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Report Claims SCO Intends to Charge IBM with Fraud

An anonymous reader writes "Now it gets interesting. According to this report, it looks as if SCO is preparing to accuse IBM of fraud, and has even opened up a web site to counter the runaway success of Groklaw. SCO's expensive attorneys Boies and Silver are apparently going to file a motion asking the court to unseal most of the documents that are currently under seal, in the hope that certain of IBM's e-mails will be seen by the outside world to tell a story about AIX, Dynix, and Project Monterey that implicates IBM in, well to be blunt, fraud. Groklaw is certain to have its own distinct view about this latest development of course."

52 of 377 comments (clear)

  1. Can't treally blame them... by Nos. · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They've got nothing, everything they do is getting thrown out of court, so they're going to try and blame IBM for that too. It will be nice to tell our grandchildren about this company named SCO that tried to profit off of others work.

    1. Re:Can't treally blame them... by TheSpoom · · Score: 5, Funny

      The way things are going now, our grandkids will just say, "But isn't that thing still going on?"

      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
    2. Re:Can't treally blame them... by Zorilla · · Score: 4, Funny

      btw, does he have any children to carry on his evil legacy? wouldn't want it to be a family tradition. :/

      Well, seeing that this guy is from Utah.....crap. It's going to be one biiiiiig family tradition.

      --

      It would be cool if it didn't suck.
    3. Re:Can't treally blame them... by Curtman · · Score: 3, Funny

      By then it will be:

      Five hundred beeeeeeeeliiiooon dollars

      Darl totally needs a minime too, if he does have children please let one of them be a midget.

    4. Re:Can't treally blame them... by Feztaa · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It's a totally different situation than you describe, though.

      yes, profitting off other people's work is the nature of capitalism. BUT, in a healthy capitalistic society, people are paid for their work. SCO is not trying to profit off the work of it's employees, it's trying to profit off the work of others, without paying them. Even that is ok sometimes (eg, redhat is allowed to make money selling the work of the linux kernel team), but SCO is trying to invalidate the GPL, steal ownership of the work from the people they haven't paid, and then make a profit off of it.

  2. Insult + Injury by Theovon · · Score: 4, Funny

    So, SCO insults the entire world of Free Software, and they think some stupid web site will generate some sympathy? Sheesh.

  3. Fraud? by datadriven · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Isn't that the pot calling the kettle black?

    1. Re:Fraud? by Curtman · · Score: 4, Informative
      No kidding. My favourite part of the article was this:
      • IBM's premise started with asking the court to declare Linux free of any SCO copyright claims. ... asked Judge Kimball to rule that the widgetry IBM contributed to Linux didn't infringe on any claimed SCO copyrights. ... but darned if we can remember SCO ever charging IBM with that.


      Thats about the funniest thing I've read in a while. I had a heated discussion about this exactly a month ago. SCO spews drivel about copyrights to any news media that will listen to them anymore, then they have the gall to get up there in court and claim this has nothing to do with copyrights. Mcbride, the death bell tolls for thee.
    2. Re:Fraud? by Wavicle · · Score: 4, Informative
      Indeed. In fact, from SCO's own mouthpiece:

      4. As set forth in more detail below, IBM has breached its own obligations to SCO, induced and encouraged others to breach their obligations to SCO, interfered with SCO's business, and engaged in unfair competition with SCO, including by

      a) misusing and misappropriating SCO's proprietary software;

      b) inducing, encouraging, and enabling others to misuse and misappropriate SCO's proprietary software; and

      c) incorporating (and inducing, encouraging, and enabling others to incorporate) SCO's proprietary software into open source software offerings.
      Sounds like IBM's partial summary judgement would go a long way towards dispelling this favorite crank of SCO's.

      --
      Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
      Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
  4. The least they could do by theluckyleper · · Score: 4, Funny

    Yeah, the least they could do is put some pr0n on it, or something.

    --
    Visit the Game Programming Wiki!
    1. Re:The least they could do by savagedome · · Score: 3, Funny

      Actually, even this new look would have done!

  5. Validate by savagedome · · Score: 5, Funny

    The page says "Roll mouse over timeline icons to see summary of each document". So I did and nothing. Hmmmm. Well, let's see how it validates.

    OH well.

    1. Re:Validate by cabra771 · · Score: 5, Funny

      I'm glad I'm not the only one who saw this right away. I figure IBM's attorneys can use this as evidence of SCO's incompetence.

