IBM Ordered to Show More Code to SCO
editingwhiz writes "Bob Mims of the Salt Lake Tribune has the scoop straight from the courthouse steps: 'A federal magistrate has handed a partial victory to Utah's SCO Group, ordering computer giant IBM to turn over more of its Linux operating system-related program codes. U.S. Magistrate Brooke Wells' ruling, released just minutes after Salt Lake City's federal courthouse closed Wednesday, came in the Lindon software company's contractual suit stemming from Big Blue's alleged distribution of Linux applications purportedly tainted with SCO's proprietary Unix code.' If at all possible, SCO's going to be even more insufferable now -- it has a glimmer of hope."
There's no way SCO is going to be able to analyze all this code before they go bankrupt.
... because as fishing trips go, there's one hell of an expedition being organised by SCO.
PS : Didn't SCO claim that they had print outs of all the copied code, that they could show anyone who signed an NDA? Why do they need to search any more of IBM's codebase.
Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
How can you turn over "even more" of something that's already open sourced?
who's going to examine the code? SCO doesn't have any developers left, do they?
Doesn't SCO know about kernel.org?
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
This is just another meaningless delay of the case. Such things are actually a victory for IBM. IBM can afford to have this drag on forever. SCO's days are numbered.
I'm a big tall mofo.
Haven't read the article yet, so I'm sure this will be cleared up in a minute when I do, but ... Turn over it's linux-related code? Isn't that what EVERYONE who distributes linux does?
Couldn't SCO have downloaded it from one of the many mirrors by now?
SCO's stock price is going up
Zagreus sits inside your head, Zagreus lives among the dead, Zagreus sees you in your bed and eats you in your sleep.
To quote Groklaw:
Finally, it has arrived, Judge Brooke Wells' Order on SCO's Motion Re Discovery. It's annoying because she enables more delay, but other than that it is a pretty normal discovery order. SCO doesn't get access to CMVC, they do get more code and they get not all programmers' notes but some. She postpones any decision on production of documents from top managment. Keep in mind, she isn't the trier of fact. That is Judge Kimball. She is the Magistrate, so it's not her job to decide who is right or wrong. Her job is simply to make sure everybody's cards are on the table.
IANAL, far from, actually, but shouldn't it be the other way around? Shouldn't SCO be releasing code to an independent party to determine if its copyright has been breeched? Or will they keep requesting more code and fish around for something they can 'try to claim' is a copyright violation?
Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
Has SCO been ordered to show any code of theirs that they claim has been infringed upon?
So IBM turns over some code, and SCO says "yep, all of that is an infringement, pay up!" How do we know otherwise?
-kidlinux.
Uhh Darl, you're fifteen minutes are up.
No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
Paying them off would admit that SCO's got a case. By fighting them (which they definitely have the resources to do), they're sticking up for the entire community. Way to go IBM!
I store my recipes online (the way nature intended)
So is it time to jump to BSD yet?? Just kidding..
However those headless macs do look kinda nice for those of us that prefer/require small foot print computing.
I don't think this means much, except that SCO buys themselves a little respite from the inevitable.
So Long and Thanks for all the Fish.
There's no place like 127.0.0.1
MyBlog
I'd pipe the code into a *.doc file and make the font about 48ish tahoma script.
Then print it on standard paper.
Hey, SCO, you might wanna bring a truck.
I'd rather you do it wrong, than for me to have to do it at all.
Seemed normal and
Caught in
Opensource
Plain English translation: Consider the source.
Seriously, this was reported in the Salt Lake Tribune? Anyway, enough preamble. This isn't a 'victory' for SCO, as reported. This is the judge partially granting a request for more discovery. Which means that SCO gets more delay, hence the 'victory' part.
Anything more is just fluff.
sPh
Make sure to print the code in binary representation. Hey, the printing will denude all the forests of the western hemisphere, but it is worth it to stick it to ol' SCO.
Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
This starts to look very suspicious to me. I think I will wait few months at most and demand my money back if SCO don't prove their case. I'm glad that I bought and sold SCOX on exactly optimal time, or otherwise I would feel kind of stupid for buying all of those licenses to run 140 Debian boxen in my lab, and 60 Red Hat desktops in the library. Has anyone tried to return the license yet?
Sincerely,
Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
"Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
Well, as much as this annoys me, Judge Wells is right. SCO gets to look at still more code, but when they still don't find anything, SCO will have nothing left to say. There's nothing there there, and this order ought to establish that fact once and for all.
SCO has already failed to produce any real evidence of Copyright code in Linux. Nothing produced by SCO from any of this evidence can change that. Everyone using Linux is safe.
This request is to support SCO's weird derivative tale that despite AT&T contracts saying IBM was free to develop code, Novell waiving the rights, and testimony from various people that IBM is bound by contract such that any code that touches SCO code is still controlled by SCO.
But SCO is "winning" for as long as this drags on and Linux appears (to the man in the street) more and more mired in confusion and controversy. Very few of us believe SCO really intends to "win" - they just want to inflict as much damage as possible as they go down, and this gives them more time and leverage to do it.
