SCO Receives Nasdaq's Delisting Notice
An anonymous reader writes "This somewhat amusing press release of sorts tells us one of those things we've all been waiting a while for. SCO(X) has announced that 'it received a Nasdaq Staff Determination letter on December 21, 2007 indicating that as a result of having filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, the Nasdaq Listing Qualifications Panel has determined to delist the company's securities from the Nasdaq Stock Market and will suspend trading of the securities effective at the open of business on Thursday, December 27, 2007.' PJ at Groklaw has surmised that with effectively zero cash resources left, Novell doesn't stand to get much more than SCO's furniture, if even that.
Ding dong, is the wicked witch finally dead yet?"
Novell doesn't stand to get much more than SCO's furniture,
If there was any proof that this was by design (which it probably was) could the directors be held liable in the US?
$0.18 to $0.12 in 45 minutes. Impressive!
Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
The letter is dated 12/21. Why did it take until 12/27 to make the newswires?
Either SCO got it but didn't release it, or SCO didn't get it in a timely manner.
This should have been released to the public at least 1 trading day before the effective date.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
So the company is dirt. What's happened to the litigious bastards responsible? Has Darl McBride got away with a fat severance package and a job at Microsoft, or did the directors of SCO go down with their ship in any meaningful way?
Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
Now they have a way to redeem their memory forever: release SCO UNIX's full source code to the public domain.
Knowledge is power; knowledge shared is power lost.
"If there is any justice, the executives and the lawyers are held liable. Why include the lawyers? While it was a frivolous lawsuit brought by the company, the lawyers were the ones executing dirty tactics in the court while getting paid by the millions. They knew well what they were doing."
It's worse than that - part of their compensation was stock. That means that they were
a) part owners of the company, and
b) they had an inherent conflict of interest as officers of the court. They had a huge incentive to act unethically with the lawsuit - they didn't get paid unless SCOX stayed at a high value, which is substantially different from getting paid if they won the suit.
"As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson