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ZDNet Examines SCO Indemnity Options 368

Ursus Maximus writes "David Berlind of ZD NET has posted a major opinion/research piece. What do you all think? I don't like the story at all, but he does seem to have made more of an effort to try to find reasons to back up SCO's claims than any of their other supporters have."
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ZDNet Examines SCO Indemnity Options

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  • RH ducks the punch (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Sad Loser ( 625938 ) * on Saturday February 21, 2004 @11:52PM (#8353624)

    my guess about why redhat is not offering indemnification is that it would be setting itself up as an easy target.

    Maybe RH figures (not unreasonably) that it is better to let the big boys slug it out. I think if it were a choice between RH's lawyers and IBM's lawyers, I know who SCO would go for.
    • by nomadic ( 141991 ) <nomadicworld@@@gmail...com> on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:42AM (#8353866) Homepage
      I don't know, after you reach a certain level of wealth the law teams even out. Both IBM and RH can afford to hire the best, no reason why IBM would be any more intimidating than RH.
    • by mellonhead ( 137423 ) <slashdot@sw[ ]l.net ['bel' in gap]> on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:56AM (#8353924) Homepage Journal
      RH filed a lawsuit against SCO for "unfair and deceptive actions."

      Firing one over the bow like that isn't exactly letting the big boys slug it out...
    • by c1ay ( 703047 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:03AM (#8353951) Homepage
      It's really a moot point since SCO is a Dead End [groklaw.net]...

    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:15AM (#8354001)
      I'm curious if Ziff Davis offers indemnity to their readers in case of copyright violation. If they really believe an end user is liable for copyright infringement they really should be.

      Mods,
      This is both insightful and funny.
    • by dbIII ( 701233 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @02:30AM (#8354321)
      my guess about why redhat is not offering indemnification is that it would be setting itself up as an easy target.
      My guess is that it would be a pointless waste of time and money until SCO produces something that stands up in court. SCO is playing the same silly games in discovery that Ford did in the Pinto case (burying the case under enormous amounts of paperwork) and which no-one else has been game to risk contempt of court and try since. I'm sure a real lawyer could say more.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 22, 2004 @05:07AM (#8354706)
      Insightful? Who's modding this?

      A legal defense fund for developers covers EVERYONE that legally can be sanctioned by the court for copyright infringement. Does that explain Red Hat's move better? A clear explanation follows.

      There's one thing in these lawsuits that even a non-lawyer can understand that really nullifies the whole point of your article. If I sell you a newspaper with a plagiarized article and the newspaper contains a license that says the newspaper comes with no warranty, you know no one can legally approach you for more license money later, since you never committed a crime. No warranty is a standard contract clause to avoid blame for buggy software, but it can't shift blame for a crime. No license can shift that responsibility. Likewise, only the parties that inserted stolen code and the parties that distributed it can possibly be guilty in this case. Darl McBride is no lawyer and clearly speaks often about legal issues without consulting one. He thinks that because the community owns the software, that they also get to answer for crimes, but they don't own it, since that's not how copyrights work. That copyright and its IP liability rests solely with the software authors or the companies they work for if it's work for hire. If there is stolen code in the Linux kernel, Linus Torvalds can be sued and sanctioned, but Google can not unless they added SCO IP.

      HP chooses to indemnify, since it's something their customers ask for without understanding that only the developers can be held liable. Their indemnification doesn't protect modified software, so it's not worth the paper it's printed on. It's a cheap ruse that looks like a selling point.

      Secondly, SCO has failed to add copyright claims regarding Linux to their IBM lawsuit after they claimed they were, which is the loudest canary singing today. Their new copyright claims are about IBM's failure to stop shipping AIX instead. Their trade secret claims have gone missing too.

      I don't doubt a frivilous lawsuit can be won. I do doubt that it can be won without a lawyer's legal reasoning by the plaintiffs. Just because they can easily confuse the media doesn't mean they can confuse a judge.
      • by The Monster ( 227884 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @09:54AM (#8355145) Homepage
        If I sell you a newspaper with a plagiarized article . . . no one can legally approach you for more license money later, since you never committed a crime
        This guy even offered up a similar scenario:
        Imagine, for example, buying a car and finding out a couple of years later that the inventor of the
        windshield wiper [about.com] was suing you for the misappropriation of the patent. Wouldn't you want the company that sold you the car to accept responsibility for the claims?
        They already do -- in this case Anderson or her heirs would go after the manufacturer.

        #include <ianal.h> //But I read a lot of Groklaw

        I can't imagine any legal theory under which such a suit wouldn't be summarily dismissed, and I wouldn't be surprised if the dismissal were with predudice and possibly even sanctions against the filer. Of course, given the RIAA's success at terrorizing people for downloading music (not distributing it) such a theory may somehow exist.
  • by Mr. Darl McBride ( 704524 ) on Saturday February 21, 2004 @11:52PM (#8353628)
    Alright. This doesn't really seem to be going the way we wanted. I mean, you said no to $690 a seat. You aren't willing to assign future Linux refinements to me and my posse. You wouldn't even read the brochure I worked so hard on, or cry uncle when I surprised you with a titty twister. And now you say you've called the police, and that's kind of harshing my mellow. I mean, that's a fine how-do-you-do for your good friend Darl!

    Listen, I mean - maybe we can still settle this. I want what we're due... you want what's fair... look: I'm taking one... two... see? Two big handfuls of mints from the nice bowl on the reception desk... all good? Okay so far? Excellent. And I'm keeping my visitor's name tag, and I want on your Christmas mailing list. No? Okay... just the mints and the tag? Just the mints? Excellent.

    Hey, look -- Jesus at the copier!!

    CHRIS! Grab another handful of mints! Let's bolt!@!!1

    ~Darl

  • by dartmouth05 ( 540493 ) * on Saturday February 21, 2004 @11:54PM (#8353640)
    Berlind makes no mention of the validity of SCO's claims--his argument is simply based on the existance of the lawsuits. That's like telling the manager of the local fast food franchise to give in to the mob's protection racket, because if you don't pay them off and your store gets trashed, you might get fired. Even if the local mob is two 12 year olds with nerf guns. It is idiotic to argue for imdemnification without analysing the threat posed by the SCO lawsuits. Anyone can file a lawsuit--it doesn't mean you should pay a 3rd party to indemnify you.
    • Yup. More to the point, he's saying "Just because the opposition to SCO is bigger, louder, and carries the most-respected voices, doesn't mean they're right." He's technically right in that regard; just because Torvalds says they're on crack doesn't mean they can't win.

