of the best."

    Linux's design is obsolete. But as obsolete designs go, it's doing quite well.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  12. Re:ESR got a copy?! by Soko · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ESR has had a nasty habit of donning a tin-foil hat, jumping up and down and then ranting like an in-coherent zealot - to the detrement of OSS in the eyes of CxO types. "Look at how this loony, a OSS leader, responds - is this the type of person you want associated with your business?"

    Unfortunately for Mr. Brown, ESR seems to be responding to the critisism of his past rants and couter-productive behaviour. This one, though perhaps self-serving at times, is measured and based on facts. AdTI's strategy of provoking a senseless flamewar with the OSS community is backfiring. If they had of made a more convincing argument, they may have gotten somewhere, but as it is, any of the /. trolls could have done better.

    Soko

    --
    "Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm." - Anonymous
  13. Re:Ken Brown really doing a social study? by Jerf · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Unless he's one of those incomptetent people who have no idea how incomptetent they really are

    Ah, time to trot out one of my favorite links:

    Unskilled and Unaware of It: How Difficulties in Recognizing One's Own Incompetence Lead to Inflated Self-Assessment - Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, December 1999 Vol. 77, No. 6, 1121-1134

    An entertaining read.

  14. Re:There's no doubt about it by argent · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I was part of the discussion, and I still say they're both wrong about each other's systems.

    It's a lot harder to get decent performance out of a microkernel, so Linus wasn't wrong to build Linux as a monolithic kernel, and Andy's criticisms of that aspect of its design were over the top.

    But Minix' performance problems were due more to its goal as a teaching system than the fact that it was a microkernel, so Linus was wrong to so vehemently attack microkernels... and he's wrong to continue doing so today.

  15. No comment by JohnGrahamCumming · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It strikes me that ESR and others who shout loudly about how awful this book is/is going to be are making a big mistake. In the face of unethical and ridiculous statements from AdTI and SCO silence speaks more loudly than loud protestations.

    If you must say something then how about "I'm not going to dignify that with a response."

    John.

  16. I refuse to do that. by Xenographic · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The fact is that these claims are a well-funded marketing campaign to create FUD about Linux because those entities which are finding themselves less able to compete with it on technical merit have to attack it in other ways.

    There are already a number of IP related attacks--Microsoft's "Shared Source" for one is calculated to give some of the benefits of having the source available, while crippling the ability of anyone who might want to use it in GPL'd software. There are also issues with patented standards, like Microsoft's XML patents. To be fair, this cuts both ways, I seem to remember someone (Lucky Green?) patenting using DRM to control the use of "pirated" software, after a Microsoft speaker claimed to have not thought of doing that. Indeed, on might theoretically patent something and make the *only* way to use that patent to incorporate the GPL'd software one provides. This is certainly somewhat more coercive than the GPL usually is (since generally, if you don't like it, you can write your own damned code instead of taking mine), but it is yet another way to advance the public interest via IP law.

    Back to the point, we're looking at a well-funded character assasination attempt here. And if we're not, it sure as hell looks that way. I'm certainly not convinced that we should be ignoring this, since they're working on convincing the types who don't read Slashdot, and who aren't likely to see all the facts contrary to this insipid book.

    I mean, I'm just waiting for Lyons of Forbes (a scolecophagous scorbutical scoundrel, in my biased opinion), or Enderle to write some poorly-researched prattle about what this "proves." Then, only to turn and complain about the questioning of their reputations, in spite of their being known more for quoting press releases than for doing independent research... And no, calling a company to confirm that it believes its own press releases is hardly Pulizer material.

    But you're right. This isn't new. Lyons wrote an insipid character-assasination piece against PJ, defaming her with spurious allegations and incredibly weak associations to some random troll he quoted off the Internet. Enderle has called those who oppose SCO "terrorists," the crime being pointing out to the media that he has no credibility and talks out his ass half the time. Oh, and some people alledgedly sent him hatemail. That's not right, but it's nothing new, and his article goes far beyond mere hatemail, especially when he invited it with his flamebait writings, painting so many with the same brush, doing worse than the things he accuses others of, in my biased judgement.

    And my favorite, the one enshrined in my slashdot journal, is where SCO set out fake signs to defame the people picketing them--ones claiming to support communism and whatnot. The Groklaw article on that is linked in my journal, and it even has nice pictures, so you can read them for yourself.

    So no, I have no intention of ignoring this campaign to malign us all. It's not likely to stop on its own. I would hope that anyone with standing to sue would at least consider doing so. I don't think this should be left to stand, even if I find it to be in the credit of Linus and the others that they are not litigious.

  17. Re:Hand behind the Hatchet? by scoove · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Any further ideas?

    Sun.

    It's too direct for Microsoft (and too bungled too). Their FUD engine is well greased and is quite honestly self-perceived to be too above this troll trash to be implicated. Not that there aren't moneys from Allen being moved around on the side, but that's not official Microsoft policy. Granted, Microsoft has admitted
    to funding Tocqueville but there's a missing beneficiary.

    Sun, on the other hand, is fighting for their life though it's receiving little coverage. Linux has decimated Sun's sales, and their missteps with Java have only frustrated efforts to find a solution - any solution. Perhaps some of the settlement money from Microsoft went here instead of directly to Sun?

    Consider: Who does having Linux portrayed as stolen property push the Linux base to?

    - FreeBSD/OpenBSD/netBSD? Not at all. If it was impossible for Linux to create Linux and therefore Linux is TheftWare, the *BSDs are next in line for accusations and implications.

    - SCO? This fossil? The same fossil one of their largest investors (and slush fund source) says should be canned? The fossil that litigation targets like Daimler Chrysler have confessed to not have used for nearly a decade? Doubtful.

    - Apple? A more interesting theory, but OS/X != Intel *NIX.

    - Microsoft? They're not at all in position to capture the Intel *NIX market. Convert to XP? How?

    Solaris, on the other hand, presents an inviting candidate for migration should the F/OSS *NIX's need a commercial home.

    *scoove*

  18. Re:There's no doubt about it by bofkentucky · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Andy teaches operating systems theory and design. The monlithic *NIX kernel had been tweaked and perfected for 21 years at that point, its interfaces were well designed and (reasonably) well documented, it was not interesting from a pure research or teaching perspective. 13 years later, some things have changed, but still the actual linux kernel work is "polishing the turd" that Thompson and Ritchie created at Bell Labs. The linux kernel is now a base for some of the more promising research in CS theory (the O(1) scheduler comes to mind), but linux is not a pure research OS by any streach of the imagination.

    Look at where we are heading now on the hardware side, NUMA, Async Processors, and Multi-core processors all have interesting side-effects when you look at micro vs monolithic kernels. When one looks at Sun's "FireMan" next-gen TCP/IP stack, it has elements of a microkernel personality siting on top of the Sun kernel. OSX/darwin's development also seems to favor moving to a pure microkernel arch in the future as Power5 and Power6 are developed. Imagine if the Quartz layer was simplified down to another microkernel running on the base Niwrad kernel.

    I guess what I'm saying is that you have two different worldviews represented in that flamefest between Andy and Linus. Andy's itch to scratch was theoretical, Linus's proved to be practical. Both are valid and both are important to this young science, so don't be so quick to judge the good doctor for being honest about his student's work.

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