If they feed this lame wolf - others might be tempted to take a similar route of blackmailing. Fighting SCOX is an effective way of securing your fort from future attacks.
No Sig for you.!
1. Sue someone for using your code.
2. Have the judge force them to turn their proprietary code over to you.
3. Copy their code into your programs.
4. PROFIT!
The man who trades freedom for security does not deserve nor will he ever receive either. - Benjamin Franklin
You can find a transcript of the order here on IP-Wars.net. Groklaw has an article about the ruling.
I think the order is outrageous personally. IBM's being ordered to produce all versions of AIX and Dynix along with notes, whitepapers, and all that fun stuff. This is going to be a mountain of code and documents considering that AIX is 20 years old.
--
Join the Pyramid - Free Mini Mac
infested with jello like fishes no melotron wishes
lol - I wasn't sure if I should mod you funny or insightful for that post. So I left it up to those with mods to burn.
Why do these judges just prolong this sort of pain, SCO hasnt found anything and they wont BE finding anything.
I suppose it's just one last ride for the stock ( up nearly a dollar ( more than 25% of it's value) today) so those guys can sell off their shares before they get delisted.
Anyone keeping track of their legal fund ? When does it run out ? We seriously need some sort of online counter to keep track out how many days worth of operating expenses those people have left so we can slowly watch their demise.
I suppose all good things take patience, right?
so what exactly does SCO do when IBM produces a single hard copy of those 2 billion lines of code? That's got to be around 40 million pages!
Isn't all of the linux kernel code already available?
LK
"Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
Ok i think we need to get this judge a drug test.. In the past two years Sco's fishing expedition has yeilded not one, 100% solid claim. And with another 1.1 billion lines of sco will have all of ibm's code.
This gives new meaning to "ALL your Code Belong To us" They have essentail "legally" aquired IBM's source code so in turn unless ibm has an inkling that sco is infringling on it's code, they can no steal from ibm. I guess they Hooked a big one!
IBM has to turn over every revision of their AIX and Dynx code, not their Linux code. SCO has yet to show how they're related, but they obviously fooled the judge.
Thank you.
An Indian-American Hindu committed to non-violent thought/speech/action alarmed by the global explosion of radical Islam
Now prove that you're not, and give them your trade secrets in the process.
"It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
but has SCO been ordered to turn over all of it's source code to the court yet? If not, why not?
Reject Fear - Embrace Hope
Anybody else hear the voice of Banky Edwards (Jason Lee) in Mallrats/Chasing Amy saying "Oh come ON!!???"
"One has to wonder what the folks who decided this course of action for SCO were smoking. :)"
Given that the overwhelming majority of people accuse them of crack via the crack pipe, I am going to go out on a limb and guess crystal meth.
Could someone claim that Microsoft illegially used their code... and have a court require Microsoft to reveal the code?
Hmm... any takers?
This could be fun. Lets Open Source Windows!
Why would SCO need to analyse IBM's code, if the reason for the lawsuit is in the first place because SCO knows IBM infringed on SCO's code?
I mean, in order to know there is infringement, you'd have to have already figured out what part of the code was "stolen", right?
The magistrate (who is presiding over pre-trial discovery, not the trial, where a judge will be in charge) noted that the contract between SCO and IBM may well give SCO more rights to the code than copyright law does. Thus IBM might be liable to SCO for putting code in Linux that doesn't violate any copyright SCO may have. IOW, Linux would be OK, IBM would not.
Another theory advanced by SCO that the magistrate did not dismiss out of hand is the possibility that internal IBM AIX and Dynix code changes may show a path between SCO code and Linux. IBM has been contending that if a bare comparison between Linux and SCO code shows no obvious copying, anything IBM did internally is irrelevant.
The bizarre bit is a footnote paying tribute to New York Giants football player Mel Hein that (to mix sports metaphors) comes from way out in left field. It's also ungrammatical ("He played 15 seasons going 60 minutes a game without nearly any rest"), which I'm definitely not accustomed to seeing in Federal court orders.
For SCO, this is both a good thing and a bad thing.
The good news is that maybe, perhaps, they'll be able to find something somewhere in a line of code and go "ah-ha! We've caught you!"
There's just one problem: if there was something to catch, SCO would have used it by now.
Is the code in Linux? So far, SCO's been unable to show any proof, and what "proof" they've tried to bring in (like "malloc.c" code) has been proven so wrong that they've given up trying to convince the public.
Is it in AIX (other than what IBM paid for)? Again, so far SCO's been unable to find anything to prove their case.
So I'd say that the odds of them finding something is pretty low. And even if they find a case of a programmer going "Hey, here's this code from AIX I can put into Linux", you'll see a note right afterwards saying "No, that's not our code - and now that you're tainted, you can't work on Linux." Or some other legal dealie that IBM's dreamed up. (My evidence? Remember: SCO has been unable to prove any of their code is in Linux without their consent, so evidently it never made it in.)
