SCO Calls GPL Unenforceable, Void 1186
wes33 writes "Groklaw has a link
to SCO's replies to IBM's amended complaints. Some
choice bits: '6th Affirmative Defense -
The GPL is unenforceable, void and/or voidable, and IBM's claims
based thereon, or related thereto, are barred. ... 7th Affirmative Defense - The GPL is selectively enforced by the Free Software Foundation
such that enforcement of the GPL by IBM or others is waived, estopped or otherwise barred as a matter of equity. ... 8th Affirmative Defense -
The GPL violates the U.S. Constitution, together with copyright, antitrust
and export control laws, and IBM's claims based theron, or related thereto, are barred.' Comments are pouring in ... not all of them
complimentary to SCO or its legal strategy." Considering that the GPL and the GNU project rely on and affirm the protections of copyright, this seems like a strange argument to pursue.
Can you say, "Pump and Dump"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Can you say, "Pump and Dump"? (Score:4, Insightful)
At what stage does the pumping cross any legal boundaries? I guess while they're getting professional legal opinions they're still in the clean legally.
Re:Can you say, "Pump and Dump"? (Score:4, Insightful)
Pump and dump is correct. Any attempts to apply any logic to this are just a waste of time.
This is exactly why SCO is taking it's issues up in the US courts. With the ignorance and insanity that dominates our legal system, they actually have a shot. A long shot, yes; but a shot, none the less.
You have to remember, a lot of the people who sit in high political offices are former judges. They are old white men who care about appeasing each other's financial interests and don't mind if all the geeks in the world want to rip their throats out. Plus, you have to remember that there's a good chance any random judge will have SCO or one of it's alliances somewhere in their investment portfolio. They probably don't care about Linux one bit, nor grasp the importance of the GPL. It's more likely someone in this mindset would think "Well, if this free stuff would go away, then people would have to buy software from the guys I've invested in.. More money! Woohoo!"...
If there was any sanity or fairness left in our courts and political systems, the DMCA would have never gone into law. Nor would we have gone to war in Iraq [google.com]. It's a dark time for the little guy.
Re:Can you say, "Pump and Dump"? (Score:4, Insightful)
It's a dark time for the little guy. :(
Care to explain when it hasn't been? Perhaps when people were being drafted and shipped to Vietnam, as - I quote - "meat"? Perhaps when streets burned and protestors rioted to give the black community equal rights as humans and citizens?
Or, was it not a dark time during slavery? Or while non-WASPs and women were being persecuted at the birth of this country? Or, let's step out of the U.S. During slavery in the U.K.? In Africa? During the times when serfs were squashed under the thumbs of opressive theocracies?
Perhaps, maybe, it wasn't a dark time before the veneer of "civilization" took hold? When the strong ruled by might alone - brutish fist and club?
It has ALWAYS been a dark time for the little guy. You miss something important though...
If the little guy can get organized, it can actually fight back now. All the little guys and gals are networked. We can MAKE our wills heard if we simply put the effort into it. How many people here know how to Google bomb? We could overrun Google with our own decentralized propaganda in a month. That's a small example of what could be accomplished if the little guys and gals all worked together to a common end. We can make people listen to the little guy for the first time in history without widespread violence and upheaval.
It's still a dark time for the little guy... but it's certainly never been brighter.
Re:Here's what you were saying... (Score:5, Insightful)
Incorrect. Communism has never been attempted by any human civilization. You may have been confused by the Soviet Bolsheviks, who claimed to be "Communist", but they were liars. As were the Maoists who imitated them.
If Communism is ever tried, it might succeed in one of a few ways. Possibly, Marx will have been correct, and the natural evolution of a mature, capitalist society will be towards greater and greater corporate control, until a handful of merged companies + unions control the entire economy, and are indistinguishable from the government.
Or, there's the even more off-the-wall chance that a resurgence of Christianity will bring with it the recognition that their religion is doctrinally Communist (as laid out in Matthew 25:44, amoung many other places). Some people think Communism implies atheism, but they are independent social factors. A strong religion might be one way to overcome the natural greed that impedes Communism.
Re:Here's what you were saying... (Score:5, Informative)
I also agree that Marx was probably correct, in that capitalist society is doomed to merge larger and larger corporations with government, until they are one in the same. I honestly think we're seeing evidence of the early stages of that, considering the influence large corportations already have on policy/law making.
I don't agree, however, that communism would ever work on a large scale. I base this on human nature alone though. While everyone working toward the good of the state and sharing the fruits of their labor is a noble premise, it never takes long for society to divide itself. It's happened everywhere, and not by accident. People who think their work is more important want more for that work. People who don't think they're making a difference don't want to work as hard. It's also in human nature to eventually do as little as possible, as long as you're getting by or ahead. That's why we have such great inventions as the tractor/combine, telephone, even the tv remote. I will work to create something that will save me time and energy, so I can relax more, or sit around a bit, or get a little more sleep, or...
I realize that communism isn't completely about the sharing of work in the state. It's about sharing power as well. In that light, human nature also takes it's run. Those with more influence eventually start exercising it (we've seen this happen throughout history many times). What you have at that point is something resembling an ologopoly.
Communism might work if you can remove human nature, and most
Re:Here's what you were saying... (Score:5, Insightful)
That's called fascism. And yes, there have been academic papers categorizing fascism then comparing modern American politics. American Fascism is a real possiblility, just because they won't all dress up like Nazis and try to kill an entire ethnic group or two outright doesn't mean it's not fascism.
Fascism is a danger to all democratic states, as it requires a democratic state to breed fascism. Read this for some primer info:
Rush, Newspeak and Fascism: An exegesis [cursor.org]
BTW, Communism is bunk. It will never work, black markets are part of a body of evidence that shows humans are pre-disposed to capitalism at some level. Also Marx was railing agains the oligarchic crony capitalism, not the free and fair markets that the large part of American capitalism enshrines. Marx would probably be an economist if he'd grown up in modern America. But, he'd still see the danger of the crony capitalism we've seen with the recent Wall Street fraud. He'd probably be rapidly anti-Fascist too.
