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The SCO Trial Through A New Lens

An anonymous reader writes "On Yahoo! News they've got an article by Paul Murphy entitled, SCO, IBM and Outcomes-Based Circular Reasoning. Murphy claims to be 'a 20-year veteran of the I.T. consulting industry, specializing in Unix and Unix-related management issues'. He writes, 'By itself this was a straightforward contractual dispute that could, and should, have been settled quickly and easily.' And that, 'Although SCO hasn't formulated its complaint in this way, I believe it could meet these, or similar, requirements quite easily and therefore has every reason to be confident that the court will eventually enforce its stop-use order against IBM.' He also goes on to insult Linux advocates by stating that, 'the position being run up the flagpole by what Stalin famously called "useful idiots" is first that the lawsuit itself is no longer a real issue and secondly that its consequences have been generally positive.'"

33 of 362 comments (clear)

  1. Bad argument by Asgard · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The author uses some fallacies of his own. He shows how Linux said "you've got X,y,Z, and that is UNIX" and then goes on to say that the Linux community says "Linux is not UNIX". He's keying off two different usages of the term UNIX, which isn't a valid point.

    1. Re:Bad argument by rossifer · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Basically, Paul Murphy is wrong about what SCO is suing IBM for and wrong in his misinformed conclusion that SCO's case has any merit. The rest of his position piece follows logically from those two initial errors.

      As to why he's wrong: 1) Linux doesn't need knowledge from the AT&T SysV code base to become world-class. 2) IBM isn't trying to contribute knowledge or source from the AT&T SysV code base to Linux.

      As an aside, reverse engineering was never necessary to understand or duplicate a unix kernel and is therefore his mention of it is a complete red herring.

      Regards,
      Ross

    2. Re:Bad argument by coolGuyZak · · Score: 5, Informative

      If he had paid attention to any of the hooplah surrounding this case, he would have known 2 things:

      • The RCU code, which is one of SCOs contested points, was implemented in a clean-room manner. IBM's kernel hackers used the patent, not the code.
      • The only code that (we know) managed to "migrate" was already shown to have originated from BSD. And IBM has already stated that their coders never saw SysV code.
    3. Re:Bad argument by wfberg · · Score: 4, Interesting


      As an aside, reverse engineering was never necessary to understand or duplicate a unix kernel and is therefore his mention of it is a complete red herring.


      Not only that, it proves a vital misunderstanding of what UNIX was and is; from the start it was an operating system that had its inner workings laid completely bare and published, at least to all who asked - and later it became a specification (POSIX and the OpenGroup's UNIX trademark).

      Why isn't SCOX taking on Microsoft? Windows NT 4.0 was POSIX compliant (at least in name), therefore it was cloned, and since it wasn't reverse-engineered (rather, tacked on to a VMS-kernel rip-off), Microsoft MUST have stolen SCOX' precious code, since every UNIX clone MUST be stolen, right? Right?

      --
      SCO employee? Check out the bounty
    4. Re:Bad argument by wfberg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not for NT4.0. They did have a license from the original Santa-Cruz Operation for their own UNIX version called XENIX. The 2003 license was to fund SCOX' coffers to spread the FUD - they never licensed anything from SCOX prior to the lawsuit, so apparently there was no pressing need.

      Microsoft never purchased a license to do POSIX on NT4.0, just like they never paid for any of the BSD TCP/IP code they snagged (not that they needed, the former being a standard you don't need to license, the latter being BSD-licensed).

      But that's the whole point; linux isn't a UNIX clone, and neither is NT 4.0.

      Also note that buying licenses from SCOX doesn't stop them from sueing you, so they would sue Microsoft, if they weren't shills that Microsoft is bankrolling in the first place.

      --
      SCO employee? Check out the bounty
    5. Re:Bad argument by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's a little late for this kind of support for SCO. Calling Linux advocates "useful idiots" is kind of neat though. It makes this guy and all the other SCO supporters look like "useless idiots".

      What it needs now is:

      Kirk: "Save... it... Bones... Save SCO!"

      McCoy: "Damnit Jim, I'm a doctor, not a corporate shill."

      Spock: "It seems highly illogical to continuing supporting this case."

      Kirk: "There must... be... something we can... do... Scotty?"