So what's the downside of this ruling? Basically, the Magistrate of this case (this judge, as Groklaw mentions, is not the ruling just, just a procedural judge or something like that) is giving SCO more rope to hang itself with. SCO has been saying "We could prove our case if only those nasty old lying IBM guys would give us what we want."
So now the Magistrate is saying "OK, I call your bluff. IBM, turn over the stuff and let's see what we find out."
If SCO can't find "evidence", then they're pretty much out of appeals (though I'm sure they'll think of something.) But even so, this is more money they're spending, and every day the case drags on without a hope of settlement is another day they pay their lawyers more. And sooner or later, Mr. Boies is going to have to start weighing the odds of paying for the case out of his own pocket versus the potential reward.
For now, I'll keep the SCO case far on my back burner. Come back in another six months or so before anything "interesting" happens.
Of course, this is just my opinion. I could be wrong.
52 Weeks, 52 Religions with John Hummel
The code ordered to be handed over was AIX, not Linux. I really don't give a crap whether SCO wins on this, because I don't use it, and, since it is commerical and closed-source, if it has copied code, IBM should be punished for it.
... SCO requests all sorts of code to go digging through. If I were IBM, I'd hand them every single line of code they've ever developed. Here you go, have fun, we'll see you in a few years when you've sorted it all out.
Considering SCO doesn't really seem to be doing much aside from churning out lawsuits, they'll blow through what remains of their cash reserves before they actually get to the end of all the code.
Of course they'd probably come back and cry foul saying they couldn't be expected to have the resources to analyze that much information and that the court should order IBM to do the analysis itself. This of course leaves the door open to appeals when IBM finds nothing
"Of course they wouldn't find it! They're the ones looking for it! What do you mean we requested they do the work? Oh, hey! What's that shiney thing over there?" *runs out the door*
If the Bushies want to do something about abusive litigation why don't they start with this case?
That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
after all, they have tons of money and if they settle, it will only cause harm to their competitors as they don't have tons of money
And this is different than a protection racket how?
You pay them and they never go away. They get stronger and start squeezing others. I'd rather see them wither and die. It's well known how the problem grows. Ever been to Yellowstone National Park. Why do you think there are "don't feed the bears" signs everywhere?
If you feed the bears, they simply become a big problem.
Please don't advise feeding the bears and hope they go away.
The truth shall set you free!
No, I think
This has vast implications..not. Probably not much
The tooth fairy is their last hope.
I dont think darl mcbride's personal accountant will agree it was a bad move (pump + dump)
..but IBM (you know, the one on trial?) has all the code they licenced from SCO. I'm sure they've did lots of comparisons and know SCO is smoking crack. I'm sure they'll let us, the courts and the world know in due time.
Kjella
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
The argument from SCO is that they collaborated with IBM to provide various UNIX solutions (Dynix etc...) . Their argument is that any source code that was added to Dynix shouldn't be in the Linux kernel. Going by the UNIX time line, the last time anything was transferred from SCO to AIX was in 1992-1993.
Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
SCO succeeded in delaying even more by requesting more code. The judge granted some, but not all, of what SCO wanted -- e.g. they wanted every revision from IBM's AIX and Dynix source revision control system along with all programmers notes, but instead just got more code and some notes. While this is in part a "victory" for SCO as their request was partially granted, the judge noted that she was doing this so as to prevent any further complaints that IBM has not supplied enough code. In other words, this is the end of the line as far as code discovery goes.
Groklaw of course has more.
The enemies of Democracy are
Isn't SCO just asking for IBM to Open the Source for SCO to chew on? If all the OS source were Open Source, this process would be a 1-day grep affair.
--
make install -not war
This is the best news that scox's primary benefactor could hope for.
This ruling will insure endless delays. Which means the legal cloud over linux will remain for years to come. All the while "independant" tech analysts like Yankee Group will be cranking out articles about the overwhelming legal risks inherent in F/OSS.
The scox-scam is the one of the best investments msft has ever made. $50MM for all that FUD is one hullva bargin.
This is the first mention of SCO I've seen this year, I guess the whole thing is approaching failure for SCO. The fact that it's not seen as newsworthy for the most part demonstrates this.
Bye bye SCO is all I can say, they could have made a packet selling a decent enterprise Linux but they preferred the easy route to raising share price.
How long do we wait? Till hell freezes over? or just until the heat death of the multiverse?
There is not nearly enough love in the world, but there is far too much trust.
No, it means that they have gained a little extra delay.
IBM has lost nothing except a little time and effort producing this extra code for them.
Given that they already all the code for the current versions of AIX and don't seem to have found anything in that it's not too likely they find anything in all the code which didn't make it into AIX.
Even if they do find what they consider to be illegal code they will still have to prove that the contract does not allow IBM to use work it has created it's self however it likes.
SCO is going to lose, it's just a matter of time.
You might want to check out some of Mims' previous reports on this topic. I can't recall the first few articles he wrote on the topic, but over at least the last year I would say that his reporting has been well-researched, fair, and not at all flattering to SCO. He deserves a little slack.
I sometimes wonder if everyone else lives in a world where 1 is 0 and up is down.