      "Your honor, those idiots don't know their ass from a title attribute."

      --

      -my other sig is your mom
    2. Re:Validate by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's their way of saying, "And now a word from our sponsor."

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  6. Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I think SCO just likes to believe that if it could just advocate enough false statements then perhaps just by chance one of them will turn out to be true. I figure the chance of that is equivelent to one hundred monkeys tapping randomly on keyboards reconstructing all of linux source code with a covering letter to Darl telling him to politely drink a cup of Ricin. Simon.

  7. SCO is commiting Fraud by Omega037 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The only one commiting fraud here is SCO. They are creating fraudulent lawsuits for no reason but to annoy IBM. Pretty soon SCO is gonna sue for wrongful death because IBM killed their company. I mean seriously, doesn't this kind of suit start to border on defamation? Shouldn't IBM have the ability to sue SCO for damages or at least to force them to stop all lawsuits?

    1. Re:SCO is commiting Fraud by marcello_dl · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Shouldn't IBM have the ability to sue SCO for damages or at least to force them to stop all lawsuits?

      It would be ideal to have a karma system for companies who want to sue. You get some accusation points, but if the outcome of the trials determines accusations to be false, the company wouldn't get more points for a long time.
      So the damage a "bad" company can do is limited.

      I've seen a similar system used in a web site, wish I recalled the url...

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    2. Re:SCO is commiting Fraud by PhotoGuy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I believe that here in Canada, there's a lot fewer frivolous lawsuits, since it's far easier to get losing sides to pay defendant's costs. I think it's a great system; you go around suing people frivolously, trying to be a bully, you primarily end up paying their court costs in battles you lose. The US should really consider moving towards this approach.

      --
      Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
    3. Re:SCO is commiting Fraud by debrain · · Score: 3, Informative


      I believe that here in Canada, there's a lot fewer frivolous lawsuits, since it's far easier to get losing sides to pay defendant's costs.


      "The most common scale of costs is called partial indemnity, which means the successful party will receive approximately 40-50% of its legal costs from the unsuccessful party. Where one party's behaviour has been particularly egregious, the court may award a higher scale of costs, called substantial indemnity, which is in the range of approximately 70-80% of the actual costs incurred."

      The courts also have the discretion to NOT award costs, particularly if they feel that the losing claim was legitimate but failed on technicalities, or if there is substantial economic disparity. In the case of SCO, I'm fairly sure that IBM would ask for substantial indemnity.

      For more details, check this.

  8. Roll mouse over timeline icons... by YetAnotherName · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...to see a summary of each document.

    Doesn't work with either browser I have installed right now. For a company whose motto is The Power of Unix, apparently you need to run IE6 on Windows to actually use their website.

    1. Re:Roll mouse over timeline icons... by Sirch · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's not actually working for me in IE6 either, so I think they're just incompetent...

  9. It's simple. by eddy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The SCOX crackheads are frustrated. They've been instructed not to embellish their case in the media. That's frustrating for someone like Darl, whose wet dream it is to mouth off at every opportunity.

    So SCOX do what they always do, they blame everyone else of doing the things they are in fact doing themselves. For instance, they'll claim that IBM (via Groklaw) is misrepresenting the case. Of course, the only people continuously misrepresenting the case(s) are SCOX insiders and their paided shills (the Endrools and Didiots of the world).

    I mean, how many times have we read Darl and Blake talking about the eV1L lUnix in the press? Then in the filings they'll say "this isn't about linux". Or the other way around. It depends on whichever would look the best for them at that particular point.

    There'll be a reckoning for you when this is over, Darl.

    --
    Belief is the currency of delusion.
  10. Re:Money by OS24Ever · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I believe that the law firm has capped what they'll charge SCO until they win.

    So we'll see two bankruptcies in Utah one day.

    --

    As a rock-in-roll Physicist once said, No matter where you go, there you are.

  11. It's Boies Schiller by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just a minor correction. Their website, actually very well done for a law firm, can be found at www.boies-schiller.com.

    As a side note, I'm a law student and Boies Schiller is an interesting firm. They are one of the three highest paying firms in the country, with a first year starting salary of 140,000 per year as opposed to 125,000 for the majority of large law firms. They are headquartered in Armonk, NY as opposed to New York, NY.

    David Boies is the premier partner. He left another high powered firm, Cravath, to start his own firm (Cravath is strangely enough representing IBM in this case). Since then, some say that Boies Schiller has become the cult of David Boies (hyperbole). I think that both his sister and brother have high management positions in the firm.

