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IBM Asks Court to Toss SCO's Entire Case

Lost+Found writes "After three and a half years of case proceedings, summary judgement motions have been submitted in the highly controversial SCO v. IBM case. SCOX shares took a loss of 18.75%, or $0.39, to close at $1.69. IBM shares rose 0.97%, a gain of $0.79, to close at $82.00. From the article: 'Both sides in SCO v. IBM have filed motions for summary judgment. To be precise, SCO has filed one for partial summary judgment and IBM has filed several motions for summary judgment, one for each of SCO's claims and two more for good measure on two of IBM's counterclaims. In other words, it is asking the court to throw out SCO's entire case, and to grant it judgment on two counterclaims without even going to trial on those two.' More motions for summary judgement from SCO against IBM counterclaims are currently being uncovered at Groklaw."

8 of 230 comments (clear)

  1. Re:The meter continues to run .... by i.r.id10t · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Thats the beauty of having lawyers on staff. You pay them an annual salary, whether they are in court, doing research, etc. it doesn't matter. Fixed cost. Now SCO went out and got a few lawyers on retainer, so they will have a hefty bill, but I think IBM just has "regular" employees doing this on their side.

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    Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
  2. Re:Summary Judgement by Phil246 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    they could have easily settled long ago - thats not the point. they do not want to settle the case and leave doubts over linux, they want to crush it completely.

  3. And the moral of the story is... by lottameez · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...if you want to make the $'s, go to law school. It doesn't matter if anything is produced, you still make money.

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    Yeah? Well I think you're overrated too.
  4. Re:About time.... by jimicus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    IANAL, but AIUI the consensus of opinion is that the judge is playing everything by the book, dotting every last "i" and crossing every last "t", in order to ensure that neither party can come back and say "Not fair!" when judgement day comes.

  5. Re:Summary Judgement by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    If you were IBM, and had long term strategies based around Linux, which would you do?

    Lose the case in back-door deal whereby I would end up paying SCO almost nothing, but provide them with a precedent that would allow them to round up all of my competitors and remove them from my competitive landscape.

    Why, what would you do?

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    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  6. Who profited from the 2004 spike? by dpbsmith · · Score: 4, Insightful

    All well and good, but the whole business certainly produced an impressive bulge in plenty of time for SCOX shareholders to line their pockets by selling stock that had been practically worthless the year before.

    The legal soap opera is interesting, but the real question is whether anyone profited from that stock bulge... and if so who and how much... and whether anyone intends to go after them for securities fraud. If not, then the whole charade may have been immensely worthwhile for SCO's insiders. IBM wins a pyrrhic victory, SCO goes bankrupt, thanks to the concept of a corporation the officers have no personal liability, and if they owned SCO stock and managed to sell it in 2004 they could well be laughing all the way to the bank.

  7. Re:Summary Judgement by Tim+C · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Given that I'm IBM and have a team of lawyers who I would be paying regardless, and that SCO's next targets would most likely be the very companies that so thoughtfully provide me (for free!) with most of the software that I'm basing my hardware, support and professional services sales around, I'd crush them before they got any funny ideas about taking out the aforementioned companies and cutting my current strategy off at the knees.

    It's called "enlightened self interest"; the right thing is also the best thing for yourself, no matter how many others it may also help. Any advantage gained in paying off SCO now would likely be lost in the future, especially as it's extremely unlikely that SCO would be paid off so cheaply.

  8. Re:Summary Judgement by mr_mischief · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They could have easliy bought SCO before going to court. That's what they would have done before settling.

    IBM's confident that this case will help them in the long run, or they wouldn't be involved in the litigation at all.

    There was a bunch of speculation before the pretrial hearings even started that IBM might buy SCO, liquidate the corporation, and open-source all the software assets, and be done with the whole mess. Winning in court proves things about the GPL, the open development of software, the honesty of IBM as a corporation, and a few other things that a buyout or a settlement never could.