SCO wants to see more, because they are clutching at straws, yes you can say "IBM ordered to" but this is probably the judge giving SCO one last shot before he brings our the red hot castrating irons.
It is wrong to setup a voluntary "I pledge to rape an SCO lawyer if they win" campaign? Then we can screw them instead of them screwing everyone else.
Something to meditate on as you play gta:sa
#hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com
it was a typo, and the header file was identified by slashcode as a html tag. i should probably use preview.
/. being anal about posting twice in two minutes, i thought sod it - people will understand what i mean.
i would have replied to myself, but due to
i meant #include (stdlib)
im not sure if stdlib is correct for c, ive never ever written anything in c.
OMG SEE?! IBM stole a line of code!
(granted, the code is probably all C not C++, but you heard what I meant!)
1. Why don't they show where the hell Linux is violating anything, as they haven't yet?
Their theory appears to be that although they apparently can't find any code they own in Linux IBM has access to that code and may have used code a bit like it in their AIX which was then altered again and found it's way into Linux.
2. Why do they need to see more of IBM's code if they knew it was violating? Doesn't that go against logic that if they knew IBM's code was violating their IP that they wouldn't need IBM to point it out for them?
Despite everything they may have said in the Media about MIT deep divers and billions of lines of infringing code they don't actually have any proof at all except for IBM press releases where they say they are going to help improve Linux. The theory seems to be that IBM is incapable of developing improvements to Linx without using SCO's magical code.
As you say SCO doesn't actually own any of this code in the first place and simply has the power to manage the licences which are ultimately held by Novell, the fact that SCO are still paying something like 90% of the money they get from their licenee's back to Novell is a good indication that regardless of the image they present in the media this is actually the case.
The case SCO is fighting with Novell is about who actually owns the licence and if Novell win that then the IBM case will probably collapse anyway. Since SCO's evidence in that case relies on a deeply illogical reading of the various contracts between themselves and Novell I think Novell should easily win.
SCO is too cheap to buy a judge.
..And legal fees.
What little money they have left is better spent on "incentives" to the SCO executives.
There is not nearly enough love in the world, but there is far too much trust.
The contract isn't between SCO and IBM. It's between AT+T and IBM, and everyone at AT+T gave a deposition that says IBM gets to keep it's own code. That's in addition to the side letter AT+T sent to IBM that says IBM keeps it's own code, and the @echo newsletter that says the exact same thing.
As for SCO's theory of copyright, well, SCO would have to own the copyright first (it doesn't, Novell does). Then, they'd have to find their so-called path, which doesn't exist. If it did, they'd have found it in the 272 versions of AIX that IBM already handed over, and would have to have disclosed it by now. Should they manage to conjure one up with their illegal fishing expedition, they'd still have to slip that completely unsupported by case law copyright theory of theirs past Judge Kimball, which isn't likely.
If I were IBM, I'd file a motion to kick Darl in the nuts. Chances are this judge would grant it just to avoid the inevitable "I didn't get to kick Darl in the nuts, therefore the trial is invalid" appeal. Honestly, how much anal probing does SCO get to do before the judge can decide that their case is composed completely of crap?
And in some back room, SCO's lawyers are rolling in the dough. "Another delay - sure..." Hey, as long as SCO pays the bills, the lawyers will do just about anything.
It is not our abilities that show what we truly are... it is our choices.
They're really only sure in the press. In court, where facts are actually analyzed for truth, the story is a lot different...
The theory they're running with is that the code was inserted into AIX/Dynix a long time ago, and eventually worked its way into Linux, but over many revisions in the interim changed so that it no longer looks like the original SysV code, but still is the original SysV code from a copyright standpoint. That's why they can't find it in Linux, because it looks different now.
In reality, as opposed to "Darl Land", they don't have a leg to stand on and they know it. This is all just stall tactics and more attempts to get in the press with "SCO victories" to keep their stock from completely tanking while all the execs sell off their shares
To prove their assinine theory. They need to be able to show the original insertion of SysV code, and all the subsequent changes to it before it went into Linux so that they can prove that the current Linux code, which looks nothing like the SysV code, is actually the SysV code.
Which is of course completely at odds with their public statements regarding code in Linux. Their "experts" -- who they have failed to produce in court -- went over Linux and found tons of blatant infringements according to Darl. Apparently, what you say to the press can be a complete lie and so long as you don't reproduce that lie in court you're okay. Very few of their public statements about the evidence they have made it into their court briefs. Odd, that.
IBM has been saying this repeatedly. They've been basically mocking SCO's inability to actually find anything incriminating, and their failure under court order to show what code in Linux is actually infringing.
As to the Judge -- the issue isn't actually at trial yet, as discovery is still ongoing (and going and going and going...). They have been ordered to show infringing code, and SCO's response was "we can't until we see all IBM code, ever". Judge Kimball is not completely unaware of what B.S. this is, and has noted as much, but not really done anything about it. The going theory at Groklaw is that she is being judicious, and giving SCO as much rope as they need to hang themself so that any decision she makes is going to be rock-solid on appeal.
So far all that is going on is pre-trial discovery. Eventually (assuming SCO still has money to litigate with) these issues are going to be evaluated and if SCO isn't doing a lot better in the actual evidence department, they're going to get screwed.
But not really. This whole time regularly scheduled (so the SEC doesn't think they're timed) sell-offs by the execs have been occuring, and with SCO's bloated price they're making a killing off all the FUD and delays. When the case collapses -- and it will, there's no real doubt anymore -- Darl and friends will have already made their millions, and it is the rest of SCO that will suffer as the remaining employees are layed off and the assets liquidated. If history is any indication, Darl will quit just before this happens and sue what remains of SCO to grab another hunk off the carcass.
And then some other moron will give him a job.
The enemies of Democracy are
Where are these people from, Mars? Nope... Utah.
.: 2+2 = PI SQRT(1+N)
Well, no, since that's not how the court system works. What you've described is called arbitration, and can be used if both sides are amenable.
-Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat
Fair enough. Mims isn't a SCO drone most of the time. But if this is what SCO is considering to be a victory these days, they are in for a rough ride.
The good news for linux is that the collective memory will be about 6 months after sco dies, and linux will be free of sco's fud for generations to come.
This is totally insecure, but very convenient.
...if people used the legal system to resolve actual problems instead of as an obstacle course? The SCO suit seems to be calculated to try and smear Linux rather than solve any real issues. The fact that SCO won't reveal what they claim to have as "proof" stands out in my mind as nothing but pure dishonesty.
-"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
To IBM's summary judgment requests from a month or two ago?
Still being processed? Delayed pending SCO's response to its new discovery?
Irritable, left-wing and possibly humorous bumper stickers and t-shirts
Does SCO have any code to show?
My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.
What is amazing is that we let these morons run the world. What we should do is round them up, put them in a secret base made out of a hollowed-out extinct volcano and then bomb the bastards. Or zap them with a space-borne laser made from diamonds.
oooh! who's a grammer nazi.
I bet you wear womens underwear, dont you?
... except that, with the additional delays, there are fewer reasons not to let the other cases go forward (RedHat Lanham Act claims, etc.).
oops...
Some days I get the sinking feeling Orwell was an optimist.
Why doesn't IBM invoke a "thousand monkeys with typewriters" program to feed SCO all the code they could ever hope for. It is clear by now that SCO doesn't care about the lawsuit beyond what it takes to feed their code fetish. I hear Darl really gets off on unions in C..."I can put into you what I want, baby! Oh, yeah!"
-- Microsoft is the most expensive commodity operating system and office suite vendor in the marketplace.
Dynix comes from Sequent computers which was purchased by IBM in 1996. Dynix forked from BSD around 1984. AFAIK IBM killed all Sequent and NUMA-Q 3 years ago. But AIX is Mach based with a bunch of features from different BSDs thrown in over the years.
And 2 BILLION lines of code? Who the hell are these people? Dr. Evil?
The contract isn't between SCO and IBM. It's between AT+T and IBM
Well, to be a bit more accurate, the original contract was between AT&T and IBM, and SCO obtained rights under that contract from AT&T (precisely what rights are one of the numerous subjects of dispute in the lawsuit).
The depositions from AT&T people will likely be considered by the judge in determining the meaning of the relevant contract provisions, barring the unlikely event that the judge finds the contractual wording is so plain on its face that no additional evidence is needed regarding interpretation.
- delays ruling on lanham act violations.
- allows scox's primary benefactor to keep a legal cloud over linux.
- Scox's CEO keeps getting $100K/month.
- sent scox already insanely high stock price up 25%.
- keeps scox's "linux lottery" promise alive for longer.
---
the reason they are so desperate for more is because they have found nothing to support their claim yet.
---
They aren't looking, never have. This is all discovery for the sake of delay.
Scox doesn't expect to win the case. In fact scox doesn't expect the case to even go to trial.
You have to understand how the scam works.
Didn't any rights transfered from AT&T go to Novell? Then Novell made arangements whith SCO concerning new business / customers (which is where the debate over exactly what rights were transfered to SCO). Caldera (who soon afterwards renamed themselves The SCO Group) purchased a majority of what was SCO, leaving what was left to become it's own entity under the Tarentella name.
Please correct me if I've made a mistake. But otherwise, it seems that there are quit a few steps between AT&T and the SCO involved in court.
They are not even looking. They never have. This case will never go to trial, that's not the idea.
Scox execs are making $100K a month. Scox's stock price is *way* up. There is a legal cloud over linux. That is what the case is about.
The case will either be completly changed (scox already did this once) and/or the case will be dismissed before it goes to trial - scox does this all the time - look at the DCX case.
What I don't understand is what they are going to do with this. Does SCO have and programmers left? Or any money to pay contractors? Who is going to do the analysis?
Even at standard fonts. The article states "approximately 2 billion lines of code".
Do the math.
(Not that I don't appreciate your humour).
But SCO is "winning" for as long as this drags on and Linux appears (to the man in the street) more and more mired in confusion...
IBM can drag this out to the end of time, Sun already claims to indemnify their customers, Red Hat is still selling RHEL--in short, no one give a rat's ass about SCO. Anyone who does is either working for SCO or retarded. That's it.
-- Microsoft is the most expensive commodity operating system and office suite vendor in the marketplace.
I find it odd that SCO can demand all this code and continue with this law suite against IBM, while the Novell case still isn't finished. It would be really embarassing, if after all the money they have spent, it was shown that they never fully owned UNIX. Just think of the law suites SCO would have to face if Novell showed that they still owned the UNIX copywrites, especially with IBM's backing for Novell.
You're correct. I just wanted to keep things very simple. Putting it yet another way: SCO is at the end of a chain that begins with AT&T.
"...So this doesn't really harm Linux at all...."
I think there is some harm to FOSS. Case in point: At work (a large corporation) we have, of course, MS all over the office space but IBM AIX workstations too (among others). All applications used on clients must be approved.
Some FOSS has made its way into the company and can be used; however, now a warning is displayed that there may be risk of legal litigation if the user builds with these tools with a link to information from the legal department that no one will bother to read. It doesn't stop me one bit of course. But I could see a PHB heeding that warning and selecting MS tools instead.
This will end, either because SCO runs out of money, or IBM wins the case outright. Then, IBM sues SCO for what remains of their assets. Given the amount of money IBM has spent already, there is no way that SCO will be able to pay the damages that will be awarded to IBM.
Rather then forcing SCO into bankruptcy,IBM purchases SCO for pennies on the dollar. IBM now owns all licenses for unix, which given IBM's current stance means that unix is now effectively open source. The software karma is now balanced.
Is this going to be another year of "nothing" Darl?
i dont feel its necessary to dot my i's and cross my t's on slashdot.
Forgive my ignorance, but can someone tell me what exactly SCO wants that they can't get from kernel.org?
As of 2.30 pm the stock was at about $4.20 - up from $3.53 the previous day. That is an 11 million dollar increase in market cap - which effectively means the market thinks the ruling is worth 11 million to SCO. I can't say that I see what about the ruling is worth quite that much. Maybe the way to think about it is that this is a 3 billion dollar lottery - and the price of the ticket just went from 62 million to 73 million.
... it is a victory for SCO, because it's
A) irrelevant to the case
B) something they asked for
C) onerous for IBM to produce, and
D) something IBM didn't want to give them (because it's irrelevant to the case, as well as onerous to produce.)
Yes, we all know that SCO is going to use this as a delay. First, it will take IBM a long time to produce it, and as soon as IBM hands it over, SCO's gonna request *more* time, because it's too much for them go through in the remaining discovery period.
It's all in the rote objection quote.
"Once again by requiring this, the court seeks to circumvent the rote objection by SCO alleging that they did not get enough information."
It's to stop SCO from whining that they haven't seen enough of the code to prove it's baseless allegations. I see this as less of a victory for SCO and more of a sign that judicial patience for these fishing trips is wearing thin.
OK. Fair enough. But I would suggest that trying to simply the chain glosses over some very important details. And its those details that suggest that SCO doesn't have the rights they're claiming to have. Put another way, your simplification may imply a clear-cut case that isn't actually so clear-cut.
I remember an interview last year where Darl McBride was asked about Novell's claims. Darl ended up asserting that Caldera (SCO Group) had purchased what they thought they purchased - after all, they're not idiots. I'm sure Jack thought the same thing about his bag of magic beans. But the documentation presented by Novell seems to throw considerable question as to what exactly SCO's holdings are. As such, I'm not expecting SCO's portfolio to be leading to the fell of any giants and associated acquisition a fortune.
I posed this question to the reporter that wrote the article and this is all I got back in reply:
.
I don't write the headlines.
We'll leave it at that . .
Bob Mims
The Salt Lake Tribune
voice: 801-257-8720
fax: 801-257-8525
e-mail: bmims@sltrib.com
SCO is ordered to show more ass to the Linux Market Share
I only came here to do two things; kick some ass, and drink some beer...looks like we're almost out of beer.
Around 6 months ago, IBM filed their motion for summary judgement which all /.'rs hailed as the end of the lawsuit. I guess it was not granted as this continues....
I am tired of the surmise. Everybody has an opinion but nobody knows the facts. *sigh* Guess I am just being optimistic these days. Until there is some sort of final determination in this case I see more wishful thinking on these forums than illumination.
And in the event SCO prevails... I cannot wait to see the postings on how the legal system sucks since SCO clearly never had a case from the beginning - et cetera.
Lets just chill until this farce is COMPLETELY over - then dissect it all you want.
It seems strange that A company can sue for more damages than it is worth.
Crisis is the rule, not the exception.
More like paying them off would say that it's too difficult and espensive for IBM to prove their case and it would be cheaper to make this go away with the standard sealed nondisclosure agreement, etc, etc, etc. What IBM realises, and the beancounters haven't overruled them on this, is that continuing the fight will get all its IP declared clean and sanitary, forestalling any future attempts by SCO to pick their pockets clean.
Understanding the scope of the problem is the first step on the path to true panic.
Solaris and Irix come from Unix too. Is IBM just the target because of their wealth or contribution to Linux or both?
Click here or here.
Okay so this is really offtopic...
"I mean, in order to know there is infringement, you'd have to have already figured out what part of the code was "stolen", right?"
Not according to the same logic that, you can be 100% sure there are WMDs Iraq, just have zero idea of where they are - which apparently was a good enough argument to invade Iraq, so why can't it be used to rob all those linux-source-code-copying-terrorists?
Lordy! A detail man, eh? :)
To be quite clear, I am not trying to imply anything about the strength or weakness of any part of SCO's case. If you look at previous comments I've made on SCO stories, I think you'll find they are anything but complimentary about SCO's case.
Of course, what you and I think about SCO's case "doesn't mean s**t to a tree," in the immortal words of Grace Slick.
SCO has a case (I know you don't want to hear that but it is true).
Hmm... so either you're an insider with extra information, or you're going solely off of SCO press releases, or you're lying (possibly in combination with option 1 or 2), because in court where it matters they have yet to show anything resembling a case.
That's the whole reason they keep asking for more discovery, you know. They claim there is substantial infringement in Linux. The judge ordered them to show exactly what infringement they were claiming, and SCO's response was that they couldn't. That's why they are fishing -- to try to find a link between SysV code and Linux code through AIX. They don't have one yet. They have absolutely no proof that infringement occured (they were ordered by the court to show any they had, and they showed none), and are hoping that they might find some by digging through yet more AIX code. Let me give you a hint: if they can't find any connection yet, another few interim versions of AIX aren't going to help.
The only question is whether SCO is going to actually allow this to reach a verdict (which they will lose), or run out of money and have to give up their case (swearing the whole way that they had a case).
The enemies of Democracy are
Devil's in them thar details. ;)
Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
I want to thank Slashdot, and the Academy, for the chance to make a triple entendre, in the Subject alone. For my next trick, I will attempt to score exactly 0 modpoints, balancing 4 points each of "Insightful" and "Troll" while Funnily Flamebaiting. Should be Interesting, though Offtopic.
--
make install -not war
Any victories that SCO sees are going to take place in Utah courts. Utah is the most conservative and rigid state in the nation, and it is very plausible that SCO will get some breaks there. If the final rulings favor SCO, IBM will of course appeal to a higher court (which will pull even more money from SCO's dwindling coffers).
Bottom line: don't worry about anything that happens in the Utah federal court, because their rulings will likely be overturned in an appeal.
Operating system-related program codes ... dammit, where have I heard that phrase before ... or something similar ... it's on the tip of my tongue.
Oh yes.
Ben "You have your mind on computers, it seems."
As far as JFS, EVMS, etc. are concerned, they won't find a damn thing. The AIX LVM code is so tightly integrated into AIX that the EVMS developers hardly looked at anything beyond the headers, and as for JFS, the version in Linux is actually derived from OS/2. The proof of that is in the source where they mention OS/2 support (i.e. case-insensitive filename operation), whereas AIX is maybe mentioned once or twice as a flag in a bitfield, but that's it.
Anyone who questions how tightly integrated the AIX LVM is should go check out the trace tools on any recent version.
I can't speak to the Dynix code, but I doubt the story would be much different. Operating systems components are typically not very "portable" between unrelated systems without major modifications.
First, SCOG's lawyers will have a hell of a time sifting through this code, and then when they do finally find whatever pieces were allegedly copied; the truth about how sadly mistaken they are will come out, and just maybe this horrible waste of time and money will end.
Only the most incompetent companies are not using Linux at this moment in that with the excuse of "legal problems".
By know it is absolutely and completely clear that this is a scam, no company worth its salt is giving a chance in a frozen hell to SCO winning this....
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
I just don't understand this IBM-cheerleading which /. is so full of. So the BigCo is being sued by SmallCo, and we don't like SmallCo's attitude.
Is that world that black-and-white, that we forget everything that BigCo has done? Like, using its patents to kill off competitors, for example?
Okay, IBM was a sucker to MS, way back, but that does not make IBM the underdog. Are you running IBM-Linux? No, nor am I. They'll sell you a flavour of Linux, if you decide you want RedHat or SuSE. They don't really care - you're unlikely to want AIX, so RedHat/SuSE is cheaper for IBM to resell than Windows is. Most of their customers get Windows, though. Reselling 3rd-party Linux distro's is just a (slightly) cheaper way for IBM to sell tin.
What is this compulsion among slashdot that IBM actually contribute anything useful to Linux?
Maybe part of it is the confusion about what "Linux" is, and part of that, is the refusal to accept there is more GNU code than Linux code in a typical distribution. Again, the black-and-white, "Linus is Good, RMS is on an ego trip" attitude.
Go for it - run Linux, without gnu's ls. Install IBM-Linux onto your kit, once it's available.
It's not got to the "emperor has no clothes" stage yet, but it's not far off, is it?
