SCO Asks Judge To Give Them the Unix Copyright
Raul654 writes "In March, the jury in the Novell/SCO case found that Novell owns the copyright to Unix. Now, SCO's lawyers have asked judge Ted Stewart to order Novell to turn over the Unix copyright to them. 'SCO contends the jury did not answer the specific issue before Stewart that involves a legal principle called "specific performance," under which a party can ask a court to order another party to fulfill an aspect of an agreement.'" Over at Groklaw, PJ is deep into a community project to annotate SCO's filing. It's for the benefit of future historians, but it makes amusing reading now.
Uhhh...with a show called "The Guiding Light", wouldn't you figure maybe SONET/SDH instead?
Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
Laws usually have to follow the general principles of the constitution which in most cases guarantees freedom of religion, morals, etc., among other things. Fundamentalist religious morals do not follow these principles.
"When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns