Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

News for nerds, stuff that matters

SCO SCO SCO!

Posted by michael on Tue Jun 03, 2003 09:31 PM
from the make-it-stop dept.
Still more links on SCO's assorted allegations of copyright infringement. They say they're going to sue Novell. Software analysts refuse to be part of the hoax - also some good quotes from Linus here. SCO and UNIX: a Comedy of Errors. Salon has a story on SCO too, but sadly it's not available to read freely. And Wired has an old story which I think sums up the SCO claims pretty well.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
SCO SCO SCO! | Log In/Create an Account | Top | 687 comments (Spill at 50!) | Index Only | Search Discussion
Display Options Threshold:
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
(1) | 2
  • SCO still packs a punch? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by mao che minh (611166) * on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:31PM (#6111484)
    (Last Journal: Sunday April 11 2004, @07:41PM)
    It makes me take pause when I witness a company that appearently has no ammo keep entering into so many skirmishes against esteemed and battle proven foes. It almost makes me question the analysts that keep stating that SCO's claims lack bite.

    Would the team at SCO really keep pushing a lie, even though they know that by doing so they will face unspeakable countersuits after the trial(s)? I think that SCO is cleverly hiding an ace-in-the-hole, and it's going to hurt Linux and IBM badly. This is unprecedented: no company would ever commit suicide so blatantly and openly. I fear the worst is yet to come.

    HAHA, yea right. Had ya going there, didn't I? SCOX stocks plummet some more.......

    PS: fist post fools

  • shareholders.. (Score:5, Insightful)

    I'm suprised some of the SCO shareholders haven't sued the directors for essentially making SCO stock worthless. It may have seen a temporary increase when this mess started, but its been on the downslide lately, and announcing ignorant lawsuits isn't going to help.
  • -1, stolen (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:33PM (#6111495)
    but seriously, you should sign up for salon. good stuff. I'll save you the daypass ad:

    If you ask Chris Sontag, a vice president at the SCO Group, how his tiny software firm decided to launch a billion-dollar lawsuit against IBM and became, in the process, the most reviled name in the open-source programming world, he'll tell you that the whole thing started rather innocently. Sontag says that SCO did not go looking for trouble with fans of free software; instead, trouble found SCO. In January the company, which makes most of its money from the sale of Unix and Linux operating system software, embarked on a routine review of its business holdings. And during the review, "we identified some concerns we had in terms of our intellectual property."

    Specifically, the company determined that some source code in Linux had a lot in common with code in Unix -- and SCO says that in 1995, it purchased rights to all the original Unix source code from the software firm Novell. In other words, SCO believes that Linux, an OS that can be freely copied and modified by anyone, is illegal. Linux is, SCO says, "an unauthorized derivative of Unix." If SCO's accusations are affirmed in court, the millions of companies and individual users who have increasingly built their lives around Linux over the last decade might have to start scrambling for an alternative or face costly penalties.



    But that was not all. During its examination of Linux source code, SCO says it found that it could trace what it believes was Unix code in Linux to one of its longtime partners in the Unix business: IBM. Sontag says that SCO immediately tried to notify IBM of copyright violations in Linux, but "we effectively got no response." So on March 7, SCO filed suit against IBM, alleging "misappropriation of trade secrets, tortious interference, unfair competition and breach of contract." In its complaint, SCO claims that IBM took parts of SCO's Unix code and illegally inserted the code into Linux. Last month, to warn end users about its findings, SCO sent about 1,500 corporate Linux customers a letter [sco.com] saying they could be in legal hot water if they continued to use Linux, which SCO told them was "developed by improper use of proprietary methods and concepts."



    SCO's war on Linux has become a hot topic in open-source circles, inspiring heated discussions on developer listservs and almost daily posts on Slashdot. [slashdot.org] Opinion in these forums, as well as among more dispassionate industry observers, runs about 99 percent anti-SCO. Nobody believes Sontag's story, and it's not hard to see why. SCO's version of the history of Unix and Linux -- as the company has explained it to reporters and as it outlines in its legal complaint against IBM -- comes off as a one-sided and self-serving account. Critics say the company misstates and exaggerates its own contributions to Unix, and SCO has yet to provide a single example of infringing code it says it has found in Linux.



    Industry watchers have attributed SCO's actions to economic desperation. The firm's products have not been doing well recently; the company lost about $25 million last year. SCO now has a stated goal of trying to make money by selling licenses to its Unix intellectual property, and critics see the IBM suit as perhaps only the first of many litigious efforts SCO will attempt. IBM intends to fight the case, but SCO may hope that escalating its rhetoric will make business for Linux companies so difficult that they'll cave in -- either by paying SCO licensing fees or buying the firm out.



    The strategy is not entirely illogical, and SCO's efforts have met with some initial success. In mid-May, Microsoft, which considers Linux its main software rival, made headlines when it decided to purchase a Unix license from SCO. The sum Microsoft paid for the license was not disclosed but is thought to be around $10 million -- pocket c

    • Re:-1, stolen by Duhavid (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @01:42PM
    • Re:-1, stolen by nutznboltz (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @06:24PM
    • Re:-1, stolen by dipipanone (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @02:30AM
      • Re:-1, stolen by dipipanone (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @09:40AM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • more bullshit from SCO by ravinfinite (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:34PM
  • SCO (Score:5, Funny)


    For Immediate Release
    June 3, 2003
    Salt Lake City, Utah, USA

    The SCO Group is proud to announce the latest product in its family of
    software products. "LawsuitClusterFuck(tm)" uses advanced SCO
    technologies to send out threatening letters to random businesses
    harvested from the internet.

    "It's a great day for the internet, open source and business!"
    proclaimed SCO spokesperson Charles F. Uckwad, III. "If you wanted
    to send out menacing extortion letters before, one would have to
    look up the address of the recipient in a phone book. Now, with "LawsuitClusterFuck(tm)"
    you just need to write up the threat as a standard form letter. Using
    standard variable names such as $COMPANY, $SHAKEDOWN_AMOUNT and
    $LIE_NUM the LawsuitClusterFuck software will use SCO's advanced
    heuristics to fill in the blanks. You'll need to hire an army of
    envelope stuffers!"
    The SCO Group is based in Salt Lake City, Utah and has done nothing of interest for many years.
    • Re:SCO by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:02PM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:SCO by SphynxSR (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:14PM
      • Re:SCO by NevDull (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:57PM
        • Re:SCO by stray (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @02:47AM
    • Re:SCO by mrlsd (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @12:02AM
    • 2 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • They must be crazy by ajiva (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:35PM
  • Whether SCO's code has been infringed or not will be exposed in court.