      Scotty: "Aye Cap'n, we'll set the phasers t' maximum FUD."

      Sulu: "Haven't we tried that already..."

      Kirk: "Shut up Sulu... or... you'll be wearing a red suit! Uhura, patch in a subspace channel to Microsoft. We'll need to replace our dilithium crystals with something stronger... a good dose of under the table cash."

      Chekhov: "In Soviet Russia, Microsoft cashes you!"

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    6. Re:Bad argument by jd · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Some fallacies? You're being a little kind. I didn't see much in the entire article I could agree with.


      Let's start with his argument that Linux didn't spring from nothing, which is the same bit you talk about. Uhhh, nobody claimed it did and by claiming that it didn't, he is being disenginious as to what it is people are claiming. Contradict something often enough, and you'll convince people that the thing you're contradicting must exist for it to be contradicted in the first place.


      You're correct that there is a difference between UNIX the API (now defined by the POSIX and Unix98 standards), and UNIX the AT&T Operating System. APIs cannot be copyrighted, trademarked or patented, although they CAN be considered trade secrets. (This is why BSD can be clean of AT&T code, but yet implement a 100% AT&T-compatiable API, and why Microsoft won't publish a complete API for Windows.)


      An API is merely a specification. A description of what goes into routines and what comes out. Nothing more. It does not define HOW things are done, nor how things are organized. The former can be patented, the latter can be copyrighted. As neither apply in this case, it is a fallacy to argue that IP is material.


      When you look at his book, you begin to understand the guy better. He has zero understanding of the industry, but is excellent at producing technobabble. The Unix Guide to Defenestration is likely to be the No. #1 worst technical book of this decade.


      He brags about his 20 years as an IT consultant. Well, I like to brag too. I have 25 years, as consultant, programmer, administrator, network architect, researcher, .... In other words, I'm not impressed by his resume/CV. Beside, his photo makes him look a bit like Bill Gates, and how can anyone take someone like that seriously?

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  2. Could SCO have a chance after all? by bmw · · Score: 5, Interesting

    OK, so this guy might have a valid point that SCO does not need to provide a line-by-line code comparison in order to prove their case but, if this is really the situation, how come they have failed so miserably to provide anything substantial in their favor? All of their claims seem so utterly ridiculous that I can't imagine them ever getting anywhere with this in court. The outcomes so far support this view. They seem to get bitch slapped out of court every time they actually bring something in front of a judge. Does anyone know of ANYTHING real that SCO has shown to prove their case? So far it just seems like they're spreading a bunch of BS and trying to scare people into buying licenses from them. Is it possible they still have an ace up their sleave?

    Something else I found interesting in the article...

    To some, the fact that SCO sees Linux as a Unix clone not only makes holding that view morally wrong but requires the immediate repudiation of nonbelievers and indeed the remarketing of Linux as "not Unix" -- a move that would replace the academic and open-source heritage powering its development with a lie and thus destroy it.

    1. Re:Could SCO have a chance after all? by squiggleslash · · Score: 4, Insightful
      WRT the quoted part, I think he's keying off two different definitions of Unix that are used within the community. There's Unix the philosophy, and Unix the operating system written by Dennis Richie and Ken Thompson and others. Linux isn't the latter, but most would probably go along with the idea that it's an example of a kernel that would fit into the former in some way.

      I think SCO has generally been incompetent and this guy actually admits so much from the beginning. They tried to blow a "contract violation" up to being a major copyright dispute, arguing for billions of dollars in compensation when the contract dispute itself wouldn't have pulled anything like that. Part of this is possibly SCO realising it has to go for broke because it's up against a company it'll almost certainly lose against, so it needs to find ways of getting that company to settle.

      This has backfired. By making it look like they're accusing Linux of being a copy of Unix and containing multiple copyright violations, they've put IBM in a position where, given it's bet the house on GNU and Linux, it has to show it stands by what it's done and that the product it's selling is legal, and at the same time it has to prevent a precedent from being set that encourages everyone to find some minor problem they had with IBM and turn it into a lawsuit.

      As for this person's view on the whole thing, I suspect he's just as wrong as the more rabid SCO opponents he chastises. He claims to have no doubt that real Unix code can be found in Linux. I have no doubt this isn't true, because we've seen the best examples of what SCO could find, and we know they're not as represented. Moreover, we have no reason to think it would even be necessary to do this.

      But his point of view is interesting, and he gives good reasons to think.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    2. Re:Could SCO have a chance after all? by zerocool^ · · Score: 5, Interesting


      I know it's a hard concept for the non-techie to grasp, but it goes like this:

      UNIX is a trademarked word. UNIX is also a POSIX compliant operating system. In order to be a posix compliant operating system, an operating system must follow X, Y, and Z criteria. Linux follows X, Y, and Z criteria. Linux is a POSIX compliant operating system. The Linux code has been built from scratch with the aim of being POSIX compliant. Since the POSIX standard is based on the UNIX operating system, Linux is a relative of, but not a derivitive of, UNIX.

      That's not exactly it, but it's close enough, and simple enough, that a reporter can digest it.

      So, in some ways, you could say "Linux is a UNIX clone". In the same ways, you could say "Margarine is a Butter clone". Margarine was built from scratch, using entirely different ingrediants than butter, but with the aim of looking, smelling, and tasting like butter. But, margarine is not butter. However, I don't think anyone who went around calling margarine "Not Butter" is going to kill either industry.

      So, I'm not even sure I know what this guy is trying to say. It sounds like he thinks that we are mad that SCO says linux is a unix clone. I don't know a linux user that would be bothered by this statement. All we (as linux users) are saying is "Linux contains no stolen copyrighted code from Unix", and "Linux is not Unix". And maybe a "Linux is similar enough in function to Unix that they share a computing standard".

      ~Will

      --
      sig?
    3. Re:Could SCO have a chance after all? by Samari711 · · Score: 4, Informative
      not only that, but SCO dropped all the copyright stuff involving Linux in their last complaint. This guy got fooled by the SCOx shell game. the suit now is focused on how IBM continued to distribute AIX after SCOx revoked their lisence. IBM points to the part of the contract that says their lisence is "perpetual and unrevokable" and tell SCOx to go sit and spin. that's why IBM isn't settling because if you look past all the smoke and mirrors the actual contract stuff isn't as complicated as the case as a whole. The issue of IBM contributing code to Linux is secondary at this point, only because it is now part of one of the IBM defenses. SCOx claims they terminated teh contract because of the Linux contributions so IBM is claiming that even if they did have the right to terminate (which they don't) and they weren't barred from terminating it by Novell (which they are) they still have no cause

      this guy is really just spreading more SCOx FUD for them.

      --

      I never said I was smart, I just said I was smarter than you

    4. Re:Could SCO have a chance after all? by Locke2005 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I wonder what the consequences would be if SCO actually won the case?
      Well, for one thing, I'll be really, really happy that I've cornered the heating oil market in Hades!

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    5. Re:Could SCO have a chance after all? by s4m7 · · Score: 5, Funny

      So, in some ways, you could say "Linux is a UNIX clone". In the same ways, you could say "Margarine is a Butter clone".

      So maybe we should be saying "I can't believe it's not UNIX!"

      --
      This comment is fully compliant with RFC 527.
  3. The Thousand Faces of Darl McBride by MooseByte · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Murphy claims to be 'a 20-year veteran of the I.T. consulting industry, specializing in Unix and Unix-related management issues'."

    Man, Darl's got more personalities than a Sweeps Week episode of "The Love Boat".

  4. From the article... by Future+Man+3000 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The problem here is that the underlying assumptions about the lawsuit being both over and baseless are unfounded. The claim that a failure to find copied code today proves that previous processes were uncontaminated is fallacious. And the presumptive consequence about due diligence having been widely rendered is unsupported wishful thinking.

    The crux of the matter is this: IBM does not have to prove previous processes were uncontaminated to win the case -- rather, the burden is on SCO to prove that they were, and they don't appear to have come up with anything substantial. Perhaps this is a wake-up call to open source developers to vet submitted code carefully, but I don't believe the wishful thinking is coming from the Linux camp.