    Regardless, from what I hear, Boies is one of the best litigators in the country. Cravath has good litigators too. This case will be well argued - and that is a good thing.

    1. Re:It's Boies Schiller by dmaxwell · · Score: 3, Informative

      Except for some press conferences at the beginning, there hasn't been hide nor hair of Boies in the courtroom. At the last hearing, one of SCO's attorneys made a garbled presentation to the judge and then fell asleep at the plaintiff's table. Since you are a law student, try perusing some of SCO and IBM's court filings. From what I understand, what SCO is doing is legal high comedy.

  12. Help me understand this by overshoot · · Score: 4, Funny
    Caldera (now called "the SCO Group") is going to sue IBM because they worked with Caldera on Linux, so that when Monterey stalled IBM and Caldera were able to move on.

    Thanks at least in part to the failure of Monterey (and the fact that Caldera helped IBM have a contingency plan that worked) Caldera was able to pick up the Santa Cruz Operation's Unix business at a discount.

    Because they got it at a discount, they're going to sue IBM for conspiring with themselves to save them acquisition costs?

    --
    Lacking <sarcasm> tags, /. substitutes moderation as "Troll."
  13. Working link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    The summary links to the main page, whose "Read story" link doesn't work. Here's the link to the printer-friendly page that *does* work:

    http://www.linuxworld.com/story/46384_p.htm

  14. SCO's IBM lawsuit page is not new by brumle · · Score: 5, Funny

    The ibmlawsuit page on SCO's website is not new, but prior to this it hadn't been updated in a while. It didn't take more than five minutes for this story to Slashdot their server. Let's wait for SCO to cry "sco.com hacked by linux users AGAIN".

  15. Re:arent the US.A judges embarrassed by now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    > why dont the judges demand real shit by now, and why dont they hurry up the whole situation? why is this taking ages and not going anywhere soon? fuck, i dont understand this at all... the judges should be really embarrassed and blushing by now.... no matter if its the one or the other way....

    U.S. judges often give a seen-by-them-to-be-losing side LOTS of room to maneuver to avoid giving valid grounds for an appeal. A successful appeal is a professional 'you screwed up' opinion, and judges don't like that on their resume'.

  16. So this is news? by melevitt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A paid shill for SCO with zero credibility writes and article full of lies, half-truths, and innuendo, Slashdot posts about it, thus generating enormous amounts of traffic to the site that posts such slop.

    Well done. I'll sure they'll keep giving voice to such trash as long as they make money on it.

  17. Re:arent the US.A judges embarrassed by now? by overshoot · · Score: 4, Informative
    now here is what i dont understand. its either the us.a legal system that is completely rotten that u can make fals claims and accusations for several years without any proof or evidence, or there has to be something to sco's case actually, and the judges arent sure either, and ibm has something to hide too, no matter if its some shit that they did to linux, or whether its just their aix/dynix/whatever code they messedup and mixed with sco stuff...

    Dismissal is when the suit is structurally flawed to begin with (e.g.: SCOX sued Novell for "Slander of Title" but didn't even allege one of the requisite elements for SoT.)

    What you're talking about would be summary judgment: there's not even enough evidence that a jury would be needed to weigh it. Since it can take a while to develop evidence through discovery, motions for summary judgment generally wait until the case is well-developed.

    IBM now is proceeding to file motions for summary judgment, based in large part on the fact that SCOX hasn't even tried to identify specific facts that would support a charge of either copyright infringement or contract violation.

    Slow, frustrating, but like Juggernaught's Carriage it gets there eventually and regardless.

    --
    Lacking <sarcasm> tags, /. substitutes moderation as "Troll."
  18. Re:Money by eddy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    >Where is SCO getting all this money to pay lawyers?

    By defrauding investors into believing SCOX had a solid case, when in fact they didn't. Lying through their teeth about "owning UNIX", lying about the pedigree of Linux, lying about everything.

    Behind closed doors they pitched this as an "investment opportunity". They probably showed the investors the Berkley Packet Filter code, maybe some standard headers (elf.h, etc). "Look! This is a slam dunk! And there are millions of lines more of that in linux!"

    Oh, they really sold this "Linux Lottery" good.

    --
    Belief is the currency of delusion.
  19. Re:I call fraud on SCO's website by davron05 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Wait, I am using ALT tags on my web page too. Applying SCO's "substantial similarity of source-codes" argument to this case, SCO is infriging my copyright!