    Anything we say here is irrelevent. What is there to discuss except to say that having 'many cooks' increases the chance that any one of them may have tossed in a poison pill unwittingly?
    • By the same token, say you're doing some programming for IBM. YOu go reading through the sources for AIX, you understand it, you learn how it works. Now you're put on another project, say the volume manager for Linux. Sure things are a lot different, but because you've been playing around with AIX for a while, you got some really neat tricks to add scalability and stability. You change a routine here, add a better algorithm there, and you got that sucker screaming.
      Now whose ideas did you use, and more importantly, who cares? Sure stealing is wrong, it says so in our lawbooks. But what exactly have you stolen? Does AIX not have a LVM because you used some ideas from it in Linux? Should a Ford not have Antilock brakes because GM put them on their cars before Ford?
      We have broken the system to the point where it is illegal to learn anything, because somebody learned it before us. We are not stealing somebody's hard work. We are expanding on it, and with Linux, they can do the same thing back to their own product. Has there been a lawsuit because Microsoft has taken on some of the same projects that Linux has? Used ideas from one and placed them into the other? No, and by rights there shouldn't be. If Linus had compiled SCO and called it Linux, then there would be a case. If Linus used the knowledge he learned in university that the original Unix guys learned, should he be crucified? No.

      and oh yeah, fuck SCO. You can sue me too you worthless piles of festering pestilence.
      [ Parent ]
    • Sure it will.... by ebbomega (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @11:07PM
    • Re:This will be resolved in the courts by zoloto (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @01:43AM
    • Re:This will be resolved in the courts by BlastQuake (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @05:53AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • geez by lingqi (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:35PM
    • Re:geez by baloogan (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:45PM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:geez by Amazing Quantum Man (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:42PM
    • Re:geez by Feztaa (Score:3) Tuesday June 03 2003, @11:11PM
    • Re:geez by joe_bruin (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @12:35AM
      • Re:geez by ray-auch (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @05:33AM
    • Re:geez by crazyphilman (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @10:17AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • ...if you first watch a brief, flash-based interstitial ad, and you have cookies turned on.

    It so happens that this "Free Day Pass" is, today, sponsored by Microsoft.

  • It's a comedy (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Sri Ramkrishna (1856) <sri@aracnet. c o m> on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:36PM (#6111509)
    SCO apparently seems to be suing everyone and anyone that stands in their way. So lets recap:

    SCO sues IBM
    SCO threatens sue Linus
    SCO threatens to sue Novell

    The whole unix world is in some kind of uproar now thanks to this crappy company over IP thats so old that it should have lost most of it's value anyways. Theoretically, the concepts and whatnot in the unix world can also be in Cisco and everywhere else.

    What really blows my mind is that they don't own any of it, they are a sub licensee of Novell. Maybe Novell can revoke the contract with SCO and then they can no longer sue because they no longer can enforce the copyrights? I don't know, IANAL.

    sri
  • hah (Score:4, Insightful)

    "The month of June is show-and-tell time," McBride said.

    How do you take someone seriously that says stuff like this. I'm sure he thinks he's being tough and serious.. but it just comes off like a bad joke.
    • Re:hah by grub (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:40PM
      • Re:hah by operagost (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @01:39PM
    • Re:hah (Score:5, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:52PM (#6111623)
      "The month of June is show-and-tell time," McBride said.


      then after that, it's time for a nap.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:hah by alib001 (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:41PM
      • Re:hah by cheshiremackat (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @11:23PM
      • Re:hah by Artifex (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @12:53AM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:hah by Waffle Iron (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:52PM
    • Re:hah by moncyb (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @03:07AM
    • Re:hah by RoLi (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @10:24AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Bollocks (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:37PM (#6111512)
    "If Linux had all of the capabilities of AIX, where we could put the AIX code at runtime on top of Linux, then we would.

    "Right now the Linux kernel does not support all the capabilities of AIX. We've been working on AIX for 20 years. Linux is still young. We're helping Linux kernel up to that level. We understand where the kernel is. We have a lot of people working now as part of the kernel team. At the end of the day, the customer makes the choice, whether we write for AIX or for Linux.

    "We're willing to open source any part of AIX that the Linux community considers valuable. We have open-sourced the journal filesystem, print driver for the Omniprint. AIX is 1.5 million lines of code. If we dump that on the open source community then are people going to understand it? You're better off taking bits and pieces and the expertise that we bring along with it. We have made a conscious decision to keep contributing."

    On the surface, those comments seem fairly damning, but let's think outside the box for a moment, something Bruce Perens is used to doing. "IBM is smart enough not to open source other people's intellectual property," he says. "Maybe the comment about being willing to open source any part of AIX that the Linux community considers valuable simply means that there is no portion of AIX that would be considered valuable by the Linux community."
  • NDA is FUD (Score:5, Insightful)

    by krisp (59093) * on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:37PM (#6111513)
    (http://www.krisp.com/)
    I don't understand why they would force analysists to sign an NDA, when the whole basis for their lawsuit is that their code is already in the public domain. Nothing new can be revealed if it is indeed already part of the Linux code. Perhaps they are going to tell analysists that its all one big hoax and they don't want them to write about it.
    • Re:NDA is FUD (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jamesc (37895) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:44PM (#6111566)
      Please remember that GPLed code is not public domain. It is still under copyright, just with the GPL copyleft twist.

      However, your point is valid. There's no point in a NDA when the disputed code is already on dozens of mirrors worldwide and on CDs pressed by many distros over the last N years.

      Let's face it -- SCO probably wants the NDA to keep the reviewers from announcing that they found stolen Linux and/or *BSD code in SCO's source tree. ;^)

      [ Parent ]
    • Re:NDA is FUD by mikeee (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:47PM
    • Re:NDA is FUD by NotAnotherReboot (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:52PM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:NDA is FUD by Software (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @09:37AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Salon (Score:5, Informative)

    by alphapartic1e (260735) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:37PM (#6111514)
    Salon has a story on SCO too, but sadly it's not available to read freely

    Salon [salon.com] gives you a "Free Day Pass" that allows access to all of the content if you are willing to sit through a 15-second ad.
    • Re:Salon by FearUncertaintyDoubt (Score:3) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:43PM
      • Re:Salon by Sri Lumpa (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @07:02PM
      • Re:Salon by sharkey (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @09:58PM
  • SCO and RIAA by kyoko21 (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:38PM
  • That's awesome news about SCO. by MisterFancypants (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:40PM
  • by Zepalesque (468881) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:40PM (#6111532)
    This site has described the SCO-Linux situation using the Dukes of Hazzard metaphor [arie.org].

    I found it quite helpful :)
  • Prescient comment from BSD judge (Score:5, Informative)

    by isn't my name (514234) <[slash] [at] [threenorth.com]> on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:40PM (#6111533)
    There is an enormous difference between an expert programmer sitting down with a pile of textbooks and disjointed segments of code to write out an operating system from scratch, and that same programmer downloading the operating system intact from a public network.

    ---US District Judge Dickinson R. Debevoise ruling in the AT&T/BSD lawsuit [bell-labs.com]
  • All this talk? (Score:3, Funny)

    by mao che minh (611166) * on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:40PM (#6111534)
    (Last Journal: Sunday April 11 2004, @07:41PM)
    All this talk about this technology known as SCO. It seems cool, hell, it has to be with all this Slashdot coverage. But does it run Linux?
  • Oh please... (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:40PM (#6111538)
    Normally this would not be right, but since this won't stop until they run out of cash, and they have to pay for bandwidth... here goes...

