SCO Is Undeniably, Reliably Dead (fossforce.com) 172
An anonymous reader writes: On Friday, IBM and SCO filed an agreement with the US district court in Utah to accept a ruling of dismissal of the last remaining claims by SCO against IBM. Says the linked article, in line with our most recent other mentions of the long-due death spiral:
This agreement wasn't unexpected, and in fact, came down right on deadline. On February 10, I reported that Judge David Nuffer with the U.S. District Court in Utah had ruled to dismiss a couple of interference claims SCO had filed against IBM, and had ordered both parties to reach an agreement on whether to accept the dismissal by February 26, which was Friday. In all likelihood this is the last we'll ever hear from SCO as its current owner, the California based software company Xinuos which now owns and markets many of SCO's old products, will probably remove what's left of SCO from life support.
They are? (Score:5, Funny)
In that case I make claim to all of linux.
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Too late - I already made claim to C/C++, and everyone (including Mssrs. Kernighan and Ritchie) owes me a frigload of money. Pay up, suckas.
Ob CSTB (Score:2)
Would the licensing fee happen to be around $699?
Re:They are? (Score:4, Funny)
So you're to blame for systemd. Damn you, Revek, damn you!
And will you please, for the love of God, fix the video drivers?
The real question remains (Score:5, Interesting)
Why aren't Darl Mcbride and his cronies locked up in Club Fed for pump-n-dump scam they perpetuated?
I fear for the future of Linux. (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm getting quite worried about the future of Linux. We're seeing numerous factors converging, and it's not looking good for Linux.
The first problem is that Linux is making no inroads into the desktop/workstation market. Desktop environments like GNOME 3 and Unity are widely disliked. Systemd has caused stability issues for many. There's no compelling open source applications, and the ones that might be candidates, like Firefox or GIMP, pale in comparison to their main competitors.
Worse, Linux is becoming q
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I see this as really a good thing. My Wife and I lament frequently about the 'good ole days' of the Internet before the World Wide Web became popular.
I don't want the bulk of 'AOL User mentality' on Linux desktops trashing the direction of a good solid OS.
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A bit late for that. 35 years, 4 months, and 15 days [convertunits.com]too late, to be precise.
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Can you justify your assertion with a link to a relevant link to that date ?
Beyond Gates selling DOS to IBM.
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http://lmgtfy.com/?q=oct+15+19... [lmgtfy.com]
Linux is fine (Score:4, Insightful)
The first problem is that Linux is making no inroads into the desktop/workstation market.
Nothing new there. It's going to be virtually impossible to push Windows out of this desktop market. It's simple network effects [wikipedia.org]. Linux would have to offer something that isn't available on Windows that people care strongly about for people to switch. Unlikely that is going to happen. The only thing that linux has that Windows doesn't is that it is available for free. But until the applications they use are also available on linux AND it is installed from day 1 they aren't going to switch en-mass.
Worse, Linux is becoming questioned as a server OS.
Not really. Yes it has problems but that's nothing new and none of them are so awful that it's going to change the landscape. People that use Windows servers will mostly continue to do so and people that use linux servers will mostly continue to do so. There really aren't any other serious options for most use cases. BSD isn't really terribly different (porting software between them is trivial) and OS X isn't really used for servers.
While the Linux kernel does see widespread use in mobile devices through Android, it's critical to note that it's well hidden, with little use made of GNU or other open source software.
So what? That's nothing new either. Whether or not people are aware they are using linux is mostly not very important. Most people don't care so long as it does what they want. Whether or not they know it is open source is similarly immaterial. It's important that it be open source but awareness of it is a peripheral concern.
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Like a decent UI or privacy?
The battle is elsewhere now (Score:2)
Like a decent UI or privacy?
I'll presume you are being serious. Most people are familiar enough with Windows that anything other than a completely revolutionary gotta-have-it huge improvement isn't going to matter. If they haven't done it in 20 years I don't think we should reasonably expect it any time soon. Furthermore any such improvement could likely be easily copied by Microsoft in short order.
As for privacy, people clearly aren't too concerned with that. If you need evidence I refer you to Facebook as exhibit A. A few peop
Windows isn't going anywhere (Score:2)
There is always the fact the Windows security is abysmal.
Which again is something people clearly don't care much about. Certainly not enough to switch to linux. And it's not as if the security on linux devices is universally bullet proof. It's better than Windows in many ways (talk about damning with faint praise...) but there are still plenty of security issues. Outside of certain security conscious organizations (like the DoD), security is a second or third order consideration.