      On the other hand:
      1. The fact that the very rights they claim to have are in dispute,
      2. The fact that it took them MONTHS to produce, even for the court, any evidence supporting their claims -- and even admitted that they didn't have all of the evidence they'd claimed to have,
      3. The fact that their high-priced lawyer hasn't shown up to court in a while,
      4. Other facts related to the case,

      those DO suggest that this is bullshit, and that there's nothing to fear.

      So yeah. Don't believe us because we're loud. Believe us because the evidence supports us.
      • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:40AM (#8353859)
        So yeah. Don't believe us because we're loud. Believe us because the evidence supports us.

        Don't underestimate the US court system. I'll believe you if and when SCO's last appeal is dismissed.
      • by Citizen of Earth ( 569446 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @06:06AM (#8354789)
        2. The fact that it took them MONTHS to produce, even for the court, any evidence supporting their claims -- and even admitted that they didn't have all of the evidence they'd claimed to have,

        The real issue is that what evidence they have produced in court is simply pointing out a well-known fact: that IBM contributed code that IBM itself wrote into Linux. SCO doesn't even claim ownership of the code; they are just claiming that IBM was supposed to ask SCO before contributing it. SCO does not claim and cannot support that there is any System V code in Linux.

        So, regardless of whether IBM contributed code improperly or not, there is no code in Linux that is a "derivative work" of any SCO property. The asking permission thing is a contract dispute between SCO and IBM and end users can't be held liable for that; nobody but IBM can. And it looks very much like SCO has no control over IBMs actions since (1) Novell has retained the control rights for existing Unix licensees, and (2) the AT&T license gave it no rights over licensees own code anyway.
      • by BobTheLawyer ( 692026 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @07:04AM (#8354870)
        any lawyer will tell you that there's always a risk that a case goes against you, no matter how strong your case.

        I work for a large law firm in the UK - we typically advise clients there's a base 10% chance of losing a cast-iron case. Would be surprised if the position is very different in the States (and presumably jury trials are significantly more uncertain).
    • "One teaspoon full of pure truth on this tray... one teaspoon full of rancourous bullsheeite on this tray... good-golly-gosh, they're nearly balanced! Who can tell what the outcome will be?"

      It's an easy game to play until you notice that you have to include the quality of the evidence somewhere in the equation. At which point TSG's case goes all wahoonie-shaped.

      I can just about imagine the IBM legal office examining TSG's amendmended complaint (I'm pretty sure they want to nail TSG's hide to the shed, if possible, no quarter asked or given): "Amendment fourteen!" <pause> <raucous laughter> "No! Wait! Wait! Amendment eighteen! Amendment eighteen! Unnnnn-believable! <bwaaaaah-hah-har!> Get a load a'tha' second sentence! Whoooe!" <more raucous laughter> ...

    • by JoeCommodore ( 567479 ) <larry@portcommodore.com> on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:57AM (#8354176) Homepage
      Knowing some decision makers - the unsupported thinly vieled threat of a possible lsawsuit makes them very reluctant. Are you saying your company never has instituted 'silly safety policy A' or 'adjustment to personnel manual B' because of some story about something that *might* happen?

      The truth is - we have too many hungry lawyers who BS better than our policymakers can stand up for what should be right.

      In the long run doing all this FUD probably will hurt SCO even if they win - as not all their code is owned by them and if they were to win who's to stop another code contestor from suing for his piece of the pie?

      In the past advancement was achieved by standing on the shoulders of those before you. Advancements today are achieved by standing on the feet of all those around you.

    • by raga ( 12555 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @03:34AM (#8354495)
      Correct. IANAL (but I do have a couple of friend who are, and this is how they explained it to me). YMMV/VWPBL etc. etc.:

      As long as the ownership of any property (in this case the UNIX IP) is under dispute between two parties in a court of law, then the end user of that property is under no legal obligation to listen to or believe in the claims of either of the parties. The end user is only obligated to the contract she entered into with the original party at the time she started using the property, until directed to do otherwise by the court.

      E.g., A rents B a house, and B, in good faith, signs a contract with A to pay a certain monthly rent, gets the keys to the house and starts using it. A couple of years later, C shows up and tells B that the house actually belongs to C, and B should be paying rent to C and not to A. Then, A and C sue/counter-sue each other re. the ownership of the house, and a court starts to look at the matter. While the matter is sub-judice, (and without any clear directive from the court to put the rent in an escrow fund etc.), B is only obligated to follow the contract with A.

      This is true especially if the matter is sub-judice. So the issue of indemnity is moot.

      cheers- raga
  • by antiMStroll ( 664213 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:01AM (#8353668)
    " Most companies using Linux (not including embedded Linux-based appliance makers, which could have more significant risk) could easily bury the cost of protection in their IT budget without anyone batting so much as an eyelash. But, you can't bury the damages in the hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars, or the pink slip that goes with them.

    Basically, you have one question to ask yourself: How much peace of mind do you have now and how much more are you willing to spend for a little extra?

    Others here have argued that the appearance of such warnings in the popular press - making Linux a risk - was part of SCO's intent all along. Don't know if they're right but the warnings are here.

  • Microsoft shill ? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:02AM (#8353677)
    from Berlind's Bio ...
    ... Prior to that, he served as editor-in-chief of Windows Sources, where he led the magazine's push for exclusive coverage of Windows NT for business users.

    http://www.wirelessenterprisesymposium.com/sympo si um/speakers/DavidBerlindBio.shtml

    Sounds like permanent brain damage to me.

    Ziff-Davis is a Microsoft shill. Their bias
    is pretty transparent.

    Fear. Uncertainty. Doubt.

    Same. Old. Story.

    • Re:Microsoft shill ? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by WIAKywbfatw ( 307557 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:28AM (#8353798) Journal
      As someone with more familiarity with Ziff-Davis than the average person (hint: in my time I've done more than just read what they've got to say), I can honestly tell you that the overwhelming majority of ZD staffers are less than enamoured by Microsoft and its business practices.

      However, living in the real world, it's a bit difficult to run a series of IT publications without writing about Microsoft and its products given their dominance in both the enterprise and the consumer markets. ZD (or CNet, IDG, VNU, etc) ignoring Microsoft would be about as sensible as a mainstream movie magazine ignoring any Hollywood productions.

      Frankly, I'm fed up with this "Ziff-Davis is a Microsoft shill" line. ZD has spent the last two decades writing about Microsoft (and other) products that run on Microsoft operating systems because that's what sells magazines. If Joe Average had wanted magazines about Unix instead then they would have written about Unix instead, but they didn't, so get over it.

      And, finally, why you would be surprised that the editor of a publication called Windows Sources would "push for exclusive coverage of Windows NT for business users" is a mystery to me - would it make more sense to you to devote large chunks of coverage to other OSes in a magazine that's devoted purely to Windows? I guess you'll be demanding that Apple magazines now cover Linux too.
      • Re:Microsoft shill ? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:48AM (#8353893)
        Frankly, I'm fed up with this "Ziff-Davis is a Microsoft shill" line.