    Got bandwidth? Mad at SCO? Download a 5mb file from here [sco.com] or launch an unspecified number of wget processes:

    wget http://www.sco.com/images/pdf/eserver/eserver_sysa dmin.pdf

    This way, you'll know how to administrate their linux server which they discontinued.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:43PM (#6111554)
    Why has nobody mentioned that SCO lost their courtcase against LinuxTag? They are gagged.

    The german branch of SCO has taken down its web site. Hans Bayer, SCO's executive director in Gemany confirmed that this measure was taken as a consequence of Friday's injunction of a German court against SCO

    http://www.heise.de/newsticker/data/odi-02.06.03 -0 00/

    SCO wasn't able to support their claims that Linux has infriging SCO IP in it. Isn't this kind of important? It pretty much proves that SCO cannot support their claims.

    I submitted this story already. Can a few other people do it as well?

    NOBODY in the US media has picked up on this.
  • Judge to do code review! (Score:3, Funny)

    by pVoid (607584) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:43PM (#6111556)
    Overly said a review of the code by anyone other than a judge "means absolutely, positively nothing" in determining the merit of SCO's claims.

    Read: a review of the code by *anyone* "means absolutely, positively nothing".

  • Set the /. Wayback Machine for 2000 (Score:3, Interesting)

    by graveyhead (210996) <fletch@@@users...sourceforge...net> on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:44PM (#6111568)
    Some "highly recognizable" members of the open-source community have also asked about the NDA process, but he would not give their names.
    Will The Real Bruce Perens Please Stand Up?

    Anyone wanna take bets? My guess is Bruce and Eric.
  • Killing Linux by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:44PM
  • So let me get this straight... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by HiredMan (5546) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:45PM (#6111575)
    (Last Journal: Wednesday August 24 2005, @09:37PM)
    1) You're accusing people of putting your secret code into the Linux kernel.
    2) You'll show me the secret code in question IFF I sign an NDA.
    3) The code for Linux is freely available.

    What's in the secret code that I can't see by looking the kernel source?
    Are they the super secret comment statements that surround the code?
    Is the secret code surrounded by super-double-secret code ?

    What's next? I have to sign and NDA and wear a tin foil hat so Linus can't suck the super-double-secret code directly from my head and add it to the source?

    Sounds like someone was sniffing glue and listening to the M$ FUD about the GPL over at SCO...

    =tkk

  • I heart statistics by Sayten241 (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:46PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • salon article (Score:5, Informative)

    by zzzmarcus (183118) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:46PM (#6111581)
    Lawyers against Linux
    A software company launches a billion-dollar suit against the open-source operating system's biggest backer, IBM -- and only succeeds in underscoring Linux's strength.

    - - - - - - - - - - - -
    By Farhad Manjoo

    June 3, 2003 | If you ask Chris Sontag, a vice president at the SCO Group, how his tiny software firm decided to launch a billion-dollar lawsuit against IBM and became, in the process, the most reviled name in the open-source programming world, he'll tell you that the whole thing started rather innocently. Sontag says that SCO did not go looking for trouble with fans of free software; instead, trouble found SCO. In January the company, which makes most of its money from the sale of Unix and Linux operating system software, embarked on a routine review of its business holdings. And during the review, "we identified some concerns we had in terms of our intellectual property."

    Specifically, the company determined that some source code in Linux had a lot in common with code in Unix -- and SCO says that in 1995, it purchased rights to all the original Unix source code from the software firm Novell. In other words, SCO believes that Linux, an OS that can be freely copied and modified by anyone, is illegal. Linux is, SCO says, "an unauthorized derivative of Unix." If SCO's accusations are affirmed in court, the millions of companies and individual users who have increasingly built their lives around Linux over the last decade might have to start scrambling for an alternative or face costly penalties.

    But that was not all. During its examination of Linux source code, SCO says it found that it could trace what it believes was Unix code in Linux to one of its longtime partners in the Unix business: IBM. Sontag says that SCO immediately tried to notify IBM of copyright violations in Linux, but "we effectively got no response." So on March 7, SCO filed suit against IBM, alleging "misappropriation of trade secrets, tortious interference, unfair competition and breach of contract." In its complaint, SCO claims that IBM took parts of SCO's Unix code and illegally inserted the code into Linux. Last month, to warn end users about its findings, SCO sent about 1,500 corporate Linux customers a letter saying they could be in legal hot water if they continued to use Linux, which SCO told them was "developed by improper use of proprietary methods and concepts."

    SCO's war on Linux has become a hot topic in open-source circles, inspiring heated discussions on developer listservs and almost daily posts on Slashdot. Opinion in these forums, as well as among more dispassionate industry observers, runs about 99 percent anti-SCO. Nobody believes Sontag's story, and it's not hard to see why. SCO's version of the history of Unix and Linux -- as the company has explained it to reporters and as it outlines in its legal complaint against IBM -- comes off as a one-sided and self-serving account. Critics say the company misstates and exaggerates its own contributions to Unix, and SCO has yet to provide a single example of infringing code it says it has found in Linux.

    Daypass sponsored by
    Microsoft

    Industry watchers have attributed SCO's actions to economic desperation. The firm's products have not been doing well recently; the company lost about $25 million last year. SCO now has a stated goal of trying to make money by selling licenses to its Unix intellectual property, and critics see the IBM suit as perhaps only the first of many litigious efforts SCO will attempt. IBM intends to fight the case, but SCO may hope that escalating its rhetoric will make business for Linux companies so difficult that they'll cave in -- either by paying SCO licensing fees or buying the firm out.

    The strategy is not entirely illogical, and SCO's efforts have met with some initial success. In mid-May, Microsoft, which considers Linux its main software rival, made headlines when it decided to purchase a Unix license from SCO. The sum Microsoft paid for the license was not disc
  • The Language of Shakespeare in danger (Score:5, Interesting)

    by bstadil (7110) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:46PM (#6111582)
    (http://blog.stadil.com/)
    How far will IP terrorism go. Read all about it Here. [gripe2ed.com]

    Even Slashdot posting could be next.

    Pretty much the best write-up of this farce so far.

  • Dvorak Predicts Death of Linux (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:50PM (#6111611)

    Don't shoot the messenger...

    Killing Linux by John Dvorak [pcmag.com]

    Sensationalism bullshit at it's very worst, IMO.

  • by Desmoden (221564) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:50PM (#6111616)
    (http://slashdot.org/)

    Lets think about this. If you look at the history of that last major UNIX legal battle ( I highly recommend reading http://opensource.org/sco-vs-ibm.html )

    it's quite obvious this is going to be a very long drawn out ugly deal. How is SCO going to pay for it? This could honestly take years. Who's helping them? Are the lawyers employees or are they hired? Are they just working on the chance of a big payout?

    This is the worlds biggest and most expensive poker game. Someone is bankrolling the players, and I don't think it's just Microsoft.
    • Contingency by bstadil (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:16PM
  • Conundrum with open source? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Ben Escoto (446292) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:51PM (#6111618)
    The article, although rightfully skeptical about SCO's claims, appears to make a good point about a problem with open source:
    since the programs have many contributors, it is difficult to be sure that the final product does not include unauthorized proprietary code. It only takes one sloppy contributor or someone who is sceptical about intellectual property to make problems for everyone. Pragmatically, the same thing can happen in a proprietary product, but the customer has someone to hold responsible in that situation (the developer of the product) so the economic incentives discourage such illegal contributions. The challenge for LINUX is that with multiple contributors and distributors, how do you set up similar economic incentives for contributors to ensure that they only add code that they have the right to add? That conundrum remains.