  20. Fraud? by rnturn · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Really. So IBM develops a product and promptly decides to kill it in favor of a new product they would rather persue. Apparently, SCO believes IBM was supposed to have had a brain wipe before moving onto their next project. Didn't SCO wind up with a copy of AIX-on-Itanium that they could have run with? This is fraud? I'm thinking that SCO was looking forward to merely riding along while IBM did all the difficult work of developing Monterey into a usable product. When the cache of IBM's name was no longer associated with Monterey, SCO finds they don't have the ability to make the new OS a standard. And then Darl comes along years later to cry foul.

    And, so would it be fraud, I guess, to use the fairly common practice of Company A buying competitor B's software product and then raising the license fees to levels that effectively kill it off in favor of Company A's product. Or lifting the guts of B's (now A's) software and incorporating it into Company A's product. Then leaving Company B's former customers with a product that they are unable to use on newer releases of operating systems (as Company A has no intention of keeping it up to date) and leaving them no alternative but to use Company A's product (which they never wanted in the first place).

    This happens all the time. The only difference is that most of the time it's the end-users of the software that get the short end of the stick. In Monterey's case, there weren't any users to get screwed. Only a corporation. But corporations have lawyers, end-users don't.

    --
    CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
  21. Re:arent the US.A judges embarrassed by now? by arkanes · · Score: 4, Informative

    The OSI position paper has a good summary of the various meanings of "Unix" and why when people say that Linux comes from Unix they don't mean it in the legal, code-copying sense.

  22. SCO continues to fail... by talks_to_birds · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ...to realize they're not trying this in any court of public opinion.

    They're going down in flames in every court they're fighting a legal battle, and they somehow think public opinion is either:

    • going to change in their favor
    • going to matter at all after Lindon Utah is reduced to a smoking crater, salted, and plowed under
    just because people get to read some emails from IBM that (in SCO's opinion) kinda look bad.

    Actually, the way SCO's research has been going, they've totally misunderstood the meaning of the emails and as soon as they're made public SCO will have made complete and utter fools of themselves, once again...

    t_t_b

    --
    I'm on PJ's "enemies" list! Are you?
  23. What legal difference does it make ? by richg74 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    So the story is that SCO is going to ask the court to unseal some of the evidence to show that IBM has been naughty and committed fraud.

    IANAL, but I don't think this would have any effect on the outcome of the legal proceeding at all. Evidence is evidence, whether it's under seal or not.

    It seems to me that this is just another example of SCO's lack of real interest in the lawsuit as a legal proceeding. Their real interest seems to be flogging their story through their paid shills and credulous members of the press. The only consistent thread in their legal filings seems to be a desire to drag the case out as long as possible.

    Can you say "pump and dump"?

  24. Re:Hi... by FurrBear · · Score: 4, Informative

    You can read the latest over at Groklaw. IBM's MIT computer scientist actually exists as opposed to $CO's mystery team.

  25. Please Open Your Eyes by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Well... Judging by main stream press which is the press most people read, not LinuxWorld, AND taking into consideration that for the most part, in the main stream press SCO FUD has worked reasonably well, yes, I think some stupid web site will generate some sympathy.

    --
    "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    1. Re:Please Open Your Eyes by 0x0d0a · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And by "mainstream press", I take it that you don't mean the Wall Street Journal, which I remember reading a SCO article in. It was entitled something like "David versus Goliath", and pointed out that Linux was a huge juggernaut and SCO a very small contender with a very weak legal case. The article ended saying "this is one battle where you'll want Goliath to win."

  26. Re:arent the US.A judges embarrassed by now? by amorsen · · Score: 4, Informative
    In every history of Linux I've read including The Cathedral and the Bazaar it's been explained to me that Linux came out of Unix. That alone leads me to believe that there is some Unix source in the Linux kernel.

    You are implying that Linux was somehow built on the Unix source code, back in the really old days. This was simply not the case, and even SCO seems to stay away from saying otherwise. Linux has always been an independent development, merely inspired by Unix/POSIX. SCO has been saying that Unix sourcecode was introduced into the Linux kernel between version 2.4 and 2.6 (to improve multiprocessor scalability). This is very recent history and has nothing at all to do with the origins of Linux, more than 10 years ago.

    --
    Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
  27. The story at linuxworld by michrech · · Score: 5, Funny

    The story
    at linuxworld
    was very
    difficult
    to read
    all the
    way
    through.

    What
    were
    they
    thinking?

    --
    bork bork bork!
  28. No, it's Mr. Silver by overshoot · · Score: 4, Informative
    Silver was the BSF attorney at this week's hearing. He's supposed to be one of BSF's top guns, but his main contribution to the hearing was snores -- he visibly slept through the proceedings.

    This case will be well argued - and that is a good thing.

    Not so far -- it's turning into a textbook case in "1001 ways to ruin a case." BSF has contradicted itself not only in its filings in different courts, but even in its filings before the Utah court. It's misrepresented the orders and findings of the Magistrate Judge to the District Judge, with the Magistrate's assistants present.

    When Judge Kimball asked Mr. Frei (SCOX Counsel) to explain the contradictions between their filings in Delaware and their filings in Utah, he tried to change the subject. The Judge then pointedly demanded a responsive reply, whereupon Mr. Frei deferred to Mr. Silver as the expert on the Delaware case.

    At this point Mr. Silver woke up, tried to change the subject, and finally simply declared that there was no contradiction -- not, as you may imagine, a response calculated to reassure a United States District Judge who'd already commented on those very contradictions himself.

    --
    Lacking <sarcasm> tags, /. substitutes moderation as "Troll."
  29. Re:Money by cdrudge · · Score: 3, Informative

    Not quite. Last quarter SCO had $678,000 in SCOSource revenue ($709,000 YTD), finally putting on the books the EV1 deal as well as several others. Legal costs last quarter alone was $7.3m.

    Much of the money paid so far came from cash reserves as well as the Baystar/RBC dealings.

  30. SCO'S next lawsuit will have a pretty good chance by Crashmarik · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Because it will have to be malpractice against boies. Given the material on groklaw it looks like they will have alot of evidence

  31. Cheerleading Against SCO by tabdelgawad · · Score: 3, Interesting

    On almost every topic that's discussed on Slashdot, the comments will generally reflect opposing points of view. Even Microsoft, Real, Spammers, and the anti-Apple crowd get a hearing, notwithstanding that opinions are skewed against them 99:1.

    Except in the case of SCO. Here, the comments are 100:0. There is no discussion, only exhortations to the faithful, followed by a large chorus of 'Amen', all modded +5. Visiting the site that's supposed to provide serious legal background, Groklaw, is like visiting a very learned religious site inquiring about the existense of God: long, incomprehensible, philosophical discussions invariably concluding that God indeed exists based on incontrovertible evidence, that all doubters' motives are suspect, and that they'll probably all burn in Hell anyway.

    I'm writing this comment from frustration. Not because I want SCO to win (my homebrew server is running Linux, after all), but because I want to be informed. I want to get a somewhat balanced view generated from opposing opinions. I don't really know what to suggest. Maybe mods shouldn't be so quick to tag any vaguely pro-SCO comments as trolls? Are there even any pro-SCO comments to begin with?! Maybe a Slashdot Interview with a SCO rep?

    If SCO wins in any of its legal claims, I don't want to sit there blaming the stupidy of the US justice system and impugning the motives of the presiding judge. I want to know where such a SCO victory could come from. I can't be the only one who believes that there are at least two sides to every issue, even if they're not equally reasonable.

    OK. Enough of this 'I want' 'I don't want' 'I want' post. Let the flames begin, if this even gets noticed!

    --
    Imposing Libertarian views on everyone online since 1992.
    1. Re:Cheerleading Against SCO by ljavelin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If SCO wins in any of its legal claims, I don't want to sit there blaming the stupidy of the US justice system and impugning the motives of the presiding judge. I want to know where such a SCO victory could come from. I can't be the only one who believes that there are at least two sides to every issue, even if they're not equally reasonable.

      However, if SCO does win a legal claim, I'm sure it'll be documented and discussed.

      However, as of right now, no one seems to have enough information to conclude that any of SCO's claims are on solid ground. That's likely why the public's opinion is about 98 to 2 against SCO. If SCO had produced and released some solid evidence, then I'm sure opinion here would change significantly.

      The courts are where cases are decided, not on slashdot. If you want to read the pro-SCO comments, feel free to look at the "0" and "-1" posts, and moderate them up if you think they're fair. I will too. but not here, cause I already posted and am ineligable to moderate here and now.

    2. Re:Cheerleading Against SCO by CmdrGravy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's not through any bias on the part of ./ or Groklaw.

