Darl Goes to Harvard 425
colinmc151 writes "Both Groklaw and Internet News are reporting on the visit made to Harvard University by Darl McBride, SCO president and CEO, and Chris Sontag SCO senior vice president. Darl and Chris made a presentation titled 'Defending Intellectual Property Rights in a Digital Age'. One protester gave out copies of Linux to all that attended. Bottom line SCO plans to carry on with the lawsuits. Best line was one student who when Darl asked if he was impacted by MyDoom.A e-mail virus answered 'No, I use Linux'." One MIT student has a write-up of the event as well...
Oh Darl, when will you ever learn? (Score:5, Interesting)
Seems like the MIT students did a nice job putting him on the spot, but it's obvious that ol' Darl is pretty adept at deflecting any criticism or challenging questions and changing the subject when he finds the current one uncomfortable.
What will it take to get him to address all the contradictory statements and lies [welovethes...nister.org] that he and his cohorts seem to spout at every opportunity?
Perhaps it's time to try to get that court date pushed up
Re:Oh Darl, when will you ever learn? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Oh Darl, when will you ever learn? (Score:4, Funny)
darl's ass, however, belongs to ibm
Because SCO can't even get their story straight (Score:5, Informative)
Particularly funny is what happens when you Email SCO [mailto] asking why you need a license if you aren't using any of the modules involved in the IBM case. Maybe they've come up with an answer by now, but the response I got was 'direct any further questions to the sales department'.
Re:Oh Darl, when will you ever learn? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh Darl, when will you ever learn? (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry.
Re:Oh Darl, when will you ever learn? (Score:5, Informative)
His answer to that particular answer was quite evasive and not particularly memorable--something along the lines of "We support the rights of authors to distribute their works, for free if they so choose." He did not at all address how this squares with the statement he made in December that the GPL is unconstitutional, which is, of course, what the student actually asked.
Re:Oh Darl, when will you ever learn? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Oh Darl, when will you ever learn? (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe he's just gearing up to run for President.
Re:Oh Darl, when will you ever learn? (Score:5, Funny)
It is well he has learned... (Score:2, Funny)
"After the superbowl another sighting, a couple of boobies were spotted hanging out at Harvard."
Not answering questions about SAMBA (Score:3, Interesting)
At this they said (again paraphrasing): Samba is good, we dont believe that Samba is tainted in any way.
They did not answer in any way what right they have to distribute Samba if they believe that the GPL is invalid. If the GPL is proven invalid (unlikely), it does not mean that the work suddenly becomes public domain. They cant s
There's one student... (Score:5, Funny)
Not a bad idea (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:4, Interesting)
I never bought any SCO products and after the childish behavior they've displayed in handling this situation, I never will. If by some miracle they're given the power to decide on the fate of Linux I will wipe every system I have and put FreeBSD on it. SCO will never receive one nickel from me or any company I support.
What kind of students were they? (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe he was speaking to fashion merchandising students (it is a nice suit, after all).
Re:What kind of students were they? (Score:5, Informative)
As for being laughed off the stage, I don't think anyone in the audience really bought SCO's claims. The audience was realistically fairly polite, but unsympathetic--no one was outright laughing at him, but no one agreed with him either.
As for the presentation itself, at its core, Darl seemed to say a few reasonable things--they claim ownership of a certain body of IP and that IBM distributed that IP illegally. Both of those claims are under contention, but he stated that that's for the courts to decide. This, to me, seems perfectly reasonable--I may not agree that SCO has a case, but they obviously think they do, and the courts are the proper forum to determine this.
If it were just the contract dispute, I don't think there would be this violent reaction against SCO. It's all the FUD that comes with it--from "The GPL is unconstitutional" to "Linux gives computing infrastructure to terrorists, cyber- and otherwise"--that is causing the problem. We told Darl as much after the talk (no matter what you think of the man, it was cool to have the opportunity to talk with him face-to-face), and he seemed somewhat receptive to the fact that we're not all IP-hating copyright-hating hippies, we just don't like the FUD. Frankly, I don't think anything will come of that--it's too late to retract the many things that have been said, and PR will probably keep him on the same path--but there was a glimmer of hope, at least.
Re:What kind of students were they? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What kind of students were they? (Score:5, Interesting)
1. The bulk of SCO's funding since the beginning of the lawsuit has been from Microsoft
2. Microsoft has softened their public FUD about linux. They're trying to let someone else play bad cop because they know when they criticize linux unfairly it makes others jump to the defense of linux AND blame Microsoft- when someone else does it for them, the first still happens but the second does not.
It's obvious to informed observers, but not to the press.
The winner so far seems to have been Novell though - people are beginning to see that they are being unfairly maligned, their stock has been climbing like gangbusters.
Re:What kind of students were they? (Score:3, Informative)
While it is true that MS have stopped piping on their anti-Linux horn quite so much since SCO have been up to their mischief, it could of course be becau
Re:What kind of students were they? (Score:4, Informative)
He is quite aware that no SCO IP resides in Linux. This man is a thief or at best a con man.
Re:What kind of students were they? (Score:3, Informative)
1. "Darl repeatedly returned to the issue of their IP being in linux, which I think is a very very valid point.
2. "he seemed somewhat receptive to the fact that we're not all IP-hating copyright-hating hippies,
Re:What kind of students were they? (Score:5, Insightful)
http://web.mit.edu/jonas/www/faim/
here's a choice quote that is very important to me:
"This isn't a group of crazy commie hippies who want to destroy their business model(SCO's), but rather, we're engineers and scientists (and law students) who recognize that they may have a valid claim, but tune them out when they(SCO) make irrational statements."
and SCO sure does make a LOT of those irrational comments eh?
SCO _is_ irrational. And if we can keep discrediting them with calm cool logic, and not froth at the mouth, we'll make headway.
Awesome job guys! You guys are role models on how to handle FUD.
Anything you say will be taken down and used ..... (Score:5, Interesting)
It must be pretty frustrating for Linux contributors to be attacked by a guy who is using the fruits of their labors on his own Linux system.
Re:Anything you say will be taken down and used .. (Score:2, Informative)
Re-read the quote. It is the student who said he is using Linux not Darl.
Re:Anything you say will be taken down and used .. (Score:2)
Re:Anything you say will be taken down and used .. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Anything you say will be taken down and used .. (Score:2, Insightful)
if (UserName=="DarylMcB")
{
DeleteAllPartitions();
int x=x/0;
}
Re:Anything you say will be taken down and used .. (Score:3, Informative)
char *UserName = "DarylMcB";
if (UserName=="DarylMcB")
It works because UserName is set to the address of the static char array "DarylMcB".
Re:Anything you say will be taken down and used .. (Score:3, Insightful)
No, its just that his endgame is when he sells his final share of inflated stock and runs off.
I really hope that when someone picks up the scraps of SCO when all this is said and done, that they can find something in the corporate documents that will incriminate Darl in this pump and dump scheme. It will of course have to be a document they forgot to shred
Re:Anything you say will be taken down and used .. (Score:3, Informative)
It's looking a little less inflated [yahoo.com] right now.
Re:Anything you say will be taken down and used .. (Score:4, Insightful)
Hardly. If you look at the year graph, it's still outstanding. It took a similar dip in August before climbing to dizzying new heights. I don't think SCO has much of a leg to stand on from a legal perspective, but the fact that remains anyone who bought at the last dip and was smart enough to sell a month doubled their money. Not a bad ROI for 30 days.
Re:Anything you say will be taken down and used .. (Score:3, Informative)
But anyone holding SCO stock and expecting it to still be worth much after Friday is delusional.
For rational, informed speculation about what might happen at the hearing on the 6th, go read Groklaw.
Anything further I might add would just be noise.
Re:Anything you say will be taken down and used .. (Score:4, Funny)
He does so! Daryl is perfectly aware of the situation and is acting like any litigiously-aware, sane, comprehending human with a clue should.
Darl, on the other hand...
Whoaa (Score:4, Funny)
Did anybody else shudder at the thought!
Re:Whoaa (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Whoaa (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Whoaa (Score:2)
Both BIll Gates and Bush went there.
Seems quite fitting.
Re:Whoaa (Score:2)
Re:Whoaa (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Whoaa (Score:4, Funny)
Or "Debbie does Dallas".