IBM shifts tin; they've presumably contributed to Windows code - at least in feedback, if not in actual lines of C, just as they have with Linux, and lots of surrounding projects. So what?
They are not the underdog, they're just another hardware manufacturer. I don't get it.
PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE ENLIGHTEN ME WHAT IBM HAVE DONE FOR "LINUX" (however you define that) MORE THAN ANYONE ELSE.
I can't see this as a "community" thing any more - I used to, but the more it goes on, it's just some contract deal between IBM and USL-or-whoever-they-signed-the-paperwork-with (I forget). Nothing to see here. Move along.
Author, Shell Scripting : Expert Re
IBM's Linux related code has already been released to SCO, and anyone else that wants to look at it. It's beholden on SCO to show that code which they purchased the copyright to had that code copyrighted (and that they own the copyright) before it was released as part of Linux.
Basically the Magistrate denied certain aspects of SCO's requests and granted the rest mostly in order to forestall SCO's being able to further claim (baselessly so far) that they need more information to find infringing code and thus further delay the case.
IIRC the Judge actually said that in the order.
Also Groklaw reminds us that this Judge is not the trial judge and therefore can not hand SCO any sort of "win".
The Salt Lake City article is mostly hype. I wouldn't be surprised to find the author works for SCO...or his wife does...
Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
IBM has done a fair amount for the open source community as a whole, which is more than just Linux.
/nm
There's eclipse, which was originally developed by IBM, and which has a sizeable team of IBM developers who work on it. There are other IBM development teams across the world that work directly on Linux. There's the pledge from IBM to not make any patent attacks against Linux. There's the 500 patents that were donated last week for open source use.
ObDisclaimer: I'm an IBMer in the Software Group, although I don't work on anything that's open source, and none of my patents are included in the 500 that were released.
...the US justice system is a cluster fsck.
/.ers NOT see
Consider: The MSFT vs US DoJ anti-monopoly
case was dragged on by MSFT until a new AG
and different political party took power --
then MSFT (apparently) wrote their own
penalty for their misdeeds.
Consider: MSFT has been using SCO Group as a
proxy to fend off advances in market share and
"hearts and minds" from the F/OSS crowd. SCO
doesn't have a case (that they can prove), so
they plead with the courts for more time and
more code to try and "pull a rabbit out of
their hat". While I have no doubt (IANAL)
that IBM can successfully and conclusively
fight SCO Group's legal gambits, the onus of
FUD delays wider adoption of F/OSS, which gives
MSFT more breathing room. (Any
a connection between SCO's lame attempts to
cripple F/OSS, MSFT's blatent IP threats against
GNU/linux, and the long delay in the EU's final
decision AGAINST software patents?)
The axiom that "in America, you are innocent
until proven guilty" may have been true at
some point, but not these days. The **AA now
uses the Feds (DoJ) AND the courts to go after
proported file-sharers. Risk a long, drawn out
court case that bleeds your resources dry, or
pony up to an admission of guilt in trade for
reduced charges?
The American judicial system has completely
suborned by the rich and powerful, who even
if the case they present is spurious, can evoke
submission of the innocent by dragging out their
case in court. MSFT has used this tactic on
numerous occasions in court, dragging the trial
out until the outcome is moot (eg. MSFT vs Sun).
That said, one of the states most deeply involved
in corporate rights over the peoples' rights has
been Utah (and in the guise of (R) Senator Hatch.
IMHO, a corporate whore of the worst sort. (Well,
he actually has a lot of company these days.)
Uhm.. Ordered to show them what, exactly? Pretty much every bit of Linux source code is and was GPL and available to anyone that wanted it. Anything that IBM hasnt made public, isn't part of Linux.
At $3 a share (as during last year) the capitalisation is a mere $52 million. That means that any group with $26 million could take control of the company. So, if 260,000 open source advocates buy $100 of SCO stock, the group as a whole would have control. They could easily fire McBride, halt the legal action and refuse to sell the IPR to anyone, thus keeping it in their control.
That's probably a poor investment, financially speaking, but it might be the best $100 you ever spent.
Burns: We're building a casino!
McAllister: Arrr. Give me 5 minutes.
"Judge Brooke Wells granted SCO a partial review of IBM's programing code and said that SCO could be given complete access in the future if IBM withholds any further data."
No it's not close to the beginning or end of the line. In situations we might see this little back and forth quite a few times.
Assuming IBM doesn't comply with the order. SCO just claiming IBM needs to fork over more code isn't going to cut it.
The enemies of Democracy are
reminds me of one of my favourite sayings (probably a quote??)
"in capitalism man exploits man, in communism it's the other way 'round"
[chuckle]
http://www.quotationspage.com/quote/810.html apparently it was John Kenneth Galbraith and I got the jist of it!
Alright, most C code should work under C++.
I still think of it as a superset, the exceptions are rare and have never affected my programs.
Changa hates change.
"...He seems to believe he'd sleep better at night if we were a 100% IIS shop. Ugh...."
;-)
Of course he will sleep better with IIS because you will be working all night long patching the system all the time.