        Okay. You're fed up with it. Regardless,
        it's true. I got fed up with Ziff-Davis
        and stopped subscribing to PC Magazine.

        ZD has spent the last two decades writing about Microsoft (and other) products that run on Microsoft operating systems because that's what sells magazines.

        Used to sell magazines. ZD is in a big hurt
        these days. You're also ignoring the other
        side of equation : ad sales. ZD was notorious
        for kow-towing the Redmond. IMHO ZD went out
        of their way to attack Linux in the early days.
        They tried to bury the baby in the cradle.
        They're sill trying to kill it. ZD could have
        had some balance and pemitted some criticism
        of the advertizers ... but they didn't. That's
        the big reason ZD is irrelevant now.

        If Joe Average had wanted magazines about Unix instead then they would have written about Unix instead, but they didn't, so get over it.

        Oh beleive me, I am over it. Who subscribes
        to PC mag. anymore? Or Computer Shopper ?
        Or Network Week? or whatever fad bandwagon
        ZD tried to domesticate?

        ZD would have been better of hedging their bets.
        The ruined their credibility.

      • by abulafia ( 7826 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:29AM (#8354050)
        And, finally, why you would be surprised that the editor of a publication called Windows Sources would "push for exclusive coverage of Windows NT for business users" is a mystery to me - would it make more sense to you to devote large chunks of coverage to other OSes in a magazine that's devoted purely to Windows? I guess you'll be demanding that Apple magazines now cover Linux too.

        No, that isn't the point, and it this is bordering on strawman argumentation.

        Of course you would expect such behavior from someone in that place. That, in fact, is exactly the point. Given such an investment in the past, looking at that in light of current behavior is simply sensible.

        This is no different than considering a politician's background then looking at what they're currently peddling.

        I'll leave it as to others to think about this in context with the rest of your ZD rant, and only say this. Suppose you're covering the local farming industry, and in order to survive as a company, you have to keep the Big Local Farmer happy. That's fine, but if people doubt your integrity when covering that particular farmer, I don't believe you have any legitimate complaint.

      • Re:Microsoft shill ? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by BerntB ( 584621 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @02:19AM (#8354283)
        So if you're an insider...

        Tell us about the connection between size of ad budget and e.g. results on reviews...

        I lost my innocence when Word 6 was released on the Mac and got good reviews in the trade rags -- while all Mac users hated it because it was both buggy and really slow. Word 6 was faster if you ran the Windows-version in VirtualPC (or what the emulator of the day was called; I talked to people that had tried but never tried).

        The interesting thing was that the columnists in the Mac magazines hated it -- they had some deal wich didn't sign away their souls. If you're in the business, please inform me:

        Can you still more or less trust the columnists in trade magazines or are they just supporting the ad sales team, too?

    • by isdnip ( 49656 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:50AM (#8354137)
      The article, which was truly stupid, ran on ZDNet. While that sounds like Ziff-Davis, it's not. ZDNet is part of CNET, a separate company; they bough it from Ziff-Davis several years ago. Ziff-Davis still puts out PC Magazine (pcmag.com) and Extreme Tech, among other things. Sort of like how Lycos owns Wired.com, not Wired magazine, though those two still have a working relationship that is not apparent between ZDNet and CNET.

      Among CNET properties, ZDNet seems to be oriented towards Windows-loving IT pros. Maybe that's part of its Ziff-Davis heritage, or just a marketing decision.
  • by ksuMacGyver ( 562019 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:06AM (#8353689) Homepage
    So is SCO claiming that their code is in the least safe operating system [slashdot.org]?

    I can see why no one wants to pay $699 for it! ;)
  • by IgD ( 232964 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:08AM (#8353693)
    http://techupdate.zdnet.com/techupdate/stories/mai n/What_did_SCO_buy.html

    This was another garbage article by Berlind IMHO. Even if SCO did "own Unix" (which it does not!) The whole idea is irrelevant. None of "Unix" got put into "Linux". Even if a few lines out of millions got copied in the there, the concept of "de minimi" applies. Such as small amount is in there that it is irrelevant. Case closed.
    • by cant_get_a_good_nick ( 172131 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:47AM (#8353888)
      In that article the guy talks abuot "what is UNIX", and whether a UNIX clone could be built without looking at UNIX source.
      1) Linux is API compatible with UNIX. How? Because they read the standards and the man pages. I keep on bringing up that some code that uses select() for timing breaks on Linux because they copied the man page and not the code. Their cleanroom version was copied from the old BSD manpage, and is not bug-compatible to the way that BSD implemented it.
      2) They don't even need to be cleanroom, they can just use the BSD code.

      What a freakin' moron. Two uninformed pieces.
  • by netsharc ( 195805 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:12AM (#8353717)
    It's worth stating that there are a couple of ways to actually avoid getting sued altogether. This may be a really good option if you work for an image-conscious company that avoids the legal limelight like the plague. One is to simply to pay SCO $699 per server for a perpetual license or $149 per server for an annual license. According to SCO's Stowell, "The license that we are offering to commercial end users of Linux is called the SCO Intellectual Property License. The end user is provided with a license that allows them to run SCO's intellectual property as it is found in Linux in binary form only. This license is meant to apply to any version of Linux (based on the 2.2 kernel and later) that is being run in a commercial environment."


    Argh, has the legality of SCO asking for that money even been established? Yeah sure I'll skip the corp-lawyers and take the advice of a fucking net-journalist and fork over the dough. Is it even to get SCO to accept the money? [zgp.org]
    • by pez ( 54 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:19AM (#8353757) Journal
      I was actually reading the article with great interest until I read the paragraph you quoted above. After that, thoughts of "how much is this writer getting paid to write this?" started dancing in my head.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:58AM (#8353931)
      Another interesting question to be asking is whether paying said money actually protects you in any fashion from being sued by SCO. First off SCO has shown they are ready and willing to terminate interminatable licenses at any time with anyone. Second off SCO has shown great interest in trying to legally implicate even further anyone who gives them money. Witness their recent incident in which all SCO UNIX licensees recieved a letter saying "Certify to us you are not using any linux installations containing SCO code, or we will terminate your license".

