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Judge Rejects SCO's Motion For a New Trial

An anonymous reader writes "A judge has rejected SCO's motion for a new trial in the company's dispute over UNIX intellectual property ownership. The ruling validates a verdict that was issued in April by a jury who determined that Novell, and not SCO, is the rightful owner of the UNIX SVRX copyrights. This means SCO cannot continue to pursue its litigation against IBM and other Linux users. 'There was substantial evidence that Novell made an intentional decision to retain ownership of the copyrights,' the judge wrote in his decision. 'The Court finds that the verdict is not clearly, decidedly, or overwhelmingly against the weight of the evidence. Therefore, SCO is not entitled to a new trial.'"

3 of 168 comments (clear)

  1. And in Other news TSCOG to retake the Caldera name by RobertLTux · · Score: 4, Interesting

    THe Sco Group is now a smoking crater rundown of the different cases

    NOVELL V TSCOG: Goes to Novell (this is the basis for the rest of the Litigation Lotto)
    TSCOG V IBM : the case that started it all
    WAIVED BY ORDER OF NOVELL (IBM does get the counter claims)
    SUSE V TSCOG (arbitration): Rendered Moot (lack of grounds)
    The Sco Group bankruptcy Chapter 11: to be converted to Chapter 7 (a chunk of the money is now owed to NOVELL)

    (the various smaller bit cases are now also Mooted)

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  2. Counterclaims... by HockeyPuck · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I can't wait for IBM to sue for all the time and money spent just to gather the source code:

    Complying with the Court's Order involved more than 4,700 hours of work from more than 400 IBM employees. This does not include the time spent by IBM's counsel and consultants on this project, which was likewise considerable. IBM produced a total of more than 80 GB of source code and other electronic data to SCO, and more than 900,000 pages of paper (which were scanned and produced in electronic form on CDs).

  3. Guinnes? by Thraxy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Does this count as the record for "longest continuous fail"? Or was that the Bush administration?