SCO Files for Stay of Execution
An anonymous reader writes "SCO has filed for another delay in the case against IBM. The article reports that 'According to filings in the case, SCO is looking to buy time until the court can hear its arguments compelling IBM to release more information. SCO lawyers argue the information -- namely source code they claim was lifted from AIX and Dynix to bolster the open source Linux kernel -- is necessary in getting a successful ruling.'"
obligatory groklaw coverage
this line is just filler.
And again, it's another journalist who repeat like a parrot SCO' press release without digging a little bit... annoying.
"Tell us what we want to know, but we need more time to find what we've been claiming for months."
Truth is stranger than fiction.
--Coming up with something clever... please wait...
"It's the end of the world as we know it, and I feel fine!"
"No beer until you finish your tequila!" -Leela's Dad
if they are doing this, are they like chickening out from suing IBM?? cool! (doubt it, but its woth a thought.)
Their strategy is simple, delay, delay, delay until IBM goes bankrupt.
Dvorak on Doomtech
So they're asking IBM to open the source that was stolen to SCO so they can investigate it?
I thought the thing they were investigating in the first place was source that was already opened that SCO found.
Am I missing something?
SCO is just digging, I wish they would either strike, or leave us the hell alone. Slander is what it's boiling down to. They need to get more sales and money and all they can do is talk shit about linux until someone figures out they have no case..... but the lose of sales from their bullshit will hurt other companies and they deserve to be sued back.... Anyone care to join in with Big Blue?
Sometimes the majority just means all the morons are on the same side.
The real reason for the delay is that the lawyers have their next scheduled stock sale next week!
Instead of the Caldera one? This is nothing but a big joke.
...and I'll say it again.
SCO has zero chance of winning. We know this, but more importantly, they know this too. This has always been the expected outcome. Thankfully the link between SCO and Microsoft has been established, admitted to, and documented, otherwise people like me would still be getting called "tinfoil hat idiots".
As long as this case exists, so does fear, uncertainty, and doubt towards linux. The longer they can stretch it out before a ruling, the better.
"The market alone cannot provide sufficient constraints on corporation's penchant to cause harm." -- Joel Bakan
I am not a lawyer, and I am seeing what amounts to little more than:
IBM: We want summary judgment now.
SCO: No, you can't. You haven't given us [INSERT NAME OF RANDOM STUFF].
IBM: But that stuff is irrelevant. Besides, you haven't given us any proof. We want judgment now.
SCO: No, you can't. You haven't given us [INSERT NAME OF MORE RANDOM STUFF].
(ad infinitum)
What can IBM do legally to stop the cycle and for the judge to say, "Enough!"?
here is the yahoo quote, as always, they're going down.
Marge, get me your address book, 4 beers, and my conversation hat.
No, No... excute them now!
Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
January 12, 2004 SCO hands infringing code to IBM
Did I miss something?
GETPKG - Package Management for Slackware
Watching the SCO saga is like watching a completely preventable train wreck in the slowest possible motion - kind of like watching snakegrass grow, or watching paint on the ugliest painting ever painted dry. Mondrian's skidmarks after a night of taxidancing. Picasso's Kleenex. Something like that.
We should start putting up options on when this idiotic extravaganza will come to a final end.
2005?
2006?
2007?
2438?
I no longer feel sorry for any one left treading water at SCO. They've had PLENTY of time to jump ship and flee the scene. When the slowly grinding wheel of justice makes its dirty, uuuh, duty, clean, nnnuuh, clear, these trusswrappers will be persecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and they will all have to walk the plank.
"I was Darl McBride, CEO at SCO for ages. Now I ask customers 'you want fries with that?' "
Hope and Pray.
RS
Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
actually, doesn't this play into big blue's hands? after all, they have deeper pockets, we know that SCO is having some problems w/ paying their legal bills (story from last week).
ed
I KNOW there's something illegal here, I just need more time to find it.
R(k)
The letters are fun reading and provide a good example on how to make opposing counsel look stupid. Both sides have accused the other of dragging their feet. So this time -- when SCO asks for a delay -- IBM says okay, as long as you don't want the delay in order to just ask for another delay. SCO refuses, basically admitting that this is exactly what they planned to do.
===== Murphy's Law is recursive. =====
..but we need something to gossip about on /.
THE SCENE: A COURTROOM. IT IS FILLED WITH MANY TENSE LAWYERS IN EXPENSIVE SUITS, HALF OF THEM ARE BLUE.
