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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Re: is there a real possibility that Sco get what it claims?
- Date: Wed, 4 Feb 2004 14:44:52 -0800
- From: Jonathan Byrne <jq@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Re: is there a real possibility that Sco get what it claims?
- References: <MBBBKFNBGKOCHLHLBFPOEEAICKAA.jc@example.com> <401F75CE.1010700@example.com> <878yjjqkqw.fsf@example.com>
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On Wednesday 04 February 2004 01:03 am, Stephen J. Turnbull wrote: > property are extremely high. A person's whose hearsay I trust (as far > as I can imagine trusting hearsay) says he knows someone who has seen > code which is licensed from SCO in Linux. Even if we take it as true (which being "friend of a friend" hearsay, we need more likely to take it with grains of salt, although the fact that you give it credibility tends to make me also give it credibility, for I know you are not easily convinced by hearsay), it raises the question, "Who put it into the kernel?" Presumably not IBM, judging by: "> I don't think it will help SCO much against IBM, because the code is a > device driver for a specific piece of now-obsolete hardware, not IBM's." The most likely answers to this question are: 1) The hardware vendor (if said vendor had access to the source code in question); 2) An employee of old SCO; 3) An employee of new SCO/Caldera; 4) An employee of Novell; IANAL, but: If it is 2 or 3, then the burden will fall on SCO to prove that it was contributed to Linux without authorization. If it is 4, they will need prove that Novell did not have a right to contribute the code. If it is 1, their case may be easier, as long as they can establish the vendor did not have permission to contribute it, or maybe even if IBM just can't establish that the vendor did have permission. However, this raises the question "If the vendor infringed copyright X number of years ago and no one noticed or objected, is IBM (or anyone else) in any way liable?" I don't know the answer to that, but I'm sure it will be answered in court if the original violation was by a hardware vendor with source access. I'm also curious, does the hearsay source say whether the alleged infringing code comes from a historical UNIX source, or from a Unixware source? If the former, that could poke a hole in the SCO case as well, since so much of it was circulated freely and/or later distributed under a free license. If the latter, that could be more difficult, but if they cannot prove liability by IBM (which I suspect won't be easy), they will still face an uphill fight to come away with much more than a court order to remove said device driver. If that's all they get, and IBM is exonerated of all claims against it, IBM's countersuit will probably still be enough to put SCO out of business. Jonathan
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