Quit sitting around on the fringes between libertarians, neo-cons and commies. There have been a lot of moderate voices who have studied all of these different systems and agree that free markets with enough regulation to keep the markets fair for new entrants is the wisest course. Regulate where it makes sense, free markets where it benefits all citizens. As Roosevelts' VP Henry Wallace once said,
Re:Here's what you were saying... (Score:5, Informative)
Matthew 6:20
Giving is from the heart, not from the state. Remember also to "Render unto Caesar what is Caesar's, and unto God what is God's"; and "There is no authority on earth which God himself has not established.""But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also."
Re:Here's what you were saying... (Score:5, Funny)
Communism: The other way around.
Re:Can you say, "Pump and Dump"? (Score:3, Insightful)
I think there's a better chance that most of the Judges own IBM than SCO. Blue chip, baby.
IBM != "the little guy" (Score:5, Insightful)
IBM will surely have first class lawyers, and no matter what you think of the judicial system and judges/politicians only thinking about money and what not, who do you think they would side with? IBM or sco?
I'm betting on IBM.
Re:Can you say, "Pump and Dump"? (Score:5, Insightful)
You're pretty far off of the point. With the exception of the Microsoft handslapping, the judicial system has been pretty fair and removed from Govt politics. The US Govt was set up that way, and of all of the branches of Government, the judicial branch to this day remains mostly neutral and unbiased.
You make it seem like it's a bad thing that some judge doesn't care about Linux or grasp the importance of the GPL. Well, Awptimus, that is the important point. We don't want the judge to care about Linux or bias his decision based upon the importance of the copyright license. We only want him to remain fair and unbiased and to determine how the different aspects of the case fit into the US Copyright Law. The copyright system is currently pretty screwed up, but it's not the job of some individual judge to take matters into his own hands when it comes to the all-important GPL. It's better for the USA if he only does his job to fit the SCO case into existing law. Leave it to law makers to make laws.
Finally, in your last comment, you seem to link the courts to drafting DMCA and to the war in Iraq... both of which the judicial system had NOTHING to do with. I think a course or a book on the US Government would be good for you since you either aren't from the USA or you failed 9th grade Govt.
Re:Can you say, "Pump and Dump"? (Score:5, Informative)
They are old white men who care about appeasing each other's financial interests and don't mind if all the geeks in the world want to rip their throats out. Plus, you have to remember that there's a good chance any random judge will have SCO or one of it's alliances somewhere in their investment portfolio.
So, at the risk of being redunant, here's the text of a message I posted a couple times, several MONTHS ago. This is not new information. Yet still, even now, most people have no idea about judge Kimball who is hearing the case. So here goes (again)....
On every SCO story, invariably someone posts a paranoid concern that perhaps a clueless judge will be assigned to the case, and rule in favor of SCO. These are often moderated to +5, which is quite silly since Judge Dale A. Kimball [utahbar.org] has already be assigned to the case, and we can see that he's got a reputation for being fair and capable of understanding cases involving technology.
Groklaw has very extensive research on Kimball's history [weblogs.com], which is nicely summarized and easy to read. Every case has links to much more detail. The overall appearance is that Kimball will probably do the right thing.
Probably most important is the Jacobsen vs Hughes copyright case [deseretnews.com]. Apart from considering much of the material uncopyrightable historical facts, Judge Kimball was quite unimpressed by the plaintif's failure to act in a timely manner to mitigate damages. Quoting from that article:
Obviously this bodes quite well for IBM and all Linux users. SCO of course will claim they stopped distribution of linux, but this ruling at least shows that Judge Kimball isn't likely to be be charmed with the deplorable way SCO has conducted itself. Kimball's willingness to consider the writing a separate work, even though a part of it was loosely based on Jacobsen's also casts quite a shadow over SCO's chances (assuming the unlikely worst case scenario that SCO has an ace up its sleeve, rather than the bogus examples we've seen so far). It's certainly a good sign that Kimball is unlikely to buy SCO expansive theories about what constitutes a derivitive work.
While nothing is 100% certain going into the courtroom, it is a fact that the Judge Kimball has been selected to hear this case. His history shows he's competent, fair, and at least in Jacobsen vs Hughes, he doesn't tollerate the sort of shenanigans SCO has been pulling!
Re:Can you say, "Pump and Dump"? (Score:3, Interesting)
Looks like an all-purpose employee.
Job Responsibilities:
Re:Can you say, "Pump and Dump"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Ooo... Graphic designer. BA degree. What the fuck was Ray Noorda thinking?
Re:Can you say, "Pump and Dump"? (Score:5, Funny)
* Administrative needs of CFO and other executives
Buys Crack.
* Quarterly budget reports
Balances crack budget.
* Travel Arrangements
What contries do not have extradition treaties with the US.
* Organizing meetings and phone conferences
Supervisor of SCO koolaid distribution.
* Supply inventory
Do not run out of crack.
* General office responsibilities
There is no code but SCO's, and Darl is our prophet.
* Records minutes of various meetings
Must be willing to break federal wiretap laws
* Partner Program database coordination
Who can we steal from today?
* Answer investor questions regarding Stock performance
Answers questions like: why are SCO execs selling all there stock?
* Packaging of financial corporate communications with the investment community
Bill, It's SCO, Send more money.
* Helps prepare written investor communications and plan investor/analyst small-group private and large-group meetings
Look at the monkey.
* Handles telephone inquiries from analysts and investors
Yes, We invented Linux.
* Oversees scheduling and coverage of front desk
Must qualify as expert with no less than 3 separate small arms, riot control experience preferred.
Pump and dump is fraud (Score:3, Insightful)
In some jurisdictions, bringing a frivolous lawsuit is the crime of barratry. Even in states without tough anti-barratry laws, "pump and dump" is still securities fraud [duke.edu].
