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Caldera Government IBM The Courts Your Rights Online News

IBM Files For Declaratory Judgement In SCO Case 390

Some Bitch writes "IBM has filed for declaratory judgement in the SCO case. They want the court to declare that "IBM does not infringe, induce the infringement of or contribute to the infringement of any SCO copyright through its Linux activities, including its use, reproduction and improvement of Linux, and that some or all of SCO's purported copyrights in Unix are invalid and unenforceable.". If the judge grants the motion then SCO effectively has no case and the whole thing is over." spafbnerf notes that "SCO has filed a motion for the patent infringement claim to be split into a separate case." fr0z adds a link to Groklaw's always-excellent coverage.
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IBM Files For Declaratory Judgement In SCO Case

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  • Its about time IBM (Score:5, Interesting)

    by randomErr ( 172078 ) <.ervin.kosch. .at. .gmail.com.> on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @09:30AM (#8724383) Journal
    I just wonder what took IBM so long to go for this? Was it matter of timing or did they have to wait for other judgements to clear first?
  • Good Lawyers.... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by millahtime ( 710421 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @09:32AM (#8724402) Homepage Journal
    Is it just me or are the SCO lawyers trying to drag this out as long as they possibly can. Talk about the lawyers staying on the payroll a long time. They are great lawyers at keeping on the payroll withough ever actually taking this anywhere.
  • by GreyPoopon ( 411036 ) <gpoopon@gmaOOOil.com minus threevowels> on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @09:32AM (#8724403)
    I just wonder what took IBM so long to go for this? Was it matter of timing or did they have to wait for other judgements to clear first?

    Both. They first had to play out just enough rope for SCO to essentially hang themselves. Let's hope the rope doesn't break.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @09:34AM (#8724410)
    I'm an attorney in a medium size corporation. We have held off on adopting Linux.

    Why, you ask? Well, despite the excellent information provided by groklaw, it is simply unreasonable to assume that SCO's case is completely baseless. These are intelligent, wealthy people, and they did not get that way by filing groundless lawsuits.

    While we were planning on adopting Linux as our new development platform, we have not. The uncertain outcome of this lawsuit coupled with very steep discounts offered by Microsoft have pushed us to Windows 2003.

    Also, in my perusal of groklaw, I have found that while it provides good information, it is also heavily censored. More than once I have read a compelling "pro-SCO" post that disappears not long after it appears. I can only assume that PJ is deleting them. In short, I don't think groklaw is giving us a very objective view of the situation.

    -Cecil
  • by andy666 ( 666062 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @09:37AM (#8724438)
    Apparently what took them so long was some complex legalities relating to a IP case from the early 90's that I forget the name of.
  • Re:Good Lawyers.... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by black mariah ( 654971 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @09:38AM (#8724443)
    Of course they are. Probably at the request of SCO's executives. The longer it goes on, the higher SCO's stocks are creeping...
  • GPL Infringement? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by tiny69 ( 34486 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @09:38AM (#8724446) Homepage Journal
    34. The viability of SCO's product offerings has depended in large measure upon the efforts of the open-source community in enhancing products and making them compatible for use across multiple software and hardware platforms. Indeed, SCO incorporated certain code licensed pursuant to the GPL into its proprietary UNIX products. SCO has also relied on independent developers in the open-source community, such as Linus Torvalds, in order to release upgrades of SCO' s Linux-based products.
    Is IBM suggesting that they have found out during discovery that SCO is infringing on the GPL?
  • by SenseiLeNoir ( 699164 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @09:42AM (#8724472)
    Its more a question about timing. Whilst SCO et al, have been blasting away with their outlandish comments, IBM have been staying quiet, and feeding as much rope as possible. This way SCO cannot argue back saying the trail has been unfair to them.

    As a side point, I recall someone on Groklaw mentioning that on the motion there is IBM referencing to SCO incorporating GPL code into UnixWare or Unix.

    The statement was vague, and MAY have meant SAMBA, etc. However, considering SCO has provided the source code to UnixWare as part of discovery, it is likely they may have found something.
  • God no! (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Ender Ryan ( 79406 ) <MONET minus painter> on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @09:53AM (#8724554) Journal
    I know you were joking, and it was funny to :), but my serious answer to your joke of a question is, "God NO!"