SCO SHILL: Your honor, most wise, humble and double wicked cool dud-
JUDGE: Get on with it.
SCO SHILL: *Ahem* In accordance with the 1887 ruling of the federal government vs. Keanu Reves, we would like you to summarily find for the plaintiff, SCO, and award damages to the tune of-
JUDGE: I'm not familiar with that ruling. Keanu Reves? 1887? If this is another delaying tactic counselor...
SCO SHILL: We request a three month period to shake down more, er, find um, evidence!
JUDGE: Denied. You haven't given a reason that there might be new evidenc introduced.
SCO SHILL: WE REQUEST A RECESS!
JUDGE: Denied. You just got back from one.
SCO SHILL: WE REQUEST AN EMERGENCY BATHROOM BREAK!
KEANU: (from the back of the courtroom) Woah.
HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
I know you stole my ring. If you let me in your house, to look around, I am sure I will find my ring. Stop hiding my ring, I know you have it.
It is my precious......
This is insane. SCO wants to go on a fishing trip, looking for something they claim IBM stole, yet have no proof of. If they don't have proof, what are they doing suing IBM other than to be annoying. Are we (collective) just supposed to believe that they (SCO) are telling us the truth, BLINDLY?
What a crock. The judge should simply dismiss the case at this point, with prejudice. I can think of at least 15 different reasons to do so. Namely every time SCO gets themselves in a pickle (technical term), they change the subject. At this point, they are suing for infringement that they don't have ANY knowledge of.
Incredible. Insane. ENOUGH already.
Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
Can you believe it's been 18 months since this started? SCO hasn't shown us one unrefutable piece of evidence in 18 months...
When you get to hell -- tell 'em Itchy sent ya!
Nothing here but the latest chapter in what's getting to be a repetitive tale: delay the inevitable with (Gasp! Horror!) YAM (Yet Another Motion). IBM will likely answer that SCO has had plenty of time and that the real problem SCO has is, in a phrase, "there's nothing there, there." Of course, the lawyers must love it - they're going to get every last penny of that $US31 million at which SCO "capped" the payments.
Scum-sucking bottom-dwellers, and I haven't even started talking about the lawyers.
So, lemme get this straight, SCO takes money from MS to throw some dirt on linux so stupid corporate businesses think linux is made up of stolen ideas (now there's something that's fucked up), and when the judges say "where's the evidence?" they say "we need more time to find dirt"...
Sounds like to me they're trying to keep "sco loses case, linux legit" headline from hitting the news...
Candy-Coated Knowledge
In the media, all SCO go on about is copyright and IP. But copyright only makes up part of this case. IBM is suing SCO for copyright infringement over it's code in Linux, that SCO is breaking the GPL when distributing, and also selling a licence for. IBM are also asking the judge to rule that it does not break any of SCO's supposodly copyrighted code by putting it's own code in Linux. SCO cannot, and have not shown, or tried to show, in court, any copyright infringement by IBM.
But.... As SCO tries to obfuscate what it going on, they're arguing contract when the case is copyright, and copyright when the case is contract - pure misdirection.
SCO says that the AT&T contract is unambigous, and IBM says that the AT&T contract is unambiguous, but they both interperet it quite differently. Even when SCO try to bring up witnesses from the BSDi v USL case, to contradict what IBM is now getting those same witnesses to say, they fail to come up with any meaningful contradictions, and fail to note that the black and white of the contract, side letter, Echo clarification and ammendments say, which is that IBM owns what is IBM's and AT&T own what is AT&T's. IBM cannot release code that is part of the AT&T Unix source code, but IBM can release code that is there's that they also put into Unix seperately. The facts of this case, even without the witnesses say IBM is right.
SCO still haven't got Novell off their backs, and their contract with Novell plainly doesn't transfer copyrights to SCO, and SCO cannot even find the paperwork to prove that they're successor in interest to that contract, and hence the AT&T contract.
The current deluge of paperwork from SCO is an attempt to befuddle and confuse, obfuscate and delay the judicial process.
-- oldthinkers unbellyfeel ingsoc
"-That's not gonna be good for business.
-That's not gonna be good for anybody."
You say that, but none of them are actually great. If I want computing goodness, I go to Linux. If I want girls, I go somewhere else. Everyone knows the two don't mix too well. Frankly, if you're basing your OS choice on the looks of the girls who champion it, your clearly more than a little undesirable.
You bastard, you slashdotted Groklaw! The site is overloaded and I can't take my daily anti-FUD pil. :|
IBM's motion depended on the claim that "AT&T didn't mean what SCO says they meant in their derivative works clause". In support of that, IBM presented two witnesses from AT&T who said that AT&T had intended for the clause to be narrowly interpreted. Unfortunately for IBM, SCO had access to the original BSD depositions, where these same two officials testified to exactly the opposite "fact".
Oops. There goes that argument -- and, very probably, any chance for a summary judgement. The net effect of the contradictory depositions will be to establish beyond doubt or cavil that there is a clear uncertainty about the meaning of the contract, which allows SCO to say "If the clause is relevant to the case, then we must determine what the clause meant. People who signed the document don't even know what it meant, and thought one thing once, and another thing later. Summary judgement is not possible."
SCO was misquoted... the actual quote was... "Our evidence against Linux doesn't exist... oh shit... did I say that out loud... spin doctor that, wouldya?"
this has to be slander, or racketeering or something. you can't make accusations and then NEVER back them up! how has this stood so long?
fortunately I haven't read much about it in mainstream news much recently.
Cb
free ipod and free gmail!
Stay of Execution? Come on, can't we just kill them now!?
"[SCO's]Lawyers point to...IBM's failure to produce information that back up SCO's breach of contract and copyright infringement claims."
I haven't really been following this all that closely. I remember laughing my ass off many moons ago when I first read about what SCO was trying to pull, and then sort of ignored it figuring that it was a big joke and would eventually just go away.
Is SCO seriously this desperate, or are they all just stupid?
The only thing SCO has that isn't going to be executed is their code...
CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
> looking for something they claim IBM stole, yet have no proof of
It's worse than that, now. Among the reasons for requesting this latest delay (from the article) is IBM's
"failure to produce information that back up SCO's breach of contract and copyright infringement claims."
In other words, "Fellas, we're gonna delay this thing 'til you cough up something we can use against you. We've got nothin' but time".
Utterly ridiculous.
S
Oh no! I'm going to crash my slowmobile!
@SCO: don't forget that it is also necessary for a successful ruling that Darl McBribe is the the judge.
Why don't you just rape the AIX source code? I'm SCO will be taking it one way or the other if you get my meaning. Meanwhile, IBM gives source code to the Linux community. Hmmm... what greaseiness I see.
||| I still can't believe Parkay's not butter.
SCO has always had the SysV code they claim was stolen and the Linux code they say it was dropped into, so IBM says that should be sufficient to prove that there is or is not 'infringing code in Linux'.
Rather than legally provide any of this infringing code that their 'experts' allegedly found 'mountains of', SCO keeps changing the story.
Currently, the line is that IBMs contract prevented IBM from revealing not only any SysV code, but any IBM code that was shipped together with SysV code, or any IBM code that somehow derived from "UNIX methods and concepts".
To prove this last point, they want IBM to provide the complete revision history of every file in AIX, including programmer notes, so that they can read through it all and try to find places where programmers writing IBM code were 'tainted' with SysV knowledge. IBM says that this theory is ridiculous and that they should not have to go through this burdensome procedure because it's irrelevant. SCO has SysV code, code from several releases of AIX and Dynix, and Linux code, and therefore has everything they would possibly need to prove infringement under standard copyright laws.
In any case, any code that one side provides to the other would be under seal, not availible to the public, and certainly not open sourced.
This shows again how royally screwed up our legal system is. We need tort reform because in the end we'll all wind up paying for this stupidity by the courts. SCO has gone after multiple parties in multiple districts, wasting countless hours in our courts and a ton of money on the accused. This ultimately costs us all.
Whether it's medical malpractice cases, bogus lawsuits or SCO, this will all cost us more in everything we buy. It does now, and it will only get worse unless we put a stop to this legal self feeding excercise.
Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
I am reminded of a quote from Londo Mollari of Babylon 5:
"Only a fool fights a war on two fronts. Only the heir to the kingdom of fools fights a war on twelve fronts!"
My rights don't need management.
The article mentioned that SCO claims that AutoZone moved SCO OpenServer code into Linux during their migration. If they were migrating from OpenServer to Linux, doesn't that imply that they had a valid license for OpenServer? So they bought the code they used. What's the problem?
The internetnews article says "Originally scheduled for Tuesday, the hearing was pushed back to Oct. 19", but that was just the discovery hearing before the Magistrate Judge.
The important hearing, on IBM's motion for summary judgment on its tenth counterclaim, is still on for tomorrow, which you can verify at the court's website, both Judge Kimball's schedule and the case history (item 268).
