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Caldera Government The Courts News

Groklaw Sends A Dear Darl Letter 268

Ralph Yarro writes "The Inquirer is carrying the text of an open letter sent to Darl McBride from members of the open source community at Groklaw. This is a lengthy and detailed response to the open letter Darl sent a while back."
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Groklaw Sends A Dear Darl Letter

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  • SUCCESS! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Ralph Yarro ( 704772 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:36PM (#7012571) Homepage
    For those of you wondering what this whole SCO vs. Linux thing was about, I can finally reveal the truth.

    As chairman and CEO of Canopy [canopy.com] I've done a lot for the Open Source community. I've promoted investments in companies like Linux Networx [linuxnetworx.com], who make the third fastest supercomputer in the world and use Linux to do it. Companies like Lineo [lineo.com] the masters of embedded Linux. Also Trolltech [trolltech.com] producing the incredible QT widget set used by the KDE [kde.org] project. And of course Caldera [caldera.com], producing the finest Linux distribution and pushing forwards the United Linux [unitedlinux.com] initiative.

    But one shadow lay over my record of achievements. Despite all I had done for the Linux and Open Source communities, I still had never achieved the triumph I most desperately sought. Not once had an article I submitted been accepted by Slashdot [slashdot.org] :(

    I'm sure my fellow Slashdotters can understand how this gnawed away at my soul.

    Together with Darl McBride [slashdot.org] and David Boies [musicpundit.com] I hatched a master plan, to achieve my dream of an accepted Slashdot article or to destroy Linux trying.

    Caldera would purchase IP rights from the Santa Cruz Operation and with funding from Sun [thesun.co.uk] and Microsoft [boardgames.com] would use them as the springboard to launch a devastating legal and PR blitz against Linux. As part of this Darl would write a searing open letter to the Open Source community, drawing responses in return. One of these from Groklaw [groklaw.com] would give me the opportunity I needed...

    As you can see everything has gone exactly to plan. I have my successful Slashdot submission, and I'm sure that looking back on it you can all see it was worth any 'collateral damage' along the way.

    Darl, you can call off the dogs now.

    God bless you all.

    Ralphie [canopy.com]
  • by ThenAgain ( 627263 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:37PM (#7012579)
    September 19, 2003 Torvalds Announces Linux "A Hoax" SANTA CLARA, CALIF. -- In a shocking announcement Linus Torvalds, creator of the Linux operating system kernel, revealed that the wildly successful Linux was "an elaborate hoax." "Alan [Cox] and I just made it up," said Torvalds, "We wanted to have our own OS but didn't know how to make one and neither of us could afford a subscription to MSDN. It's been real hell faking all of those patch submissions for the last twelve years. I'm just glad it's over." Torvalds went on to describe how Linux has been assembled over the years from stolen code, mostly from SCO's Unixware server operating system. Large portions were also lifted from Novell's NetWare 3 and Microsoft's Altair BASIC. When asked if he felt any remorse over the affair he replied, "Sorta. But everybody does it. The KDE project is mostly de-compiled Windows code and Eric Raymond copied 'The Cathedral and the Bazaar' verbatim from an MIT enrollment brochure. Most open-source developers are just coders who couldn't hack it in the real world where everybody runs Windows." Concluding his announcement Torvalds encouraged Linux users to "either purchase a legitimate license from SCO or install GNU HURD." Alan Cox declined to comment.
    • by ThenAgain ( 627263 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:58PM (#7012693)
      Sorry, didn't format right. BTW-- IT'S A JOKE. I USE NOTHING BUT LINUX. I'm not a troll. Take a joke. Jeez.

      September 19, 2003

      Torvalds Announces Linux "A Hoax"

      SANTA CLARA, CALIF. -- In a shocking announcement Linus Torvalds,
      creator of the Linux operating system kernel, revealed that the wildly
      successful Linux was "an elaborate hoax."

      "Alan [Cox] and I just made it up," said Torvalds, "We wanted to have
      our own OS but didn't know how to make one and neither of us could
      afford a subscription to MSDN. It's been real hell faking all of
      those patch submissions for the last twelve years. I'm just glad it's
      over."

      Torvalds went on to describe how Linux has been assembled over the
      years from stolen code, mostly from SCO's Unixware server operating
      system. Large portions were also lifted from Novell's NetWare 3 and
      Microsoft's Altair BASIC.

      When asked if he felt any remorse over the affair he replied, "Sorta.
      But everybody does it. The KDE project is mostly de-compiled Windows
      code and Eric Raymond copied 'The Cathedral and the Bazaar' verbatim
      from an MIT enrollment brochure. Most open-source developers are just
      coders who couldn't hack it in the real world where everybody runs
      Windows."

      Concluding his announcement Torvalds encouraged Linux users to "either
      purchase a legitimate license from SCO or install GNU HURD."

      Alan Cox declined to comment.
      • One of the funniest things I've seen here. Worthy of publication by "The Onion."

        Thanks for the ROTFLOL thing.

  • by inode_buddha ( 576844 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:41PM (#7012604) Journal
    Everyone who is concerned about this issue should read this letter, they're really giving the GPL some shark's teeth.

    On a more serious note, maybe this is what it takes to get some real "street cred" for Free SW/Open Source among Corporate Amerika. It's just a bummer for me that things have to go *that* far in the 1st place.
    • Except that the GPL covers distribution, while SCO is licensing usage.

      I don't think they've read SCO's license FAQ carefully enough, nor paid enough attention to paragraph 7 of the GPL.

      If this weren't the case, then any patent-encumbured GPL'd software would fail under the GPL for distribution.

      My question is how SCO can license usage for a product, even if there is copyrighted material in it. Patents cover usage. SCO has made no patent claims.

  • by HoxBox ( 670161 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:41PM (#7012606)
    And here I am getting all my news from scodot...
  • by billstr78 ( 535271 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:43PM (#7012618) Homepage
    Obviously, the SCO FUD machine will not halt under it's own misguided intentions. So it only makes sense that members of the community fight SCO on thier own grounds and at thier own game. It looks like the Linux owners claim of protection under the GPL is far a far stronger argument for suit than any 10 lines of copied source embedded deep within the kernel. It fills me with pride to read the calm, well thought words of a community under fire. I will sleep a little better at night knowing that serious action is awaiting SCO at the end of thier grab for cash profit scheme.
    • FUD remark: (Score:4, Funny)

      by Avihson ( 689950 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @01:39PM (#7012849)
      "The record shows which method has done a better job of policing source code, which reveals that your call for indemnification is, to put it bluntly, FUD."

      So are they saying Fear Uncertanty & Doubt?
      or should I read:
      "...your call for indemnification is, to put it bluntly, F**cked Up Darl."
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:43PM (#7012619)
    open letters: C,E,F,G,H,I,J,K,L,M,N,S,T,U,V,W,X,Y,Z
    one closed region: A,D,O,P,Q,R
    two closed regions: B
  • by Henry V .009 ( 518000 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:44PM (#7012626) Journal
    Despite the publicity SCO's claims are receiving, they are actually unimportant. There is no legal leg for them to stand on. This back and forth debate is uninteresting. Yes, SCO's claims were outrageous, but that is obvious even without someone pointing it out in detail.

    So in response, I am writing a closed letter to both SCO and the open source community. And no one can read it since it's closed. So there!
  • by WTFmonkey ( 652603 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:50PM (#7012647)
    The headline should be "groklaw Whips Out Penis and Proceeds to Beat Darl McBride With It." My favorites:

    If you can identify any infringing source code, please do so, prove it is infringing, and let us remove it, because we surely do not want it.

    We do not need or want your legacy UNIX source code

    which reveals that your call for indemnification is, to put it bluntly, FUD

    We would think, however, that a capable information technology company that sells web services software would have the technical know-how to handle a DDoS attack, if that is really what happened. Most such companies do handle them without being brought to their knees for a week. We are glad that you say you have since learned technical steps you can take to protect yourself in the future.

    Your inability to make your Linux business a success, while unfortunate for you, parallels your company's failure to make your UNIX business a success

    If you're looking for a successful business model, you might consider the tried and true model of satisfied customers.

    Man, that was a fun read!

    • by MuParadigm ( 687680 ) <jgabriel66@yahoo.com> on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:59PM (#7012700) Homepage Journal

      'The headline should be "groklaw Whips Out Penis and Proceeds to Beat Darl McBride With It."'

      I'm wondering how the author of piece, Pamela Jones, will take that.

    • My personal favourite is this paragraph:

      Your letter attempted to portray us as a counter-cultural fringe element. On the contrary, the truth is that our community is very much in the mainstream already and includes many of the largest and most successful businesses today, including IBM, Red Hat, Merrill Lynch, Lucent Technologies, Unilever, Verisign, Dell, Amazon, Google, Dreamworks, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Oak R

      • I figured that somebody (maybe Darl himself) lives there. Utah is where much of Caldera is.

        --
        Evan

        • St.George is way down at the bottom corner of Utah, in the fringes of the southwestern desert. Not much there but rocks and the freeway, and it's as far from Utah's commercial centers as you can get without leaving the state. (Probably a nice enough little town for getting away from it all, if you don't mind the dust. It's about the dustiest place I've ever been.) Who knows, maybe Darl does live there, or maybe it was just the first known example in the state of Utah.

          [admin dude at maps.yahoo.com: "Hey, wh
      • Oh, wait. I live in St. George, New York City. Not St. George, Utah.

        Nevermind.
    • Although this letter is very thoughful and serious it still shows how much of disparity exists between professionals and amateurs.

      This letter was released on a Saturday when no CIO is at work. Since ZDNET only updates their web site on M-F they will probably not even report on it. The mainstream press which is already hostile to open source also will not pick up on it. Finally I guarantee you that nobody in the financial press will even notice it let alone post it for investors to see.

      It would have been b
  • SCO is nuts (Score:5, Informative)

    by Tirel ( 692085 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:50PM (#7012649)
    I have noticed that they have not FILED any copyright infringement actions, despite their numerous allegations that Linux infringes on their copyrighted code and mentions of the rights of copyright holders in their legal pleadings and press releases. No matter how loudly they proclaim infringement of copyright, they aren't willing to use the appropriate federal laws (USC-17) to protect this supposedly infringed upon "IP". I wonder why.

    If SCO has copyright material that has been infringed upon, they have to go to the INFRINGER (whoever has access to their code and copied it, meaning the code and not just a work-alike clean-room code, into the kernel) for damages. End users and unwitting publishers of infringing materials are not listed in USC-17 as liable for infringement. You can't get damages from a publisher if one author of a short story collection lied about the authorship, nor can you collect from the bookstores and purchasers.

    If they have proof that Red Hat is distributing infringing material, they first have to notify RH what the infringing material is. As the innocently infringing publisher, RH has the chance to double check the material, and either remove it or check its pedigree dispute the infringing nature of it.

    The only time a publisher can be nailed for damages is if the plaitiff can prove they knew, or could reasonable have been expected to know, that a work was copyright. This covers sleazy anthology publishers who don't bother to get permissions and pay royalties, and anyone stupid enough to accept a well-known work of fiction from anyone but the real author.
    • You can't get damages from a publisher if one author of a short story collection lied about the authorship, nor can you collect from the bookstores and purchasers.

      Unfortunately, the trend in litigation is to go after whoever can pay, by reading additional duties into existing laws. If you serve drinks at a party, and a partygoer kills someone while driving home drunk, who is liable? It would make sense that the driver is solely liable for his or her actions, but in fact recent rulings [lutz.nb.ca] indicate that the
  • DOC (Score:4, Interesting)

    by potpie ( 706881 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:51PM (#7012652) Journal
    This letter has a certain, "Declaration of Independence" feel to it. I like how it lists the crimes of King Darl.
  • Great letter guys, (Score:3, Insightful)

    by fewnorms ( 630720 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:57PM (#7012688)
    really a very good one. My respect to the people at Groklaw for writing such a well written, well researched letter to our dear friend Mr. McBride. I, for one, welcome our newfound brotherhood and companionship, even though it is at the expense of our friends at SCO.
  • Ouchhh!..or is it??? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by botzi ( 673768 )
    Do you have methods in place to prevent GPL source code from being improperly inserted into your proprietary software? Would you be willing to allow us to check for such violations? We particularly wish to check your Linux Kernel Personality (LKP) source code. We suspect that there may be GPL source code taken from the Linux kernel and used in LKP without authorization, and we challenge you to prove this has not happened by showing us your LKP source code, throughout its complete development history to date
    • by MuParadigm ( 687680 ) <jgabriel66@yahoo.com> on Saturday September 20, 2003 @01:04PM (#7012718) Homepage Journal

      It's been floating around for a while, and The Inq has a companion research link where you can verify all the assertions in the Groklaw letter [theinquirer.net].

    • by emurphy42 ( 631808 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @02:28PM (#7013070) Homepage
      > what LKP exactly is

      http://www.sco.com/products/lkp/

      "The Linux(R) Kernel Personality (LKP) for UnixWare 7.1.3 provides Linux environment hosted on the UnixWare kernel. This environment does not contain a Linux kernel, but does contain the PRMs needed to run most Linux applications. By invoking the UnixWare kernel to run the Linux application, the application gets all of the performance and scalability advantages that UnixWare delivers. Linux applications that are disk or database intensive, or require support for a large number of users, typically perform with greater stability, reliability, and scalability when deployed on the UnixWare LKP environment."

      "Since UnixWare is much more powerful, scalable and secure than Linux, customers may replace multiple Linux servers with a single, more powerful UnixWare server."

      Goddamn, you can't make up stuff this funny!

      (I also liked the "Flame Editor" link at the bottom of The Inquirer's page. Apparently all their articles use that wording.)
      • "The Linux(R) Kernel Personality (LKP( for UnixWare 7.1.3 provides Linux environment hosted on the UnixWare kernel. This environment does not contain a Linux kernel ..."

        Well, since this commercial product does not contain a Linux(TM) kernel, where does SCO get off using the registered trademark Linux(TM) as part of its name?

  • what about ILM? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by rexguo ( 555504 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:59PM (#7012696) Homepage
    In the last sections about "Who Makes Up the Open Source Community Today?", I feel ILM (Industrial Lights+Magic) should be included for their work on www.openexr.org, which is an open-source High Dynamic Range image file format which is useful for CG in films. Knowing how expensive CG work is in film-making, such a contribution at this low-level is indeed commendable.
  • Useless unless (Score:3, Insightful)

    by gsfprez ( 27403 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:59PM (#7012697)
    this gets in Computer World, eWeek, or even mabe a link to this from the SCOX page on finance.yahoo.

    $1 says we don't see this attributed anywhere in the "major IT media".
    • this gets in Computer World, eWeek, or even mabe a link to this from the SCOX page on finance.yahoo.

      What does it take to get listed on "business intelligence" sites like finance.yahoo.com and brokers' sites? People should send in these open letters as press releases, at the very least.

      Perhaps under a headline such as "FooBar Inc. announces intent to acquire SCOX" -- for $0.000000001 per share, based on our expectation that they will fail in court..
      • Re:Useless unless (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward
        If you look at the groklaw site you will get a list of some of the places the press release was sent.. Click Here to and scroll down about 3/4 of the page! [groklaw.com]
      • by Animats ( 122034 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @01:31PM (#7012817) Homepage
        PR Newswire only puts the ticker symbol of the issuing company on press releases. Here's their policy:
        • Tickers For Publicly Traded Companies

          Publicly traded companies automatically get their ticker symbol included in every release they issue. This is required so the releases will index properly on the hundreds of Web sites and databases carrying PR Newswire copy. The use of ticker symbols NOT belonging to the company issuing the news release will only be permitted if the news involving the second company is determined to be "material" by PR Newswire or if the ticker belongs to the issuing organization's parent company or subsidiary. If applicable, please list additional tickers and respective exchanges: For releases that contain ticker symbols that are not materially-related or do not fit the above criteria, the use of the second party's ticker symbol is allowed only with the written permission from that second party. Please attach authorized permission from any such companies.

        If you want to get your release onto a company's financials, you need to get it onto Reuters, AP, or Bloomberg.

  • by Tirel ( 692085 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @01:03PM (#7012714)
    If the comparison shows "no code matches" you can say so. A SCO licensee saying "We've looked into the problem ourselves, and feel Linux is unique." tells nothing about SCO, or their secrets. If the comparison suggests SCO adopted Linux code, one would be obligated to report same to proper authorities. NDA, or not. As a licensee failure to report, indeed failure to do the due diligence of this test, may rope you into commission of willful infringement and/or conspiracy to do so. If the comparison suggests infringements, and you cannot determine the source, you may be obligated to determine same under rules of due diligence. This would include filing appropriate reports with authorities. If the comparison suggests Linux adopted SCO code, then you, as one SCO licensee to another, can likely exchange that information. Further, you or your guilty peers could (and probably must) publish corrections for your error. Now, the comparator won't catch is code that's been "infected" by SCO's newly envisoned concept of the world's first, *truely* deadly, viral license. IBM claims to hold valid copyrights as independent works for code they also contributed to the Unix V codebase. SCO claims to "control" any and all such code, and all that came in contact with it, however remotely. (Yes, I assume SCO fells they now excercise license control over nearly all of IBM's code base assets. Mainframe to wrist watch. I can't imagine how their theory can hold otherwise, actually.)
  • ...by everyone who can be located, who has contributed to GNU/Linux kernels. As SCO claims that the GPL is bogus, they obviously do not intend to follow it, and, in fact (as this open letter points out) have violated it.

    I'm sure the LKP code would look really nice made public as part of the discovery process, if there truly is GPL code stolen by SCO in it. :)

  • They'd included the link in my signature.. ;-)
  • Subtle..... (Score:4, Funny)

    by lexsco ( 594799 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @01:19PM (#7012775)
    My favourite dig at Darl-

    Your inability to make your Linux business a success, while unfortunate for you, parallels your company's failure to make your UNIX business a success. Perhaps the problem isn't Linux, the GPL, or the open source business model.

  • by mertner ( 90928 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @01:19PM (#7012777) Homepage
    What I don't get is the stock price. SCOX has gone up, and up, and up, and is now at more than $19. This in spite of several pieces of evidence suggesting SCO has no case at all, and no evidence that they have a case that is worth anything (Just lots of bluster).

    Do the Wall Street types know something that we don't about the likelihood of SCO actually winning in court, or are they just massively ignorant about how much SCO is going to go down once this issue gets heard in a court of law?

    I think both of those alternatives are scary. Particlarly as i sold short SCOX at $16 :) I'm thinking it will be at less than $1 a year from now - but Wall Street does not appear to agree thus far...?
    • by Anonymous Coward
      The stock has a very low float (number of shares publically available) and some fund holding large blocks.

      If you watch the trades during trading hours you can see lots of strange behavior and what appears to be obvious trading designed to keep the stock above certain amounts.

      It is especially obvious during the last hour of the day when then stock rises no matter how it had been trading the rest of the day.

      Here is an example from Friday [yahoo.com]
    • by burnin1965 ( 535071 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @03:00PM (#7013217) Homepage
      If you compare the data at ThomsonFN.com that shows some information on who is buying and selling you will notice something peculiar about SCOX.

      SCOX [thomsonfn.com]

      RHAT [thomsonfn.com]

      IBM [thomsonfn.com]

      MSFT [thomsonfn.com]

      If you look at the pie charts at the bottom of the pages, it seems that only retail traders are willing to let anyone know they are buying/selling SCOX. For the most part the known SCOX traders are people using online trading or calling up their broker and making a trade request.

      There are virtually no institutional traders who are willing to publicly advertise they are trading SCOX.

      Now all of these charts show a large portion of traders that are unknown, however, I have a suspicion that the unknown traders in SCOX are the driving force behind raising the stock price. And my suspicion tells me that it may be for two reasons, 1) it creates an impression that the market has faith in the SCO case and expects a big windfall coming to SCO, and 2) with SCO execs dumping stock this is one way that someone could provide a payoff without directly transfering cash to SCO or its execs.

      Of course this is purely speculation and I could just be paranoid. You'll have to make your own judgement as to what the numbers mean.

      burnin
    • by jasonditz ( 597385 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @03:29PM (#7013334) Homepage
      Even at $19, SCOX is trading at a market cap of only $250 million. Even if we assume that the only thing of value is the company's possible billion dollar bonanza from IBM, this would hint that the market is pricing in only a 25% possibility of winning.

      The thing is, its not a matter of whose really right or wrong here, because its entirely possible the court system could 'get it wrong'. Even if we all agree that SCO is 100% in the wrong here and has no possible evidence at all, I wouldn't want to bet that a jury would find the same way.
    • The obvious possibility is that some of the investors buying stock do not expect any return; they are in effect tossing money to the SCO execs and increasing SCO's credibility by keeping the stock high.

      I have also read that there are discussions on stock boards where people are guessing that SCO will sell licenses to X percent of a bazillion Linux users at $1400 a pop. This gives a huge income for a company worth $250M, enticing day-trader types, unless you know enough to realize that the most likely valu

  • by Anonymous Coward
    If Chewbacca lives on Endor, you must acquit! Next McBribe will be showing off a server stats chart to stock holders as proof of sco's growing relevance in the high tech world.

    This Comment was generated with the Comment-O-Matic for SCO Stories. [rageagainst.net]
  • by __aagmrb7289 ( 652113 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @01:42PM (#7012856) Journal
    I hope everyone here takes the time to read this well written, documented and thoroughly enjoyable "Open Letter". It should be the example of every discourse that happens on ./ - especially when compared to SCO's letter. Each point of the original letter was carefully, thoroughly, and fairly addressed. There was quite a bit of documentation backing up each claim, and there was a healthy expectation that SCO should be following specific guidelines, along with an understanding and explanation of how those guidelines had been agreed upon by SCO. There were carefully phrased warnings of the consequences of breaking these agreements, without resorting to threats. Note: these warnings did not discuss the havoc that these remedies would cause for SCO, so I am defining them as being warnings instead of threats. Anyway, point is, this letter is a good example that our community should attempt to emulate, in my humble (but correct) opinion.
    • Because the truth is - the mainstream press and the general public just don't get it do they? Look at SCO's price right now and tell me that makes any sense whatsoever!

      I was reading another article on some pro-MS rag where they actually quoted some PHB as saying that he'd be glad to pay off SCO just to get them to 'lay off' with the legal action. Yeah, like that'll ever happen - this is their BREAD AND BUTTER now!

      We here at Slashdot and others in the 'community' might take the time, but the truth is, SCO
  • Seriously. I don't mean that I don't care about the fate of linux, because I do (very much).

    But I DO NOT care about every little open letter sent from Darl's dog to his grandmother regarding OSS.

    Lets get back to 'stuff that matters.'

  • Weather SCO will back down out of this or weather they will keep claiming unprooved facts to avoid admitting they "might be wrong".

    Also, I wonder if (are they any?!) linux users that have paid for these so called licences will get refunds when this case falls apart.

    The longer this drags on, the more arguments between the OSS community, relivant organisations that have IP rights in the Unix field - the more tangled this legal mess will become.

    When will it end?!

    -- Jim
  • by VValdo ( 10446 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @02:30PM (#7013079)
    Wouldn't it have been better to release this letter on a Monday morning for maximum news exposure? Who is going to read it on a Saturday? By the time the work week comes around, it could be easily missed.

    W

    On that note-- it would be cool to set up a fund to get Linux position statements like this in the NYT or other news publications. Does anyone know about a Linux Publicity Fund or something similar?
  • by ONOIML8 ( 23262 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @02:42PM (#7013127) Homepage
    Suppose the SCO issue were true (Once upon a time, in a land far, far away...)....

    The Linux kernel comes to me as source code. So suppose I vi in there and remove the bad code. Then I compile and run. SCO can look anytime they like and see that I'm running Linux with a 2.4 kernel but they can pucker up and kiss my ass.

    Right?

    Or am I missing something here? It just seems to me that even if the courts did find some truth to their story there is still an easy way around them.

  • by Master of Transhuman ( 597628 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @04:36PM (#7013624) Homepage
    and explains things rather well, and should be required reading for any company concerned about Linux or the GPL.

    However, since SCO is essentially an extortion racket, it's irrelevant to them.

    This is like writing John Giotti a letter saying that crime doesn't pay. Or writing Saddam Hussein a letter saying a country runs better under a democracy (does it? Looking around, I'm beginning to wonder...)

  • by geekee ( 591277 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @04:40PM (#7013644)
    I didn't know they were on writing terms.
  • by earthforce_1 ( 454968 ) <earthforce_1@y a h oo.com> on Saturday September 20, 2003 @04:56PM (#7013706) Journal

    But first they have to sign a NDA to read it!
  • Too Long! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by PCM2 ( 4486 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @05:48PM (#7013972) Homepage
    A great letter. However, if these messages are to percolate widely throughout the media, the general public, and (perhaps most importantly of all) the investment community, somebody in a position of authority/respect needs to come along and make these points using far fewer words. It's a simple fact of life that most of the people we want to reach with this message are not going to invest the time to read a dissertation of this length. Many will be automatically prejudiced against it, for fear that it will turn out to be an open source zealot's rant.

    The well-reasoned thinking, the comprehensive argument, the lack of smug sarcasm all work in this letter's favor. But I just can't see your average C-level executive taking the time to read it.
    • Totally agree. Too many words, even when correct, lose their power to convince.

      You praise this letter's "lack of smug sarcasm"; that may be true, compared to the common exchanges by these combatants, but from the perspective of a CIO/CTO desk the letter is still pretty smarmy and superior.

      It's like '80's Apple users talking about the PC world: "We know we're right and everybody else does too, but we'll do you a favor and take you through this argument once more...because you're such a dope." Success will
  • Thanks Groklaw (Score:5, Insightful)

    by salesgeek ( 263995 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @08:22PM (#7014765) Homepage
    Thank you for writing a coherent, polite and clear response to SCO. I believe that your methods will get us faster and better results than the usual loose cannons.

If you steal from one author it's plagiarism; if you steal from many it's research. -- Wilson Mizner

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