    --

    I never vote for anyone. I always vote against.
    -- W.C. Fields

  5. What an idiot. by autopr0n · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If the two teams have no contact except through the specifications documents, and neither team is contaminated by knowledge of the original engineering, then the new product is considered just that: a new product and not an illegal copy. It's possible, therefore, to recast SCO's basic claim as saying that IBM was contractually obligated to ensure that this type of "chinese wall" existed between those of its people who had some contact with the protected Unix knowledge or code and those of its people who contributed to the Linux development effort in the run-up to the 2.4 kernel release, but failed to do it. What a stupid argument. You don't need to do a "Chinese Wall" to be legal, you do it in order to prove that what you did was legal. The IBM ROM-BIOS was likely going to have a lot of code in common with the Phoenix bios that Compaq purchased. In other words, if the data is physically identically, then you're going to need some pretty strong proof that what you did didn't involve copying. On the other hand, Linux and SCO didn't contain any identical duplicate code. There were some pieces that were similar, IIRC, but those were lists of variables out of a book and had to do with meeting standards. And secondly, the "Chinese Wall" is all about preventing copyright infringement. This was a contract dispute, not a copyright case, because Linux wasn't a copy of SCO. offensive tshirts

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  6. Conjecture based on "WAG" and not research by Anthony · · Score: 5, Informative
    Here's an example:-

    The reason Tannenbaum apparently gave Linus a "C" for his kernel hack probably wouldn't have been that the code was bad or derivative, but that he disapproved of sacrificing design elegance for a performance benefit available only on the x86.

    Here is what Tannenbaum really said:-

    I still maintain the point that designing a monolithic kernel in 1991 is a fundamental error. Be thankful you are not my student. You would not get a high grade for such a design :-)

    Note the smiley.
    --
    Slashdot: Where nerds gather to pool their ignorance
  7. Negotiations to settle the issue? by eric76 · · Score: 4, Informative
    As a result, SCO issued a stop-use order with the 100-day hiatus required under the contract, but IBM neither changed its behavior nor embarked on good-faith negotiations to settle the issue. SCO therefore asked the court to enforce its rights under the contract.

    I find it hard that you have to negotiate to settle an issue when you are completely in the clear by the terms of the contract.

    SCO's interpretation of the contract is so overbroad that it is absurd. The definitions they are using for the terms are completely different from the normal usage of the same terms.

    For example, a derivative work incorporates the original work or elements of the original work. But SCO takes the view, with nothing in the contract to support them, that developing your own code to run under their UNIX makes it a derivative work even though it has never contained any element of the original work.

  8. Third Paragraph Says It All by canfirman · · Score: 5, Interesting
    It's interesting the author states, "By itself this was a straightforward contractual dispute that could, and should, have been settled quickly and easily." If it was so straightforward and should have "been settled quickly and easily", then the judge should have seen that too. So, the fact that the case is still going on shows that it's definitely not a "straightforward" case. (However, as we all know with SCO, that it's never straightforward, or quick and easy.)

    If you read the beginning of the article, it sounds like the author assumes that SCO is in the right, but that has yet to be proven. I thought that's what courts were for.

    --
    It is not our abilities that show what we truly are... it is our choices.
  9. Where does he get this stuff? by bigtallmofo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Software reverse engineering requires two teams

    Says you. I can see how an entity might be on firmer legal ground if they adopt the procedure you've outlined. However, to say that legal reverse engineering "requires" two teams is a total fabrication.

    What a troll article.

    --
    I'm a big tall mofo.
  10. In breaking news SCO hires a cleaning person. by LWATCDR · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I mean really this is a bad opinion piece by someone that has no legal training about a law suite. If you print any story about SCO will it end up on Slashdot? Great way to drive up your ad income.
    Next week at Playboy on line. The women of SCO.