If IBM's motion is granted, Judge Kimball will issue a declaratory judgment that IBM's copying of Linux does not infringe any SCO copyright. That would imply that anyone else copying any of the Linux versions IBM uses is not infringing any SCO copyrights, either.
The SCO-IBM disputes over contracts would remain, but the rest of the world needn't concern itself about those.
You can find the briefing papers on the motion here
Seems interesting that Darl should ask, "Do you want fries with that?" since, IIRC, McDonalds uses some sort of SCO product for their registers and other crap. I could be wrong though.
No need to execute SCO. No need to execute any of their code.
Thank you, thank you. I'll be here all week. Be sure to try the veal.
So many documents are showing up in this frantic motion practice SCO and IBM are embroiled in, it's hard to even read them all, let alone write about them. But I think we may summarize them like this: SCO would like more time before it has to walk the plank.
And an old AT&T attorney, Martin Pfeffer, who claims no direct involvement with the IBM contract that I can see in a quick reading of his statement, says some things that don't apply to IBM at all.
I gather SCO would like to bury the judges in documents so they will be forced to grant delays just to be able to read them all in time. If it was confident at all that it could prevail on any of IBM's motions, I believe none of this would be happening. They may well get some delay from this strategic blizzard of paper, unless it annoys the judge as much as it does me, but it won't change the eventual outcome at all, from anything I've seen so far, including the Pfeffer testimony. They're like a condemned man, asking at the last minute for a dish that takes three days to prepare as his last meal. Even if his request is granted, he's still going to die. So, if they do get a delay, don't be amazed. They've certainly worked hard enough for one, and the judge may not know them as well as we do. A lot depends on understanding the tech. If the judge gets it, it helps to see through what would other wise sound plausible.
It's kind of like at the beginning. Remember how the media would print every bit of SCO's outrageous claims, as if they were received from heaven on stone? We knew what SCO was saying about Linux would not prove true, didn't we? And how did we know? Because some of us understood the tech and we all understood the GPL. Do you see the media still eating up SCO's every claim? No. They got educated. It's the same in the court cases. It may take time, and it can prove frustrating if you like instant results. But it is an inexorable process, and it will happen with the judges, just as it did with the journalists. And they can take their time, I reckon, getting up to speed, what with all the delays SCO keeps asking for. But judges are not stupid. They will see the SCO pattern, if they don't already. How many delays can SCO ask for before they see what is happening? I don't know. But they will see it eventually, without a doubt. It's also true that many judges tend to bend over backward to be fair to the side they know is going to lose. Really. So, if they get more delay, they get more delay, but the process is moving forward like a tank.
It's all SCO here, except for IBM's normal reply memorandum on the motion to strike and one request -- to be allowed to file a response to SCO's Supplemental Memorandum re: Discovery and to Continue Hearing. As you recall, Judge Wells told them that after SCO's filed this document, anything further could only be brought up at the hearing. However, it seems SCO took advantage of that to raise new issues, and IBM asks for time to get declarations in response.
Here they all are. Read them and weep. I feel like crying just looking at them all, thinking about transcribing and doing all this HTML. If you can help, please do, leaving a comment on which one you are working on, so we don't overlap:
#272 - SCO's ex parte motion for leave to file overlength memorandum re: SCO's Opposition to IBM's Motion to Strike Materials
#273 - SCO's Supplemental Declaration of Christopher Sontag in Support of SCO's Oppositon to IBM's Motion to Strike
#274 - SCO's Supplemental Declaration of Sandeep Gupta re SCO's Opposition to IBM's Motion to Strike
#275 - SCO's Supplemental Declaration of John Harrop in Support of SCO's Opposition to IBM's Motion to Strike
#276 - IBM's [redacted] Reply to response to [212] Motion to Strike the 7/12/2004 Declaration of Christopher Sontag
#277 - SCO's Motion to extend time to file response to IBM's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on Breach of Contract Claims and IBM's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on it's Counterclaim for Copy
So SCO accuses IBM of copying SCO's source code into Linux. Then delays claiming that IBM hasn't given the source code over for examination. This is what happened, isn't it? SCO obviously already has their own code. The Linux code is open source and freely available all over the net. So how can SCO credibly make such a claim? Why, through lawyers of course. God! We are so in need of tort reform.
Between OJ, MS-v-DOJ and GWB'00, I'm not sure I can tell the difference between right and wrong anymore.
This could be the only way they could get it.
