Unsealed SCO Email Reveals Linux Code is Clean 733
rm69990 writes "In a recently unsealed email in the SCO vs. IBM case, it appears that an outside consultant, hired by SCO in 2002, failed to find copyright violations in the Linux Kernel. This was right around the time Darl McBride, who has before been hired by litigious companies as CEO, was hired. It appears that before SCO even began its investigation, they were hoping to find a smoking gun, not believing that Linux could possibly not contain Unix code. Apparently, they ignored the advice of this consultant."
Don't forget... (Score:3, Funny)
Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:5, Funny)
Then you draw a needle on the dial that points to BULLSHIT.
Then whenever you hear anybody on the TV who has the word 'CHIEF' or 'EXECUTIVE' or 'OFFICER' in their title, you point the box at the TV and there's your answer.
(also works with radio, newspapers and the Internet. Patent Pending of course.)
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:5, Funny)
Get real! It's not all BULLSHIT! Some of it is just plain lies!
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:4, Funny)
That's right.. like "I did not have sexual relations with that woman"
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:4, Insightful)
I long for the days of a president who got a bit of nookie on the side. It's a far better situation than a president who fucks us over, fucks others over, and generates piles of dead bodies. On the other hand, my fossil fuel stocks have been kickin' ass -- even with today's hit on speculation China will not consume as much oil as it has been. Anyway
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:4, Funny)
I think I can agree with that.
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:5, Insightful)
Are you seriously saying that since Clinton lied about getting a blowjob, it is OK that the Bush administration lied about intelligence to justify going to war? Don't forget, Clinton got impeached for his lie by the House, but not convicted by the Senate. Given the fact that the repurcussions of Bush's lie is so much greater (we are at fucking war and there was no uranium purchased from Africa, no WMDs, no connection to 9/11), shouldn't the consequences be greater? Maybe Impeachment, Conviction and Jail time? I would say one day for each death that has occurred during the Iraq war - that should work out to between 30 to 300 years.
Sorry to not have much of a sense of humor about this, but the repurcussions of this lie are just too tragic and painful.
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:3, Interesting)
Saddam kicked out the weapons inspectors when Clinton was president. From 1998 until the war began in 2003, there were no inspectors in the country. Further, he didn't offer to bring them back until the invasion was imminent with a carrier group in the persian gulf.
While I think the entire war was a mistake, critical misunderstandings and outrigh
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:3, Informative)
"After the war began?" The inspections resumed [un.org] in 2003, under the threat of war. Sure,
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:3, Insightful)
Prior to 1998, there weren't any inspectors either. They were inteligence officers who were only interested in Saddams whereabouts for a surgical hit. That's WHY they got kicked out.
All your post has done is provide more evidence that when it comes down to it, partisan politics is more important than truth.
Not all of us hail from the USA, so your arg
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:3, Informative)
Never claimed to be. However, the majority of this conversation does not need a 5000 year perspective - a 3 year perspective is quite informative on it's own.
Of course, when there is an imminent threat the US, the military should be used to counteract that threat. However, even if the intelligence that Saddam had limited quantities of WMDs and Uranium yellow cake had been true (it wasn't) and the intelligence indicat
Linux is CLEAN! How about Windows. (Score:5, Interesting)
I encouraged them to try to get a similar audit of Windows from one of Microsoft's competitors before we include Windows in or bundle Windows with any of our future products.
Re:Linux is CLEAN! How about Windows. (Score:4, Interesting)
Still, I do think Windows is probably fairly clean.
I believe the BSD license is the way. If you talk about market forces, I think in general those that produce sweet-ass code under BSD licenses will be employed anyway. If you demand that the user open their own source, you're essentially asking, "If you use our code, and close it up, We'll squash you in court?" Good idea, but how do you prove it? You've already ensured that violaters are fairly difficult to find. The answer might be easy for us developers, but its way to complicated for the courts. You wanna push open source? Eat em from the inside, where they can use your code on their terms, but you can close off the 'innovation' valve at any point. Then you just point out that everybody knows how to build a fucking motor; we all just build motors with different purposes and strengths. The concept itself shouldn't be limited to one company; what we're trying to reward in a market is being able to deliver the solution in a way that people like. Competition *stems* from others being on relatively equal ground.
Re:Linux is CLEAN! How about Windows. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Linux is CLEAN! How about Windows. (Score:5, Interesting)
Does anybody else find it ironic that Microsoft that stole a kernel is touting that Linux isn't clean? The best part is that VMS and NT are so simular that even some of the terminology is the same. Maybe Darl took lessons from Microsoft, except SCO is claiming to be the victem.
