[ale] SCO Tells Linux Users: Time To Pay Up
Transam
bob at verysecurelinux.com
Tue Jul 22 21:40:42 EDT 2003
On Tue, Jul 22, 2003 at 11:59:22AM -0600, Joseph Knapka wrote:
...
> Wait, wait... has SCO actually proved to *anyone's* satisfaction
> that there really is SysV code in the Linux kernel???
>From what I've read, SCO *claims* that there are about 400 lines of
code from Unix illegally used in Linux and they are claiming, I think,
$40 Billion dollars of damage.
To obtain damages in a U.S. civil court, one must demonstrate the financial
loss caused by the issue in question. No line of any code is worth
$100 million. Thus, SCO's claim is unrealistic. If any Linux code has
made it into SCO-authorized Unix, there's a counterclaim.
Of more interest, since SCO's claim is absurd, its letters to companies
demanding money under threat of civil or criminal action amounts to fraud
in many jurisdictions. This is a felony. Further, SCO's executives
claiming this matter as an asset (as they very likely are), probably
constitutes stock manipulation. This too is a felony.
While SCO may shake a little money out of cowards, IBM seems unwilling
to tolerate being "shaken down". Hence, the popular view of "goodbye SCO!"
A few will be scared away from Linux and that is unfortunate.
> -- Joe
Bob
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