"...So if Chewbacca is from Endor, you must convict!... er, I mean acquit! Dammit, how did it go again? Your honor, can we have a little more time to uh, research?"
Things went perfectly during the rehearsal, too.
Old news for GROKLAW readers...
/. should not cover it as well. Do you expect to find a major story in only one newspaper?
/. and it's getting rather old to watch every story about SCO on /. have someone scream, "This is old new! Groklaw had it first!"
Now don't get me wrong, Groklaw is a good site for the most up to date information on all of this but the format that PJ put it in, her editorializing not withstanding, is very legalease.
And that also is just fine. There are geek lawyers out there who want to know the straight dope on what's going on with SCO, the IANAL geeks who know enough to read it without getting splitting headaches after a while, and those of us like me to still go there and read but soon develop splitting headaches after a while.
I don't expect a lawyers to understand C and don't think that just beacuse geeks are considered to be smart that they should automaticly have to understand legalease. It's unfair to expect just because Groklaw exists that
Groklaw has their niche as does
Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
...you insensitive clod!
I'm not in court, I'm out on a fishing expedition!
"If you mess with us, we're going to take you on, even to our utter destruction, whatever occurs." - Ralph Yarro (SCO)
Oh yes. We all need an OS with a spokesbabe. Uh huh. Never mind things like stability or freedom. Just pay attention to the ass shaking in front of your fucking face. That's why, ten years from now, I'll still have a great job and you will be a fat, balding, middle-aged Emo loser. Get a fucking job and get a life dude!
Who is Twirlip of the Mists?
"...as well as IBM's failure to produce information that back up SCO's breach of contract and copyright infringement claims."
Uh...wait a sec... when did it become the defendant's job to prove the plaintiff's case?
Veritas patesco per quaestio questio. Truth is revealed through questions.
...for your tireless efforts in wasting US taxpayer dollars with your frivolous litigation. These dollars could be better spent on defense or education, but still you continue to spew your bald-faced lies to the world. Oh wait, I see--you have a secret agenda to create a defenseless, uneducated US which is more vulnerable to terro rists. Far-fetched? Well at least it makes more logical sense than your wild allegations against IBM and Linux. Darl, just give it up already. Please.
SCO sues IBM, and makes themselves the laughing stock of the business world by doing so.
HA-FRICKEN-HA.
I don't need 12 updates a week on the status of how retarded the SCO lawyers are.
I thought that case was sealed? How can they use testimony from that case?
Bob-
The Ludwig von Mises Institute. The reasoning individuals economics
but BSD can give you those things too! it's the best of.. well.. something, I think. ah, who cares, back to my winxp lameness.
In the Linux CVS some reasonably fully-formed code just appears in several places saying 'donated from IBM' then proceeds to get integrated in over time.
SCO wants IBM to go through their internal version control system to generate full revision histories for every file ever attached to AIX. IBM says this would be a difficult undertaking, mostly because AIX is not just a single file, or even a single set of files, but is comprised of many disparate code projects that join, separate, rejoin, get dropped, get added and so forth, such that the thing called 'AIX' really only exists in the released versions (which they've provided).
One of the IBM sworn statements is from the maintainer of their internal version control system and goes into more detail on this.
IBM mostly argues that, legally, the information can't possibly help SCOs case, and thus they shouldn't be forced to go through the trouble and expense.
Me fail English? That's unpossible!
sco has deleted their cvs repositry (or supositry, hee hee) and theyre trying to get ibm to give them as much code to fill the gap - it doesn't matter if they ask for the same thing twice, they'll just rename it to file1_0.c file1_1.c etc
Wow, I'm doing jokes about SCO, on Slashdot, and two people have modded me as 'Overrated'.
Isn't that a sign of impending Apocaplypse? Or is this just SCO guys quietly doing damage control...;-)
HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
I assume that's what the mods actually meant.
BSD has a mascot who leaves us in no doubt that this is the OS for real men!
At the risk of my karma...
You do know that booth babes typically do not use the products they hawk, don't you? I mean, honestly, how many of the booth babes at, oh... say... GenCon think it would be just awesome if some guy would ask them to go play D&D?
Aforementioned BSD mascot probably runs Windows XP at home.
Who says MOD's don't have a sense of humour !
They can't prove it based on the major releases of AIX/Dynix, so they want access to every source code version ever to try to prove their case.
I too am a regular Groklaw reader and really really wish they had moderation. As it is there is just waaay too much noise in the comments. I usually end up only reading a couple of "first posts" and then leaving. I would be very interested in reading some of the really interesting comments if they could somehow be bubbled up like it is here.