      It's like kidnappers. Show them you're willing to cooperate by handing over the ransom, they'll just ask for more...
    • by pavera ( 320634 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:41AM (#8354087) Homepage Journal
      I guess this writer forgot to find out that you still can't purchase these licenses from SCO, their sales people still can't sell them, or know how to sell them to people
  • by holy_smoke ( 694875 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:14AM (#8353721)
    'nuff said.
  • 10-Q worries? (Score:5, Informative)

    by cant_get_a_good_nick ( 172131 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:14AM (#8353725)
    I stopped caring when the guy took the 10-Q filing as a strong piece of evidence against Linux. 10-Q filings need to include EVERYTHING, essentially in "the sky is falling" mode, just in case it does happen and the SEC gets hard core, or even shareholder lawsuits. Yeah, there's always the off chance that SCO might win, but to take this warning in the 10-Q as strong evidence gives strong evidence he doesn't know what he's talking about.
    • by Xenographic ( 557057 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:40AM (#8353857) Journal
      Take a look at this article [groklaw.net] from a week or two ago on Groklaw.

      PJ compares SCO's worst case scenarios with those of RedHat, IBM & co.

      It makes for much more interesting reading than many of the other legal filings I've read... Note how in that article, SCO describes quite a few ways in which its business could fold, compared to rather bland statements that something bad might happen in the off chance SCO ever actually prevailed with some bit of their case.

      It's kind of fun to read all the various ways in which SCO might be liquidated, though. I wonder which of them will happen?
  • Lame article... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by GoMMiX ( 748510 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:14AM (#8353727)
    Reading the same FUD crap over and over through 'normal' media outlets is really getting old.

    Though, I must admit, this is probably one of the better FUD articles I've read. Rather, it takes a new approach...

    "Hey, normal users don't need to worry - you're safe. It's the big companies that have to worry. Just forget about it, and let SCO do their thing."

    I'm not sure -- but it appears to me that the article is somewhat geared towards telling normal Linux users to abandon concern for the SCO situation and let the corporations take it all on alone.

    Perhaps a new FUD tactic attempting to break up the community?

    Regardless, I have a headache after reading it. 99% of the information in that article I've read 20 times already - with the only exception being the articles strong attempts to alleviate any concerns that normal Linux users may have of being sued.
  • by Performer Guy ( 69820 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:15AM (#8353734)
    It is very telling that Sun was pushing the indemnification angle in this timeframe. This really sheds some light on their funding of SCO as a means to further their own hidden adgenda. Like Microsoft they appear to have used SCO to attack Linux by proxy and advance their own business. In SUN's case it is particularly mendacious as they pose as a Linux ally while working against our interests.
    • Riiiiiight. Nice paranoia there. Exactly how is hurting Linux in the best interest of Sun? What, do you think that it will increase the number of Solaris installations? Maybe they want one less Java virtual machine to have to keep up to date? Please, and I'm being serious here, give me ONE GOOD REASON that Sun would want anything to happen to Linux.
    • It is very telling that Sun was pushing the indemnification angle in this timeframe. This really sheds some light on their funding of SCO as a means to further their own hidden adgenda.

      Great - a conspiracy theory. So Darl or his secret masters have an expert master plan to topple linux and IBM, which somehow involves looking stupid for a really long time before the final few seconds of the court case when all will be revealed. I don't think there is a hidden agenda.

      The secret masters are still in beta.

    • by -tji ( 139690 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @03:25AM (#8354468) Journal
      McNealy has been spewing FUD since SCO first announced their lawsuit. This guy's talk prior to the lawsuit would imply that Sun was not just responding opportunistically. They knew about it beforehand, and maybe even contributed to it.

      See this article [com.com] for some McNealy FUD right after SCO started this. Such as:

      "We think open source is wonderful and good, but we also believe in copyright and the rule of law," McNealy said.

      "We paid a big, big bag of money a decade ago to get IP (intellectual property) rights to do what we wanted to do with Solaris," he said at a press conference announcing a new line of Intel-based servers on Monday. "We've got a free and clear SCO license. Your audit committee won't get a letter if you are using Solaris." said Sun chairman Scott McNealy.

      Compare that to HP's response at the same time:

      "HP is unaware of any intellectual property infringement within Linux. The complaint is focused on alleged inappropriate behavior by IBM, it is not about infringement by Linux itself of SCO's IP rights."

      and Larry Ellison was quick to point to Microsoft as one of the groups behind the scenes:
      "All Bill (Gates) says is, 'Give me the opportunity to innovate,' and once again Bill is innovating," Ellison said during a press conference announcing an alliance between Oracle and Sun to promote Sun's Intel-based servers. "You've seen advanced bundling and now you are seeing extreme litigation...They know a lot about extreme litigation."
  • by unboring ( 697886 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:16AM (#8353742) Homepage
    That's the impression I got after checking out the other articles written by the author (David Berlind) on the website archives. He has a few interviews with high-ranking SCO employees. Most of the articles are written from the SCO viewpoint too, IMO.

    Moreover, in this article too, nowhere has he questioned the validity of SCO's claims. He seems content to criticize other companies for their indemnification programs.

    • by nomadic ( 141991 ) <nomadicworld@@@gmail...com> on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:29AM (#8353801) Homepage
      Moreover, in this article too, nowhere has he questioned the validity of SCO's claims. He seems content to criticize other companies for their indemnification programs.

      He says:
      If you take some time to study the case, however, I think you'll find that SCO's claims are not as easy to dismiss as some people would lead you to believe. Could those claims eventually be dismissed? Absolutely. I'm just not sure that it's the slam-dunk that SCO's opponents and water cooler discussions make it out to be.


      He explicitly states that SCO's claims could be dismissed. The point of the article is simply to explain how linux users can be protected if this isn't the case.
      • Wrong (Score:4, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:13AM (#8353991)
        He says "If you take some time to study the case"

        let me translate:

        1) I, wise sage, have studied the case
        2) You, stupid dope, have not
        3) I conclude there is much to this lawsuit and it will be difficult to dismiss

        He's so full of shit that he burps brown.

        THe point of the article is to say:
        Wow, this is complicated, you can't understand it. FOrtunately, I do understand it and let me tell you, this looks really difficult for you if you use Linux.

        He ignores that fact that SCO has changed their tune in the lawsuit; they no longer claim they own Linux/Unix/AIX; they're saying "Oh look, shiny!"

        Please stop trying to defend this guy; he's a moron with a word processor.
      • Sure. He says the claims could "absolutely" be dismissed. That is hardly a careful review of the claims at issue. Yet he goes on to ask "How much is your job worth to you?"

        Now - to be fair he does note "...as a user of Linux, protecting yourself from an SCO-law suit could easily be a waste of money." But by the time he's done with the article he's advising " Basically, you have one question to ask yourself: How much peace of mind do you have now and how much more are you willing to spend for a little e
  • Catering to the PHB (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Gothmolly ( 148874 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:18AM (#8353751)
    Given the current state of our collective PHBs, the kind that aren't technical, and both fear and resent their more technical employees, this article attempts to soothe their fears. Just pay up, and you won't have to worry. Don't bother asking your developers and/or legal staff for pesky details and long-winded explanations. Just sweep the cost under the rug, as it were. Don't worry, Mr. Manager, you can sleep soundly at night, knowing that through your failed initiative, Darl McBride is a richer man. Heck, your own stock portfolio might event perform better now.
  • by perlchild ( 582235 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:19AM (#8353758)
    I found an interesting contradiction in this article... In one line he speaks of the defense fund for developers, and mentions they aren't likely to get sued. And in another he mentions Linus Torvalds and Andrew Morton by name as likely to get sued... Just who did he think they are? Another case of someone WAYYYYYYYYY out of their depth...