The DoD has been replacing Windows for mission critical systems for some years now.
I could point out plenty of organizations that have found linux to be a better so
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Nothing new there. It's going to be virtually impossible to push Windows out of this desktop market. It's simple network effects. Linux would have to offer something that isn't available on Windows that people care strongly about for people to switch. Unlikely that is going to happen. The only thing that linux has that Windows doesn't is that it is available for free. But until the applications they use are also available on linux AND it is installed from day 1 they aren't going to switch en-mass.
If Google didn't have Chromebooks I think they'd have crawled into Microsoft's "convertible" space with Android by now but to Google's business model a cloud-oriented laptop is much better than Linux. The smartphone/tablet market has been dealing Windows the death of a thousand pin pricks, sure there are a few professional applications with no real match but more and more the "light" mobile versions are good enough. What's really missing is someone to do the platform push, people aren't going to look for IS
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Meh, I can say this to you without you getting irate or thinking that I'm attempting to do something other than what I am claiming to do...
It is "en masse." I usually type it en masse but I made a mistake not long ago. Nobody picked up on it but then, just a few hours later, I noticed someone got dinged for it. That's when I thought about it and realized that I'd typed the same thing. I slunk (is that past-tense for slink?) off and was never discovered!
'Masse' is French for mass. It's also in pool as the "m
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I hope you are not suggesting that Windows is a viable alternative. You might need to read up on Windows 10.
I think the future for Linux could be great if the Unity/Systemd lessons are learned. (Not holding my breath. )
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Have you and many of the haters researched SystemD at all?
Youtube (sorry it is blocked at work) had a great video on how a hater turned into a proponent and showed started ngnix as an example. In SystemD you create a Unit file with \\pathtodaemon startup type:x and that is it. No complicating scripting with evil nasty bash scripts if/fi statements all over.SystemD also is event driven so when one thing happens it can trigger something else if you set it up that way.
Re:I fear for the future of Linux. (Score:5, Insightful)
> Serious developers prefer to use C# and .NET instead of the more amateurish PHP platform that's so common on Linux.
First, let me say that your post reeks of "concern trolling." The quoted part is a good example. So, if they aren't using C# and .NET they're not serious developers? Not only is that childish, it's wrong. I know this and I'm not even a developer - but I do know many, many developers. I know developers who, not out of idealism, use the tools they feel do the best. If you think serious development is limited to just C# and .NET then you're sorely mistaken.
I could go on and dissect the rest of your post but that's all I need to point out for others to go back and reread your post in a new light. Your post is full of non-sequitur and assuming facts not in evidence. It's not even original and the only reason I'm bothering to reply is I've seen this same damned post a half dozen times in the past two weeks. Normally, it's moderated down - as it should be. Unfortunately, you've probably found a non-developer who decided that your post looked right so they voted it up.
No, no I am *not* a developer (and neither are you). I do, on the other hand, know developers from all across the globe. Some of them are Windows users and develop on and for Windows. You might even say that they're in the majority. However, that number hasn't changed in the direction you seem to think it has changed, never mind not changing to the degree that you think it has changed.
Other than a few rabid folks, nobody's switching from Linux to BSD over systemd and no major install bases are converting their servers to either BSD or to Windows. And lest you think I'm some sort of fanboy, I think it'd be prudent for me to point out that I was an MS MVP (multiple categories, multiple awards) for 6 or 7 years, have purchased more Apple devices than anyone on this site, love GhostBSD, and use Linux ever day while having a Windows phone. I really don't *care* what OS you use, be it libre or proprietary. I'd just prefer we base our arguments on things like facts, reason, and actual evidence.
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> As requirements; speed, efficiency, frugal resource usage, etc. pale
> in comparison to needing maintainable, reusable, run-anywhere code.
What is this "run-anywhere code" you speak of? One PITA with Java is that for anything significantly more complex than "Hello World", an app written under e.g. Java 1.2.3.4.5 will run *ONLY* "anywhere Java 1.2.3.4.5 is installed"... not under Java 1.2.3.4.4 and not under Java 1.2.3.4.6. The end result is that some places have to keep multiple versions of Java aroun
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The OpenSSL and Bash security woes have not helped.
I think it's an issue of marketing. When you're on Windows 10, you'll get a nice "Windows cumulative upgrade blah blah". When you're on Linux, you get updates to all the packages, with nice informative change summaries that include security bugs fixed etc.
The truth is, all mainstream platforms equally suffer from security bugs. Linux is no better and no worse here, I think.
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In that case I make claim to all of linux.
I will claim SVR5 & Unixware and rebrand it as SVRV. And then put it under GPLv3.
But seriously, SCO's product is still available - from Xinuos. They have made a product based on FreeBSD - a big departure from SCO, which was System V based.
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Can't even get unicode right on the front page... (Score:5, Funny)
I know this came up in the discussion back on February 2 [slashdot.org] after someone accidentally bought slashdot, but apparently it still isn't that important a month later...
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Here we thought unicode support was just broken in comments and discussion, apparently it doesn't work anywhere here...
The strange thing is that the so-called "editors" don't filter out stuff that makes the text "break" in the presentation.
Re:Can't even get unicode right on the front page. (Score:5, Insightful)
This bit here made me laugh way too fucking hard. Thanks damn_registrars - you've made my gloomy Tuesday a bit brighter :)
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In other news, UTF8 still alive and going strong (Score:5, Insightful)
March 2016, still UTF8 errors on /.
Re:In other news, UTF8 still alive and going stron (Score:5, Insightful)
You may not believe it, but /. supported Unicode for probably over 15 years now.
Its just early abuse by posters destined to misuse it forced the implementation of a whitelist of acceptable UTF-8 characters, which basically are all the printables between 32 through 127. Everything else is effectively stripped. Since UTF-8 uses the high-bit to indicate that the codepoint consists of additional bytes,
(The Unicode support came as part of Slashdot.jp way back when.).
If you google for erocS or even 5:erocS, you can try to guess what the Unicode "fun" posters and trolls did that forced the implementation of the whitelist.
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€‘’öóíúüëéåäáßðfghïøñb®©£½¼¾÷¦”“ÖÓÍÚÜËÉÅÄÁÐFGHÏ‘B®ÆÆ
Then there are HTML entities like < ± — – and even & are in there.
If you're (or anyone else) curious as to how to input them, then hit reply and quote parent. Then you should see what goes into it. The fi
Oh shit. (Score:5, Funny)
Where do I send my $99 licensing fee?
Re:Oh shit. (Score:5, Insightful)
Use some of it to buy Ms. Pamela Jones [wikipedia.org] a nice scotch.
If anyone has earned it...
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Where is the +1 and/or "Like" button?
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IIRC she wanted a red dress, or redress.
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WTF?
Site is online, copyright owned by the posters, hers under creative commons.
Copyrights did this (Score:5, Insightful)
And we owe this 30 year court battle over Linux to... copyright law! I'm sure we all feel glad our work is protected by such an efficient and fair system!
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First of all, it was a 12 year battle, not 30, and second, how do you intend to enforce whatever FOSS license you like without copyright law? Suppose the case was the FSF suing IBM for putting GPL Linux code into their proprietary AIX product, would you still be complaining about copyright law?
And, no, we don't owe this battle to copyright law, we owe it to a corrupt company attempting to pull a scam using copyright law. WTF is wrong with the mods?
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AND to a corrupt legal system that doesn't rate justice very highly in it's decisions. The case should properly have ended early in January of the second year.
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I should point out that Linux is protected because of copyright and that this case is one where it turned out right in the end. Unfortunately, there are no repercussions for the losing party - other than they lost some money. However, they're well and truly dead, as they should be.
Point is, copyright is not bad (in and of itself - as a concept) but the current process and regulations could sure use some adjustments.
still? (Score:1)
I can't believe this went on for so long. What is it, 14 years?
Anybody remember that 'We own all your code' picture?
Re:still? (Score:4, Insightful)
Started in mid-2003, so not quite 13.
While not successful in its original goal (that is, to destroy Linux) it did last long enough to serve Microsoft's purpose (to at least keep Linux off the mainstream user's desktop and blunt server adoption).
Re: still? (Score:3)
The Linux desktop developers did a better job than SCO ever could have.
I think scox-scam started in March 2003 (Score:2)
> On March 6, 2003, the SCO Group (formerly known as Caldera International and Caldera Systems) filed a $1 billion lawsuit in the United States against IBM for allegedly “devaluing” its version of the UNIX operating system.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SCO_Group,_Inc._v._International_Business_Machines_Corp.
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I can't believe this went on for so long. What is it, 14 years?
Oh, now, you're making me feel old! I remember getting an email from the Chief Counsel from IBM, instructing me that I would have to give a sworn deposition concerning this case. This was because I had access to the AIX source code, and also did some work for the the IBM Linux Technology Center. CSI: Austin, Texas!
The lawyer assigned to me had a Park Avenue address in New York City. I'm normally not the best friend of lawyers, but this guy was really good. I explained to him that I did some work with
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Anybody remember that 'We own all your code' picture?
For those who don't, you can see it here. [theinquirer.net]
I love SCO (Score:2)
I made a killing shorting their stock about 10 years ago when they first sued IBM. Too bad they aren't still around to do more stupid things I could make money from.
Not until... (Score:5, Funny)
Has Netcraft confirmed it?
Where's the SCO is for Cows comments?!? (Score:3, Interesting)
I was wondering what's happening with the "XXX is for cows" comments... the only time it could be insightful the anonymous coward isn't making it...
"will probably remove what's left of SCO" (Score:2)
Why? If it's even vaguely profitable, what's the reason for not selling it anymore?
This breaking news just in... (Score:2)
Red Hat's suit? (Score:5, Interesting)
Red Hat sued SCO in 2003 for false advertising, and that case was stayed pending resolution of the IBM case. Is that still pending (and can Red Hat try to get damages)?
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SCO has no money. Trying to revive that suit would only be a waste of legal fees.
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There's reasonable evidence, though not proof as far as I know, that Microsoft was bankrolling at least part of the case. You'd probably need to read back through Groklaw to find the reports of it though.
Dead? Undead? (Score:2)
Pining (Score:5, Funny)
Sure its not just pining for the fjords? Or maybe just stunned?
Muchkin coroner's report (Score:2)
(adopt high-pitched voice) ...and SCO's not only merely dead,
it's really most sincerely dead!
Unicode vs SCO - Why is SCO winning? (Score:3)
The SCO lawsuit started in 2003 and, in comparison, Unicode version 1.0 was released in 1992. So, it's not like this is a new standard, preceding the lawsuit by ten years. Unicode support in Linux seems to be around 1999.
I guess somebody at /. (or, more likely submitters) are getting a perverse kick out of copy and pasting unicode characters on the SCO article and I'm trying to figure out why. Maybe /. article editor tools make the unicode characters invisible to them but this has been going on long enough.
Timothy, et al, could you take this back to your new masters and get it fixed - one way or another? I, like probably a lot of people who come to this site, when we see the acronym "SCO" immediately look to see how many unicode characters are embedded in the summary.
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RMS does not like Unicode. Therefore, I do not like Unicode.
Unixware Master Ace (Score:1)
Guess my Unixware and Openserver Master Ace is worthless now?
... and they escape (Score:4, Insightful)
She's really most sincerely dead (Score:2)
Kinda like Franco (Score:2)
Man it took him a long time to die.
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Great story to encapsulate major slashdot issues.. (Score:2)
Great summary to show off a couple of slashdot's worst issues: no unicode support for things as simple as quotes and useless "editing" that doesn't even correct the aforementioned obvious problem with the summary. /. overlords, are you "on it" as you claimed or not?
So, new
SCO OpenServer V (Score:2)
Actually not quite over (Score:5, Informative)
What SCO agreed to is dismissing remaining motions for summary judgment . This is more IBM agreeing there is no point delaying SCO's option of appealing the motions that went against them. It is still possible that SCO might try one last gasp effort in the appeals court. I am not sure how long they have before they must file such an appeal.
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How the hell are they paying their lawyers?
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The lawsuits that SCO filed against other companies are all resolved. It lost against Novell and DaimlerChrysler and settled out of court against AutoZone (apparently getting a chunk of change from the latter).
The only other pending lawsuit is Red Hat against SCO, and that case is adminstratively closed, likely to never be reopened.
R.E. IBM, SCO will undoubtedly file an appeal, so saying that that SCO is absolutely dead is still premature. Kind of like that Monty Python skit https://www.youtube.com/watch? [youtube.com]
It's a trap... (Score:2)
Get an axe.
Have another drink PJ! (Score:2)
You deserve it!
As coroner of Linux land, (Score:2)
I have thoroughly examined them,
And they are not just merely dead,
They are really quite sincerely dead.
Darl McBride (Score:3)
The people, the people! (Score:2)
That's great that Caldera, later rebranded as SCO, is dead. Now what about the actual perpetrators of that Linux debacle, Darl McBride and Chris Sonntag?
Oh Yeah? (Score:2)
pointless.... (Score:2)
Micro$soft must have had a huge bounty up to get big blue to switch... all rendering this case rather
Is SCO "Dead"? (Score:2)
Sep 14, 2007
http://www.unixresources.net/linux/clf/linuxtalk/archive/00/00/65/85/658554.html
"Stick a fork in SCO. They're done."
Nov 24, 2008
http://www.cnet.com/news/ding-dong-sco-is-dead/
"Ding, dong SCO is dead"
Apr 14, 2011 ..."
http://www.zdnet.com/article/sco-is-dead-sco-unix-lives-on/
"SCO is dead
Aug 13, 2011
http://www.h-online.com/open/news/item/SCO-vs-Linux-it-s-over-1333900.html
"SCO vs Linux: it's over"
Aug 8, 2012
http://www.zdnet.com/article/sco-is-finally-dead-parrot-dead/
"SCO is finally 'Dead Parrot'
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Vote for Trump == Vote for satan
Vote for Hillary == Vote for satan
don't vote for either.
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Similar scams.
Microsoft was behind scox scam, scox was just a pawn.
Now Microsoft has partnered with Red Hat, and declared that only Red Hat Linux is immune from Microsoft patent lawsuits.
So MS is still using IP scams to kill Linux. Instead of scox, MS is now partnering with Red Hat.
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Did I miss something? How is this Ubuntu's fault? Unless I'm mistaken, isn't systemd from RedHat? Or are you mad that Ubuntu put it in their distro?
Serious questions - I'm thinking I missed something. I'd thought I understood everything that had gone on.
Hmm... I should add...
I do maintain a number of servers, including remote and colo hosted servers. I have a full rack (and a part of one) in my basement at home. Everything in there, at the bare metal level, runs Linux and I want to say all of them have syst
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This is what you said:
Blame Ubuntu for being the first to "solve" a problem that didn't exist.
Wouldn't Redhat be the first? And, if not, are you saying that it solved a problem for RedHat?
What non-existent problem did Ubuntu fix?
I'm still, after all this time, trying to wrap my head around this. I was working on Unix systems back in the late starting at just about 1990. While I did administration duties, I'd still humbly submit that I am not an admin. It's a bit like I've written many lines of code but I am not a programmer. In both cases, I learned out of necessity and with th
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Oh no, I'm well aware of what init is. You can still use your init scripts, or so I'm told. I've never tried, I've never needed to. At any rate, init is a daemon that starts with the system. I want to say it has PID 1 but I suppose it might be 0 in some systems.
Maybe I'm not getting this "context" or anything but I'm starting to think it might not be my fault. That's not actually a very articulate answer and doesn't actually answer any of the questions.
What was Ubuntu first to fix that didn't need fixing? I
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Ah - I think I've got you. upstart! Ubuntu wrote and included upstart. I'm not sure that worked well - ever.
Alright, so you're angry that they changed the initialization system? Hmm... Okay, why?
I guess I'd be angry if it were forced on me. I guess, technically, it isn't. I'm kind of annoyed that it's now decided to include far more than the init system - there's no reason for it to be more than that - that's annoying but, so far so good.
But, it's not like it's the first alternative? There's launchd, busybo
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Re: Ding Dong the Sco is Dead! (Score:2)
It's still not dead. I got an email from a recruiter about a COBOL contract yesterday.
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Re: Ding Dong the Sco is Dead! (Score:2)
£280 a day. Not bad for dead tech. I haven't done any COBOL for 12 years so I don't think I'd be much use to them.
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That's why I said "quite premature".
COBOL lives because it's well-tuned by time for its niche of high-volume reliable back-end business and monetary processing, and isn't jacked around by fads, trends, and whims.
It's like Latin: it's used in science and church documents BECAUSE it's a "dead" language not subject to societal whims. Nobody messes with it; here today, here tomorrow.
Re: Ding Dong the Sco is Dead! (Score:2)
Nah Swindon, UK.
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My auntie that looks like a member of the Adams family.
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I'm not quite sure when the trials started but they've been covering it, this whole thing, for longer than that.
http://slashdot.org/?page=56&v... [slashdot.org]
(I go through and look at old threads once in a while. I use the search fairly often for that.)
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