    Once SCO is fucking dead, we can get back to coding and building fun toys, and maybe some useful things too, with the Linux kernel, without this damn fiaSCO hanging over our heads. It would also be nice to see someone persue some sort of criminal investigation against the SCO execs, but I'm not holding my breath.

    And even better would be Darl's head on a pike, but I don't think we do that sort of thing anymore, right? :)

    disclaimer: no, I don't *really* want to see Mr. McBride dead, call off your snipers you crazy SOBs.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @09:55AM (#8724573)
    Law suits will never be outsourced

    Nope, that's already happening:
    http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/art icleshow/578 987.cms

    Good thing I love curry.
  • by Mansing ( 42708 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @09:59AM (#8724595)
    In short, I don't think groklaw is giving us a very objective view of the situation.

    While this may be true, I don't think there is any objective view on this case other than reading the actual filings. And as an attorney, I would expect you to reference not the commentary but the actual filings. If you did not, then I'm surprised.

    very steep discounts offered by Microsoft

    This statement is the true reason you have chosen Microsoft, IMHO. If you or your company's attorney had read the various filings, (as our attorneys have) then the lawsuit(s) would not enter into the decision making process.

    These are intelligent, wealthy people, and they did not get that way by filing groundless lawsuits.

    As the previous poster mentioned, you are new to this, aren't you? Perhaps you should read several recent cases revolving around technology intellectual property. The Rambus case would be a good starting point. I also contend (as many others do) that SCO's management never expected to have the court proceeding last this long. I suspect that the plan was to be purchased or to have the case settle of out of court.

    While you may be an attorney, I have seen and heard IBM's attorneys Cravath. There are one of the best intellectual property firms in the US. If the Cravath attorneys believe that claims are meritless, then I would tend to believe them.

  • by morelife ( 213920 ) <f00fbug&postREMOVETHISman,at> on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @09:59AM (#8724598)
    If the judge grants what IBM wants, the case will be over, SCO's stock price will have created much revenue for them, as did the investment by MS, Linux will have had doubt cast upon it needlessly, and there will have been no punishment for Darl.

    I wish IBM would fight them in court, win, and countersue for further damages to prove the point.

    There's a Good Thing that has happened as a result of the SCO saga to date:

    the Linux development commmunity is now being a lot more careful about code re-use, attribution, credits, and licensing issues in redistributed packages.

  • They certainly are (Score:5, Interesting)

    by griblik ( 237163 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @09:59AM (#8724599)
    According to the filing as read by me on groklaw, SCO's attempt to impose extra licensing requirements puts them in breach of GPL section 5, which terminates their right to distribute under section 4. (ianal, could have read it completely wrong)

    IBM has IP in linux that they have only licensed under GPL. If SCO has no GPL rights, they have no right to distribute the code, and they're therefore infringing IBM's copyright.
  • by SenseiLeNoir ( 699164 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @10:02AM (#8724625)
    > "These are intelligent, wealthy people"

    so were Enron, et-al.

    You say you are an attorney? If my attorney made a decision on pure hearsay, i woudl fire him/her. You did not give us any facts, just the presumption that they must be a fine upstanding company. Well so is IBM, and IBM happens to be MORE than SCO. On that assumption you have decided to ditch Linux, and go for MS? Nice deal you got with them!

    Groklaw is a site for us NON-LAWYERS. As an attorney, surely you dont need to go to Groklaw of all places right??? you shoudl be well versed on the facts. In fact you shoudl be CONTRIBUTING to the knowledge on Groklaw, not reading it!

    I doubt you are a attorney, just a troll.

    Good bye, and nice try.
  • by 4of12 ( 97621 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @10:04AM (#8724642) Homepage Journal

    We have held off on adopting Linux...it is simply unreasonable to assume that SCO's case is completely baseless.

    I'm sure it's not completely baseless. But, the premise of a flat world isn't completely baseless, either. What I've seen from SCO to prove their point has been rather sketchy. You are entitled to your own opinion and to make business decisions accordingly. And, yes, it would be a shame if cogent, pro-SCO analysis were artificially suppressed. Perhaps you could point out some of those posts.

    But here's something to think about for the future.

    If your company loses money by delaying a Linux migration primarily because of the SCO suit, you might want to collect together evidence leading to that decision.

    Should it ever some to light that the SCO suit were frivilous and possibly motivated by some third party that stood to gain by deliberately supporting a frivilous suit, then your company and others might stand to make up some of the lost revenue for being deliberately misled as part of a broader conspiracy that might not be legal.