Re:Linux is CLEAN! How about Windows. (Score:3, Informative)
We can be quite confident that NT does not contain VMS code: VMS was written mostly in VAX assembly language. NT was written, I believe, mostly in C. In any case, one thing we can be sure of is that it was NOT written in VAX assembly language.
I'm not even sure that NT can be said to contain ideas proprietary to VMS. Is there any evidence of that? The general nature of VMS has been public knowledge since the outset, and as far as I know there is nothing in VMS that requires unusual algorithms or coding t
Re:Linux is CLEAN! How about Windows. (Score:3, Informative)
HP never bought insurance from SCO. HP was going to, and then backed out at the last minute and announced indemnification for their customers.
Click here for story [computerworld.com]
HP probably felt that by paying the insurance instead of offering indemnification, they would be admitting guilt. They probably also have access to the source code and did their own audit of Linux and gave the green light.
Re:Linux is CLEAN! How about Windows. (Score:5, Funny)
Nice, that'll get you promoted.
Copy of the actual email. (Score:5, Informative)
Groklaw is intermittantly slow for me (database problems or whatever) and so I want to make sure this can be read by all.
I'd have to say this looks pretty damning, all said--it shows they found nothing and persisted anyway... Lovely.
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:5, Insightful)
Because that's the example that's been set at the top.
Too Little Too Late. (Score:5, Insightful)
Darl & his MSFT frineds DID get away with it.
My CEO's already convinced that Linux is dirty thanks to lots of Enderle reports that our microsoft rep among others seem to have refered him to.
My bet is that Darl's backers are already praising him and preparing a job for him in much the same way that Rick Belluzzo got rewarded for defeating SGI and HP.
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:4, Insightful)
Aside from that, the same crowd that lambasts Bush for 'allowing' the various scandals that erupted after he took office (including the three I mentioned) all really built up during the Clinton administration, something they seem to ignore. For that matter, Ebbers was driving companies into the ground back when Reagan was in office, so there's something to say about the government's (in)ability to keep track of this no matter who is in office. If they're going to blame the Bush administration for allowing deception to become acceptable because it's "the example that's been set at the top," they need to keep in mind that the example is not new to the current occupants of the White House.
I will admit that I was unclear in things. While my intentions were not trolling as I see them, such posts are often seen as trolls by much of the mainstream Slashdot crowd. But sometimes one man's intentions to provoke thought are another man's begging food for the troll.
I also commend you greatly for keeping an open mind, and being mature enough to be able to bring up a rational conversation after your initial response. I took no offense at it, primarily because my political thoughts are all over the place as demonstrated above, and as such I am routinely chased by conservatives and liberals wielding devices intended to induce mass conflagrations upon my person. I simply clarify my views, and hope that others understand me better later on. I am pleased to find another one. People such as you are rare. In fact, I think I shall add you as a friend -- my first one ever.
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:4, Interesting)
For a very long time, light trucks made up only a small segment of auto sales, and so were exempt because they were very often used commercially, and the benefits of commerce outweighed their smaller contribution to pollution. (Just about every Little League baseball team also seemed to have a team mom with a Suburban, and it was cool having all twelve kids pile in for the after-game pizza party.)
With the introduction of the traditional SUV (built on truck frames and so regulated as such), and the improved handling of trucks, they became far more popular, but political pressure has left them exempt from mileage requirements. They make up something near to half of all auto sales now, though, so they really should fall within the the same limits, at least in spirit, as autos. I understand that they will not catch up with the mileage of smaller cars for the most part, but some things can be done. I'm just not sure whether forcing the issue is the best idea.
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:3, Funny)
check the headline (Score:3, Funny)
Enjoy.....
Re:Reveals Darl McBride is Dirty (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Panel Says "Dead Wrong". Nice try at bullshit! (Score:3, Funny)
Interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
Gee, that sounds familiar. Seems to be a popular strategy in both business and *cough*cough*cough, government these days. Seriously though, this is a model that does appear to have some traction in a variety of fields in that if you press your case hard enough, and you convince enough of the right people, there is ground to be gained from simply sticking to your guns no matter what the reality happens to be. In my business, when you have a theory, you design an experiment to test it and collect data in an attempt to disprove that theory. When the data supports the theory, then you are golden. The way NOT to run business, science (or government) is to come up with a theory (or a desire) and then try to fit the evidence to support what you want. This of course is exactly what has happened with the SCO case, a couple of other business debacles in the news recently and interestingly, in the hunt for WMD in Iraq.
Re:Interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
this is a model that does appear to have some traction in a variety of fields in that if you press your case hard enough, and you convince enough of the right people, there is ground to be gained from simply sticking to your guns no matter what the reality happens to be
Important note: whenever a business/government tries this horrible tactic, they always fail. SCO's case is (has) colapsed, people all around the world view the US government as untrustworthy, etc. Sometimes it takes a while, but they always lose in the end.
News stories like this are just a nice reminder to everyone not to try tactics like this.
Lose? (Score:5, Insightful)
Face facts, SCO was a company whose stock price was floundering. Then Darl came along, ginned up a lawsuit, and multiplied it manyfold. He also got real revenue for the company from "sales" of "licenses" to Microsoft. He's already a multi-millionaire as a result. And despite how slashdot members feel, it's extremely unlikely he'll ever see any jail time.
Big name spammers are much the same. We may all hate them, but they've done very well by themselves. What's the worst that most have them have seen from their billions of dollars of theft of service? A slap on the wrist.
Same thing for Bush and Rove. Had either been remotely honorable or honest, Bush wouldn't have won reelection. Tell me, how is is losing?
Face facts: evil tactics are often winning strategies. Especially because our collective tolerance for corruption is so high (and going higher).
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't agree with that saying though. People who server in the military learn to take orders, perhaps really dumb orders. I don't want a society filled with those people; I am afraid we may have just that anyway.
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Interesting)
I served. I vote. And I don't agree with the parent because that's not how our government works. It sure as hell isn't the government I served to protect.
I have to wonder what branch of Service you came from. In the Air Force, my professional military education covered the concept of the
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Insightful)
I had a relative on the other hand was in the Marines, he didn't think highly of his superiors and called them a bunch of Communists and brainwashers. He served his 4 years all the way to the end (he guarded Nav
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't think it is healthy for the citizens of a free country to be beaten into submission as is done to people in basic training. Yes, we need people, good people, in our armed forces. We also need people in our society that have nothing to do with the military.
BTW, my outfit was the United States Military Academy at West Point. Class of 1993. And I'll be damned if I agree w
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Interesting)
I completely agree. Like I said earlier - the grandparent's post is wrong. Our system does not require one to serve to have a voice. And nor should it.
What I resent is the implication that Active Duty or former military personel lack the a
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Interesting (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, here you are talking tough, but you're too scared say who you are, you Anonymous Coward.
No Linux copyright violation, film at 11 (Score:4, Funny)
--
Toby
Re:No Linux copyright violation, film at 11 (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:No Linux copyright violation, film at 11 (Score:5, Interesting)
So we like consultants now? (Score:2, Insightful)
Also, while SCO's PR has talking about Linux (after IBM started implying it), this was ORIGINALLY a lawsuit about the derivative works from a company working with a Unix license that IBM bought. It was originally a breach of contract case, not a "Linux is a derivative work" case, it just got weird when they started flailing around.
Alex
Re:So we like consultants now? (Score:2)
Not for IBM's case, no. But it DEFINITELY has a pretty fricking serious impact on the slander/lanham act/whatever cases that RedHat and others will be starting up just as soon as the SCO-IBM case ends, I would expect.
What the consultant thinks isn't really important. What matters is what SCO knew at the time, as contributed to by this consultant.
derivative works from a company working with a U
Re:So we like consultants now? (Score:5, Informative)
what are you talking about? In their first filing,
http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20040704
their first cause of action was "Linux is full of UNIX, which belongs to us"
First cause of action - (Misappropriation of Trade Secrets--Utah Code Ann. 13-24-1 et seq.)
this is in reference to their placing UNIX code in linux... read the previous 103 statements to see what they are alleging.
in their second (and current) complaint, they keep it up!
http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20040207
3. A variant or clone of UNIX currently exists in the computer marketplace called "Linux." Linux is, in material part, based upon UNIX source code and methods.
4. The UNIX software distribution vendors, such as IBM, are contractually and legally prohibited from giving away or disclosing proprietary UNIX source code and methods for external business purposes, such as contributions to Linux, or from otherwise using UNIX for the benefit of others. This prohibition extends to derivative work products that are modifications of, or derivative works based on, UNIX System V source code or technology. IBM is violating this prohibition, en masse, as though no prohibition or proprietary restrictions exist at all with respect to the UNIX technology. As a result of IBM's wholesale disregard of its contractual and legal obligations to SCO, Linux 2.4.x and 2.6.x and the development Linux kernel, 2.5.x, are replete with protected technology. As such, the Linux 2.4.x and Linux 2.5.x and 2.6.x kernels are unauthorized derivatives of UNIX System V.
the are, have, and continue to claim that Linux is full of Unix, and that its a derivative because IBM put UNIX code in Linux.
That's the basics of their case, in a few words... they are hiding that contention behind their contracts with IBM. But how did they breach contract with SCO? - SCO alleges that they put UNIX in Linux.
If there is no illegal UNIX in Linux, then they've not breached any contracts, have they? To have breached contract, they would have had to have infringed on SCO's "UNIX copyrights"
Re:So we like consultants now? (Score:3, Interesting)
their first cause of action was "Linux is full of UNIX, which belongs to us"
(Regardless of the validity of their claims) Their allegation is that developers who had access to the confidential unix code were tainted and had no business working on very similiar pieces of linux.
Summary (Score:2, Interesting)
Hardly unlikely. (Score:5, Funny)
The nail in the coffin? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The nail in the coffin? (Score:5, Funny)
Christ Almighty! You mean we're letting them breed???? Have we learned nothing from the Black Death?
Yet more proof (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe now the case will be dismissed...
Re:Yet more proof (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yet more proof (Score:4, Funny)
Woah. Meta.
Making Sure The Guilty Pay Their Price (Score:5, Interesting)
No one should be able to participate in a sickeningly slezy shakedown like SCO tried to pull off and just wash their hands and pretend it never happended.
Of course not everyone associated with SCO is guilty of sleaze but keeping an eye out for key SCO people and either making sure they don't get hired or at least making it known to companies that would think of hiring the scumbags it isn't worth the bad press/karma.
Re:Making Sure The Guilty Pay Their Price (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Making Sure The Guilty Pay Their Price (Score:4, Informative)
Chairman
Ralph J. Yarro III
President, CEO, and Director
Darl C. McBride
CFO
Bert Young
Re:Making Sure The Guilty Pay Their Price (Score:4, Interesting)
- Microsoft
- Sun Microsystems
Cheers
Stor
Re:Making Sure The Guilty Pay Their Price (Score:5, Insightful)
This country needs to be cleaned out. Its starting. We got Ebbers on the finacial front, along with Arther Anderson. Soon we'll have Rove or someone from the WH on the political front. Now McBride on the tech front and his lawyers on the legal front.
So much corruption, but at least some opportunities are opening and making an example out of these people goes a long way towards justice and keeping others from doing the same.
Re:Making Sure The Guilty Pay Their Price (Score:3, Interesting)
Shareholder SUits (Score:5, Interesting)
What would happen to UnixWare and OpenServer? (Score:4, Interesting)
Indeed, if IBM did happen to acquire the rights to UnixWare and OpenServer via such means, then it would be very helpful to the community if they released the source code to both products. Of course, Novell's involvement may sticky things up a bit. But it would be great to have the systems available to the community.
Being a former sysadmin of SCO systems, I remember them fondly from the late 1980s and early 1990s. With some community-based work, they could easily be made useful again today. On older systems they would fly, thus making obsolete hardware usable again.
Re:What would happen to UnixWare and OpenServer? (Score:2)
More likely sold and the money from the sale given to the creditors. Creditors often don't care about the actual assets of a bankrupt company, but how much they can recoup from the sale of said assets.
Re:What would happen to UnixWare and OpenServer? (Score:2)
Re:What would happen to UnixWare and OpenServer? (Score:5, Funny)
2004 It is revealed that SCO is getting money from Microsoft through indirect means.
2005 A memo reveals that SCO knew all along that there was no copyrighted code in Linux.
2006 Case against IBM dismissed, SCO files for bankruptcy, split up. Unix rights bought by OSC.
2007 OSC sues IBM for breach of contract.
2008 It is revealed that OSC is getting money from Microsoft through indirect means.
2009 A memo reveals that OSC knew all along that there was no copyrighted code in Linux.
2010 Case against IBM dismissed, OSC files for bankruptcy, split up. Unix rights bought COS.
2011 COS sues IBM for breach of contract.
2012 It is revealed that COS is getting money from Microsoft through indirect means.
2013 A memo reveals that COS knew all along that there was no copyrighted code in Linux.
2014 Case against IBM dismissed, COS files for bankruptcy, split up. Unix rights bought by CSO.
Re:What would happen to UnixWare and OpenServer? (Score:5, Funny)
The Church of Scientology buys the rights to Unix. Ok, Stop the ride, where do I get off.
Don't get your hopes up... (Score:5, Insightful)
...relax and enjoy (Score:5, Funny)
Each day brings a new humilation to Darl McBride. Treasure this moment, because all too soon the case will be thrown out of court and then you won't have Darl to kick around any more.
So just relax and enoy, and don't be so focused on the final result. (No, your girlfriend didn't pay me to say that.)
advice to McBride.... (Score:5, Funny)
Tune in the news and pay attention to the video images of Bernie Edwards going to jail for 25 years. Now, go down to your local "adult" store and buy some lube in preparation for your own date with justice.
Re:advice to McBride.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:advice to McBride.... (Score:2)
Damn my fingers. Actually, damn my subliminal mind for pulling out the last name of my least favorite VP candidate from 2004.
Maybe Edwards could represent Ebbers in any future appeal...
There is no parole in federal prison (Score:4, Informative)
The upside is that federal prisons tend to be a bit nicer than state prisons.
Re:advice to McBride.... (Score:4, Insightful)
McBride is free and clear (Score:5, Insightful)
Ebbers (not Edwards) is one of a very rare elite -- wealthy white-collar criminals who are getting the book thrown at them. There are very few prosecutions in this arena. It's expensive, you are facing hordes of lawyers, and people wonder why you aren't hauling off murderers.
Ebbers is getting screwed specifically because he was involved in one of a handlful of financial cases that were so egregious that they caught the attention of the popular media, and hence the mind of the public. If you are a politician, and you represent a public outraged over some criminal, you do what you can to have the book thrown at that criminal.
Darl did not piss off anyone other than the statistically insignificant (if vastly disproportionate in influence in the tech world) members of the open source community. My mother has no idea that Darl exists, and there isn't really any way to pack his crimes into a one-sentence damning sound byte that appeals to the public(Ebbers had to deal with pictures of blue collar workers and the sentence "they lost their retirement money"). Nothing scares the shit out of a voting baby boomer like the concept of someone losing their retirement money.
Darl, IIRC, came off of the whole thing rather well, with no liability and plenty of money. And SCO was in the shitter already, so his rep is more of just a CEO willing to try some long shots when not much remains than the guy who killed SCO. He *did* manage the media rather poorly, getting personally involved instead of having a more competent spokesman involved, but that's really the only black mark against him.
SCO lies.... (Score:5, Funny)
Operating systems are Black Magic, Toqueville says (Score:5, Interesting)
No matter what I said, he was not able to grasp it. He just could not believe that one guy could write an OS kernel. But he really didn't understand what a kernel is either, so that was a bit of a barrier also. The fact that various CS professors had come out and said the same thing didn't faze him.
Darl McBride is just another non-technical businessman who thinks that operating systems are black magic that only huge teams of people can write. His reasoning leads him to believe that if "one guy" did it, but one guy really couldn't have done it, then he must have copied it. Pure, simple, logical, but unsound in that it completely doesn't account for just how simple or complex a kernel is.
Just like how some people can't possibly understand how a piston engine works, some people aren't cut out to grok OS kernels. Darl just doesn't have the brains for it. (Plus, his primary motivation is to make money, not actually UNDERSTAND anything.)
Re:Operating systems are Black Magic, Toqueville s (Score:5, Insightful)
Amen.
In this case, the 'simple' bit is a simple idea - only teams of programmers can make a kernel. It doesn't matter that it's incorrect, just that it's what the PHB believes. It is their dogma. All evidence presented to them is filtered through this belief, or just plain ignored.
Here endeth the lesson.
Operating systems are Black Magic, Torquemada says (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Operating systems are Black Magic, Toqueville s (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem was, you didn't listen to him. If you did, you would have heard him clearly say;
Rhetorical question? Practical answer (Score:3, Insightful)
Because Darl is a lying cunt, that's why.
so what would be good punishment for Darl? (Score:4, Funny)
Hmmmm... (Score:5, Funny)
I guess (Score:3, Interesting)
If SCO had been serious about investigating the Linux kernel, they would have had needed to hire a sizable team to perform the investigation. There is no evidence they ever did so - rather, they hir
SCO doesn't use SCO products within SCO? (Score:4, Interesting)
X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.6 [en] (Win98; I).
That is very interesting, indeed. