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SCO Missing 16,209 Files?

FileSortingZombie writes "After all the allegations by SCO that IBM is abusing or dragging out the discovery process, over in this story on Groklaw you can read about IBM's objections to what SCO is producing in discovery, not the least of which is that there are suddenly 16,209 fewer files in the privilege log, and IBM wants to know what's become of them. Are they unprivileged, lost, destroyed, already produced, or quite simply gone? As of yet, no one seems to know. All told, IBM found fault with some 76% of their claims, especially one case where IBM says that SCO appears to be trying to claim that a conversation it had with an IBM employee should be considered confidential. One helpful Groklaw reader went so far as to put up this analysis of the complaint on his Web site for those interested in just how objectionable IBM found SCO's filing."

10 of 273 comments (clear)

  1. analysis link contains no data by gwn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... seems to be the nature of SCO's whole case...

    (the link produced errors when first posted.)

  2. Coincidental by treff89 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is a great example of the corporate corruption plaguing the courts and, ultimately, the globe. Why were these files not seized by court officials if they are so important? In any case, IMHO there should be some form of penalty applied to SCO if these documents really could have had significant sway in terms of the court case. This is a criminal offence? (IANAL)

    1. Re:Coincidental by ajs · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "if these documents really could have had significant sway in terms of the court case."

      You are confusing this with a criminal case where the police seize evidence. This is a civil case, so there is a discovery process.

      SCO (the party that filed the complaint in the first place) can do whatever they like with their documents, but every time they pull a stunt like this, their chances of winning this case (which were pretty much limited to litigation risk from the start) drop by an order of magnitude, and the chances that the judge will simply throw the case out of court go up to compensate. Ultimately, they could even be charged with a criminal offense, depending on how blatant it is that they did this to obscure the facts, as opposed to simple incompetence.

      To look at it the other way around, imagine how awful it would be if, every time someone sued your company, your books were seized. I can just see the denial-of-service type attacks now. Want to cripple IBM? Sue them just before they file their taxes! ;-)

  3. Re:DAmn by dnoyeb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The marketing firm known as SCO has of course deep pokets due to their financing and elimination of any productive branches of their business.

    Not only have they marketed their Linux FUD, but appearantly they are good at marketing themselves as valuable as well. Else why would any sane company continue to fun this obvious lawyers party?

  4. Take Your Anti-Corporate Nonsense Elsewhere by mfh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We are lucky to have something Marshall Berman has enlightened us about and it's called modern progress -- companies can learn and evolve. They don't have to stay the same! They can change!

    This is a great example of the corporate corruption plaguing the courts and, ultimately, the globe.

    Just because people set up a corporation for the purpose of defrauding an industry -- don't blame all corporations. If we held every single corporation to blame for incorrect practices of employees and management, the economy would collapse. What many businesses are missing today are change mechanisms. Every company is doing something wrong right now. It's the duty of those who work there that see the impropriety to blow the whistle on bad practices, internally and if that fails, externally. If the company in question has the correct business systems in place to enable internal practice auditing to occur, then the company will survive.

    Certain people are responsible for SCO's incorrect business philosophy. Let the focus be on them, and what they did wrong, and how they manipulated little old lady stockholders into shelling out big bucks for no reason whatsoever.

    --
    The dangers of knowledge trigger emotional distress in human beings.
    1. Re:Take Your Anti-Corporate Nonsense Elsewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Certain people are responsible for SCO's incorrect business philosophy. Let the focus be on them, and what they did wrong,...

      That's one of the main criticisms of corporations. All the privileges of citizens*, none of the responsibility.


      * although these days they seem to have more privilege than citizens

  5. I feel sorry - by spungo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    for SCO's customers. Ok - the management should be put in front of the firing squad, but the bulk of their employees and their customer base will turn out to be the real victims here. An ideal solution to this fiasco would be the incarceration of McBride/Stowell, and some reputable outfit picking up Unixware and OpenServer for a song, and continuing with their support.

  6. Re:Doh... Just make it disappear... by KinkifyTheNation · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you can't beat them, destroy all evidence that you tried.

  7. No effect on SCO stocks anymore by AnuradhaRatnaweera · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There was a time every single news item on the case used to boost the value of SCO scocks. Not anymore; the hype has died down.

  8. Not Missing! by WPIDalamar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Good lord people, these documents aren't somehow gone. Go RTFA.

    1. A while back they claimed a whole bunch of documents as privileged.
    2. Now they don't.

    What's "missing" is an explanation of why, not the documents themselved. Since they're not privleged, it would go to reason that IBM can now compell them to turn all of those over, only when they do this will we learn if the documents are missing.