    However, it seems to me that the incentives are totally analogous. Programmers in the open source world code (mainly) to help others, or show off their skills (for prestige or a better job). If they are caught cheating then they obviously are not helping, and plus they lose a lot prestige.

    Similarly, the people who manage open source projects clearly want their project to be successful and popular. If they accept infringing contributions then they jeopardise this, so they have an incentive not to. There may not be a direct economic incentive, but that doesn't mean the incentive isn't just as strong. The only conundrum is the familiar one that, in the free software world, people do things for reasons other than money.
  • Judges reviewing code? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by PetWolverine (638111) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:52PM (#6111626)
    (Last Journal: Sunday May 11 2003, @02:06PM)
    From the second link:

    Overly said a review of the code by anyone other than a judge "means absolutely, positively nothing" in determining the merit of SCO's claims.

    Is it just me, or is there something scary about a judge, who may or may not use his/her computer for anything other than e-mail and word processing, trying to interpret two snippets of source code to determine if one uses the other in an illegal way?
  • Hundred of LOC? by Laser Lou (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:52PM
  • Is this the same Giga? by lushmore (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:55PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Pot to Kettle... (Score:5, Funny)

    by MongooseCN (139203) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:55PM (#6111649)
    (http://www.mongeese.org/)
    McBride characterized Novell's move as "a desperate measure..."

    Pot to Kettle, come in Kettle, are you there?

  • Lets Embrace SCO by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:56PM
  • ...the duke boys version. by biolabrat (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:59PM
  • German website down (Score:3, Informative)

    by grungeman (590547) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @09:59PM (#6111677)
    SCO's German website [www.sco.de] is down. A German court had ordered them to stop telling that Linux contains stolen code or to pay a fine of 250,000 Euro. And since everybody at SCO is now busy fighting lawsuits, the had no time to remove only the FUD from their webpage. Consequently they removed the whole website in order to follow the court's order.

    Oh, and a German artice about this can be found here [heise.de]

  • SCO is acting like they have no case (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:00PM (#6111687)
    I am a lawyer--specifically an IP litigator.

    Any litigator knows that you don't want to go to trial--you want to force a settlement. If you hae a halfway decent case, you'll show your evidence up front, so the other side sees that it's going to lose. On the other hand, if you have no case, then you try to keep everything under your hat and stretch out the legal proceedings until the other side pays just to make you go away.

    Which of these sounds like SCO? I think that they have squat and I think that SCO and their lawyers know it.

    BTW, if SCO doesn't produce evidence, IBM can file a motion to compel discovery and demand to get it. If they still stonewall, IBM can move for dismissal and get the whole case thrown out.
  • "second blow"? (Score:5, Funny)

    by 73939133 (676561) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:02PM (#6111693)
    SCO delivered a second blow this month when it sent letters to 1,500 corporations using Linux,

    I think "blow" is the wrong metaphor. A "blow" implies strength, power, and the ability to inflict pain and damage. None of those apply to SCO.

    SCO is making a lot of noise and releasing a lot of hot air, something that should be embarrassing to SCO and is somewhat annoying but generally harmless to the bystanders. That kind of event is more accurately described as a "fart", not a "blow".

    So, using this more accurate metaphor, the reporter should probably change the article to read:

    SCO CEO Darl McBride farted again this month in the presence of 1500 corporate Linux users. He did not seem to show any embarrassment.

  • Did it Ever Occurr to Anyone by fidget42 (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:02PM
  • I can't believe it by grungeman (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:02PM
  • I am an Attorney and close confidant of MRS. MARYAM GOTCHA, the former first lady and wife of the late GENERAL RAY GOTCHA, the former head of state and commander in chief of the armed forces of the Federal Republic of Utahwonga.

    She (MRS. M. GOTCHA), has as a result of the trust and confidence she has in me mandated that I search for a reliable and trustworthy foreign partner, who will help receive some UNIX source code which she has totaling Five Million United States LOC into a personal, company or any reliable foreign Unix-like system for safe keeping for a short period of time, since her family computer accounts within and outside the country have all been frozen by the authorities.

    This source code in question has however, been carefully kept in defaced form and deposited with a security company that has branches in Europe and America. You may therefore be required to travel to any of the branches to collect the source code on behalf of my client for safe keeping.

    I shall let you into a complete picture of this mutually beneficial transaction when I have received your anticipated positive reply. This matter should be treated as urgent and confidential. This is very important.

    PS, it's very important that you maintain your current good relationship with Dr. Linus. Only he has the keys to the vault in which we must deposit our Five Million United States LOC. When added to the Millions of LOC already there, we will all become very rich.

    Best Regards,

    Dr.Darl McBloodsukr

    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Misunderstanding of Closed Source Software by bstadil (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:05PM
  • The New SCO CEO by linuxislandsucks (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:17PM
  • ugh - are they still around? by brad-d (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:17PM
  • Goodbye and good riddance SCO (Score:5, Interesting)

    by argoff (142580) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:20PM (#6111809)
    Several years ago I made a strong push to move my career from SCO to Linux. One of the main motivations for this was that I was so fed up with SCO, SCO support, SCO licenses (and policy daemons), and most of all SCO crashes. It was so bad - SCO eventually made the entire OS mirror a bunch of soft links to the real files, and changed their FSCK program so as not to do a real fsck on bootup. (which made things worse) They litterally had programs to undo the damage of their crashes like "fixmog".

    I also got sick of people insisting that SCO was commercial quality UNIX while blowing off Linux, while I knew darn well that Linux was more trustworthy and stable, and the only way to get decent productivity out of a SCO box was to install tons of free software on it that was often better then the software you licensed out the nose for from SCO - they even licensed TCP/IP for chrisake. Anyhow, sometimes I still do SCO work, because I'm one of the few that know how to nowdays - but none the less I am so thankfull that this next generation will never need to deal with them. And I am so thankfull that many of the businesses that toiled under SCO now have the freedom to be productive with their computers.
    I am also thankfull that people no longer need to suffer under their lies, lies about quality, lies about stability, lies about being for the enterprise, and most of all lies that they were better than free software. They are so full of it. At home I tell my 4yr old daughter no-no, and in the enterprise I tell business men sco-no.

    Goodbye and good-riddance SCO, I should have known you'd sue IBM. You maximized damage and harm to the computing industry for years, it only makes sense you'd do it on your death bed too. Goodbye and good riddance.
  • wouldn't SCO suing Novell by f00zbll (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:20PM
  • i'm confused by towaz (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:21PM
  • This Just in Peterson SCO Link? by n6jpa (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:21PM
  • The Real Outcome of This Fiasco (Score:4, Interesting)

    by sethadam1 (530629) * <adam@fi r s t t u be.com> on Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:23PM (#6111839)
    (http://firsttube.com/)
    The real outcome of this fiasco is easy to see. Dvorak [pcmag.com] thinks he's got the scenarios covered, but in my book, he's missing the likely outcome if SCO somehow wins this case.

    Linux is free and available. Provided SCO wins anything, they will HAVE TO come clean about what parts are offending code and which are clear. As soon as that's done, SCO will have a field day with IBM, RH, and other Linux vendors.

    However, within a few weeks/months, the Linunx community will rally to replace all offending parts of the kernel/GNU utilities/whatever with something equal if not better, it will be tested, and deployed within a year. Linux will suffer a setback, but Linux will NOT die.

    It's been said that open source projects never die, they just cease to be developed. Linux ain't going anywhere. There's no imaginable way that hackers around the world will simulaneously abandon Linux and move to FreeBSD or some other alternative. If, by some miracle, there's something to all this, we'll have it behind us within a few months. ...but I'd still hate to be Red Hat.
  • Has SCO got anything right so far ? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by timlewis_atlanta (195776) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:25PM (#6111850)
    (http://slashdot.org/)
    The more I think about it the more I begin to wonder if SCO have grabbed completely the wrong end of the stick. Having read the "Comedy of Errors" link I was thinking about the "ham handed" comment, i.e. the fact that so far SCO have done just about everything wrong. So I ask myself this : is it less likely or more likely that they would have done an equally bad job when doing their technical investigation. Clearly it's more likely that they did a bad job. From that I think there's a good chance that a) yes, there is code in Linux that is also in SCO (I mean, can they really be bluffing, surely not ?). b) investigation of said code will show that the code was appropriate FROM Linux and placed INTO the SCO product. From a technical point of view this is a more likely scenario. And of course that mean that SCO would have to GPL their source code.
  • Look there it is: by bettlebrox (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:29PM
  • Here's the offending code by reptar64 (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:36PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • The real issue (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:42PM (#6111957)
    The real issue here probaly has something to do with large dollar federal contracts from homeland security and/or defense agencies.

    Just as it was a remarkably convenient time for Microsoft to license technology it already owns from SCO, this lawsuit is probaly happening during a bidding process for a massive contract.

    Microsoft recently gave some very serious discounts and other carrots to get a 750,000 user Exchange implementation in the face of stiff competition from IBM running Linux mainframes in a large northeastern state government. I imagine larger federal contracts would justify more "agressive marketing".
  • McBride confirms they're after a buyout by sbszine (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:43PM
  • poor employees by RestiffBard (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:44PM
  • SCO says copyrights don't matter!!! by RandomIO (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:52PM
  • Minor violation at most by dtfinch (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:53PM
  • I forsee... by Ridge (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:58PM
  • All I've got to say about it is..
    I love what Linus was quoted as saying..
    As for what he thinks of SCO's actions, Torvalds in an e-mail interview compared the fight between SCO, IBM and Novell Inc. to bad TV. "Quite frankly, I found it mostly interesting in a Jerry Springer kind of way. White trash battling it out in public, throwing chairs at each other. SCO crying about IBM's other women. ... Fairly entertaining," said Torvalds.
    Now there is a man with his eye on the ball :-D
  • SCO as a swear word? (Score:3, Funny)

    by mdg149 (678718) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @11:20PM (#6112142)
    You know, put like that "SCO SCO SCO", it made me think SCO would make a good swear word. I'm not sure what it would mean and in what context one would use it, but I'm sure people can think of something. It would have to mean something SCOing awful, that's for sure. Windows ME is SCOware? The project is ruined, that idiot SCOed everything up!
    Maybe?
  • Code review by transiit (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @11:27PM
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 03 2003, @11:32PM (#6112210)
    I've been outraged, puzzled, and amused by the on-going SCO saga. While I think SCO is unlikely to succeed in their current "endeavor," I am increasingly concerned about open source legal vulnerabilities which I think SCO is exposing, and which I think the open source community should address more vigorously.

    Consider the following scenario:

    Imagine that the Linux kernel developers are having trouble designing a driver for some new hardware device: a winmodem, a video card, a hard drive or whatever. The manufacturer, ACME INC, has released a Windows-only (binary) driver, but doesn't appear willing to cooperate with the development of an open source driver. Furthermore, ACME's minimal published specs for the device seem to be wrong in significant ways.

    The Linux driver is buggy and giving users trouble. A volunteer - Mr. Smith - presents himself to the Linux kernel mailing list. He says he has the device in question and he would like to try to help with improvements to the Linux code. Taking the existing driver code as a start, he makes a series of important contributions over a few weeks that resolve the difficulties. His changes are incorporated into the kernel source and released as part of kernel 2.6.30.

    A few weeks after the release of 2.6.30, Linus Torvalds and Alan Cox receive an angry letter from ACME Inc. ACME claim that large portions of ACME's original (proprietary) driver code have been incorporated into the Linux driver code. Furthermore, they are incensed that the kernel developers accepted contributions from Mr. Smith, who, it turns out, is an ex-employee of ACME, dismissed for serious financial improprieties. ACME is convinced that Mr. Smith has stolen their code and released it under the gpl in order to harm ACME's competitive position in the market. (ACME says that a careful reading of the Linux driver code clearly reveals that Mr. Smith made use of ACME's trade secrets.)

    The company decides to sue Linus Torvalds and the kernel developers. The suit does not allege that the kernel developers knowingly tried to harm ACME Inc. Rather, the claim is that the kernel developers didn't exercise "due diligence" in vetting Mr. Smith and his contributions. In effect, ACME says that someone in a position of responsibility should have asked Mr. Smith where he worked previously, and an effort should have been made to contact Mr. Smith's previous employer. Furthermore, the kernel developers should have asked ACME to review the Linux driver code before it was released.

    During a news conference, ACME's CEO says:

    "Every computer company in American does a at least some background checking before they hire someone to work on an important project. Where did the employee get their education? Where were they employed previously? Did they have any significant problems at their previous place of employment? In the Linux world such questions are rarely asked or followed-up on, even though Linux advocates claim that millions of people rely on the Linux operating system. In failing to ask such questions of Mr. Smith, the Linux kernel developers made themselves legally liable for the harm that resulted when he exploited the open source development process for nefarious ends."

    My question is: Is this a plausible scenario? What safeguards are in place to prevent such a scenario from coming true? Are these safeguards adequate?
    • My question is: Is this a plausible scenario? What safeguards are in place to prevent such a scenario from coming true? Are these safeguards adequate?

      What safeguards are in place to prevent such a scenario from coming true in a closed-source system? Infact, would ACME even know if their code had been stolen in a closed-source system? How would they know this if they don't have the code to look at? It seems that in a closed-source system your IP can be stolen without you even knowing. That can't be good, and you're always left wondering if ex-employee is using methods and code at the new company; of course no NDA, peer review or anything else will catch the code thief in that situation because who's to say he didn't just think the stuff up him/herself?

      With that, it's pretty obvious that opensource allows a company to prove IP theft extremely easily. The employee or code thief in question should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law and thats one less thief to worry about.

      If the company in question harmed financially or competitively they need to take proactive steps to reclaim any loss ground via the thief and to also have a "debriefing" process where the programmer(s) they hire that are leaving are aware they can't divulge or use X ip anywhere else. As said by many people before, if someone is going to throw a brick through your window, attempt a robbery of your car, steal your code, attempt at burning your house down or simply attempting the bombing of an airplane. They are going to do so regardless, and people are responsible for their own actions. You can only mitigate the attack and prepare for the worst.

      Basically, this example is typical stuff and it again shows that opensource is the crowd I'd rather play in.. Especially in regards to business and Intellectual Property. Not knowing if that last programmer you fired is now working for the competition and is stealing your IP must really make it difficult to sleep at night. That is; if you run on a closed-source system.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:Does Linux have legal vulnerabilities? by klmth (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @02:03AM
    • by Lumpy (12016) on Wednesday June 04 2003, @05:31AM (#6113409)
      (http://timgray.blogspot.com/)
      "Every computer company in American does a at least some background checking before they hire someone to work on an important project. Where did the employee get their education? Where were they employed previously? Did they have any significant problems at their previous place of employment? In the Linux world such questions are rarely asked or followed-up on, even though Linux advocates claim that millions of people rely on the Linux operating system. In failing to ask such questions of Mr. Smith, the Linux kernel developers made themselves legally liable for the harm that resulted when he exploited the open source development process for nefarious ends."

      never been in management have you....

      #1, asking the previous employer... ALL they can reveal legally is that they did in fact work there... NOTHING ELSE. so your "did they have trouble at their last job?" is impossible to find out legally. Yes there are some bosses that put their company at risk by passing along info on a bad egg...but they put their company at risk by saying anything... good or bad.

      #2 a background check does not reveal your work history. It reveals if you have been arrested or other legal trouble.

      so doing any of that which "every company" does.. would reveal nothing to uncover a disgruntled person.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:Does Linux have legal vulnerabilities? by jck2000 (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @08:03AM
    • Re:Does Linux have legal vulnerabilities? by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @09:08AM
    • Re:Does Linux have legal vulnerabilities? by MrResistor (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @05:08PM
  • For all the "NDAers". (Score:3, Interesting)

    by janda (572221) <janda@kali-tai.net> on Tuesday June 03 2003, @11:33PM (#6112212)
    (http://www.kali-tai.net/)

    IANAL, but let's talk trade secret law for a bit.

    If you have something you're going to claim to be a trade secret, you have to exercise "reasonable precaution" and "due diligence" to prevent the secret from being revealed to the public, or you lose your trade secret status.

    How do the courts decide if something is a trade secret? Generally, you sue somebody for trade secret infingement, or somebody sues you claiming that you don't really have a trade secret.

    One of the big things the courts look for is consistancy in keeping your trade secret a secret. If you don't require everybody (and I mean everybody) to sign NDA's, the court can rule that you have allowed your secret to pass into the public knowledge, and is no longer a trade secret.

    If, however, I sign an NDA with you to not disclose your trade secret information, and then I give it to a competitor, the courts can rule that I violated the NDA, so I owe you money for damaages, the company I gave the secret to may be liable for damages (that would probably need another lawsuit), and that the trade secret is still a secret even though there are now "umpteen" people who know it.

    If, however, I give you access to my source code without requiring you to sign an NDA, even though the material is in millions of archives all over the planet, I'm basically saying "it's not a trade secret anymore", and the courts will (hopefully, I don't know about US courts anymore) rule that you no longer have a trade secret due to your actions.

    Courts have, however, ruled that once a trade secret has reached enough people, regardless of the method, that trade secret status is lost. So, if I found out the formula for Coca-Cola (either by signing an NDA, breaking and entering, torturing one of the people who knows it, whatever), and posted it all over the internet, the courts could rule that even Coca-Cola maintained due diligence in attempting to retain their trade secret, it has lost that status.

    Whether or not people should be signing NDA's is something they'll have to take up with somebody who can provide competent legal advice (in other words, not me), and will depend on lots of factors.

  • THIS sums it up completely by LittleLebowskiUrbanA (Score:2) Tuesday June 03 2003, @11:38PM
  • Reasons for NDA by Linthos (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @11:38PM
  • Maybe SCO is infringing? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by minion (162631) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @11:49PM (#6112259)
    Who's to say that SCO didn't copy code from the Linux source, put it in their code, and claim they did it first? After all, we can all freely look at GPL'ed code, but we can't look at SCO code. We have no way to know if SCO put that code into their source tree or vice versa.

    Another reason all intelligent societies should reject any software patents.
  • One line of code (Score:5, Interesting)

    by BrynM (217883) * on Tuesday June 03 2003, @11:52PM (#6112281)
    (http://www.brynmosher.com/ | Last Journal: Monday August 27, @10:15PM)
    If SCO is really serious about proving this and wants anyone to take their NDA seriously, then show us one line of code that's both in it's property and in IBM's code or in Linux. If Mr. McBride truly is "going to show hundreds of lines of code", then give the public and your detractors a taste. If there are "hundreds of lines" that offend, surely SCO can pick one that proves their point.

    Then again, he never said they were going to show offending code. For all we know, Mr. McBride could show us "Hello World!".

  • SCO, SCO, SCO... by rune2 (Score:1) Tuesday June 03 2003, @11:53PM
  • What happend to their original lawyer???? by arf_barf (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @12:06AM
  • The offending code by eyegone (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @12:11AM
  • This has brought to my attention by sstory (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @12:12AM
  • More SCO News (Score:4, Interesting)

    by aerojad (594561) on Wednesday June 04 2003, @12:13AM (#6112365)
    (http://www.secondpagemedia.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday August 20 2003, @11:39PM)
    Legal action hits SCO Web site [com.com]

    Lawyers representing LinuxTag, the German Linux group, told SCO on May 23 that the Lindon, Utah-based company was engaging in unfair competitive practices when it sent to 1,500 large companies letters that said using Linux could pose legal problems because SCO proprietary Unix source code had been copied into Linux, according to a statement from the group.

    "SCO must not be allowed to damage its competitors by unsubstantiated claims, to intimidate their customers and to inflict lasting damage on the reputation of GNU/Linux as an open platform," LinuxTag's Michael Kleinhenz said in the statement. LinuxTag demanded SCO make its evidence public by May 30 or retract its claims.

    SCO removed copies of that letter from its Web sites as a result, but later, LinuxTag succeeded in obtaining a temporary restraining order against SCO, said Ryan Tibbitts, SCO's newly appointed chief legal counsel. Because SCO hasn't been able to see the actual contents of the order, the company ordered the entire site shut down to be on the safe side, he said.
  • Offending Code? (Score:3, Funny)

    by Beatnick (560520) on Wednesday June 04 2003, @12:22AM (#6112398)
    I'd be offended also if I found SCO in my code. :)

    If I was SCO, I would be so embarassed to find my
    trashy code in someone's prog or OS that I would
    litigate to just have the nasty *&^% removed.
    Wouldn't you? ;)
  • Sco is that Old crazy guy in the Park. by big_fish (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @01:00AM
  • Line count percentages (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Schubert (5172) on Wednesday June 04 2003, @01:16AM (#6112602)
    (http://schubert.cx/ | Last Journal: Wednesday September 14 2005, @11:51PM)
    Ok so we have this quote:
    "The month of June is show-and-tell time," McBride said. "Everybody's been clamoring for the code...and we're going to show hundreds of lines of code."
    So lets assume "hundreds of lines of code" is our N value. Now let N equal... oh... we'll be lenient on our definition of "hundreds" and make N = 5000.

    Ok so we've got our hypothetical 5000 lines of offending code. Now lets count the number of lines in every .c file in linux-2.4.20.tar.bz2 ...

    TMPFILE=`mktemp /tmp/$0.XXXXXXX` for i in $(for i in $(for i in $(find ./|grep "\.c"|grep -v Documentation);do cat $i|wc -l;done);do echo $i;done);do echo -n $i+>>${TMPFILE};done;echo "0">>${TMPFILE};echo quit>>${TMPFILE};bc -q ${TMPFILE};rm ${TMPFILE}

    Which gives us 3332935 (including comments but hey we're lazy).

    And this seems reasonable give that according to this link [geocrawler.com] which shows ~1.8 million for a 2.2 kernel so yeah hey what's another 1.5 million between friends? (think of all the new hardware support)

    Ok so we've got our probably bogus number of ~3.3 million lines of code. Remember N? Come on you can do the next step its fun!

    5000 / 3332935 == 0.0015% and lets be super generous and assume comments make up 40% of our line count...

    5000 / 1999761 == 0.0025%

    I wonder what the statistical liklihood of having similiar blocks of code of some signifigant size that happen to be the same (excluding format and variable differences). I mean there's only so many ways one can _intelligently_ code a given function

    Given those kind of percentages I doubt a judge or jury could be convinced of any copyright infringement of any signifigance. It'd be kind like trying to sue a competing encyclopedia company for swiping that one entry in the "P" volume on "Petards" ("hoisting", "petard", look it up) from you and demanding millions of dollars in compensation for this plagerism (ok so this analogy sucks but I had petards on my mind so...)

  • why don't they just poke every nest of zealots... by bragi (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @01:27AM
  • Mormons and SCO by rtbarry (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @01:50AM
  • ultimate embarresment for SCO by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @02:12AM
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 04 2003, @02:16AM (#6112810)
    http://marketwatch-cnet.com.com/2100-1016_3-101294 7.html?type=pt$(B"_(B=marketwatc h-cnet&tag=feed&subj=news

    "SCO previously hired outside attorneys to serve as its chief legal counsel, but about 10 days ago hired Tibbitts, who has experience in litigation."

    I'm not sure that means Boies is no longer representing SCO at all or if it means Tibbitts is now going to court and Boies is doing other legal stuff. Sure seems like Boies is gone though..

    Having said that I want to say this.

    I know a little about Boies. Boies takes cases he believes in. That is why he took on MS, why he represented Gore and Napster. The man doesn't need $. Also, Boies has a photographic memory.

    BUT: Boies takes cases that he often has little background in. Because he has such a good memory though, this doesn't impede him. Recall how he embarrassed Microsoft several times. This is a man that previously had never used email.

    If Boies is no longer working on the SCO case, it's probably because he realizes just now that SCO lied to him. If you read the filing that was made against IBM as if you BELIEVED EVERY WORD - would you think IBM deserved to be sued?

    I think Boies thought that every accusation made in that filing was correct and factual. I think Boies believed that SCO had an enterprise Unix and a significant marketshare. I think Sontag and McBride who, let's face it, have no regard for the truth, lied to Boies.

    Boies is a fairly ethical man and he doesn't take cases for money. If Boies isn't working for SCO, I'd bet money he quit because he was lied to from the start. There is no POSSIBLE way SCO fired Boies either. If Boies is gone, he quit.

    If McBride and Sontag lied to Boies, they're going to jail because they have absolutely no case and they have lied to their stockholders. This might be a little embarassing for Boies but this is the end for McBride and Sontag. You don't hire a lawyer of Boies stature and lie to them and expect to do anything besides burger flipping for the rest of your life.

    I think Sontag and McBride really are stupid as hell. If this entire theory is correct, it explains everything. I couldn't figure out why Boies, I mean BOIES, would take this case and allow his clients to make these statements, unless he didn't realize the statements were false. Boies is a respectable man and he deserves the respect he gets. I think he's been played for a fool.
  • Pirates of Penguinance by KMSelf (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @02:30AM
  • An alternative viewpoint. by cyt0plas (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @02:43AM
  • A good SCO summary by krappie (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @02:54AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • SCO coders tainted? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by geoff lane (93738) on Wednesday June 04 2003, @02:56AM (#6112929)
    Over the years SCO has had access to the sources of most of the major versions of Unix and Unix-like operating systems currently marketed. Zenix, Unixware, OpenServer, AIX, SYSV, PTX, Linux. In addition, there are so many ex-Novell people in SCO right now it wouldn't surprise me if SCO had a copy of Netware sources. When Caldera sued Microsoft over DRDOS, the court granted Caldera access to parts of MSDOS and Windows.

    So, any coders within SCO potentially have had access to almost any operating system code of any significance written over the past 20 years!
  • Late to the game... by cei (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @02:58AM
  • Hey... by EnderWiggin99 (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @03:05AM
  • SCO Watch / Central? by _Sprocket_ (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @04:10AM
  • Hidden campaign to strengthen Linux? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by juggy (135917) on Wednesday June 04 2003, @04:28AM (#6113228)
    This may seem very strange, but I recently had an (admittedly very weird) idea: What if this whole thing was no attack against Linux but in reality a covert operation by, let's say IBM or anyone else who plans to profit from Linux in the long run, to strengthen Linux's stance?

    I mean, c'mon, look at what we have here:
    1. a company that apparently has nothing to back up it's claims
    2. a company which carries out their actions rather in a slapstick sort of way (blunders all over the place)
    3. a company that screwed up in any way you can imagine: distributing the allegedly infringing code 2 months after they knew about it, bullying their business partners (United Linux), taking on the "gorillas" (IBM, Novell)


    Now imagine, someone like, let's say Mr. X, wants to make sure it cannot be harrassed in the future by anyone in the way it is happening right now. Think of all those who want to check whether the GPL is valid, all those who want to bet their business on Linux only if they have security that noone can attack this platform later on and ruin everything.
    Now Mr.X decides to, covertly, establish a pro-Linux-case. One sunny day he chats with the guys at SCO and says: "Look, your company is almost dead, and you know it. How about this: You make some unsupportable claims against Linux. I make sure nobody will bother you for some time, so since your stocks will rise you can make some money. After I decide it's enough, I will crush SCO in a way that noone ever dares to attack Linux again without having some REALLY good reason for it. Although it will be a problem for the Linux business for a brief time, afterwards everybody can be happy."

    OK, OK, sounds weird I know. But what would the world be without conspiracy theories? ;-)
  • This Case is A Good Thing (tm) by UberDork (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @04:31AM
  • soon enough... by z80 (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @04:42AM
  • by MattGrounds (540732) on Wednesday June 04 2003, @05:03AM (#6113336)
    Please someone correct me if I'm missing something here.

    But isn't there a very quick solution for Linux once SCO discloses which are the "hundreds of lines of code" which were taken from SCO's UNIX source code? Can't we just rewrite the source code to perform a similar function to what's already there, but with a brand new open source implementation?

    As far as I know, it's the source code which is copyrighted, and NOT the algorithm. So once SCO discloses in court what the offending lines of source code are, can't we rewrite those lines, distribute a kernel patch, and hey presto, the code is open source again?

  • Valid point, already taken care of by the FSF by leandrod (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @05:03AM
  • SCO's German site shut down by kuknalim (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @06:24AM
  • Re: SCO by blibbleblobble (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @07:00AM
  • 32V copyright by ebcdic (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @07:08AM
  • SCO already has lost by UnknownSoldier (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @08:00AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • SCO is probably right... by somethinghollow (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @08:27AM
  • FSF should sue SCO!! by spotteddog (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @08:38AM
  • Shouldn't this be..... by carlos_benj (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @08:49AM
  • SCO article on Salon.com by dataroach (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @08:51AM
  • Hey Michael! by swordgeek (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @09:20AM
    • Re:Hey Michael! by Trolling4Dollars (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @09:44AM
    • Re:Hey Michael! by WhiteWolf666 (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @09:46AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • another thought by dacarr (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @09:37AM
  • IBM's perspective (Score:4, Insightful)

    I think it is helpful to evalute this from IBM's perspective.


    As I see it, there are three possibilities.

    A. IBM screwed up. They released stuff from their SCO license into Linux. Oops.

    B. IBM didn't screw up. They have all the evidence (remember, they have BOTH SCO's source, and Linux's source). They don't care what SCO says, because they already HAVE all the evidence. They can't release the evidence, because that would then violate their licensing agreement with SCO, but they can sure as hell prepare they legal briefs now.

    C. IBM didn't screw up. They are in cahoots with SCO, and are doing this to screw linux.

    Given IBM's investment in Linux, and its contribution to the kernel, and other software, I'm guessing that C is highly unlikely.

    I dunno, A seems unlikely to me too. If A were the case, an IBM had a big problem on their hands, I think that as soon as SCO threaten them, they would have rapidly been able to determine that SCO's claim has some legitimacy, and bought them out immediately. After all, they have plenty of cash.

    That leaves B. Someone in the IBM legal department is of the opinion that they have a REALLY strong case. Someone on the board of directors decided it would be better for their credibility if they blow SCO out of the water.

    Remember, IBM can see both sides of the table here. They hold all the cards. They don't need to get SCO to show them the evidence, so they didn't even have to ask.

    They knew they would win from day one. You can't bluff when the other guy sees your cards.

  • SCO and Iraqui Information Minister by machinecraig (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @10:10AM
  • Maybe SCO is doing Linux a Favor by mslinux (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @10:16AM
  • Good FUD by utahjazz (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @10:27AM
  • ----- Original Message -----
    From: Darl McBride
    Sent: Saturday, May 31, 2003 12:05 PM
    Subject: URGENT AND CONFIDENTIAL

    ATTN: MANAGING DIRECTOR/C.E.O

    LINDON, UTAH

    REQUEST FOR URGENT BUSINESS RELATIONSHIP

    First, I must solicit your strictest confidence in this transaction. This by virtue of its nature as being utterly confidential and 'top secret'. You have been recommended by an associate who assured me in confidence of your ability and reliability to prosecute a transaction of great magnitude involving a pending business transaction requiring maximum confidence.

    We are top officials of SCO Group (formerly Caldera International -- Nasdaq: SCOX) who are interested in obtaining your services. We are presently in negotiations in a business deal we feel will be quite lucrative. Since we may leave the country quietly in the middle of the night, in order to commence this business transaction, we solicit your assistance to enable us to transfer a large sum of money into your account to hold until further arrangements can be made.

    The source of this fund is as follows: We have leveraged IP that we originally thought belonged to our company in order to solicit a rather large monetary investment by the company Microsoft. We have in turn sued IBM for contractual violations and IP violations, as well as sending out thousands of threatening letters to various corporations and Linux vendors, in a move carefully designed to drive up our stock and put us in a position for our company to be purchased simultaneously. You see, this is a carefully executed plan modeled after what some might call, "a house of cards." We hope very much that we will collect from all parties involved, sell our stock before it tanks, and head for some fun in the sun, IF all goes as planned.

    However, by virtue of our position as members of the SCO Group, we cannot acquire this money in our names.I have therefore, been delegated as a matter of trust by my colleagues of the panel to look for an overseas partner into whose account we would transfer the sum of US $21,500,000.00 (Twenty One Million, Five Hundred Thousand United States Dollars) Hence we are writing you this letter.

    We have agreed to share the money thus:

    1. 20% for the Account owner (you)
    2. 70% for us (The officials)
    3. 10% to be used in settling taxation and all local
    and foreign expenses.

    It is from the 70% that we wish to commence the importation business.

    Please, note that this transaction is 100% safe and we hope to commence the transfer latest seven (7)banking days from the date of the receipt of the following information below

    (a)company name and Beneficiary of account (b) Your Personal TeL. Number and Fax Number
    (c) Bank account/Sort/ABA/Routing numbers were the funds will be transferred to
    (d) Your Bankers Address, Telephone and Fax Number.

    The above information will enable us write letters of claim and job description respectively. This way we will use your company's name to cover our paper trail. We are looking forward to doing this business with you and solicit your confidentiality in this transaction.Please acknowledge the receipt of this letter using the above tel/fax number. I will bring you into the complete picture of this pending project when I have heard from you.

    Your faithfully,

    Darl McBride
  • Is anyone else tired of SCO news? by deadgoon42 (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @11:01AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • We should be wary of the Canopy Group by GreatDave (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @11:12AM
  • Disney really behind it all. by jakob_grimm (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @11:37AM
  • SCO, as in FIA-SCO (Score:3, Funny)

    by Dave21212 (256924) <dav@spamcop.net> on Wednesday June 04 2003, @11:45AM (#6116101)
    (http://www.venganza.org/ | Last Journal: Wednesday January 19 2005, @11:24AM)

    Hilarious. The salon article was well done. My favorite line (it actually had me laugh out loud) has to be:

    For folks keeping score, "SCO" doesn't stand for "Santa Cruz Operation" any longer, and it's to be pronounced not as three separate letters but as a word that rhymes with "fiasco."

    Priceless ;)
  • Right? by CaptainZapp (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @12:09PM
  • This just in... by PSaltyDS (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @12:27PM
  • Bad luck by LotusMan (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @02:42PM
  • Stock Price rally makes me sick by gabbarsingh (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @03:19PM
  • Copyright vs copyright by vaseyandco (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @03:30PM
  • W00t... 666 Comments... by DeionXxX (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @04:13PM
  • Why not perform an independant code search? by miltieIV2 (Score:1) Wednesday June 04 2003, @06:22PM
  • by larry bagina (561269) on Tuesday June 03 2003, @10:16PM (#6111787)
    (Last Journal: Friday October 19, @09:21PM)
    or worse than slashdot... where you get to stare at an MS ad 20 seconds while the restof the page loads and renders.
    [ Parent ]
  • POLITICS + ECONOMICS 101 by Zeriel (Score:2) Wednesday June 04 2003, @08:03AM
  • 34 replies beneath your current threshold.
(1) | 2