Forgot the subtitle (Score:5, Funny)
Excellent! (Score:5, Interesting)
Now if they threw pig blood at them it would've made mainstream news. But something good and worthwhile to humanity? that's not news
Re:Excellent! (Score:2)
Re:Excellent! (Score:2)
Re:Excellent! (Score:4, Funny)
I suggest a comprimise: Throwing free software at them.
That way, everybody wins.
Re:Excellent! (Score:4, Funny)
Only they charge $699 for it.
The Important Part (Score:4, Interesting)
http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=SCOX
At $13.54 at time of this posting, and has even gone down so low as $13.18 for the day range.
-Joshua
Re:The Important Part (Score:5, Funny)
Jump on it now!! (Score:4, Funny)
The part I do not understand... (Score:5, Interesting)
I thought that the whole point of open source is so nobody can take the software, change it, and then sell it as their own. I thought any changes made became the property of the project, for everyone to use.
For example, in the GPL it states:
You must cause any work that you distribute or publish, that in whole or in part contains or is derived from the Program or any part thereof, to be licensed as a whole at no charge to all third parties under the terms of this License.
SCO got compensation (Score:5, Insightful)
Their compensation was a licence to use and distribute all the other code.
Re:SCO got compensation (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The part I do not understand... (Score:5, Informative)
Yeah, but IIRC, Darl is claiming someone took SCO IP, stuck it in Linux code, and distributed it as GPL, when in fact the code wasn't supposed to have been released. SCO then sued a bunch of Linux users.
IBM called shenanigans, and one objective of the upcoming trial is to have SCO show just what code they claim is theirs, and so other kernel coders have a chance to defeat the claim on prior art or somesuch.
GTRacer
- IANAL
Re:The part I do not understand... (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, and according to Groklaw, that person or persons are Caldera, which is what SCO used to be called.
Re:The part I do not understand... (Score:4, Insightful)
But, since we don't know what they are claiming ownership of, we don't know that it's the part that Caldera contributed.
OTOH, whenever we've been able to pin them down to something specific, it's been quickly shown to be an invalid claim. Still, proving that parts of their claim is invalid doesn't really prove that their claim is totally without merit.
Not necessarily (Score:4, Informative)
This applies fully only to GPL and closely related licenses. BSD-like licenses enable people to do exactly this while IMO still being open source licenses. Open source != Open Source.
Re:The part I do not understand... (Score:5, Funny)
They do not make sense when applied to copyright law. The Unix SYSV code has been openly published on a wide scale for a LONG time... none of what was published can be called a secret. That does not mean there is no copyright protection, of course. You can't steal my code just because I published it.. but I can't go screamng that it's a secret and everyone has to sign an NDA so I can prove you stole my code. I can, of course, show my evidence.
If IBM snuck code they did not have the rights to into Linux, they will be removed. The entire linux community is not guilty, IBM would be.
All SCOs other claims are just to confuse the world... first it's a trade secret, then it's about copyrights, then it's about contract violation by IBM, then it's about the GPL being unconstitutional... then it's about WMD.....
The Abbreviated Text (Score:3, Interesting)
"Rather than go out and just say, 'Let's go sue everybody now,' we're coming out with a well-thought-out program." - excerpted from WLTSIM [anerispress.com]
Find the SCO Source Code (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Find the SCO Source Code (Score:4, Funny)
I saw this back in the 80's (Score:4, Funny)
This is akin to reading the details of a year long train wreck. I somehow feel dirty every time I read the next SCO news.
The tuition bill (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The tuition bill (Score:2)
That seems cheap for Harvard.
Great job, Eric Jonas, but... (Score:5, Funny)
What I want to know is what do Erica and Clare look like? Pics, dammit!
Classic! (Score:3, Funny)
It's great to see anecdotes like this making it into the media.
Re:Classic! (Score:5, Funny)
"Interest in SCO has never been higher, hits to our website are off the charts!"
Groklaw /.ed already? (Score:5, Informative)
Darl Goes to Harvard - My First Quick Impressions
Monday, February 02 2004 @ 08:48 PM EST
I watched the webcast and while I lost the stream once or twice, I heard the bulk of it. No doubt others will fill in the blanks, and I took some pictures off the screen which will at least give you a flavor when I get them up. Soon.
The big news is that they say they will start to sue copyright end users by February 18. The other news is that he asked the audience if they had gotten infected by MyDoom, and he pointed to one guy who beautifully answered, "No, I use Linux, so I wasn't affected," and the room laughed. Darl wasn't happy about that and it was clear he didn't like the questions about the ABI files. He said that Linus claimed only two, and there were the rest they can sue over, though they still plan to contest Linus' claims in court.
Someone mentioned an article that had lessened his credibility on the other ABI files, that it had said it looked like they had distributed them under the GPL. And it was like he turned dark and stormy and paced and tried not to show his anger. But it showed. Then he said that the BSDi settlement was about those same header files, and they know what is in that sealed settlement and we don't, but there were three kinds of files addressed in that settlement: files that had to be removed, files that had to have copyright notices put on them, and files that were ok. They claim that the files they will be suing over lack the copyright notices, plus some files that were supposed to be removed, IIRC. And the DMCA says it's a violation to strip off copyright information, so I gather they intend to go after end users for "stripping off" copyright information on those header files. Ridiculous and cynical as that may sound, that is their strained plan. No doubt they figure the DMCA gives them muscles that AT&T didn't have back when the original case was before the courts. But those are the files. Sontag hinted that they might add copyright claims to the IBM case over those same header files at some point.
My overall impression was that they were very uncomfortable. It began with calls for civility, which turned out not to be necessary. Everyone was polite. But clearly Harvard had gotten a lot of complaints, judging from their remarks. They have invited Chris Stone of Novell to speak there in three weeks on February 23. Details will be on their website.
They continued to repeat the same untrue "facts" about the GPL, that it forces you to give your software away free, blah blah. I hardly think explaining it one more time will help them, since it's clearly volitional. They've got their story and they're sticking to it. Darl said when you go to court, the rubber hits the road. I assume he means by that you have to get it actually sorted out with facts. He was asked how he can sue without having established copyrights, but he danced around without answering that directly. No doubt that rubber will hit the road when he sues the first end user.
Clearly they have something in that settlement agreement, which Noorda was a party to, and the rest of us were not, and they plan on springing it on a startled and totally innocent end user soon, who will be befuddled as to how he is responsible for complying with a sealed agreement he isn't a party to and doesn't have a clue what it says. Of course, they don't tell you what it says. They would rather surprise you. Well, good luck, cowboys. We'll see how it plays in a court of law.
He tried to answer Eben Moglen's illustration about going to Barnes and Noble and buying a book and having SCO leap into your living room and say, I'm suing you for reading that book. He said it's more like you get the book without paying for it and then you make copies and give them to 500 friends. He said that is how it is with Linux. Companies get one copy and make tons more. The part he misses is that the writers of the code have no problem with that,
Evil is afoot (Score:5, Funny)
Tomorrow, the judge rules (Score:5, Informative)
Motion hearing set for 10:00 2/6/04 for all pending motions:
The SCO Group is hereby ORDERED:
In that one line of boldface above, the judge captured the key issue. No amount of PR spin control will help SCO in court tomorrow.
Re:Tomorrow, the judge rules (Score:4, Funny)
So you're the one who was DoSing SCO's website 2 days early.
Look at part 6 (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Tomorrow, the judge rules (Score:3, Interesting)
It appears from the transcript (which you can find - along with the usual e
'No, I use Linux' (Score:5, Interesting)
CItation for the record (Score:5, Interesting)
This was Eric Raymond acting as self appointed champion and bull in a china shop during an earlier attack.
http://linuxtoday.com/news_story.php3?ltsn=2003
Personally I think Eric Raymond is a darned fool for saying 'we' etc as if this was a community effort. Eric saying he's ashamed for us all plays right into SCO's hands. This was not the community, it was one lone criminal acting for themselves. Presenting it as something else is both inaccurate and damaging.
P.S. that citation for the record (Score:3, Informative)
Full writeup text, (site slashdotted.) (Score:3, Informative)
Or, My Chat with Darl McBride
see, "Free as in Speech" vs "Free as in beer" are different types of freedom. The Cheat goes "Maaah!"
2 February 2004
Those of you who know me know I don't miss lab on a whim. But when Erica zephyred me saying that Darl McBride (head of SCO) was speaking at Harvard, I knew we had to do something. Our first thought was, in proud MIT tradition, a hack. May be water balloons, maybe paper airplanes. But hacks are hard to do without causing some sort of damage, and these people have proven that they are willing to sue everyone in sight.
