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Final Judgment — SCO Loses, Owes $3,506,526

Xenographic writes "SCO has finally lost to Novell, now that Judge Kimball has entered final judgment against SCO. Of course, this is SCO we're talking about. There's still the litigation in bankruptcy court, which allowed this case to resume so that they could figure out just how much SCO owes, which is $3,506,526, if I calculated the interest properly, $625,486.90 of which will go into a constructive trust. And then there's the possibility that SCO could seek to have the judgment overturned in the appeals courts, or even the Supreme Court when that fails. Of course, they need money to do that and they don't really have much of that any more. Remember how Enderle, O'Gara and company told us that SCO was sure to win? I wonder how many people have emailed them to say, 'I told you so.'"

10 of 265 comments (clear)

  1. I for one by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Can't wait to hear the last SCO story. Barring appeals, I really hope this is it.

    --
    You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
  2. Enderle matters? by l0ungeb0y · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Anyone that would write an article extolling his Ferrari branded laptop and how the prancing horse logo adds raw ultimate power should never be taken seriously.

    I guess some people do listen to that hack.
    Well, perhaps a few less are listening to him now.
    *shrug*

  3. Re:3.5M? Oh noes... by The+Snowman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm sure that really stings after Microsoft's $50M cash injection. Really, 3.5M? That's it? They're laughing all the way to the bank.

    I am sure it does sting, considering they have spent quite a bit of that money on lawyers, corporate executive benefits, etc.

    --
    24 beers in a case, 24 hours in a day. Coincidence? I think not!
  4. It's (apparently) easy to forget facts are facts by Random+BedHead+Ed · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Remember how Enderle, O'Gara and company told us that SCO was sure to win? I wonder how many people have emailed them to say, 'I told you so.'"

    Agreed - these tech pundits were complete tools. O'Gara was shallow enough to stalk Pamela Jones of Groklaw in 2005 and publish alleged photos of her apartment. Only Daniel Lyons (he of the Fake Steve) later admitted he was wrong.

    But this gets into a bigger pet peeve of mine: the tendency of people to disregard details in pursuit of what they wish were true. These pundits really wanted Linux to fail massively, either because their bread and butter was covering the developments of Microsoft and other proprietary OS vendors or because they equated Linux and free software with anti-capitalism. This led a lot of these shrills to cling to a very silly, unsubstantiated lawsuit long after it became clear that SCO had no concrete evidence to present in court and clearly hadn't thought through licensing considerations (BSD-licensed code in both Linux and System V, for example).

    Many people really don't like delving into the details before forming an opinion and sticking to it. See also: religion, politics.

  5. Re:Isn't this just Novell's suit against SCO? by Sanat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Darl belongs in jail... in addition to being stripped of his power.

    --
    And in the end, the love you take is equal to the love you make
  6. "a complete waste" by DXLster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    whither Microsoft, now that their $86 million investment in Baystar has turned out to be a complete waste.

    Ummmm, that $86 million was the best money MSFT spent since the $50,000 for QDOS. The chilling effect that the SCO suit produced for the Linux community was huge, and bought MSFT a lot of extra time. And you can't even begin to imagine the degree to which it has slowed innovation in IBM Software Group. IBM engineers can't post without 10 person-months of review from Legal.

  7. Re:Isn't this just Novell's suit against SCO? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Interesting. I see lots of comments (rightfully) condemning Darl, but no one ever seems to complain about Ralph Yarro any more. Which is a pity, because he was the one who picked Darl to carry this campaign out, is the biggest single SCO stockholder, and deserves even more come-back than Darl does.

    (Heh. CAPTCHA was 'embezzle'.)

  8. All irrelevant by macraig · · Score: 5, Insightful

    None of this matters: Darl McBride et al were still personally enriched by all this shenanigans, and they are all still alive and able to run off somewhere else and pull yet more shenanigans.

    The bad CORPORATION was slapped, but its ORGANS still won and will get "transplanted" somewhere else. Until we get rid of the ethical shield that corporate law provides, people like this will still rule the roost.

  9. Re:Speaking of losers... by schon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    SCO in its day was very intimidating, with Darl Bride as an eloquent and persuasive spokesman. His pronouncements sounded factual and reasonable, until people like Groklaw looked behind the curtain and showed us the truth.

    Sorry, but I think you and I have very different recollections of what happened.

    Darl may have been eloquent - right up until he had to answer questions. But once he did, it was quite obvious that it was a scam.

    For example, when he said that every Linux user owed him $699, the immediate question was "why? Where is the code?" His response was always "I can't show it to you."

    You don't have to be a genius to understand that was an outright lie. If he can't show it to you, then you don't have to pay him. The excuse that they had NDAs that prohibited it was laughable. Any attorney who signed a deal saying that said that the company wasn't allowed to identify their own code, even if someone else made it publically available would be disbarred. It's just absurd.

    Darl came across as a sleazy con-man. Persuasive he was not.

  10. Re:It's NOT too bad about the engineers by kelvin31415 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Most of the engineers did find jobs elsewhere. Those who remained did so despite salary cuts and other hardships, including the knowledge that basement-dwellers everywhere scorned them for their association with the corporate raiders and lawsuit-happy lawyers who had taken over the company.

    Perhaps after having spent decades of their life putting heart and soul into something they were proud of, they were hoping against hope that it could be kept alive, instead of walking away and watching their legacy, the direct descendent of the original Bell Labs UNIX, get flushed down the toilet.