    What he probably meant to say was "my intended audience of (frightful?) enterprise users of Linux are NOT developers, so they don't want to know who is gonna get sued, they only care if they are gonna get sued..."

    I also found it odd(in the sense that it indicates his research was skewed as not to sound alarmist) that he spent so little time speaking about how vital a part of a proper support contract indemnity used to be (in Mainframe and Minicomputer environments, which aren't as plentiful now) and are now being forgotten because people think anyone MCSE can run what they call "a departmental server" on 2000$ hardware with no backup or redudancy... As for indemnification I always thought a good rule of thumb was if your computers systems total 50000$ of book value, or handle more than a million a year in money value, you should either get indemnification, or negotiate an equivalent value out of your support contract(equivalent to the indemnification, not the 50000)

    If anything, we live in interesting times...
  • by ewe2 ( 47163 ) <ewetoo@gmail . c om> on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:19AM (#8353761) Homepage Journal

    by the complications surrounding indemifying Linux because they don't understand the nature of Linux distributions. Linux and a distribution are not the same, yet Berlind keeps confusing the two in the case of HP, Sun and IBM, even though two of them contribute code and the other offers Linux on its hardware via Red Hat; one of them is suing SCO and the other two are indemifying against SCO lawsuits.

    I don't see anything wrong with Red Hat's position; the software business is after all a get-rich-quick-via-litigation arena these days, and they are a valid target. So I don't buy Berlind's arguments of a preemptive strike either.

    I'm not arguing against indemnity per se, but, especially in reference to Linux, I don't think anyone really knows how to measure it as an insurance cost; the estimates are currently wildly high or low. There would be a high barrier to entry from most insurers point of view in any case, which is why the big companies do a lot of research and wait to be sued over a product rather than take out a policy and cross their fingers.

  • For many, the answer to these questions has to do with the likelihood that SCO might succeed in its legal endeavors. It's like basing the decision to get collision insurance for your car on the likelihood that you're going to get into a fender bender while traveling down a desolate stretch of highway.

    That is to say, he doesn't sound like he thinks SCO might succeed (it's a "desolate stretch of highway"), but that perhaps you should get indemnification *before* more "traffic" (somebody with a legit claim... say, somebody with a "defensive" patent...) comes along.
  • by k4_pacific ( 736911 ) <`moc.oohay' `ta' `cificap_4k'> on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:21AM (#8353768) Homepage Journal
    Some time ago, I posted this to Groklaw, I've since updated it some, so here it is again. It can be sung to the tune of Don McLean's "American Pie" (sort of). You'll have to excuse the scarcity of carriage returns in the below text. Slashdot would not allow me to post with them, saying the lines were too short. Anyway, enjoy!

    A long long time ago, I can still remember how Unix used to be so great, tape drives were as big as cars for saving files, known as tars and perhaps, we could save it from its fate

    But Richard Stallman surely shivered when Windows NT was delivered, with icons on the desktop and a flying toaster backdrop

    But I can't remember if I cried such great relief I felt inside, we had IBM on our side the day Caldera died

    *Bye Bye Mr. Darl McBride, claimed there's Unix in our Linux but we know that you lied, and them Redmond boys are cursing Samba and WINE, thinking this'll be the way that they die, this'll be the way that they die.

    Did you use the kernel source? Well the GPL you can't enforce. Just because I said it is so, we'll sue you if you don't desist, its not a slap across the wrist and that's the FUD that's coming out of SCO

    Well, he belongs in a prison cell, or in the fiery pits of hell, his name is Darl McBride, and he'll take you for a ride, his SCOsource license costs a grand, but no one's got one in his hand. We all told him to go pound sand, the day Caldera died, we were singin'
    repeat *
    Didio came to spread the FUD, and SCO was after Linus's blood, but that's not how its going to be, cuz PJ came and did her blog, and Darl I'm sure, that dirty dog, reads it all, quite religiously

    In Las Vegas back in August, SCO tried hard, tried with earnest to prove Linux wasn't free, but they showed us BSD. We all laughed and we all reeled, when we observed what they'd revealed. So now they keep their claims all sealed, the day Caldera died, we were singin'
    repeat *
    Then they released some header files, and that left them on the tiles, cause the files contained not a line of code. You can't lay claim to 123, its just a number you can see, that simply tells the program how to load

    It's public knowledge, for all to know, that's what was told by us to SCO, but did those fools believe it? They just could not conceive it. We own Unix and all the works, all its traits and all its quirks, and then they called us stupid jerks, the day Caldera died, we were singing
    repeat *
    And now they're suing Novell too. They'll sue me and they'll sue you. They're saying this in every place. They are fighting against our IBM, and fighting the owners of RPM, but they don't have a solid case

    It's gonna bust its gonna break, investor's money they plan to take. Stock won't be worth a dime, and it will be a crime. Insider trading we'll all cry, Linux was just their alibi, Darl and Kevin the feds will try the day Caldera died, we're a singin'
    repeat *
    When times were dark and things were glum, Darl had Linux by the thumb. Someone had to save the day. But like an episode of Scooby Doo, PJ and friends all came through, and Linux is here to stay

    But back in Utah, so it seemed, SCO did cry, and then they screamed. They couldn't match a token, no copyrights were broken, and the OS I admire most, is free to all, from coast to coast, and SCO is but a distant ghost, the day Caldera died, and we were singin'
    repeat *

    IANAL or a poet or a musician. So there.
    • by kfg ( 145172 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:00AM (#8353936)
      Dear Sir,

      I am a founding board member of the nonprofit corporation that acquired the rights to the coffeehouse in which Mr. McLean first performed American Pie. As such, in our opinion, American Pie is a derivative work of our orginization.

      Please remit a check for $699 dollars to me immediately.

      Oh, yeah. Make it out to "cash," 'K?

      KFG
  • by holy_smoke ( 694875 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:23AM (#8353774)
    Maybe not related but d@m funny! SCO street photo at Groklaw [groklaw.net]
    • by Zocalo ( 252965 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:46AM (#8353879) Homepage
      Higher resolution GPL'd versions more suitable for use as wallpaper can be found here [kde-look.org] for a preview courtesy of KDE-Look and here [thelinuxbox.org] for the actual pics ranging from 800x600 upto 1600x1200. The latter link looks like it might be a personal server, so anyone got a mirror?