    The suite has been setup by SCO as Linux is evil and belongs to us and we will sue all the users that do no pay us.
    There are no Linux advocates involved with the court case it is Freaking IBM that is involved.
    Here is what happened.
    Someone convinced SCO that Linux could only have gotten so good by stealing SCO's code. SCO was going down fast and grabbed that straw with the hopes that IBM would just buy them to shut them up.
    IBM knew that SCO did not have a case so it decided to make an example of them.
    SCO trying to get more people to pony up attacked any deep pockets that it could. Autozone and other show the court that SCO had nothing so that backfired.
    Frankly at this point I really want to believe that McBride really did believe that IBM had stolen the code. I would like to think that he has just backed himself into a corner and can not see anyway out. The only other answer is he is delusional.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  11. Stalin is not the source of "Useful Idiots" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    It is more commonly attributed to Lenin, but it seems that he didn't really say it either:

    "Lenin, it is said, once described left-liberals and social democrats as 'useful idiots,' and for years anti-communists have used the phrase to describe Soviet sympathizers in the West, sometimes suggesting that Lenin himself talked about 'useful idiots in the West.' But the expression does not appear in Lenin's writing. We get queries on 'useful idiots of the West' all the time, declared Grant Harris, senior reference librarian at the Library of Congress, in the spring of 1987. We have not been able to identify this phrase among his published works."

    The source of this passage is a work entitled "They Never Said It: a Book of Fake Quotes, Misquotes, and Misleading Attributions", authored by Paul F. Boller Jr. and John George, published by Oxford University Press in 1989. The text goes on to explain that the phrase apparently first appeared in a John Birch Society pamphlet labeling President Ronald Reagan a "useful idiot" because of some agreement he had negotiated with the Soviet Union.

    btw, most of Lenin's writings are available for searching at http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/

  12. Re:Congress should protect Open Source by coolGuyZak · · Score: 5, Funny

    $ echo "dream" | su congress -c 'chmod 444 open\ source'

    done. what next?

  13. I hate amateur Sovietologists! by TheNarrator · · Score: 5, Informative
    what Stalin famously called "useful idiots"

    It was Lenin who said that and he actually didn't say it. It was invented by the John Birch Society to describe Ronald Regan.

    Source

    There is much more evidence that Lenin referred to them instead as "Deaf Mutes" which is much less of a marketable term for the anti-communists to use in describing how communists view their dupes.

    Article that Makes Reference to the Deaf Mutes Quote. This quote was also referenced by Theodore Radzinsky in his Stalin Biography as being authentic.

    "The so-called cultural element of Western Eurpoe and America are incapable of comprehening the present state of affairs and the actual balance of forces; these elements must be regarded as deaf-mutes and treated accordingly....

    (The Lufkin News, King Featurers Syndicate, Inc., 31 July 1962, p. 4, as quoted by the Freeman Report, 30 Sept. 1973, p. 8).

  14. His other works and his forum. by wan-fu · · Score: 4, Interesting

    He's getting destroyed by readers on his very own forum.. Also, from his website, are a bunch of his other writings on the SCO case.

  15. Sorry, no by autopr0n · · Score: 4, Informative

    This guy is making a totally specious argument, by comparing the Compaq vs. IBM case to the Linux case. I stopped reading after that, because it was quite stupid. In another mal-formed post below I elucidated this, but here's a summary: Compaq V. IBM was about copyright infringement. Any re-implementation of the BIOS was likely to have identical code, since we're talking about optimized assembly. Compaq had their "Chinese wall" in place to be able to prove that they didn't copy anything. There was no contract dispute, either.

    On the other hand, all you need to do to prove that Linux is not a copy of SCO is compare the source. They're different. Linux does not infringe SCO's copyright, and it never did.

    He also confuses Trademarks and Copyrights. He says "Linux is Unix" because it does what Unix does. But when people say "Linux isn't Unix" they're talking about trademarks.

    Imagine if Coca-Cola sued pepsi for violating their trade secrets or something. You wouldn't say "Pepsi is Coca-cola because it tastes kind of like Coca-cola.". No, Pepsi is a Cola (that's the name of the flavor of Coca-cola, pepsi, RC-cola and so on). You can't make the argument that Pepsi tastes like coke, and because you want to call it Coca-cola, then Pepsi is violating Coke's trademarks. That would be retarded. This isn't a "new" perspective, it's just some retards musings.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  16. Interesting quote on Paul Murphy's forum by LittleLebowskiUrbanA · · Score: 4, Informative

    This could be of interest to PJ at Groklaw.

