SCO Website Using Groklaw's Content 286
darkonc writes "It looks like they didn't learn from the
BSD debacle (where, having sued Berkley for copyright infringement, AT&T found that they were using BSD code without acknowledging it's source). Groklaw has an article detailing how SCO has documents created by and for Groklaw on their site -- without even acknowledging the source. It seems that the defenders of the holy IP principle have hoisted the skull and bones."
Hipocrisy (Score:5, Funny)
Weasels (Score:4, Interesting)
You can tell a *lot* about a company by it's corporate culture. I remember a post I made a while ago to my weblog, before I did a domain change. It's about PHP Consulting but it really applies to this SCO article because of the no-good-theivery going on at SCO. I think SCO certainly faults on each and every one of the following:
Read on... [jcomserv.net]
Re:Weasels (Score:5, Interesting)
It looks a lot like a scam where SCO is the victim and linux is just being used as a smokescreen while Darl guts the company and lines his pockets with cash.
Re:Weasels (Score:2)
10/10! What do I win!?!
We should write to SCO (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:We should write to SCO (Score:2, Interesting)
Remind SCO of their misattribution or lack of proper attribution, yes. But I hope no one is silly enough to make a legal issue of this, at least until the larger lawsuit is over and done with.
Nothing but bait.
Re:We should write to SCO (Score:2)
I have... (Score:4, Funny)
I hope they sue you ... (Score:3, Informative)
If I write a book titled "SCO[tm] Sucks Donkey Balls," that book is a copyrightable work. Assuming Congress keeps listening to Disney every 10-20 years (as the copyright on Steamboat Mickey is about to expire), copyright will last forever. I believe right now we're at life of the author plus 95 years. The point
Re:I have... (Score:2)
Re:I have... (Score:2, Funny)
SCO sells stock certificates, a similar product to TP, although less valuable.
KFG
Re:I have... (Score:3, Funny)
(That's the official TSG Poland site--TSG's own staff replaces the site with that image and resigned after they sued IBM.)
Re:I have... (Score:2)
Read up on some history (Score:2)
Just a test? (Score:4, Funny)
Eh? (Score:2)
MS had the same eh?
Head of Canopy, Noorda's Daughter killed herself (Score:5, Interesting)
Happened last week- old news in internet time. But applicable her because SCO's financial backing literally took a bullet to the head. I think the least of their concerns would be Groklaw's stolen pdf files.
That's the 2nd "suicide" in 4 months. (Score:5, Interesting)
1 in March.
Both people involved in Canopy.
Nothing strange or unusual about that. No sir.
Re:That's the 2nd "suicide" in 4 months. (Score:3, Interesting)
A long time ago when this SCO stuff started, I rhetorically asked "when would someone fall out of a helicopter" in reference to the Bre-X scam. (look it up).
The parallels are remarkable.
Derek
Re:That's the 2nd "suicide" in 4 months. (Score:5, Informative)
So unless you have some other information about those suicides that makes them look less coincidental, perhaps you should allow the dead to rest instead of furthering a tin-foil hat craze.
Re:That's the 2nd "suicide" in 4 months. (Score:2)
I don't see how questioning the fact she actually killed herself can be considered overly critical of the dead. Quite the opposite. I hope (and assume) the police investigated things very closely in this case.
Re:That's the 2nd "suicide" in 4 months. (Score:2, Funny)
Get a 'Clue'... (Score:5, Funny)
Ah HA! It was Mr. Mustard at Canopy with the Revolver!
Bullet in the head (Score:4, Funny)
Only if factory loads are used.
If you load your own powder and bullet into the brass before killing yourself, you're infringing on the intellectual property rights of ammunition manufacturers.
Don't even get me started on who gets sued if it takes two bullets.
Re:Suicide? (Score:3, Interesting)
I agree that it is possible for a religious person to commit suicide (esp. with so much pressure to do what the church and others believe is the right way to do things). But
Re:Head of Canopy, Noorda's Daughter killed hersel (Score:4, Informative)
She often gets a lot of the facts wrong and in this case the only thing we know for certain is that there has been a death. Maureen is the only one calling it a suicide and everyone has reported that the Noorda family is not releasing any details.
It may be a suicide or it may not be and we won't know for certain until a real journalist supplies more information.
Re:Head of Canopy, Noorda's Daughter killed hersel (Score:3, Informative)
See the second story here [redherring.com].
Docs pulled from both groklaw and tuxrocks (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Docs pulled from both groklaw and tuxrocks (Score:2)
Well, you know they're supposed to be "UNIX technology leaders" - who can't do a ps2pdf run...
Or maybe their finances are so bad they don't have enough employees around to do one...
This really plumbs the depths of pathetic and petty. A company who behaves like this really should be shut down by the courts as a matter of public decency.
Of course, if that were true, most of the corporations in America would be out of business by Tuesday.
Re:Docs pulled from both groklaw and tuxrocks (Score:3, Insightful)
So sue them? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:So sue them? (Score:3, Insightful)
IANAL, but I assume that scanning court documents is similar - just because you were the one who scanned them does (I'd assume) not mean
Re:So sue them? (Score:2)
Re:So sue them? (Score:2)
Insignificant. See Bender v. West Publishing. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:So sue them? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:So sue them? (Score:2, Funny)
Wow.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Given their past behavior, I've gotta go with b. For a while, I was expecting ( but certainly not hoping for ) them to pull the rabbit out of their hat and set us all back on our heels. Their claims just seemed too silly not to be justified by *something*.
Now of course, we've all got a pretty good idea what kind of clowns these really are.
Still, to steal from groklaw...whew...that's just stunning in my opinion. You gotta respect the lengths these guys will go to.
Re:Wow.. (Score:4, Informative)
Still, to steal from groklaw...
Copyright infringement is not theft. Not when you share music illegally. Not when you distribute GPLed software against its license terms. Not when you copy documents from a website on "our side".
Terms.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Ya, and plagiarism is not copyright infringement. Heck in the US, plagiarism isn't even illegal.
In this case, plagiarism is obvious, infringement would take a court to decide. (It isn't clear whether scans of documents can be copyrighted at this time... They represent effort, but not necessarily creativity. Further, some courts are starting to be careful about allowing loopholes that might "relock" public domain works.)
Re:Wow.. (Score:2)
Re:Wow.. (Score:4, Interesting)
And copying public domain court documents isn't copyright infringement.
Nope. So that's why what Groklaw did is legal.
What SCO did, however, is copy a specific representation of those court documents that was created by Groklaw. That, on the other hand, is copyright infringement.
For example, Bach's music is in the public domain. Making your own copies of Bach's music is legal. Copying somebody else's representation of that music is copyright infringement.
Re:Wow.. (Score:2)
The Big Lie.
[T]he principle - which is quite true in itself - that in the big lie there is always a certain force of credibility; because the broad masses of a nation are always more easily corrupted in the deeper strata of their emotional nature than consciously or voluntarily; and thus in the primitive simplicity of their minds they more readily fall victims to the big lie than the small lie, since they themselves often tell small li
Too busy looking over... (Score:5, Insightful)
Too busy, too cheap, too lazy... who knows what their excuse.
Perhaps it is simply that SCO does not want to give credit where credit is due.
Subdude
Re:Too busy looking over... (Score:2)
Re:Too busy looking over... (Score:2)
Of course when these two groups meet, the former will have an advantage in making the latter look like arses because they can point this out to ignorant SCO fans.
But on a related note, how many SCO fans are there? FOSS is a community. SCO is a business that has investors.
Re:Too busy looking over... (Score:2)
No. That's why I wouldn't use their stuff.
To answer no and then use their stuff anyways? In this day and age? It's just plain, without a doubt, stupid. There's no question whether you'll get caught.
Then again as a self-interested web developer hired by SCO to put up these documents, and caring nothing about the company whatsoever, I suppose it'd make a sick sort of sense to do this...
Re:Too busy looking over... (Score:3, Informative)
Petty (Score:3, Insightful)
Scanning didn't create a derivative work. Scanning added no actual content. Plus, as legal filings they're arguably public domain in the first place in which case they'd still be public domain after scanning.
Yeah, sure I appreciate the irony of them using the work without recompense. But compared to the ghastly irony of continuing to offer Linux for download from their site this is piddling stuff.
Re:Petty (Score:5, Insightful)
However, for a company currently in court claiming that the fruits of its labours have been misappropriated to turn around and do exactly the same thing... Well, it's hardly in the best taste is it, even if they are so strapped for cash and/or resources that they don't have the ability to transcribe it themselves. Plus, I wouldn't be at all surprised if IBM's legal team finds a way to let the court know about this to show just how two faced SCO can be.
SCO shoot themselves in the foot. Again. We'll pass on the film at eleven, and proceed with the scheduled reality show re-run...
I don't really know anything about copyright, but (Score:2)
Now if I'm not mistaken, even things which are public domain, if you "edit" them you can copyright them-- because the document itself is public domain, but the editing, page numbers, etc are.
No?
Re:Petty (Score:2)
I hear Darl will have a lot of free time soon...maybe he can do it.
Re:Petty (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Petty (Score:2)
Re:Petty (Score:2)
Actually, SCO's never claimed in court that the fruits of its labours have been misappropriated. SCO claimed that the fruits of IBM's labour belonged to them, and also claimed that they didn't misappropriate Linux. It is completely in keeping with SCO's position to use Groklaw's work; the only unusual thing is that they haven't yet sued Groklaw for not lic
Re:Petty (Score:5, Interesting)
It is quite ironic that SCO seems to think that only their most holy IP is significant to them. They should clarify that they couldn't give a rat's arse about anyone else's efforts, or they should at least credit people for doing the work they did instead of (perhaps inadvertantly) trying to make it look like they did this themselves.
Re:Petty (Score:5, Interesting)
Tell that to Westlaw or Lexis. Both of these companies supply the full text of court decisions, statutes, administrative decesions, etc. etc. All of these are available free at the respective courthouses, gov't offices, libraries where they are stored. Why then would a basic subscription to the state law databases of one state cost around $125 per month? Because the gathering and reformating of this widely dispersed inconveniently printed material has imense value. Westlaw and Lexis do not own the content, but they do own the manner in which it is presented. In a simialr vein, while groklaw doesn't own the content of the documents it has presented, it certainly owns the files it has created.
Re:Petty (Score:4, Interesting)
There was a prior 8th Circuit case to the contrary, but Feist pretty much killed it. IIRC, it hasn't been seriously reexamined since in light of the incredible difficulty of claiming that page numbering is original, and the strong public policy and due process arguments.
Re:Petty, or Not! (Score:2)
deep the staffing/cash flow problems that the
SCO Group now finds itself in.
Doesn't the acquisition of most court documents
incur (1) a service fee for copies made, or (2)
the personnel/go-for to go to the courthouse to
obtain said documents, or (3) both of the above?
IANAL, and IANALA (IANA Legal Aide), but I think
that there "would" be some costs associated with
obtaining court documents, regardless of direct
involvement in the case at hand.
Also, while the original
costs (Score:3, Interesting)
There was a case in Texas, Veeck v. Southern Building Code Congress International [constructionweblinks.com] that held that there is no copyright in laws. In Bender v. West [findlaw.com] West claimed copyright on pagination, but the case was never fully dicided as they struck a deal to avoid the question. But, mo
Re:Petty, or Not! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Petty (Score:2)
I wonder if this is true. If you remaster a film in the public domain to DVD or something you do get copyright protection on the digital work.
Re:The use of Groklaw documents may be deliberate. (Score:2, Interesting)
Groklaw is arguing that open-source Linux can't be copyright by SCO for a wide range of reasons. SCO knows that you can't copyright a scan of a public domain document like a legal document, so SCO puts Groklaw in the awkward position of complaining that SCO has "stolen" their property.
To be sure, SCO is a hypocritical, scummy company based on usurping the IP of other, more generous people, but they are showing that they have a se
Get it while you can (Score:5, Funny)
Plagiarism without Citation (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's say I look up some documents on Lexis-Nexus. I have to cite Lexis-Nexis; otherwise it's plagiarism. It doesn't matter where those documents originally came from. My citation must include a reference to Lexis-Nexus saying how I got this information.
If I don't do this, I've committed plagiarism. I would receive an automatic F and face the possibility of further, much more damaging to myself, ramifications.
I don't know about how this might play out in the minutae of copyright law, but in academics SCO would be in serious trouble.
Re:Plagiarism without Citation (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Plagiarism without Citation (Score:2)
Re:Plagiarism without Citation (Score:2)
Plagiarism (not citing your sources) is considered bad practice but it is not illegal. Piracy (copying copyrighted works without permission) is illegal.
The question here is whether this counts as mere plagiarism (because the court documents are ultimately public domain) or whether it counts as piracy (if Groklaw's display of these public domain works counts as copyrightable). I don't really have a good answer to that question, but the two are definitely not the same thing.
Modern corporate culture (Score:2, Funny)
1 - Steal IP
2 - ???
3 - profit
Sorry, mod me down to redundant if you must. I couldn't help it. I saw content I liked and decided to tweak it and post it as my own....
BTW, does redundant burn karma?
There's No IP Here (Score:4, Informative)
We rightfully excoriate MSFT and SCO when they make overreaching IP claims. We should be the last ones to make overreaching claims.
That said, the one thing which makes SCOX's claims look the worse is their own damn filings. By publishing them themselves, they aren't helping themselves in the public eye.
Re:There's No IP Here (Score:2)
Re:There's No IP Here (Score:3, Interesting)
The real irony is that they wrote the documents but are using Groklaw's scanned versions on their site--I assume because it is more difficult than finding the originals.
Especially, ironic as this site was their attempt at countering Groklaw's `lies
Re:There's No IP Here (Score:2)
It includes stuff copied from sco.tuxrocks.net which is not Groklaw.
Re:There's No IP Here (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not so sure about that. The details are a bit vague in my mind (I don't remember the details enough to google), but there was a similar case in which some dude painstakingly traveled to a bunch of museums around the world, photographed a fameous artist's works (monet, van gogh, something like that), cropped, stitched, readjusted etc., and presented them on the web. Then, someone copied them onto another website and was
Re:There's No IP Here (Score:5, Informative)
C.16. How come my paper book of Shakespeare says it's "Copyright 1988"?
C.17. What makes a "new copyright"? So, basically the formatting, anything additional added, and the general presentation are all copyrighted. I don't visit Groklaw, but I'm sure they made edits, footnotes, and other changes. If SCO included any of those, they'd be violating copyright.
Re:There's No IP Here (Score:2)
I maintain that no protectable expression was added in scanning a public record into an image file.
No added footnotes. No cross references. Just images of the documents as they were filed in the court.
Re:There's No IP Here (Score:2)
Putting into context of the case that established you can't copyright facts, a phonebook. It was legal to copy all of the information in the phonebook and republished in a se
Re:There's No IP Here (Score:2)
We're taking scans of court documents, not transalations of a literary work.
Re:There's No IP Here (Score:2)
Look up the phone book case for example. FEIST PUBLICATIONS, INC. v. RURAL TEL. SERVICE CO., 499 U.S. 340 (1991)
Re:There's No IP Here (Score:2)
I've read Feist. There needs to be creative content for there to be copyright. AN alphabetical listing of names, addresses and phone numbers lacked sufficient originality to be copyrightable. In this case, "selection and arrangement" of the names on the page and the act of typesetting provided no creative content.
Similarly with your Poe edition, the typesetting and pagination gets them nothing. Even the selection of stories and ordering of them provides
They kyped the Jargon File, too (Score:4, Interesting)
Error in the article (Score:4, Interesting)
What surprise? (Score:5, Interesting)
Its just further proof that no one at SCO has any idea what the fuck they are doing. I've said it before, I'll say it again...those who can, innovate, those who can't, litigate. And now we can add that those who can't litigate successfully steal from those who can.
Appalling behaviour (Score:2, Funny)
Yawn (Score:3, Interesting)
Not quite complete at SCO (Score:5, Funny)
This company is just pathetic.
It all looks bad... (Score:5, Insightful)
To beat the dead horse: this is why corporations shouldn't be treated as equal to humans by the law, because they don't play by the same rules and they don't have the same motivations and limitations. It's unbalanced.
Cheers.
Oh, puh-leeze! (Score:4, Interesting)
You are seriously claiming IP rights in the PDF scan of a public document, or comparing the conduct with the allegation of copyright infringement? Give me a break!
Either we are trying to provide a public service by making documents available to the public to lend more light than heat, or we are as bad as they are and just blowing smoke. Public service means the public as a whole -- including the bad guys.
Seriously, by making petty bullshit allegations of wrongdoing for doing the right thing -- disseminating public information -- we lie right down next to the thing we are supposedly demonizing.
Don't fight battles on the wrong playing fields. You should proudly point out they are beginning to appreciate our virtues, not suggest that they are doing the same thing they accuse us of doing. They aren't, and we're not.
Darl, you're at it again. (Score:3, Interesting)
If I've said it once, I've said it a thousand times: I firmly believe that when SCO was Caldera and Caldera was developing Linux, contributing to Linux, and open sourcing some of their proprietary software, a lot of stuff that was used in their proprietary code was placed in Linux, and a lot of stuff that was in Linux was then placed in their proprietary software.
In other words, the programmers there had access to the source for both systems, and instead of reinventing things that already existed on one system for implementation in the other, they copied and pasted, perhaps making some modifications in the process. I firmly believe that this company did not keep a record of what was copied and in which direction.
Then, Caldera became SCO. Then, some idiot named Darl looked at Linux code, saw something that looked strikingly similar to SCO code, and jumped to the conclusion that it must mean that proprietary SCO code was illegally copied into Linux. Since IBM had access to SCO code, this was proof, in Darl's crooked mind, that IBM illegally copied SCO code into Linux.
He didn't consider the following possibilities:
However...they ARE claiming copyright. (Score:5, Insightful)
So not only have they "borrowed" the work of others instead of doing their own (which apparently may be legal as that they are court documents, or may not be legal since the file itself may be copyrighted although the document cannot be etc... etc... ), they are also claiming copyright on the "borrowed" work.
Regards,
Z
Re:However...they ARE claiming copyright. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:However...they ARE claiming copyright. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:However...they ARE claiming copyright. (Score:4, Funny)
Isn't that what they're doing with Linux, also? I expect Growlaw to recieve a take down notice anytime now.
Re:However...they ARE claiming copyright. (Score:2)
Time to test the DMCA and send the take down to SCO. But maybe not. I can imagine SCO doing this on purpose just to pull PJ into a distraction.
A legal troll.
Re:However...they ARE claiming copyright. (Score:4, Insightful)
In my opinion it isn't worth to go to court for it; the publicity is a far sweeter reward.
Re:However...they ARE claiming copyright. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Court documents (Score:5, Interesting)
Personally, I think it doesn't. Comments might but we're talking about markings here. This is just my personal opinion though. This still doesn't rise beyond mechanical duplication, IMHO.
I think it's questionable whether the PDF files count as a transcript which would be necessary since you would have to have a copyrightable work in the first place.
If memory serves me correctly, there was also a general consensus that
a) SCO sucks b) C&D'ing SCO could prove to be a very interesting publicity stunt c) SCO sucks.
Mod parent up! (Score:2)
Case to be made, but missing the point (Score:5, Interesting)
What does that mean, that the formatting is copyrighted? See this thread [groklaw.net], on Groklaw. There are also court cases where the contents of a phone directory were considered public information, but their compilation, formatting, etc., were considered copyrighted. (I'm feeling to lazy to look it up at the moment.)
Still, does this really rise to the level of a Federal Case? Is it worth it to file suit, or even send a C & D letter?
At any rate, PJ has made it abundantly clear that she has no intention of pursing this legally. She just finds it very funny, as do I. The people crying for litigation are missing the point.
Re:BREAKING... PAMELA JONES interview... SCO vs Gr (Score:3, Funny)
You don't see that everyday