      To quote the lead comment on Groklaw... "priceless!" ;)

  • by malchus842 ( 741252 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:24AM (#8353779)
    ZDNet is, effectively, advising their readership to pay protection money to SCO, in order to protect their image? Gee, that's a nice house you have there, be a shame if something happened to it. And those are nice kids you have...be a shame if something happened to them.

    Give me a break. First of all, what are your chances of actually being sued by SCO? Fairly slim, I suspect. And even then, a simple motion that says "Your honor, Novell claims they have the copyrights to this material, and SCO is involved in legal process with them. Until such time as SCO can demonstrate that they actually own the property they are claiming, I move the case be placed on hold.

    Second, so SCO sues you - I don't believe that they can win (see Groklaw for exhaustive details. You don't look bad to anyone except perhaps a few SCO or MS shills. Everybody else thinks you are a hero!

    Finally, even assuming that SCO does own the copyrights, they still have yet to prove that any of their code is in Linux. That's what the IBM lawsuit is all about. And if you check the analysis on Groklaw, SCO is digging their own grave at warp speed.

    Ziff Davis is being irresponsible and is givnig VERY bad advise.
    • by kfg ( 145172 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:32AM (#8354063)
      Give me a break. First of all, what are your chances of actually being sued by SCO? Fairly slim, I suspect. And even then, a simple motion that says "Your honor, Novell claims they have the copyrights to this material, and SCO is involved in legal process with them. Until such time as SCO can demonstrate that they actually own the property they are claiming, I move the case be placed on hold.

      Nah, you don't even have to do that. Things are going roughly the way I predicted a while ago. SCO threatened Lehman Brothers and they responded, in essence:

      "Dude, you got the wrong party. We use Red Hat. If you have issues with your IP in Red Hat you have to resolve them with them. Now run along."

      Red Hat is the one to bring up the Novell issue. The end user is the lowest man on the precedence totem pole and you work up from there.

      Oh, wait. Red Hat has already sued SCO. Go figure. Well, that settles it. The issue of SCO's IP in Red Hat is already before the court.

      KFG
      • No shit... (Score:4, Insightful)

        by benjamindees ( 441808 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @04:52AM (#8354658) Homepage
        I read that article in disbelief as the author continued to suggest that *end-users* needed indemnification from lawsuit. He even compared it to buying a car that contained some sort of unlicensed patented technology as though using something that you bought leaves you open to legal liability. Has this *ever* happened? What complete and utter horseshit!

        At *most*, the "indemnification" that a company or end-user would require would be some sort of guarantee that, should they be required to stop using any part of Linux, an alternative would be available. I think the weakness of SCO's case and the response of the community has already allayed those fears.

        In fact, that's the entire reason for using Open Source as opposed to closed alternatives. Everyone knows that, should just about *any* part of Linux or any other Open Source project be encumbered, a suitable replacement will be found.
  • Seriously... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by fr0z ( 658466 ) <fr0z@myrealbox . c om> on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:25AM (#8353783) Homepage
    Why does anyone still believe in these "analysts" any more? And I fail to see how an opinion piece by a former Microserf in a Microsoft-mouthpiece is news...just more of the good ol' FUD from the same ol' sources...
  • by jms ( 11418 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:26AM (#8353792)
    The next time someone here finds him or herself at a SCO question-and-answer session, I would appreciate if you would ask the following question:
    Part of IBM's countersuit against SCO alleges, in effect, that SCOs entire product line infringes on various IBM patents. What steps does SCO intend to take to indemnify their customers in case SCO's products are found to infringe on IBM's patents?
  • by OnBeyondBeing ( 709878 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:42AM (#8353869)

    Mr. Berlind wrote that we open source-ers are 'cultish.'
    That's ridiculous.
    I say we hex him.
  • SCO Linux? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by elusus ( 562774 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @12:46AM (#8353881)
    In that worst-case scenario, distributing any version of Linux without a license from SCO or 100 percent clean room-developed code would be illegal.
    But Linux can't be distributed under any license but the GPL. So an SCO licensed "Linux" would contain no lines of Linux code outside the code in question. So the choices should SCO win are a clean room implementation or no legal Linux at all. This is precisely the kind of statement that people like the author use to cloud the issue, not clarify it.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:01AM (#8353939)
    How did slashdot miss this [groklaw.net] article?
  • Why??? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by OneFix ( 18661 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:01AM (#8353942)
    Any infringement (if it even exists) is still SCO's fault. SCO has still not given us exact line numbers or snippets of code. They have made statements without backing them up and claim that Linux is still hurting their IP.

    The only thing we've seen are claims that are nothing short of saying anything IBM has touched is stolen from SCO...It's obvious that SCO has no plans to actually cooperate with the kernel dvelopers, as there has really been no attempt at contacting the developers directly...

    There's really no reason for this type of speculation until the courts actually make their decision...this article seems to assume that SCO's claims are as good as gold...To be honest, SCO doesn't look to be moving on their end...
  • by ABaumann ( 748617 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:04AM (#8353959)
    This guy is the Executive Editor of Tech Update. He got his degrees in Computer Information Systems. [wirelessen...posium.com] (and he wears those stupid emo glasses) Why is he talking about the legal issues of the whole SCO debate?
  • Rolling eyes (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:05AM (#8353962)
    Another clueless hack with a word processor.

    I guess most people realize this guy knows little about computers, and nothing about law, so his main claim to fame is...that he is a journalism major writing for Ziff-Davis? That means his rant is just a nicely worded Slashdot troll.

    He writes like he knows something when in fact he's being completely uncritical of not only *fact* but recent events. Particularly how SCO's lawsuit has completely changec character and is now down to 60 lines of code that they claim were copied.

    SCO's case is on its last legs, but he talks as if SCO is an aggrieved party looking for a little love.

    Lets do some digging on this chump and see what other jems he is pushing on an unsuspecting public.
    • by 0x0d0a ( 568518 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:56AM (#8354167) Journal
      I guess most people realize this guy knows little about computers, and nothing about law, so his main claim to fame is...that he is a journalism major writing for Ziff-Davis? That means his rant is just a nicely worded Slashdot troll.

      To be fair, to write a really good summary of what's going on, you'd need to be skilled at law, software development, and journalism, and I'm fairly convinced that anyone that's really competent in all three areas is not going to be making a living as a journalist.

      The degree of uninformed commmentary all over the place means that few people *do* have a good handle on what's going on. From what I can get from reading this guy's archive, he tends to hobnob with CEOs/upper management of tech companies, who naturally are going to happily feed him whatever line they think will best manipulate him. He isn't going to sit down and start reading through legal code.