    If you're an internal counsel for your company, pursuing redress might provide you with plenty of work.

  • by YU Nicks NE Way ( 129084 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @10:13AM (#8724709)
    Folks, this filing is a "Duh" -- not because it's valid, but because any competent attorney will file for a declaratory judgement. After all, the judge might grant it, and there's no harm in trying.

    I don't think that they expect the judge to grant the motion, though. IBM would have to show that there's no controversy about SCO holding the copyrights to the UNIX code in question, and that's patently false. SCO claims the copyrights and has documents the appear to show that. Novell has documents which might impose some limitations on the transfer, but it isn't clear that they apply in this case, or that they're valid. SCO has affadavits from the people who signed the original documents which appear to show that they intended to transfer the copyrights in full. That matter is currently under judicial review, and until it's resolved, that controversy prevents a declaratory judgement.

    I expect the judge to deline to rule on the motion in the interests of allowing Novell v. SCO to proceed unimpeded. IBM's attorneys have to try, both because they might win, and because if the Novell case goes against SCO, then IBM will have it in the record that they asked for declaratory judgement earlier, and so can forestall some procedural objections from SCO in that case.
  • Re:Life after SCO? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by drooling-dog ( 189103 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @10:15AM (#8724734)
    Hardly IBM, since they seem to be rapidly converting themselves into good guys - this story will probably elevate them to the status of demi-godhood.

    Knowing how full the world is of irony, and how the powers that currently defend Linux will someday seek to control it, it'll be interesting to see how we all feel about IBM 5 years from now...

  • by Eggplant62 ( 120514 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @10:32AM (#8724881)
    I predict that SCO's stock WON'T descend so quickly.

    The newly leaked internal MS memos seem to be saying that MS has earmarked x millions for uses such as this; artificially maintaining SCO's stock high.

    The problem is the typical investor can't see that going on and will simply believe there really is some interest in SCO's stock.

    It's a doomed tactic, but MS are more interested in causing harm than actually winning at this point.


    I think you have some good arguments. However, there are a lot of short interests in SCOX that are held by people who *are* savvy in the tech field and know SCO's claims to be the crack-rock-induced pipe dreams they truly are. At some point, those people are going to cash in those shorts and what happens next?

    I can hear the whistle as that bomb drops.
  • Re:GPL Infringement? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Hieronymus Howard ( 215725 ) * on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @10:40AM (#8724963)
    RTFA. IBM make it very clear indeed that they believe that SCO are violating the GPL and are terminating SCO's rights to distribute GPL'd code developed by IBM.
  • Re:Not at all over (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @10:50AM (#8725051)
    In light of that fact that SCO has dropped it's trade secrets claim [groklaw.net] over a month ago, I think this is much more important than you are saying.
  • by mykepredko ( 40154 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @11:09AM (#8725201) Homepage
    I have some experience with the type of lawyers IBM hires as litigators in social situations - I was involved as a witness in a product conterfiting suit about ten years ago.

    To make me feel at ease, here in Toronto they took me out to dinner (Shopsey's at Yonge and Front) followed by a show at Second City.

    Over dinner, the conversation ranged over such fascinating topics as the low percentage of both Canadians and Americans that could name all the judges on the countries supreme court, the need for all engineers to have mandatory training in evidence collection, documenting and testifying, explanation of the correct terms to use in the deposition process, which of the firm's offices were best for aspiring new hires and how much BMWs cost in Canada.

    During the show, one of the lawyers actually started taking notes, recording what he thought were inappropriately used registered statements in the show - during the intermission they debated on the differences between Canadian and US law and whether or not the useage would be legal in the US.

    At the end of the evening, they were happy that they were able to "sneak in a few minutes" talking about business, as this would allow them to claim the evening expenses as well as the time spent over dinner and the show as billable hours.

    All in all, I found it to be a pretty traumatic evening.

    At no time did I get the feeling that these people were normal human beings. On a personal level, they can't function with normal human beings. On a professional level, they are more than competent and although they will bleed you dry.

    But, if they are working for you, I'm sure they'll devote more than 100% of their waking hours to your case. So, I guess looking at it from this dimension, they are excellent friends to have.

    myke
  • by surprise_audit ( 575743 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @11:21AM (#8725326)
    I think there may be something even better than that lurking in the bushes waiting to bite SCO's ass.

    Remember back in the beginning when SCO was inviting everybody to sign an NDA to look at the alleged infringing code, and all the OSS/kernel programmers wouldn't touch it for fear of appearing tainted?? You know, after seeing the source, SCO could later claim that they used SCO "inventions" and "methods"?? Remember that??

    Well, SCO was recently asking for a pile of Dynix/AIX source from IBM... I don't remember (and I'm too tired to check) if IBM forked it over yet, but if they have/when they do, won't that make it really, really tricky for SCO to innovate anything?? Assuming they escape from this farce as a solvent company, that is...

  • Patents still matter (Score:2, Interesting)

    by rwebb ( 732790 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @11:28AM (#8725382)
    If IBM try to turn against the free/open source community then this court filing would turn into a weapon against them. IBM are saying to the judge, "we're 100% behind Linux and the GPL". It would be very hard for them to now turn against the free/open source movement.

    Not at all. The GPL is a license to distribute copyrighted works but this isn't a paper-rock-scissors thing.

    I may write code today to which I hold the copyright and may chose to distribute the code under the GPL. However, that doesn't mean that the code is then unencumbered by a patent held by someone else.

    If, in the future, FOSS significantly threatens IBM's revenue stream then it may indeed be in their best interests to use their patent portfolio to quash competing products, irrespective of the validity of, or their continued recognition of, the GPL.
  • by Kismet ( 13199 ) <pmccombs AT acm DOT org> on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @12:06PM (#8725705) Homepage
    SCO does not have documents that "appear" to show an actual copyright transfer under any interpretation of the law. Superficially, to an observer ignorant of copyright requirements, the APA ammendment may appear just as you suggest.

    What SCO does have are documents that specifically _deny_ copyright transfer, and then an ammendment that shows intent to transfer unspecified copyrights as needed. As Novell has said, copyright law requires that a copyright be transferred with specificity. There are absolutely no documents in SCO's possession that do this. According to the law, it takes more than intent to transfer a copyright.

    Anyway, Novell can't just go and transfer System V copyrights because it is unclear who owns copyright on what. Is it BSD code? Is it public domain code? Is it 3rd party code? System V is a copyright minefield. This is probably why Novell explicitly did NOT transfer copyright, but attached a promise of copyright transfer based on specific needs.

    Remember that Ransom Love, assuming he had System V copyrights at the time, noted that SCO couldn't open up Unix (other than ancient Unix, which was already effectively public domain); because SCO wasn't sure what 3rd party proprietary code was in there. So there was this talk of opening up System V, and back then, SCO seemed willing - but unable - to do it.

    I guess that this is most likely the intent of the Novell ammendment to the APA: To only transfer a copyright once it has been cleared of any outside claims (remember USL vs. BSD in '92). Clearly Novell was open to copyright transfer to SCO, and very possibly that was the intent (over at Groklaw, PJ surmises that SCO might even have Novell witnesses willing to testify to this intent). However, as I mentioned, it takes more than intent and promise to satisfy the law.

    But I agree: The SCO copyright dispute must be resolved before any declaratory judgement. My only issue is that SCO documents don't "appear" to show anything other than intent.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @12:11PM (#8725747)
    A more likely and far *better* outcome would be if UNIX was declared to be public domain.

    Remember that UNIX was created before the berne convention, and before the Berne convention things were *only* copyright if you included copyright notices. The UNIX source code had no such notices, and therefore was not copyrighted. If the code isn't copyrighted, then it's public domain.

    If the code is public domain, then it's impossible to sue over copyright infringement or license violations.
  • by realcheese ( 470506 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @12:53PM (#8726188)
    I agree with you and I've asked this question. However, the answer I get back from our lawyers is that Microsoft provides the target for lawsuits if something is wrong with Windows. We (large Aerospace company) become the target for lawsuits if there is a problem with the Open Source stuff that has no company behind it.
  • by gcaseye6677 ( 694805 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @01:14PM (#8726422)
    If parts of Windows were found to have been illegally copied from someone else's code (which has happened before [geek.com]), I don't see how the end users could be held responsible since they don't even have access to the source. Not only do they not have a duty to check Microsoft's source for infringing code, they don't even have the ability to do so. With open source products, the end user does have access to the source. Whether the user would be liable for infringement would vary depending on the circumstances, but it is at least more of a possibility. Although it looks like SCO has no case, this are issues that need to be addressed if someone were to come along and make SCO-type of claims and actually have evidence to back them up.
  • by mabu ( 178417 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @01:22PM (#8726504)
    RHAT is up at $23.24/share
    SCOX is at $8.40/share

    tick.. tick.. tick..

    From an article today on Businessweek [businessweek.com]

    Will the threat of SCO litigation slow down Linux adoption?
    Not likely. The lawsuits have been in the air for a year now, yet sales of Linux-based servers continue to pick up steam. In the fourth quarter of 2003, they grew 51% over the same quarter last year, according to Gartner. In comparison, sales of Windows servers were up 15.9%, and Unix servers dropped 4%. In the last two years, Linux' share of the server market has grown from 2.7% to 7%. With big computer makers like IBM, Hewlett-Packard (HP ), Dell (DELL ), and now even Sun Microsystems (SUNW ) selling Linux boxes, there's little reason to think Linux will lose its momentum.

  • by mabu ( 178417 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @01:34PM (#8726666)
    Today is the first blow of many that will take SCO's stock back to the penny-stock pink sheet.

    I'd tend to agree with you except it looks like SCO is trying to manipulate the price by buying back its own shares:

    Form 8-K for SCO GROUP INC

    11-Mar-2004

    Other Events and Regulation FD Disclosure

    Item 5. Other Events and Regulation FD Disclosure.

    The board of directors of The SCO Group, Inc. ("SCO") has authorized management, in its discretion, to purchase up to 1.5 million shares of SCO's common stock over the next 24 months. The repurchase program is effective immediately. SCO has approximately 14.4 million shares of common stock issued and outstanding. Any repurchased shares will be held as treasury stock and will be available for general corporate purposes.

    The repurchase program will allow SCO to repurchase its shares from time to time in accordance with the requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission on the open market, in block trades and in privately negotiated transactions, depending on market conditions and other factors.

    Forward Looking Statements

    This report contains forward-looking statements regarding SCO's implementation of a stock repurchase program. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties. These risks and uncertainties may affect the timing and amounts of stock purchases under the program and other circumstances related to repurchases under the program. Purchases under the program are subject to the discretion of management based on market conditions and other factors including the trading price of SCO's common stock, availability of stock, alternative uses of capital and SCO's financial condition. Other risks and uncertainties related to SCO's business are described in SCO's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
  • by Teahouse ( 267087 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @01:45PM (#8726817)
    That's what this case is actually all about. SCOX was practically a penny-stock when this started. Darl had no idea how to get them out of that hole by innovating, so litigation gave the stockholders the stock bounce they needed and demanded.

    Now, the stock is dropping again. A buddy of mine (who is a broker) told me that the bubble will burst at about $4.50. At that poing, the drop to under a dollar will be very fast. Once that happens, these cases will go away because SCO will either have to hold it's remaining money to find another way out (wow! you mean innovate and try some R & D?!?) or follow this rabbit into insolvency very quickly.

    Once the stocks hit >$4, Darl's "strategy" will be considered a failure, and SCO will fire him and seek another company to buy them (for virtually nothing) or stagger on as a dying company maintaining a shrinking customer base of legacy-UNIX systems.

  • by Captain Nitpick ( 16515 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @03:44PM (#8728137)
    Both. They first had to play out just enough rope for SCO to essentially hang themselves. Let's hope the rope doesn't break.

    This isn't a hanging rope, it's a +1 bungee cord of lawsuits.

    IBM waited for SCO to measure out their cord, and decided that SCO had five hundred meters of cord for a hundred meter drop.

    IBM's asking the judge to let them shoot SCO and save the trouble of waiting for SCO to hit bottom.

  • by spun ( 1352 ) <loverevolutionary@@@yahoo...com> on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @03:59PM (#8728383) Journal
    I was living in Honolulu, Hawaii and involved in a very cool polyamory group there called Pali Paths. Didn't really date this lady, we were more just friends who occasionally had sex, but I did hang out with her. Nicest person you ever met: sweet, funny, and little bit geeky, even seemed a little shy.

    She was a business lawyer, worked for the city. She said she liked that because she was really always fighting bad guys, and she could let her claws out without feeling bad. She showed me one of her briefs once (don't start ;-) and I read the whole thing, it was only seven pages.

    I remembered the case, from the media's point of view, the other guy was a bastard who was screwing over orphans or something like that. She tied his balls in a knot and handed them to him on a platter. Used his own arguments against him, proved he was screwed if they were valid or not. You should have seen her eyes light up as she described arguing this case. I could suddenly see the shark in her, and I was frightened. She was very good, and it was obvious she could be ruthless in court. I'm sure the world is a better place because she decided to fight for the (mostly) good guys.

    I say mostly because Honolulu, and really all of Hawaii is an old boy's club. The government there is at least as corrupt as most.

    I had some other lawyer friends there. They were activist types, one was fighting for fair water use rights, the other was in the Hawaiian Native Sovereignty movement. They were good, dedicated people, but they didn't have that shark mentality about them. Just remember that not all lawyers are bad people.

    God only knows what this has to do with SCO, just thought I'd throw out my own bit of personal experience with lawyers. I guess it does sound like IBM is doing what she did, tying the SCO lawyers' balls in a knot, so to speak, and proving that their arguments are utterly without merit.
  • by EmbeddedJanitor ( 597831 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @04:41PM (#8728921)
    If IBM had said this straight off, then everyone would have said "Well of course they're going to say this" and they would not get taken seriously. By waiting until SCO's case and credibility are significantly erodes, everyone will just want to agree: "Yeah there's nothing in SCOs bullshit, lets just close this unpleasant episode".

    Waiting this long might have also helped to consolidate IBMs position in Linux land. A lot of Linux companies got badly hurt, but IBM has the reserves to wait it out. By delaying things a lot of IBMs competition gets wiped out or at least roughed up somewhat.

  • Re:IBM 1 TSG 0 (Score:3, Interesting)

    by prell ( 584580 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2004 @05:45PM (#8729856) Homepage
    Rather than trying to divide the corporate world up into friends and enemies, we should consider all for-profit entities as being agnostic to Linux, and we should be agnostic in kind, for one self-evident reason: said entities exist to make money, and as long as Linux helps them achieve that goal, they will defend it (as parent notes).

    These legal sparrings over Linux get perhaps at least most of the inspection the deserve, but let us not take sides. Remember that Linux was created for everyone, and each and every one of these companies is trying to bend it completely to their will. Whether Linux remains free is a side-effect (to them), and whether the GPL remains unchallenged is a corollary of whether it impedes future business for these companies now that they've chosen Linux for their platform of operations.

    Writing this, I'm becoming pretty indignant about the whole thing. Nobody is taking my Linux away. We didn't give it to you; you're using it because we give it to everyone, and in case you hadn't noticed, your assaults do not result in a change in our behavior, nor will they ever. Linux cannot be affronted or destroyed, because it is not a stack of gold coins or a religion; it is reason, it is ideology. Trying to stamp it out is like trying to put postage stamps on packets.
  • by Build6 ( 164888 ) on Thursday April 01, 2004 @10:10AM (#8735961)
    Wouldn't it be interesting if, upon SCO's claims etc. getting tossed out, Microsoft turns around and sues SCO/Canopy for a return of the licensing fees they'd paid, in the sense that "since you guys didn't own the licence anyway - and there's that recent judgement that says so - we've given you money for nothing, you cheating liars, you told us you had a valid enforceable license that everybody needed to get! We wants our money back"?

    Microsoft would have every right to do so (assuming their contract with SCO/Canopy doesn't have any clauses saying "once the money's handed over it's ours for good")?

    Assuming there's no secret (and enforceable) agreement between MS & SCO to play nice after, assuming the "SCO is doing this on MS's behalf" conspiracy theories are true, there's really nothing to stop MS from abandoning their flunky running-dog after they've outlived their usefulness, is there? And, if there isn't a secret conspiracy and MS is just buying the licence (if only on an enemy-of-my-enemy-is-a-friend basis), once the judgement comes, won't MS have a *fiduciary duty* to their shareholders to claw back the money they've paid out to SCO since, heck, they got nothing for it?

    Come to think of it, are there any minority shareholders within SCO/Canopy who can sue SCO/Canopy management for messing up their ongoing line of business (back in the Caldera days, OpenLinux was regarded quite well, wasn't it?) in a series of decisions that antagonised everybody and (will almost certainly?) lead to the collapse of their remaining business?

    EV1 net has now publicly regretted getting their licence - if SCO loses their case, who on earth is going to want to buy SCO licences (or OpenLinux, for that matter) for any reason other than "maintenance while we quickly look for something else to migrate to" purposes?

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