      First of all Groklaw mainly just reports on the court documents, you can read them and draw your conclusions just as PJ does and draws hers.

      Secondly if you can find anything, anything at all which leads you to believe SCO may have a genuine case and might win it then please post here and we can discuss it, the fact that as yet no one on ./ has managed to do this is simply evidence that such a thing is so hard to find.

      You'll notice that most reports in the media now are simply reporting what SCO said and no positive comments on SCO except for journalists like Maureen who write opinions based on a seriously flawed analysis of what ever it is that has happened they are reporting on.

      It seems like you are not classing Maureen O Gara's comments as a sensibly balanced opposite point of view yet she and her ilk are the only people painting SCO's chances in a positive light which is in itself an interesting comment on the case.

    3. Re:Cheerleading Against SCO by wrecked · · Score: 5, Insightful
      SCO has a falsifiable hypothesis: IBM copied code from its AIX operating system to Linux. However, the evidence disproves this hypothesis.

      Further, SCO has not helped itself by issuing numerous public statements that contradict their representations in court.

      As far as Groklaw goes, as a lawyer I cannot emphasize enough how innovative and unique that website is. Sure, Pamela Jones has a distinct bias, but at least you know up front where she stands so you can evaluate her opinions accordingly. The real value of that site is the sheer comprehensiveness of the public statements and filings organized in its database. A resource like that would cost someone tens (or possibly hundreds) of thousands of dollars to compile privately, and yet here it is offered to the public for free. It's like open source litigation, and I hope that Groklaw or sites like it continue in the future for other legal/political/social issues (software patents anyone?).

      I think that these stories on SCO are so one-sided because after more than a year on this story, it has been thoroughly exposed to the point of ridicule. It's sort of the way that the public responds to other types of lawsuits that seem frivolous at first glance; it's possible that a seemingly frivolous lawsuit may have have merit, but that doesn't stop the public from being highly sceptical.

      SCO's problem is that they decided (highly unwisely from a litigation viewpoint) to spin their action in the press. This is completely contrary to standard practice when it comes to lawsuits ("No comment, the matter is before the courts"). All of their ill-informed, contradictory and bombastic press quotes are coming back to haunt them, as you can be sure that IBM will use any prior inconsistent statement to cross-examine and impeach their evidence now.

  32. US legal system is #1 by jjo · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'm afraid you're much mistaken. It's only the US system of easy-to-file lawsuits and 'everyone-pays' legal fees that make the US legal system what it is today: an efficient, unbiased forum equally available to all, both rich and poor. If we adopted the foreign 'loser-pays' system, we would immediately see the little people locked out of the courthouse and mercilessly persecuted by huge corporations. Such things never happen in the US now.

    Under 'loser-pays', the RIAA could hound innocent file-sharers into submission just by imposing legal expenses that could never be reimbursed! Oops, I got confused: that's what happens under the US system now. Never mind, the US system is still the greatest thing on Earth.

    To see just how valuable and attractive the US 'easy to sue' and 'everyone pays' system is, just consider all the other countries that have adopted it: ... hmm ... I guess there aren't any. Well, all those other countries are sure missing a good thing.

  33. Judge Kimball is starting to get impatient by Animats · · Score: 5, Informative
    From this week's hearing:
    • Regarding SCO's Motion to Dismiss or Stay, Judge Kimball said, "You're not likely to get that."
    • SCO asks for more time to compare UNIX and Linux: Judge Kimball replies "One might assume that a comparison of UNIX to Linux might have been done before filing a lawsuit."
    • SCO asks for more discovery. Judge Kimball asks "Unix is yours and Linux everybody can get hold of it, right? What is it you think you need?".

    That's pretty clear. Judge Kimball is clearly telling SCO's attorneys that they need to present unambiguous evidence of copying, and soon. He's hinting to SCO that unless they come up with something good, he's going to grant IBM's summary judgement motions. He's giving them one last chance to do so.

    This is a U.S. District Court judge. He has many other cases, most of them criminal. Here's his court schedule for the week. Sentencing hearings, plea bargains, and a few civil cases. He's not there to listen to SCO's lawyers stall forever. Federal civil procedure doesn't allow that.

  34. I know! I know! by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 3, Funny

    Hmm , now given 2 companies , IBM and SCO ... and given the evidence - who do we think the dictionary definition of fraudulant bastards best describes ?

    The Bush Administration?

    Sorry, couldn't resist. Go ahead and mod me to oblivion.

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.