    Re: SCO V. IBM -Thursday April 28/05
    Author: Robert Weiler (204.247.40.---)
    Date: 04-29-05 16:45

    Dear Paul,

    I have over 25 years in the software business, most of it on Unix systems and I have worked for two SVR4 licensees. It was very clear at both of these companies that code that we created belonged to us and that AT&T did not control it in any way. The only copright notices that we placed in our code was our own, not AT&T's. This is explicit in IBM's agreement, and it was made explicit in the $echo newsletter. The notion that SCO controls the subsequent work product of everybody that has ever seen Unix source is complete nonsense and would in fact be illegal restraint of trade in most states. Your notion seems to be even more expansive than SCO's; as I read your argument, any code that ever ran on AIX and was subsequently ported to Linux would belong to AT&T. This idea is so silly it doesn't even merit a response, so I'm asuming that I've misinterpreted what you wrote.

    SCO's notion of what constitutes a derivative work is not only completely at odds with the SOFT aggreements, it is at odds with copyright law. If the only thing that SCO has is a few suggestive emails and the 'mental tainiting' argument that you espouse, then IBM will win on summary judgement as a matter of law. And according to Judge Kimall, that is apparently all they have.

    Finally I should note that even if SCO were to prevail on their contract dispute with IBM, it means absolutely nothing to Linux. At worse, the offending code is removed, any liability is IBM's.

    I would greatly appreciate it if you would inform yourself on the issues of this case and write a followup article. Every CIO should be evaluating a migration from Windows and proprietary Unix to Linux as the cost savings are dramatic. It would be very, very unfortunate if any CIO delayed a transition to Linux based on misinformation about SCO's legal propects which are virtually nonexistant.

  17. He has a pretty selective understanding.. by schon · · Score: 4, Informative

    SCO issued a stop-use order with the 100-day hiatus required under the contract, but IBM neither changed its behavior nor embarked on good-faith negotiations to settle the issue.

    And what really happend:

    SCO issued a stop-use order with the 100-day hiatus, but failed to include in that order an explanation of what IBM did wrong, or how they could correct it as required under the contract, and so therefore IBM neither changed its behavior nor embarked on good-faith negotiations to settle the issue, because SCO never gave them that option.

  18. At least he's consistent: 5/2003: "SCO slam dunk" by rjamestaylor · · Score: 4, Informative
    Over at LinuxWorld (the infamous sys-con.com) is a history of Mr. Graham's writings on the SCO Monkey Trial, beginning with his assessment that a SCO win is a slam dunk -- in May 2003. His conclusion in May 2003 was:
    I'm sure IBM will either settle, enter into serious negotiations and thus get SCO to lift the deadline, ask a court for a temporary injunction, or come up with a better overall answer.
    He was right about one thing, IBM did "come up with a better answer" -- they stood their ground and fought.

    I'm not calling Mr. Graham a troll or shill. Just wrong. Consistently wrong on this issue.

    --
    -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
  19. Re:I used to work for this guy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Rumour had it that he started as an entry level sysadmin and wrecked so much stuff they made him a manager. This is the Peter Principle at work boys and girls... Posted anonymously for obvious reasons.

    The Peter Principle is where you get promoted because you're good at what you do until you become incompetent at your new position and stagnate.

    The Dilbert Principle is probably what you mean. You're a total dumbass, therefore you get promoted to management.

  20. Author ignores a number of inconvenient facts by MattW · · Score: 5, Informative

    The author ignores a number of inconvenient facts.

    First, and foremost, SCO's bluster about Linux and copyright infringement predates their lawsuit against IBM. Whether or not IBM violated its contract with SCO is not the community's beef with SCO; the community is up in arms because SCO had the gall to suggest that Linux was a big ripoff of SCO's proprietary unix code and began to do things like sell linux licenses, as if it had some right to collect that money. So this is not merely a "simple contract dispute".

    Moreover, he is skewing the origin of Linux. Regardless of the author's qualifications, the two people most able to state whether or not Linux was or was not dervied from Minix or contained Minix code would certainly be Linus Torvalds and Andrew Tannenbaum. Tannenbaum said, "I told [Ken Brown, President of the Alexis de Tocqueville Institution] that MINIX had clearly had a huge influence on Linux in many ways, from the layout of the file system to the names in the source tree, but I didn't think Linus had used any of my code." Eric Raymond may have been citing this to make a point, but when Linus and Andrew both are clear on the point that Linux did not use Minix code, then I believe take their assertions on that point.

    The assertions about due diligence are equally off-base, as the Open Source Risk Management company is offering insurance against claims of copyright infringement. It is basically absurd to suggest they could get millions and millions of dollars of insurance underwritten without due diligence against the product they were insuring - which, in this case, is the code that comprises Linux.

    Finally, the author completely ignores how unclean SCO is with its own source management. They distributed a version of Linux for quite some time, and continued to distribute it even after they had made public claims. If they had discovered claims but continued to distribute the code, one could quite easily argue (and surely IBM will) that they have themselves have placed whatever code is in question under the GPL.

    This only touches on the number of issues he manages to gloss over in a few brief pages. By no means do I think that David Boies would have been involved on contingency unless he felt he had some chance of winning, but the fact is, SCO is bleeding money like tomorrow's bacon, and it is hard to imagine how anyone would care to purchase a real product from SCO in the future, given their propensity to do things like, say, sue their customers.

    Certainly, at this point, Canopy can only be hoping that the payoff from the lawsuit against IBM and other actions will be sufficient to justify flushing the company. But even *if* SCO managed to prove IBM contributed tainted code, there's a mountain of counterclaims to deal with and SCO has to try to establish damages, and it's hard to see how SCO can justify damages that are a significant multiple of its own market capitalization at the time the offense occurred. It would be like Harold Welte suing Asus for $2B or such. It may sound like a nice round number, and SCO can say that it wants "infinity times infinity" for damages, but that doesn't give it a snowball's chance in hell of actually seeing such damages.

  21. Public Relations Spin by CodeBuster · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The entire article looks suspiciously like what the public relations firms call a "press hit", meaning that the public relations firm feed factual background information to one of their reporter contacts, which may not be entirely false but almost certainly represents a selected truth (e.g., figures don't lie, but liars sure do figure), who then cuts and pastes the "facts" into an article. The end result is that one news bureau after another reprints the "facts" until the real source of the information in the article, (.i.e., the public relations firm), becomes entirely obscured. The vast majority of the public has no idea that the majority of the articles that they read today, especially trade-magazine articles and technology pieces where reporters have to rely more on outside experts, are "press hits" prepared by public relations firms for their clients. If I were SCO then I would certainly be engaging the services of a PR firm in light of the acrimonious nature of the ongoing litigation. A good PR firm can charge upwards of $20,000 per month for their services, but the really good ones get results and marketers, advertisers, and lawyers everywhere know that.

  22. Re:I used to work for this guy... by Get+Behind+the+Mule · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Posted anonymously for obvious reasons.

    Since no one has seen fit to respond to this so far, let me point out emphatically that this post is making an an outrageous and completely unsubstantiated accusation, and it is a lousy, indecent thing to be doing to Paul Murphy. You may or may not like what he says about SCO, but he most certainly does not deserve an anonymous accusation of attempted rape.

    I frankly would like to meet the person who wrote this post, so that I could give him solid kick in the ass. I'm not using a figure of speech here. Far from acknowledging any "obvious reasons", Mr. Anonymous Accuser, I say that you are loathsome coward, and you damn well better come back with something more substantial, or shut your filthy mouth.

    As for you moderators who modded the post up to 5 Interesting, I submit that you are among the stupidest morons ever to visit Slashdot. If anything deserves a -1 Troll, this is it.

    As for the question of whether or not the accusation is true, in the absence of any verifiable evidence there is no reason at all to consider such a possibility. To make any such assumption about Paul Murphy on the basis of an anonymous accusation is so unfair as to be utterly indecent.

    I never thought I would attack someone for an anonymous post, because I'm often irritated by all of the pithy sigs about how anonymous posters cannot be believed. In almost all cases, that's a logical fallacy, because the merit of post in a discussion group lies solely in the strength of the evidence and arguments it presents, which usually has nothing at all to do with the identity of the poster. The only situation in which the anonymity of the poster detracts from his credibility is when his identity is one of the issues addressed in his post.

    But this is precisely that kind of situation. Someone here is saying that he knows Paul Murphy personally and is accusing him of a crime, but the accuser won't tell us who he is and how he supposedly knows these things. That kind of crap deserves no credibility until the poster comes back and tells us why we should believe anything he says.