Our obvious choice, then, was to provide anti-FUD. Based on help from people on my zephyr class, we assembled a nice set of flyers full of pro-Linux and pro-GPL information. We figured that, as this was a talk put on by the Harvard Journal of Law and Technology, the audience would mostly be lawyers. Maybe they've never heard of the GPL? Maybe they think Linux is some sort of furry pet?
So we made up these flyers. They were all done in Adobe Illustrator under Windows (Oh, the irony!) but looked really professional. Above all, we wanted to go and present the non-RMS, non-crazy-anti-IP side of linux. We even dressed up.
* What Is Linux
* SCO vs Open Source : A timeline
* Quotations between SCO, Linus, and the FSF
Oh, and in each packet of information (in a nice little folder, might I add) we included a burned copy of Knoppix 3.3 (which Erica and I stayed up late last night mass-producing in an Athena cluster). Knoppix is great because 1. it's only a single CD and 2. it'll let non-linux-users try linux without any potential risk.
The Handout
We decided to leave Fourth East at around 5:00 or so. Some people would be late, but in the end we had myself, Erica, Dave W, Vimal, Javier, Clare, and Ike there. We took up a whole row in the room (which, by the way, was beautiful -- Harvard has some nice buildings!)
At around 6:05 (the talk was scheduled to begin at 6:30) we decided to get started. Our 60 handouts, complete with Knoppix CDs, were ready. Erica and I went out in front of the auditorium, and Clare et. al. stayed behind, to hand them out to people already inside. Upon meeting some people from the Journal, they admitted that they knew Darl would be a contentious speaker, and simply asked that we tell people that we were in no way affiliated with the journal or Harvard.
Our speech went something like "Hi, we're not affiliated with this talk in any way, we're just a group of concerned MIT students who have some information about Linux, the GPL, and SCO that we'd like to provide to perhaps counter some of the claims that will be made by the speaker tonight." Only one person said no to a handout. Several said that we were "preaching to the choir", others admitted to having run linux for many years.
The Talk
Once the talk begin, Darl introduced himself and rambled a bit about the superbowl. At this point he announced that he had several coworkers with him, two of whom looked, I kid you not, like Agents (were Agent Smith et. al. collecting social security). These guys never smiled, all night.
McBride starts off by talking about the role of intellectual property in the digital age. He talks briefly about copyright law in the digital age, and asks about Napster, and then talks about linux being free, and seems to be suggesting that "free things on the internet require violation of copyright". He traces through the ownership of UNIX IP, and then argues that the change between 2.2 and 2.6 was largely due to corporate help.
He also repeatedly argues that, per recent supreme court decisions, copyright exists to benefit the public by creating profit incentive. He keeps painting the IP debate as a pendulum swinging between public and private ownership, but continually stresses "Do we want a world where all IP is free?" which of course, no one is arguing for. He mentions that the GPL hasn't been tested in court (an allegation nic
wow! (Score:5, Funny)
I'm not sure what I'm more impressed by - the fact that an email virus can talk, or that it's speaking at Harvard on behalf of Darl.
there there (Score:5, Funny)
Darl reads slashdot??!!
and can you imagine your house in denial of service? and distributed? all rooms are denying you sevice... even toilet... oh horror
RMS is not crazy! (Score:5, Insightful)
Above all, we wanted to go and present the non-RMS, non-crazy-anti-IP side of linux.
[..]We're having the law forced on us, and if we're not careful, one day we're going to wake up in a world where IP restrictions will take all the fun out of engineering.
Maybe you should go back and listen to "crazy" RMS when he talks about these legal issues. Which he's talked about since day one. And people laughed at him.
When the FSF insists on paperwork for all major contributions, there's a good reason. When they insist that all copyrights be centralized with the FSF, there's a good reason.
Linus may be popular to us geeks because of his easygoing nature, but easygoing gets you eaten alive out in the real world.
SCO brings a "sharpshooter" to a Darlnote... (Score:5, Interesting)
I got this off of the SCOX yahoo board:
'Electronic terror' in Linux's shadow [eetimes.com]
You'll find this about 2/3 of the way through the article:
And they call the Linux community fanatical! :)
Settlement (Score:3, Funny)
Um, doesn't this belong... (Score:3, Funny)
Best Line that most people probably over looked (Score:3, Insightful)
and then... (Score:4, Funny)
At this point Darl wrung his hands gleefully and said "Sic 'im boys!". Two heavyset men set upon the freeloading nerd and, after a brief struggle, relieved him of his wallet. "Anyone else use Linux?", Darl jeered, as he pocketed 2 dollars, fifty five cents, and an expired bus pass.
To really make the point stick... (Score:3, Insightful)
I mean, having SCO speak on how to defend intellectual property rights is like Bill Gates giving a speech on business ethics.
Distancing ourselves from extremists. (Score:5, Insightful)
It's difficult to believe that these attacks (DDoS) and threats on SCO might be from GNU/Linux users.
Despite the timing of the attacks, all of the evidence is highly circumstantial.
We, as a community, however, must distance ourselves from extremists or extremist activities such as this by whatever means possible.
We cannot compromise our core values which are embodied by the work done on Open Source and Free Software, but we also cannot allow corporations to usurp our hard work.
We must, *above all else*, allow this to play out in court as this is the *only* way to make certain something like this doesn't happen again.
This is my message and, while I can't speak for the community, I believe these statments to be undeniable. I, personally, don't think a Linux user is behind the attacks, but if it is, then it's one person or a small group of people who are acting foolishly and should not reflect on the community as a whole.
Thanks, GJC
One comment I'd like to have seen made... (Score:5, Interesting)
At least one argument they're using against the GPL can be used against the claim that anyone should pay them $699 per CPU.
Saint Thomas Moore (Score:3, Interesting)
In a way, this is what's happening today. I am confident that the GPL here is not in violation of the law, but I am also confident that copyright monopolies do not belong in the information age and must go. And the GPL is the license most true to that spirit.
PS: St Thomas was executed, inspite of his attempt to stay within the law by being silent. There's a lesson to be learned from this.
I was one of the law students in attendance... (Score:3, Informative)
JOLT's presentation of the event was very odd. They made a few comments at the start that made it sound like they were only grudgingly admitting non-Harvard Law students, which is a shame, because the MIT people really came to play. Their questions were good, and the kept it all professional and on-message. (JOLT does and always has, as far as I know, made their events open off-campus; the editor's comments just made it sound like he wasn't all that happy to have a room packed with non-HLS kids.)
Darl was also impressive, to be honest. He was more than a little bit evasive in his answers, but he was very good about going back to the MIT students for questions, even though there were some obviously more sympathetic law students with their hands up. He also stayed around for a bit after the presentation to talk to a small knot of students, presumably including the author of the linked piece.
While he didn't convince me that SCO has a case, he did a fairly good job of convincing me that he *believes* they have a case, and that it's not a scam. He did, after the speech in the small discussion, address the "pump and dump" allegations; he denies selling any significant stock, and claimed any internal sell-offs have been minor and insignificant. I was just on the periphery of that conversation though, so take my report with a grain of salt.
A couple of people have commented on McBride's bodyguard. He did, in fact, have a bodyguard there; I was told it was because he's received death threats. The other guy (the one who actually looks like a bodyguard) was a Harvard police officer; university policy forbids guest speakers from bringing bodyguards on campus without a peace officer in attendance, apparently.
Re:Choice of venue? (Score:3, Funny)
Six of one, half dozen of the other.
Re:Choice of venue? (Score:4, Funny)
Don't you mean Darl Goes to Con-College?
Re:Great quote (Score:2)
Re:RTFA...wait... (Score:2)
Oh well, next time
Simon
Re:Obvious answer (Score:3, Funny)
Darl: Were you impacted by MyDoom?
Student: No, I use Linux.
Re:Obvious answer (Score:5, Informative)
Civil disobedience (Score:5, Insightful)
It is not performing a legal act despite very vague accusations that it may violate some law or contract.
Re:Darl Goes to Harvard? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:He'd better gone to Yale... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:'Ess See Oh' or 'Skoh'? (Score:3, Funny)
Until a few days ago the MyDoom herring got in the news here (in Holland) and I learnt that their PR people and the parro^H^H^H^Hmedia seem to think it's 'Ess See Oh'.
But don't dispair, history will merely render them as the funny story that brought us the expression "pulling a sco".
"Tell me again about Skoh gramps"