Re:Pump and dump is fraud (Score:3, Interesting)
You got that wrong (Score:4, Insightful)
Why the dickens would thieves wait to steal?
As for the chances of the GPL being ruled invalid, for what cause? It does not remove permissions, it only adds permissions. If it is ruled that it violates the copyright clause of the constitution because it expands on said clause, then every license does, including every EULA out there. You think Microsoft wants that?
Re:Can you say, "Pump and Dump"? (Score:4, Informative)
Souter - Bush I
Thomas - Bush I
Breyer - Clinton
Scalia - Reagan
Stevens - Ford
Rehnquist - Nixon
O'Connor - Reagan
Kennedy - Ford
7 our of 9 nominated by Republicans. You, sir, are a fool.
Re:Can you say, "Pump and Dump"? (Score:5, Funny)
a) Britany ain't dead
b) IBM didn't kill her
c) SCO ain't intitled to collect even if a and b weren't the case
You don't need to be a lawyer. There is no "worst case" because SCO has no case.
Re:Can you say, "Pump and Dump"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, I can see that happening. Not.
I can suspend disbelief (briefly since I have a vivid imagination) and envision a world where the GPL is invalidated but that's way too far out.
...THERE it is (Score:4, Funny)
I guess (Score:3, Funny)
So will it change from BSD is dead to... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:So will it change from BSD is dead to... (Score:5, Funny)
-credits to the Simpsons on that one
Obligatory (Score:5, Funny)
8th Affirmative Defense: The GPL is Unconstitutional and invalid.
9th Affirmative Defense: ???
10th Affirmative Defense: Profit!
SCO is intercoursed either way (Score:5, Interesting)
If the GPL is invalid, then while SCO was redistributing Linux (and still continued to do so after bringing suit [duke.edu]), the company was infringing copyright, because nothing other than the GPL gives SCO the privilege to do that. If SCO gets the GPL on Linux declared illegal, watch kernel contributors with deep pockets sue SCO for copyright infringement.
Re:SCO is intercoursed either way (Score:3, Insightful)
Two points:
This is totally irrelivant, but: (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.sco.com/products/linux/ [sco.com], which said only:
Forbidden
You don't have permission to access
For no good reason, I find this funny.
P.S. Searching for "Caldera Linux", on the other hand, returned some search results, including this absolutely fascinating [sco.com] page, which describes a developer-only "technology preview" of.. "the upcoming linux 2.4 kernel". The page seems to still be under the impression you can still sign up for SCO's "OpenLinux Developer's Network". They have e-mail addresses and an 800 number that points to the voice mail of some poor fellow within SCO named "Chris Morris". Hm.
Re:This is totally irrelivant, but: (Score:3, Interesting)
SCOX ticker says it all (Score:4, Informative)
Re:SCOX ticker says it all (Score:5, Insightful)
"Over a 4% drop"? That seems practically insignificant.
The thing that really bugs me is what goes on with financial news all the time - they'll interpret market movements as the obvious effect of X news event without demonstrating any link. "Microsoft issued two new security patches today, and so happy investors raised stock values 4%." It's exceptionally naive to assume that only the events you care about affect what happens to stock prices.
Correlation does not imply causality. It could just as easily be that the SCO-execs-and-cohorts are pulling stock prices to refill their pump-and-dump tanks - it's really all speculation.
Re:SCOX ticker says it all (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:SCOX ticker says it all (Score:4, Funny)
Launch has been made, nothing to do now but ride it out.
As a corollary this probably explains why Ralph Yarro is being refered to as "Betty" around the SCO offices and has little or nothing to do with his private life.
KFG
Violates The Constitution?? (Score:3, Funny)
Wow, now, I understand the legal "carpet bombing" theory, but COME ON NOW.
Then again, I'd like to "violate" certain folks at SCO, I'm sure they'd love a little man-meat...
WTF? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:WTF? (Score:4, Funny)
Comments (Score:4, Funny)
This
Proving freedom of speech (Score:5, Funny)
Re:SHUT THE FUCK UP (Score:4, Funny)
I agree! (Score:5, Funny)
Yes! I, too, feel that current copyright laws violate the U. S. Constitution! I'm glad somebody has finally come on-board with this, even if it is SCO.
Re:I agree! (Score:5, Interesting)
First off, the Patent & Trade Office has nothing to do with copyrights. You don't "apply" for copyrights, you automatically have them when you write something. You can register your copyright (which gives you slightly more legal edge in defending your copyright), but that's done with the Library of Congress, not PTO.
Secondly, the section you reference empowers Congress to give authors a monopoly over their works "for a limited period of time." In my opinion (which is what the words "I feel" mean), a copyright term longer than the lifespan of your average citizens is, for all realistic intents and purposes, unlimited. While a work written the day of my birth will (barring any further Bono-esque extensions) eventually become public domain, it will never happen within my lifetime so what's the point?
"Just couldn't take a clue from all the flames you got then, eh?"
I saw them (most of which I wouldn't have gotten if my post hadn't been moderated so high originally). My face turned red. I learned from the mistake and have moved on. Things like that happen when you're not a kharma whore trying to find an easy target to look smart next to.
EFF (Score:5, Insightful)
If Linus is unequal in his pursuit of his intellectual property rights vis a vis the GPL that only renders Linus property rights at issue, not the GPL. The GPL is a licence (like the Microsoft Shared Source Licence, or even EULA) and not an institution. Since the GPL is one of the more innovative licences we often lose sight of that fact.
(IANAL, of course)
Re:EFF (Score:3, Redundant)
Now, if you fail to enforce *trademarks*, you can lose them.
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Easy Way to keep your acronyms straight... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:EFF (Score:5, Funny)
Considering the GPL is credited to GNU/Stallman, wouldn't that line therefore be transformed into:
"emacss a emacss the GPL?"
Re:EFF (Score:3, Informative)
The doctrines of estoppel and laches are more powerful with trademarks, but they still exist to a limited extent with copyrights and patents.
Linux is an unauthorized version of UNIX? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Linux is an unauthorized version of UNIX? (Score:5, Interesting)
In practice too [pliant.cx]
OB Chewbacca Defense quote (Score:4, Funny)
Why would a Wookiee -- an eight foot tall Wookiee -- want to live on Endor with a bunch of two foot tall Ewoks? That does not make sense!
But more importantly, you have to ask yourself: what does that have to do with this case?
Nothing. Ladies and gentlemen, it has nothing to do with this case! It does not make sense!
Look at me, I'm a lawyer defending a major record company, and I'm talkin' about Chewbacca. Does that make sense? Ladies and gentlemen, I am not making any sense. None of this makes sense.
And so you have to remember, when you're in that jury room deliberating and conjugating the Emancipation Proclamation... does it make sense? No! Ladies and gentlemen of this supposed jury, it does not make sense.
If Chewbacca lives on Endor, you must acquit! The defense rests.
unenforcable = void? (Score:4, Interesting)
Schweet! I have an unlimited number of win9x copies now, because all those licences are VOID BABY! Music copyright? Unenforcable, therefore VOID BABY!
SCO allegations unenforcable? I have an unspecified copies of unspecified versions of unspecified distributions of Linux... SCO can't enforce anything on me, so their claims are VOID BABY, YEA!
"Your Honor, I'd like to cite precident, SCO vs. everyone, in which it was ruled that any unenforcable license is void. Since I'm only being tried for stealing a tenth of the stuff I stole, but you can't prove I stole the other stuff, the licenses covering all of it is void. I move for dismissal of all charges plus I claim ownership of every physical object my stolen stuff touched, because their ownership rights is unenforcable and therefore void."
Strung up by their own rope (Score:4, Insightful)
Please, I beg ANY developers of GPL'ed code that is in SCOs distro on their FTP site. Please sue these bastards for breach of copyright. I am willing to pony up $100 to anybody about to do this.
This madness has just got to end.
Better hope not! SCO doesn't care. (Score:4, Interesting)
SCO DOESN'T CARE
There's no principle in it for them here. McBride talks about getting 'square' or 'clean', but he's laughing at all of us. That's not the intent at all.
They aren't in this to prove anything other than trying to find out how much wealth the execs can aquire before it all comes crashing down. SCO WILL go down - let's hope they don't take the GPL with them.
Consitutional Copyright Protection (Score:4, Interesting)
in other news... (Score:4, Funny)
"Our field testing has proven very effective," says Ralph Synles, head of SCO R&D, "Subjects spend almost every waking moment in a projected fantasyland, and the way their hearts are racing, I would say they are high as fucking hell."
"Pink fuzzy secret code wonderful property tastes like intellectual NDA violations. Call my stock broker!" SCO's CEO, Daryl McBride, was quoted as saying, before giggling and waving around several blank sheets of printer paper.
What? (Score:5, Interesting)
This is how I understand it:
Copyright law says that I, as creator of my work, can control how it is used and by whom.
Licences give me the power to selectively allow freedoms to be given out.
The Microsoft EULA is an example of such a licence, in which paying the licence fee for a Microsoft product allows limited usage of the product as per the terms of the licence. That's what one pays for when they get the product, the right to use it under the terms of the accompanying licence.
The General Public Licence allows one as a Copyright owner to selectively give rights to users to use the product as long as they accept the licence. Said licence tells them that any derivative works must also be licenced under the GPL.
So what am I missing here? Is SCO saying that licences shouldn't exist? Are they saying that Copyright law is wrong? Have they just simply gone out of their minds? Because the licensing business model has existed in the software industry for ages.
The idea behind the GPL is nothing new, it's just intended to guarantee freedom rather than restrict it. It's another type of licence, and it's certainly as valid as something any other software vendor would choose to put on their products.
Re:What? (Score:5, Informative)
Copyright law only says that you, as a creator of your work, have exclusive control on whom else you wish to allow to distribute that work. By default, nobody other than yourself is allowed to distribute a work that is copyrighted by you. You must grant permission first.
The GPL is not a license for usage, it is a copyright license that outlines the terms necessary to obtain permission to redistribute from the copyright holders.
That is why it's effectively impossible to declare the GPL void.
Re:What? (Score:3, Interesting)
Um, there *is* a copyright holder of GPLed software. If there wasn't, the GPL would be unenforcable as it would be public domain.
Re:What? (Score:3, Insightful)
Not a GPL fan, but... (Score:3, Interesting)
The US courts have upheld the much more lenient BSD license, and many much more restrictive EULAs, so the GPL seems quite court-safe where it is in the middle.
What planet did their lawyers come from (Score:5, Interesting)
I guess they don't know the difference between copyright and trademark. Selective enforcement has zero effect on enforcebility of copyright. Black letter law.
8th Affirmative Defense - The GPL violates the U.S. Constitution, together with copyright, antitrust and export control laws, and IBM's claims based theron, or related thereto, are barred.'
Export control laws? I see, now. Their defense is "We're to fucking retarded that we need a keeper. Please give us money."
Selective enforcement of copyright violation (Score:3, Insightful)
If the FSF decides to selectively enforce the GPL and in some way that manages to release their copyright (stay with me).
How exactly does this action relate to IBM?
Even if the FSF was selectively enforcing trademarks, how does that relate to IBMs rights?
Re: What planet did their lawyers come from (Score:3, Interesting)
> > 7th Affirmative Defense - The GPL is selectively enforced by the Free Software Foundation such that enforcement of the GPL by IBM or others is waived, estopped or otherwise barred as a matter of equity
> I guess they don't know the difference between copyright and trademark. Selective enforcement has zero effect on enforcebility of copyright. Black letter law.
Also, why is it the FSF's job to enforce the GPL, selectively or otherwise?
Unless the FSF happens to be the copyright owner on a par
They forgot one... (Score:5, Funny)
If anyone cares... (Score:3, Interesting)
I dunno if anyone saw this or cares, but I used my (lack of) GIMP skills to make some borg/SCO icons at the request of KilobyteKnight [slashdot.org]... it just got posted late so I don't know if anyone saw it.
As I said previously, these just differ by filter; I couldn't decide which I liked. Feel free to use them however.
This is a good thing. (Score:5, Insightful)
If the GPL stands up in court, it's SCO's case that is going to be crippled.
If SCO didn't exist we'd have to invent them. (Score:5, Funny)
And how nice that SCO is being an obvious pack of assholes about the whole thing. This puts the defenders of the GPL in a much better situation than if they had been reasonable.
You'll recall how, when the Forces of Law'nOrder try to set a precedent confirming the enforcability of some new law (especially if it's constitutionality is questionable), they'll go after the worst scumbag they can find first. (Like going after child pornographers when trying out the latest restriction on the free press.) Once they get the precedent set, they can then use it to club anybody else who publishes something they don't like.
SCO, by taking on the entire world and insulting the intelligence of the judges who will be handling the case with a stack of obviously bogus claims, has voluntarily put itself in a position with respect to the GPL of the child pornographer picked by a prosecutor to try out a new censorship law. VERY convenient for the GPL side.
This reminds me of a saying from the heyday of usenet news political discussion/debate groups. Often there would be a regular poster on one side who would trot out every tired, repeatedly disproved, position of that side of the argument. He could never be convinced to change his position. But he'd make a DANDY foil for presenting the counter-arguments, for the edification of thousands of neo-lurkers who hadn't yet heard them. Then, a few weeks later, once a new crop of newbies had gathered and/or another news item made the subject front-page once more, he'd rehash them AGAIN. How convenient!
After a few iterations some of the posters would get bored or annoyed with him and start asking how he could be discouraged (or kicked off, if the group was moderated). Then the old hands would point out how CONVENIENT it was to have someone from the "other side" to periodically hoist the strawmen and give the rest of us an opportunity for a bonfire.
SO convenient, that it would often be said that "If [whomever] didn't exist we'd have to invent him.", i.e. we'd have to plant a shill in the crowd to do the same function (but less believably, because someone who actually believes the opposite position won't get the rhetoric quite right.)
Of course you'd never know if [whomever] actually WAS a shill - a particularly convincing one. (And that uncertainty also helped. It implied that if he WAS a shill, he'd only be raising arguments that were defective. So simply by raising one of "his side's" arguments he discredited it. B-)
SCO has been so PERFECT in this role that the old saw applies.
If the GPL can't handle a legal challenge, it's better to find that out sooner rather than later.
SCo has been so perfect for our side that it's almost enough to make you wonder if SCO *IS* a shill.
it's a shame.. (Score:3, Funny)
No GPL = Copyright violation (Score:3, Insightful)
Everyone else thought they had a valid licence to distribute linux.
In more GPL news ... (Score:5, Funny)
Futhermore, high ranking army officers are also said to be frustrated by the GPL. "It is quite simply conter-productive in our efforts to find Saddam and to bring law and order to Iraq", said an officer, speaking under anonymity.
And finally, graffiti was seen on Redmond, WA train claiming, "GPL = French". Underneath was written, "it's '==' you insensitive clod".
Can we examine the big picture? (Score:4, Insightful)
Linux is free software, that everyone participates in making, and then gets to use for free.
SCO distributed Linux itself, until very recently. It was also selling its own "competing" product at the same time.
Now SCO is claiming that some of their "valuable" property was incorporated into Linux - without their knowledge. They're demanding everyone who uses Linux pay them for it (at a price they've just determined) - or face lawsuits.
They're refusing to reveal what was "stolen." (More accurately, they will only show evidence to those who sign an unacceptably onerous non-disclosure agreement.) Not the actions of a company with a good case, but let us assume, since it is certainly possible, that some work of SCO's appears identical to some work inside Linux.
It is first of all not exactly obvious who copied whom. In the most similar case of years past, exactly such confusion resulted in a major legal reversal for one of Unix's past copyright holders. But let us even assume that someone secretly put some stolen SCO work inside Linux, since that is certainly also possible.
One of two things is true, then:
1) If you are a Linux user (who unwittingly received a bit of SCO's property), you have to pay whatever SCO asks, even if you didn't know (and had no way of knowing) you were using "stolen code"!
This means that SCO is in massive trouble, since they violated the licenses of all the Linux contributors _themselves_, by distributing Linux with their proprietary code incorporated into it. This is forbidden by the GPL (Linux's license), which (basically) forces participants to contribute their work for free or not at all. (That's the whole point of the affair, really.) And as we just established, ignorance is not an excuse. The fact that SCO might not have known they were breaking this rule wouldn't save them.
Result? Several thousand Linux contributors (a group which includes some very large, wealthy businesses) sue SCO for violating _their_ licenses, which specifically forbade this in the first place. SCO goes bankrupt.
-- OR --
2) If you are a Linux user (who unwittingly received a bit of SCO's property), it's _not_ your problem, because you didn't _know_ there was a problem, and once you found out, you replaced the "stolen code" - by downloading a patch, most likely. Right after SCO gets around to telling people what was stolen, that is. (Which they will do eventually?)
If ignorance is SCO's excuse, it's everyone's excuse. It means THERE IS NO DANGER TO ANY LINUX USER from SCO, because nobody was knowingly involved in these affairs, except potentially IBM (who stands accused of having actually done the deed). If there was any improper copying, it's IBM's problem - which is as it should be (although apparently even that part of SCO's story is questionable).
Result? SCO's threats to sue Linux users are actually a nasty and libelous publicity stunt, and a number of affected business (IBM, Redhat, Dell, Suse, etc) sue them as a result. SCO goes bankrupt.
I can't figure out how SCO's threats to "license Linux users" to the tune of hundreds or even thousands a CPU is anything other than the business world's equivalent of an April Fool's joke.
You can make specious legal threats about any product - open source or closed source. The fact that Linux is a target this time is only a sign of its continually increasing importance.
If you want my take on it, some people sitting in big offices (picture Microsoft and Sun logos on the walls) saw the recent spate of articles about high-profile defections from their own products to Linux, and pushed the "panic button." They encouraged and financed a proxy (SCO) in the advertisement of an elaborate legal fiction in hopes of slowing the hemorrhaging. It's clever, good old-fashioned American business strategy at its finest (no holds barred competition in anything but quality or price). I don't think it will save them, either. And I _think_ it's going to leave a smoking crater where the proxy used to be.
ESR Got the Drop on 'Em (Score:4, Interesting)
SCO had the gall to cite ESR's definition of 'FUD,' which at the time related the origin of the acronym as applied to IBM. When their papers were already filed with the court, ESR tacked on a little 'bonus,' which the court will read because SCO cited it:
http://catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/F/FUD.html [catb.org]
Have to have GPL killed.. they've abused it. (Score:5, Insightful)
SCO has every reason in the world to see the GPL killed. That reason is that they have (most likely) been using GPL'd code in their proprietary code. They want to see the GPL nulled and voided so that when "they win their case", they can, at a later date, keep right on using Linux code in their shitty products.
i'll keep saying it - this is the whole of the "why" behind their case, i'm telling you. They don't want to have to pay up to anyone - let alone thousands of individuals, for abusing their GPL code in their products...
because after this - everyone will go after them.
Simplified Pleadings... (Score:5, Informative)
The deal behind the litany of affirmative defenses is that under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (Rules 8(c)-8(d), for those who care), if SCO doesn't assert these defenses in its response, then it can't assert them later. So, the standard trick for lawyers is to put in everything but the kitchen sink.
Also, under rule 8(e), they're allowed to state as many defenses as they can, 'regardless of consistency.'
Now, they're really only supposed to list the real defenses and they could get into trouble for listing frivolous ones (I think their first affirmative defense is frivolous, for example). But, sanctions for this sort of thing don't happen as often as they probably should. They do run the risk of PO'ing the judge, though....
Re:Simplified Pleadings... (Score:5, Informative)
First of all, congrats on being in law school! It's definitely a fun ride. Anyway, to your point that the first affirmative defense is frivolous -- failure to state a claim is in practically *every* civil case answer, regardless of type of case (for federal cases, although it's not precisely a Rule 8 AD, many attorneys believe 12(b)(6) should be included in every answer). 12(b)(6) is really a bedrock kind of defense, one that you'll hear over and over and over again in opinions you'll read for many different classes. I don't think (or at least don't remember if) Rule 11 has ever been applied to the raising of that defense!
Re:Simplified Pleadings... (Score:5, Funny)
They're called "trials".
I posted this to SCO's feedback: (Score:4, Insightful)
I would like to point you to our product page (http://www.xxxxxxxx.com); we provide xxxx xxxx systems to many large xxxx institutions around the world. Currently, we are based mainly on the Sun/Solaris platform, but are looking at moving to Intel due to customer demand.
After considering SCO's products, we have been forced to exclude them due to your court statements regarding the General Public License ("GPL"); specifically, that it is unenforceable. Considering that large parts of your latest products appear to be licensed under the GPL, we find it difficult to reconcile your legal position with the products you claim to supply. Instead, we have decided to go ahead with Red Hat's Advanced Server product.
Sincerely yours,
XXXX YYYY
ZZZZZ Co., Ltd.
This is very common (Score:4, Informative)
/* DISCLAIMER:
This is not legal advice. You are not a client. I'm not even an attorney. If you want legal advice, contact an attorney admitted to the bar in your jurisdiction. What I am saying here is probably 100% wrong and if you do anything based on it, you are a blitering idiot who deserves whatever bad shit is very likely to befall you.
DISCLAIMER */
This isn't a big deal at all. In responding to a complaint, defendants will raise all manner of "affirmative defenses" so they cannot be later deemed to have waived them. For instance, a defense that "the complaint fails to state a claim under which relief may be granted" under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) [cornell.edu] is nearly universal, even though actually winning on that defense is rare. "Relief under FRCP 12(b)(6) is extraordinary and rarely granted," so says the case law. In fact, just about all of those FRCP 12(b) defenses are raised so as to avoid waiver.
Will SCO prevail on it? Probably not. But they've now preserved the defense for later (and for the interminable appeals that will ensue lest cooler heads prevail soon in this debacle.)
affirmative defenses and selective enforcement (Score:5, Informative)
1) You have to realize that this is SCO's *Answer* to IBM's counterclaims. This means that it has to (a) respond point by point to IBM's complaint/counterclaim, admitting, denying, or otherwise, well, answering each allegation, and (b) give a list of "affirmative defenses" to IBM's overall complaint. (a) is self-explanatory. (b) is a list of arguments and/or facts that mean that, if true, even if everything that IBM alleged in its complaint/counterclaim is true, SCO should still prevail.
Hopefully you can guess, then, that the defense attorneys will throw pretty much anything they can think of into the "affirmative defenses" list. In fact, a lot of them are practically boilerplate -- they're things that "everyone" puts in an Answer. For example, the 25th AD says "IBM lacks standing to assert that SCO infringed some or all of the patents at issue." Of course the defense is going to throw this in -- it's a basic constitutional issue. The point is that SCO has to (in general; there are a few defenses SCO can raise later) plead any and all affirmative defenses it can think of in its answer, lest it waive any (which, obviously, would be bad for SCO and practically malpractice for its attorneys). Just as IBM doesn't have to have complete proof of each and every allegation in its complaint/counterclaim, SCO doesn't need complete proof for each reply and each of its affirmative defenses in its answer.
The claim that the GPL is unenforceable is, frankly, an obvious affirmative defense that really needed to be made in the reply. I would think, though, that SCO would prefer not to have to prove that particular defense.
2) People seem to be caught up in the "selective enforcement" affirmative defense. They are right that enforcement is wholly up to the copyright-holder. However, wrt the GPL, we're talking about a contract. Waiver and estoppel are easy and obvious defenses to make in litigation over contracts; I can't really imagine a situation where you wouldn't throw them into your reply as a matter of course.
Re:affirmative defenses and selective enforcement (Score:4, Insightful)
However, wrt the GPL, we're talking about a contract.
I thought the GPL was a grant of rights, not a contract.
#7 is hillarious (Score:5, Interesting)
However, the actions of the FSF in no way impacts IBM's enforcment of its licensing terms for software to which it holds the copyright, whether or not they license it under the GPL. The FSF and IBM are different corporations, even if they, like SCO itself, have used the same license on some software.
Example: I could license software on which I hold the copyright to you under terms identical to a Microsoft license. I could then fail to enforce that license. That would in no way impact Microsoft's right to enforce its licenses on its software, ever. Similarly, how the FSF treats violations of FSF licenses to FSF code has no relevance to IBM's rights regarding violations of IBM licenses to IBM code.
Frankly, if I were the judge, I'd pin SCO's ears back for making the argument. Yes, shotgun claims area common practice, but this is especially ridiculous, and needs to be discouraged.
Should we "Thank" SCO for testing the GPL for us? (Score:4, Insightful)
Also, thanks to whomever (M$?) for funding $CO's ability to make this all possible!
The Open Group (Score:4, Interesting)
Now the open group has already stated that the UNIX trademark belongs to them [opengroup.org] and that they are neutral in matter of SCO v IBM. They have no flavor of Linux certified as a UNIX [opengroup.org], so SCO can not arbitrarily assign the UNIX trademark. It sounds to me like the Open Group may have to step in and defend its trademark in court, as if SCO didn't already have to beat up an 800lb gorilla with a spoon.
Shut down sco.com the legal way (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd enjoy the whole SCO fiasco if SCO spent the time before their case comes to trial shut off the internet for running a warez site.
If the GPL is unenforcable (Score:5, Interesting)
Someone should have warned them about this.
GPL=void.
Samba=no longer able to be distributed.
SCO sells Samba as part of Unixware.
Willful infringement for the purpose of commercial/finanical gain.
Felony charges. Minimum 3 years in prison.
Generally, I believe that the amount of prison time is proportional to the distribution. In SCO's case, it is going to be pretty damn big.
And, you know, depending on why the GPL is declared invalid (not that I think it will be, infact, I'm pretty damn sure it won't) one of two things may occur:
a)GPL won't actually be found invalid, instead, SCO's crazy ass-ed interpretation of the GPL will force them into some kind of bind where they will be inviolation of it, and loose the right to distribute under it
b)It will be found invalid in some tiny and specific way, and only the current revision of the GPL. GPL v4 will come out quickly, fix whatever error existed, and the opensource world will have a hell of a time moving everyting over to it. Or even better, it will only be found inapplicable to the linux kernel for some crazy reason, in which GPL v3.x for linux will be released, fixing the problem.
If either of these occur, or the GPL is just plain busted, SCO execs will go to jail and owe huge fines.
Not that it is much consolation--->It would really suck if the GPL was crushed. But it would feel good that the people who did it were screwed in the end anyways.
Re:I can't take much more of this (Score:5, Insightful)
The notion of a free product that is in many ways superior to its commercial counterpart scares alot of people. It's frightening to any business minded person that there is a large wealth of talented developers who are making an amazing product and not only distributing it free of charge, but giving away the source as well. To a business person, this is simply nonsense, but to those of us who beleive in creating something useful and of high quality "just for fun", it's not only a hobby, but a cause.
It was only a matter of time before this ideology was challenged. This is that challenge. Fortunate, they are standing on a pretty weak argument, and up against an 800lb gorilla.
~my $.02
Re:I can't take much more of this (Score:3, Insightful)
Its economics, just like barter is economics. The GPL relies on respect for other people's property, and the conditions they put on what they produced, and what they are willing to offer it for.
Re:I can't take much more of this (Score:5, Insightful)
The GPL mindset is designed, at the very core, with the sole end goal of making the best computer program possible. Everything else-- the financial success of companies like Redhat included-- is merely a means to that end, or coincidental.
The capitalist mindset is designed, at the very core, with the sole end goal of making a bunch of money. Everything else-- creating a good product included-- is merely a means to that end, or coincidental.
People can sit down and found an open source or a commercial software products with these not being their goals, but the open source project or the company will, in time, take on a life of their own. The project will fork, and leave the hands of the maintainer, if the maintainer does not do everything he can to promote it being the best program possible. The company meanwhile will eventually pass out of its original creator's hands, usually into the hands of a board of directors who care only about making the most money possible.
Because these different mindsets are so different, things the open source community does tend to seem completely mind-bogglingly nonsensical to the commercial community, and vice versa. Both sides would have an easier time understanding each other if it were understood on both sides that with a GPLed program, it is not the people, it is the source code, that is in control; and with a company it is not the people, it is the corporate culture, that is in control. Some groups of people do a better job of keeping a reign on their code/corporation than others, of course, but this is still what things seem to tend toward.
Now, there's something slightly more complicated going on here. It is that in most cases, the corporate side of things comes from a culture in which capitalism as a philosophy reigns supreme. This philosophy says that the free market will always defeat everything, because it is ultimately efficient. The mutual selfishness of everyone, acting upon each other, will ensure that only the strongest companies survive, the market winds up with the most fitting goods possible, and the capitalist system overall ends with as much wealth within it as is possible. They then get confused when these open source "things" crop up that don't seem to follow the rules of capitalism at all. They get confused because their philosophy tells them that the way to succeed is to let capitalism optimise everything; but then they see "inefficient", unoptimized, seemingly altruistic open source succeeding, they can't understand why that is. The first thing they've missed is that the open source world is going for a completely different kind of "efficiency" than the capitalist world. Both worlds want efficiency; they just want efficiency at different things. The second thing they've missed is that Open Source does indeed work within a survival-of-the-fittest free market very much like the one capitalism describes. It's just that it isn't a market of money. It's a market of ideas.
Re:I can't take much more of this (Score:4, Insightful)
The GPL mindset is designed, at the very core, with the sole end goal of making the best computer program possible.
Even if you've missed the constant dogma of promoting freedom, you need look no further than the first two sentenses of the GPL's preampble:
What makes this a troll is the tension between "Free Software" and the "Open Source". Richard Stallman, for the last few years, as argued that the term "open source" is a deliberate attempt to discard the importance of freedom (the clear purpose of GNU, the FSF and the GPL) and instead emphasize the superior performance and development of software. On the other hand, OSS advocates like Eric Raymond intended to "rebrand" free software to "sell" it to businesses, primarily by chaning the name to something less ambigious (in English) and by emphasizing characteristics that commercial interests care about (mostly superior software and development methodology).
Many a bitter flame war has errupted over this.
Re:Maybe it would be a good thing (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Maybe it would be a good thing (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Excuse me. (Score:3, Insightful)
Secondly, the GPL has no provisions whatsover against diarrhea of the mouth. SCO can trash talk the GPL all day without violating it. The GPL is only going to bite the
Re:SCO and DOS (Score:4, Funny)
Allow them the maximum use of their bandwidth.
This will allow them to discredit and incriminate themselves much more effectively.
Re:GPL and other international copyright issues (Score:4, Insightful)
If the GPL is shot down in court people will just move to BSD type licenses.
I took the time two months ago to contact the SEC (Score:5, Interesting)
I spoke with the gentleman for about 45 minutes. He's a stock geek, and I'm a computer geek - different worlds, to be sure.
I did my best to communicate what I believe are the essential issues in this matter - that SCO
Is filing lawsuits to manipulate potential investors' opinions about them and their products
Is lying about the core issues in the case
Is a sham - not really developing technology but using IP (their definition) to wrest dollars from "infringers," and
That the leadership within the company is pumping and potentially dumping stock
The investigator listened patiently to my explanation and asked good "process" questions - he heard what I had to say.
He indicated that he wanted to be sure that he understood my issues (IP and copyright issues are not day to day issues for them)
Unfortunately he indicated that he did not believe that he could express my concerns cogently, and that there was not enough volume of stock being sold by insiders to justify starting an investigation.
He did tell me that if we could demonstrate that SCO leaders knowingly lied about their products or other companies, he needed to know about that because that was substantive enough to justify an investigation.
Note that we don't have to find where they sold stock on the basis of the lies, only be able to demonstrate clear false statements.
I found it interesting that
a) They would contact me
b) They would listen to me
c) They want to protect the public from abusive leaders, and
d)They would show me how to help them initiate an investigation.
Find the lies and report them, and the SEC will get engaged. Remember that what seems completely obvious to a tech geek may not be clear to a stock geek. (and vice-versa) Do the legwork, find the proof and then in a clear, concise, non-inflammatory way using layman's terms communicate that to the SEC, and they will do their job. They can't do what they don't understand. Remember that they have to prove it in a court of law, not a court of open-source advocates.
Regards,
Anomaly
PS - God loves you and longs for relationship with you. If you want to know more about this, please email me.
Re:everybody misses the humor (Score:4, Insightful)
Then US copyright law will need to be evaluated from first principles. The GPL is very straightforward, and is merely an application of copyright interests, making specific grants of distribution rights which are reserved to authors under copyright law.
If there is anything to find "invalid" about the GPL, it's going to be very, very difficult for such a finding to be narrowly tailored so that it only affects the GPL and does not affect every other agreement that has ever been made under copyright law, and it's also going to be a challenge for a court to make a finding that ONLY respects the GPL, because that would not pass the basic test of fairness and gets into 14th Amendment territory.
No judge is going to order the GPL "invalid" without stating the reasons. Any reasons given are guaranteed to affect other licenses. Without reasons given, it would obviously be a case of prejudice against the "GPL".
There might be specific problems with the GPL, but the overall implication of the agreement is solid and doesn't do much besides exercise an author's right under copyright law. I have never heard an argument against the GPL that does not abridge authors' rights under copyright law, and I doubt that such an argument can be made.
Re:If the GPL is invalid... (Score:5, Interesting)
>then SCO is guilty of pirating the Linux kernel!!
Absolutely. It actually should be worse than that for SCO:
EVEN IF the GPL is NOT invalid, SCO has publicly rejected its terms.
So the validity of the GPL does not enter the discussion, period. SCO has no right to use the software unless it has negotiated some other license terms, period.
I'm surpised we aren't already hearing about TRO's being filed, C&D's being sent, and suits being filed on this. It's pretty simple: GPL software is licensed, not sold. Either you accept the terms of the license, or you do not. If you do not accept the terms of the license because you believe the license to be invalid or because its terms are not legal in your jurisdiction or because of other interests you may have, that's just too bad for you.
If your mortgage agreement has an illegal clause in it, you don't get your house for free.
If I don't agree with what's written on my parking ticket, it's not going to stop my car from being towed if I don't move it.
If I have legal problems that prevent me from agreeing with the GPL, I cannot use SAMBA on my network, period.
Re:I call for a SCO client boycott (Score:4, Insightful)
No, they won't.
Linux users aren't enough of the population to pull off an effective boycott (except perhaps in some technology sectors where we make a disproportionate amount of purchasing decisions).
The companies you listed purchased something from a company which later got bought by a company which later turned evil. Punishing them for it would be ridiculous.
SCO isn't a technology company any more. They've never made a profit by selling products, and never will. They have enough venture capital now to finish their lawsuit regardless of what happens to their business. If by some freak chance they won these cases then their sales revenue would be a drop in the bucket that they could afford to lose. By the time they lose this case the executives will have all cashed out and won't care what happens to the company afterward.