      So, is he uninformed and parrotting BS? Sure. On the other hand, are *most* people involved? Sure. The only people that I'd really claim to know what's going on are in IBM's legal team -- and those folks, beside having an obvious bias, take the approach of not saying anything that might be wrong. Lawyers are conservative about making statements. Journalists, on the other hand, need to make impressive announcements and insights on a constant basis. Does this mean that accuracy suffers? Sure. But if it didn't, they wouldn't get paid.

      I agree that anyone at this point that's worried about using Linux because of SCO is pretty much either uninformed or awfully paranoid. I've keept a reasonably close eye on groklaw and other parties involved -- and I've never even coded on the sections in question or taken any civil law courses. I think that Slashdot *was* overeager to pronounce SCO full of hot air, but at this point, they really have no case against Linux users. There are so many counterarguments that could be used if even one failed that would blow away their argument that it isn't even funny.

      IBM shareholders might be a bit worried about the continuation of AIX, which is more at risk than Linux, but honestly, I still wouldn't lose any sleep over it if I had a bunch of AIX deployments. Given the data that's come up from Novell and IBM, and how weak SCO's arguments have been once in the light, this case shouldn't have been a worry for at least a month or two now.
  • by Ars-Fartsica ( 166957 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:13AM (#8353993)
    I want this thing to go to court so we can hear arguments that actually have consequences. Really, no matter how it ends, it ends well for open source. If the very best thing happens, SCO is vaporized in the markets after the judgement against it. In the very worst case, IBM gets hammered, linux essentially becomes quasi-legal, and we can embark on the largest and most productive exercise in civil disobedience in a generation.
  • email to the author (Score:5, Interesting)

    by hankaholic ( 32239 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:14AM (#8353995)
    I just sent an email to the author of the article:

    In your article, "The SCO legal train: Know your options", you suggest that legal indemnification is something that end-users should be concerned with.


    However, what you didn't explain is exactly what SCO could sue end-users for doing. As SCO continued to distribute the Linux kernel under the GPL even after filing suit against IBM, they really cannot argue that end-users are infringing upon their copyrights. After all, the GPL provides explicit permission to redistribute under certain conditions.

    If end-users didn't actually break the law, SCO has no case against them. "They should have paid us" isn't a strong core argument for the prosecution unless law was actually broken.

    What exactly do you believe that SCO can sue end-users for doing?

    --
    Cheers,
    Chet
    I'll post any response I get ;)
    • Also sent the dude email. Mostly it was sending him the best early comments on this story, so he could read some of our opinions (claimed them as definitely NOT mine), with a link to this page and to Groklaw. Told him to base his opinion on actual facts instead of SCO press releases. End of message.
  • by Trailer Trash ( 60756 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:22AM (#8354018) Homepage
    He needs to read more Groklaw. Pity, his article is long enough that he could have backed it up with research.

    First, regardless of who owns SysV, SCO can't find any of it in Linux. Therefore, the "who own SysV?" question is moot.

    Second, this case hinges on SCO's alleged contracts with IBM. I'm not a party to those contracts. If IBM put stuff into Linux that they weren't supposed to, then, that's a tussle between IBM and SCO. Not "me and SCO", or "Lehman Bros. and SCO". IBM and SCO. Period.

    SCO's case rests on their bastardized idea of "intellectual property" that no lawyer that I know of (outside of their paid counsel) has bought into. Plenty of lawyers are laughing at them.

    My feeling is that the "SCO case", and I mean all of it, will be over far quicker than most people think. It'll be sudden, unexpected, and leave everybody with their jaws dropped. You heard it here first...
  • by TFloore ( 27278 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:22AM (#8354023)
    when should you start seriously looking for shelter?

    My answer? Probably on the day that a judge announces that he agrees with SCO's interpretation of what it acquired from Novell.
    Or, put another way...

    You don't need to worry.

    Read Groklaw. Sit back. Laugh.

    Worry? I don't think so.
    ==
  • Fight Fire With Fire (Score:5, Interesting)

    by femto ( 459605 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:25AM (#8354033) Homepage
    Not that I think SCO actually has more chance than a snowball in hell, but *IF* SCO happened to win, the the case would extended the definition of a derivative work to an extent never seen before.

    This could open an avalanche for copyleft. It would mean any code which has ever been *near* any copylefted code would be owned by copyleft. Removing the copylefted code would be no remedy. The FSF would have field day chasing down all past GPL violators and any company which has even looked at GPL code (the majority, even if they won't admit it or actually used it?). The opportunity for retribution against the Darl McBrides of this world would be fantastic, and make others wish the SCO case had never happened.

  • Moronic Op piece (Score:5, Interesting)

    by pavera ( 320634 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:44AM (#8354096) Homepage Journal
    This piece completely forgets that SCO just removed all of the Unix is in Linux parts of their case, and now it is only that AIX and Dynix are in Linux, which SCO has no reason to believe they actually own, and if a judge finds that code developed by IBM and Sequent is actually owned by SCO well, I'll have to move to a different country, based on that ruling code developed using Microsofts MFC is owned by microsoft, code developed using Qt is owned by trolltech, and so on and so on...
  • by The Good Jim ( 642796 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:47AM (#8354115)
    He's a bit hard to take seriously -

    - IBM urgently writing a 'clean' kernel, when they don't know what is tainted?

    - Novell releasing NetWare as GPL? Who would migrate to NetWare simply because Linux was no longer an option?

    Both of these silly suggestions imply people want to run Linux for its kernel - whereas most people have limited interest in the kernel, but want an OS to let them run applications.

    The information on indemnification wasn't bad, but the legal advice is essentially "Stop and think - accidents can happen to you". FUD

  • by jc2000 ( 532814 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @01:54AM (#8354157)
    The author says that those who dismiss SCO's claims haven't really analyzed their merits, but have relied on the opinions of others. But he doesn't do any merits analysis either. He just looks at who has indemnified their users and who hasn't -- that is, the opinions of others -- and suggests there is something significant in IBM's and Red Hat's failure to offer indemnification.

    There isn't. Whether you distribute proprietary software or GPL'd software, there is always a nonzero risk that some of your code, one day, might be held to infringe someone else's intellectual property rights. Indemnifying against that risk therefore has nonzero cost. Proprietary software vendors can cover that cost in the license fee they charge for the software. But GPL software vendors do not and cannot charge a "license fee" for the software.

    Obviously, GPL software vendors can and do charge for other things, such as maintenance and support, access to FTP and web sites, or even copies of the program. But they cannot charge a "license fee" for the right to obtain or use the program. If you can't and don't charge a license fee for the code, you shouldn't be expected to provide either a warranty or an indemnity.
  • by HangingChad ( 677530 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @02:00AM (#8354190) Homepage
    If people are making money writing tripe like that then I'm working too hard for a living. He avoids any real discussion of the merits of SCO's case. Just read what Novell has been posting on their web site. Read the IP primers Groklaw has put online. Berlind, you're a fear mongering hack.

    Certainly it's complicated but not beyond human reason to comprehend. Let's take just one line:

    IBM's AIX has a different question mark over it. Nonetheless it's a question mark

    This says one thing loud and clear: You've never worked with IBM on a project. They're as Death Star about IP as anyone I've ever worked with. And that was WAY before the SCO business ever surfaced. That's not even going into detail on the merits of SCO's case. But he didn't have to, so neither do I.

    weigh the total cost of protection versus the risk of being sued by SCO (or maybe someone else).

    Spoken like a true low-level pussy. You can get sued these days whether the other side has a case or not. Some cases are just to keep you distracted while one of their partners moves in on your deal. If the threat of litigation puts you off these days, you might as well consign yourself to a life of being someone else's bitch because that's all you're going to be. If the other side knows that's all it takes, they'll make it a reality.

    And before anyone steps up and says that's easy for me to say because I've never been sued...screw you. I've been through it twice already. Litigation is just another business tool today so learn to deal with it. Best thing you can do is keep your professional liability insurance paid up and learn how to find the "oh, shit" lawyers (they're not even always the most expensive). The ones who send out a letter and the other side goes, "Oh, shit, not them." Just the name on the letterhead can make you a bigger pain in the ass than you're worth. I spend time down at the courthouse talking to lawyers, ask them who they hate to see coming. After a while a handful of names will surface. They're usually bastards, but they're your bastards. It makes a difference. Lot of firms just run up the charges and don't really do the work. You have to find the ones that actually work for their 300/hour. Talk to the court house people. Who files the most appeals when they lose, those people are motivated to win.

    Plan for it. Budget for it. It's going to happen even if you're St. F'ing Peter. You'll get through it.

  • by cant_get_a_good_nick ( 172131 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @02:00AM (#8354193)
    I recall OpenUNIX (UnixWare 8) being sold as the great melding of UNIX with Linux. I know they have a lot of GNU userland tools (always have; I hit the Skunkware site regularly when I had to work on OpenServer 5) but part of me thinks they tried to meld some kernel stuff as well. They claim that their Linux compatibility stuff in the kernel is cleanroom, has anyone checked? People can ask for specific code modules instead of the general fishing expedition that SCO is doing.
  • by borgheron ( 172546 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @02:09AM (#8354232) Homepage Journal
    Dear Sir,

    I would like to point out something:

    "SCO is a tiny company in Utah, with opposition that includes some of the
    largest companies in the world, millions of Linux users, and the leaders of the
    cultish open source movement."

    Why is it that anytime there is something in the world that doesn't fit a mold
    which is familiar to the layperson it is considered "cultish"?

    I like GNU/Linux because it helps me run my business and because of all of the
    other advantages of open source and free software and because I dare to be
    different and think that some ideas should be free and open to the public.
    Our founding fathers believed this. Why is it so hard to convince people
    these days.

    I do not think that makes me a member of some cult. If it does, then this
    country is truly in deep trouble when it comes to personal freedoms.

    Aside from the glaring inaccuracies and omissions, which I won't bother to
    point out since the refutation of most of what SCO has said is on the net for
    all to see, you're article disappoints me because it resorts to this type of
    name calling to prove it's point.

    What most people interpret as "cultish behavior" is the love and the attachment
    which Linux users have to the operating system that they have worked so hard to
    create. This sentiment is prevalent in many other communities. Last time I
    talked to a die hard windows fan, I could swear I was talking to a cult member. :)

    Please remember, that by stereotyping an entire community, such as you have
    done in your article, you seek to diminish it's voice.

    Good day, GJC

    =====
    Gregory John Casamento -- CEO/President Open Logic Corp.
  • by mabu ( 178417 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @02:24AM (#8354302)
    Don't say I didn't tell you so when IBM *SETTLES* with SCO so that it appears to korporate amerika as the only "legitimate" Linux source.

    I urge Slashdotters to not be blinded by their idealism and realize that this is a corporate battle for shareholder interests. What's "right" has absolutely no fucking thing to do with this argument. None of the parties involved are motivated by "rightness"; they are motivated by profit.

    Make sure if you support any effort to fight SCO that it's contingent on ** NO SETTLEMENT ** !!
  • by _Sprocket_ ( 42527 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @03:05AM (#8354418)
    From the article:

    If you've been accepting solutions from your providers without using your buying power to establish indemnification, you are putting yourself at unnecessary risk. For the many savvy IT shops (GE is rumored to be one), such negotiations are par for the course.

    This seems to imply that idemnification is something out of the ordinary. After all, acording to Berlind, one should be leveraging one's buying power to get it.

    So the question that I get from this is - who offers idemnification as a standard part of their license? Which OSes are "safe"? How "safe"? And were they always like that or is this something they jumped on when SCO began its campaign?
  • by njdj ( 458173 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @04:15AM (#8354584)
    he does seem to have made more of an effort to try to find reasons to back up SCO's claims than any of their other supporters have.

    He ignores the fact (admitted by SCO) that SCO distributed Linux under the GPL. That's one very good reason why his article is hogwash. Many people already have an SCO license ... and that license allows them to redistribute it without fee, to anybody.

    So despite the author's attempt to sound serious, balanced, objective, responsible, etc: he's just another FUD merchant.
  • by VernonNemitz ( 581327 ) on Sunday February 22, 2004 @05:07AM (#8354704) Journal
    I note something that didn't seem to get mentioned it in the article about indemnification. That is, Novell has dredged up an official AT&T interpretation of a particular paragraph-in-the-contract [novell.com].

    I think that this disputed paragraph is the foundation upon which SCO is basing 99% of its claims. What I most seriously wonder is, "OK, suppose the judge gives SCO full rights to Unix. But most of the Unix contracts out there are based on an AT&T contract, and AT&T has provided a specific interpretation of a critical paragraph. Can SCO change the interpretation of this particular paragraph, JUST because they now own Unix?"

    What I think is that those who obtained those AT&T-type contracts will argue that they are operating under the AT&T interpretation, which they were contractually allowed to do when they signed those contracts!

    I do not think that the judge will grant SCO the right to arbitrarily alter the interpretation of the disputed paragraph in those contracts without some sort of advance notice -- and no such notice was given (just lawsuits). The net result is that, for example, IBM may have to STOP moving AIX and Dynamix code into Linux, but that all previously-moved code will be "grandfathered".

    For Linux, that net result means that SCO can be ignored, and no indemnification nor insurance need be paid to anyone.

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