I donated a little money earlier today and suggested to PJ that she turn on moderation for Groklaw. She doesn't have to, but if enough of us did that she might reconsider it. I will continue to visit Groklaw on a daily basis regardless though.
No, not at all, because as soon as SCO stops delaying the result is going to be a ruling of some kind, and SCO's complete lack of material evidence is going to result in Very Bad Things(tm) happening to their case. Their only hope to keep their heads above water is to keep delaying, and pray that they can convince the judge to let them do more discovery. So they can find the evidence that will prove them right, or so they can keep selling their still-inflated stock, I'll let you decide.
The enemies of Democracy are
SCO lawyers argue the information -- namely source code they claim was lifted from AIX and Dynix to bolster the open source Linux kernel -- is necessary in getting a successful ruling.
Umm, if it was *lifted* from AIX and Dynix and put into Linux, couldn't you find the code in Linux instead of telling IBM to release source code from a closed source product? They said it was *released into Linux* Well, go get it from the Linux tree!?!?!
It's sickening to see the bureaucracy of the US courts drag this out on bull$hit motions, declarations, or any other form of action within the a court.
Seriously, if you haven't bailed out of your stocks in SCOX, then you're a dumb-ass and the genepool is better off without your filth.
Take it like a man.
Darl could not sink any lower
He's tops as a bullshit thrower
But Darl showed his ass
Which is now only grass
And IBM is the lawnmower.
The year: 2038...
SCO Lawyer: '...and all the IBM machines' clocks died at *precisely* the same time as our SysV clocks! What further evidence need we present that our code was illegally copied?'
IBM Laywer: '...*ack*... my heart!'
First, Groklaw is made by a legalease for non-legalease.
/. here to scream "Groklaw had this 1st!" And while true does not really serve anything.
I'm sorry but I'm going to have to wonder if you have read some of the things that are posted on Groklaw:
Chris Sontag's Supplemental Declaration - as text
SCO's Memo in Support of its Expedited Motion to Enforce the Scheduling Order - text
Those are just two recent examples of articals which really are just court docuents that have been put into text. And I'm afraid that things don't get much more legalease than court documents.
While I realise the thrust of your post was more on another topic, your topic itself was part of the trend on
Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
http://web.archive.org/web/20020923114403/http://s co.com/
kinda funny how things changed so much
Many Linux geeks including myself shorted the SCO stock and made large amounts of money. In my opinion that is another good thing that came out of this fiaSCO.
Thanks to SCO I have a brand new SUV and some really really nice computer equipment. And I am not even done spending a quarter of the proceeds from my successful SCO short transanction. I would actually like to thank Darl and the gang for the money. I am just not sure what the best way of doing this would be.
Maybe I'll send them a card and thank them for lying through their teeth and pumping up a worthless stock. I am sure they'll appreciate it.
This is a fundamentally a contract case. The law of torts deals ONLY with liability outside the realm of contracts.
Instead of repeating a term that politicians bandy about with no idea what it means, why don't you list some concrete changes you would make in the law?
http://biz.yahoo.com/e/040914/scox10-q.html/
haha they collected 709 dollars this year.
This is a fundamentally a contract case. The law of torts deals ONLY with liability outside the realm of contracts.
Instead of repeating a term that politicians bandy about with no idea what it means, why don't you list some concrete changes you would make in the law?
Yes, this comment is a dupe, but so is the ignorance.
We get to execute SCO?!...
Oh, never mind, i just read the title wrong.
They are amazingly tenacious for a company which in all this time has yet to demonstrate a shred of valid evidence, while wasting hundreds of millions of other company's money.
Maybe I was wrong about whether all of industry is "getting it."
I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
They have only one answer to everthing.
Republicans: We need more tax cuts!
SCO: We need more time and all of AIX!
Darl's made millions as the scumbag head of SCO.
Like other's before him, he'll get away with it, because nobody in this country is serious about white collar crime.
they want IBM to provide the complete revision history of every file in AIX, including programmer notes, so that they can read through it all and try to find places where programmers writing IBM code were 'tainted' with SysV knowledge.
But that's not the best part - they want to do this because they say it will be *faster* than simply comparing Linux to SysV.
Yup - we have too much data to look through, so the only way to make it faster is to give us *MORE* data!
Maybe they're hoping that after reading their filings, the judges head will explode, and they can get another delay?
There are Booth Babes at GenCON?!?
Gotta go, man, gotta go!!!
As yet another regular Groklaw reader, I can tell you that PJ had no such plans last I knew, simply because she commented over here a few times, only to be ignored in favor of highly-moderated (but incorrect) legal advice someone gave out. Thus, she's no fan of moderation.
That said, there are generally only a few threads worth reading--some of the new information under OT and corrections (which are generally started by someone right at the top of each new story), and comments by some of the more knowledgeable legal types on Groklaw. AllParadox & Marbux come to mind--you can search for their comments via the Groklaw search page. Quartermass is another who provides interesting legal insight, but he always posts anonymously, merely signing his messages, to encourage people not to filter the anonymous posts out over there. Sadly, that makes his insights harder to find, with them being somewhat burried.
An item of interest is that it appears there is NOTHING scheduled all morning before the hearing and NOTHING scheduled after 2:00 pm when the hearing is to take place. It looks like Judge Kimball has given himself plenty of time to prepare for the hearing as well as plenty of time to listen to oral arguements.
This is significant because other hearings have been much shorter. You have to assume he's already read through all the motions, so maybe he's getting ready to rule. I don't know if he will actually be ready to rule tomorrow, but I think there might be a chance. I also like the fact that he's not letting other things crowd in. He's giving this his whole attention.
Or excercised some options.
No need to send them a card.
I think they new before hand exactly how many stock they could sell off without looking like a pump and dump.
For example lets say they have been selling 10000 shares every six months for the year before all this happend as a way of getting their lively hood. I have heard many arguements that this is how a lot of CEO's make there living and that it's honest.
So now you have our officer who isn't happy with the 60 thousand a year he's been making in excess of his salary. So we'll announce that we have absolute proof of millions and millions of line of code that IBM has put into linux and is infringing our code. Stock goes from 3 dollars to 22 dollars and instead of making 60 thousand a year, in one deal our officer makes 220 thousand dollars. Doesn't matter that he used Fraud to get it. And he can claim hey I just did what he's been doing all along. And the CEO alas wasn't able to excercise the options so he got a bonus that put his salary over 1 million dollars for the effort. And on the long shot that he has over half a million shares of stock options that are going to make him rich for the rest of his life.
Now all they have to do is stick it out till the company is bankrupt and worthless so that it looks like they "Believed" in the company. Sure they may not have made 37 million but we aren't seeing all the behind the seens stuff that goes on with the primary stock holders and they made a whole lot more than they would have if they had stayed the course and not sued IBM.
So in short... for them it was a Win-Win situation... Lose lose for the company... but Win-win for the officers and initial shareholders. Oh by the way... I've noticed that some officers that couldn't excercise their options when the going was good, haven't purchased any stock in the company either. Wonder why... I mean if they are so sure they are going to win.
I was just informed that Ceren Ercen is, in fact, a tester for BSD labs, and does not run Windows. So my parent post should be modded (-1, Wrong).
As I told my informant; if you can't be wrong, what can you be?
Lawyer: Your honor, my client pleads guilty.
Defendant: WHAT?
Lawyer: Well, you are...
Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
Judge Wells initially set a deadline of next February for the discovery phase of the suit to be complete. Until and unless that deadline would need to move, I think he'll let SCO continue to litigate anything and everything they want.
Just a note. Judge Wells is a she. Magistrate Judge Brooke Wells.
The only reason we have the rights we have is that people just like us died to gain those rights. -- Cheerio Boy
The funny thing is that your money comes from the pocket of technologically uneducated investors who where acting greedily and stupidly by encouraging this disaster to go on and making the stocks to go rocket high.
:)
Others people misery don't amuse me but in this case, they simply deserved it; they where the one who where betting on the collapse of Linux just to pocket some dollars. They lost, time for the "repo mans" to pay them a visit.
Yahh, hiii haaaaa! -Major Kong, from Dr. Strangelove
I think it's simpler. Some people never learn to cancel a project when it's going to cost more to finish than you expect it to earn back.
They seem to be looking at it as a "waste" to give up now. It would make sense to be so stubborn if they had anything, but even if SCO manages to identify infringing lines at some random point in the future, IBM can just pull out the change history data, trot out the engineers who wrote the code, and let them explain it personally.
The same goes for a lot of other situations, like those of us who'd spoken with Sequent engineers about NUMA/RCU as a VM pitch.
Of course SCO itself could just be a huge FUD, in which case you have to wonder what the fudsters might be doing.
I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
Sounds like to me they're trying to keep "sco loses case, linux legit" headline from hitting the news...
Actually, they don't even want to win, because if they did, all it takes would be a set of patches to the Linux kernel. SCO wants this anti-linux campaign to go on and on and on... That's their (and MSFTs) primary goal.
cpghost at Cordula's Web.
When you wave the prospect of big undeserved gains in front of someone, there is a chance that greed kicks in. In fact, that it kicks in to such an extent as to give their brains an emergency shutdown.
E.g., after the fall of communism, pyramid schemes swept across Eastern Europe like a tsunami. Some people sold their houses, emptied their savings accounts, etc, to join in some harebrained pyramid scheme or another.
Since it invariably involved some variant of "each person gets the money from X other persons", it just _begged_ the question "well, and when everyone dumped their money into it, what happens to the _last_ idiots in the line. Who will _they_ get money from?" But apparently greed was enough to shut people's brains out.
It's not even a new thing. Historically other such mass-attacks of idiocy include the tulip bulb madness in Holland, or Law's replacing the whole French currency with pumped up stock in a non-existing company. We're talking whole countries, from Regent to nobles to workers to beggars, who basically had their brains shut down by pure greed.
And I'm thinking that a _lot_ of what happens in the corporate world is IMHO remarkably well explained by this theory.
It also doesn't help that clue must be heavier than air. The higher you go up the corporate pyramid, the thinner it gets.
What I'm getting at is that a frontal attack on IBM to get bought is sheer idiocy. IBM is an IP bastion itself, so it has the army of lawyers and the experience in dealing with _exactly_ this kind of crap. Or with giving someone this kind of crap.
Other stuff like threatening with fraudulent invoices or suing their own customers, _if_ actually planned as such, and not just for pump-and-dump sake, is an even bigger idiocy
The whole scheme is so _obviously_ stupid, that _if_ Darl & Co actually believed in it, the only explanation I have is that greed shut down their brains.
And again, we have a case of clue being heavier than air. Or of PHB's thinking they're above clue.
I can't believe that noone tried to offer them some free clue. E.g., with Caldera/SCO having been a linux shop and still having a distro for download, they had plenty of Linux people inside their own organization. Didn't any of those try passing some free complimentary clue upwards when the assault on Linux began? I don't believe that.
But again, clue was probably too heavy to go upwards. It probably ran into the kind of PHB who's not about to start taking feedback from lowly worthless peons. You serfs better not start questioning the emperor's new clothes.
A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
A real Nazgul would actually scare the living daylight outa me.
SCO just makes me laugh.
We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
Judge: I find in favor of plaintiff and award damages to the tune of $0.37 (Thirtyseven cents).
Court is dismissed.
"Fighting terrorists with millitary might is like killing a mosquitor on your Dad's forehead with a rifle."
I know for a fact that there had to be quite a few people that were shorting SCO stock. I tried to do it myself, but was disallowed because the percentage of SCO stock that was already being shorted was too high. The original poster's story might've been lacking in details, but it's a pretty safe bet that if this guy didn't make a lot of money off of shorting SCO stock, somebody did.
Shop Smart, Shop S-mart!
SWEET! Someone wasted a further mod point on my joke about modding a joke down as overrated.
/. is out to get me, or someone with modpoints has a wicked ironic sense of humor!
Either
HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
I didn't see this in existing comments, so adding it myself. What exactly does SCO want from IBM? SCO has the full source to Unix. They should have, for historic reasons, some indication as to what the source looked like when IBM bought it from AT&
If your code is acting bloated, and is running rather slow, it's likely and predicted that some loops you will unroll.
... it sent without clicking submit. Anyway, they have full source for what the code looked like when IBM bought it from AT&T, they have full code for Linux, if they want it. So they can prove where the code came from. Presumably, the kernel folks have a log of what they accepted from IBM in CVS/SVN... I don't understand here why they need IBM to do anything. So far as the BSD code, the BSD code should carry a BSD copyright still, and therefore if Linux did use any of it, the BSD copyright should be there. You cannot just apply GPL across someone else's code and call it your own -- SCO, BSD, whoever. BSD's license would let you use it in the kernel while following GPL, but you would have to still preserve the BSD copyright on code you copied from BSD.
If your code is acting bloated, and is running rather slow, it's likely and predicted that some loops you will unroll.
"A negligent or intentional civil wrong not arising out of a contract or statute."
This is fundamentally a contract case. By the definition you used it is the opposite of a tort. I suppose the kind of change you want is "contract suit reform" but I'm personally unaware of a pervasive problem with the way courts enforce contracts.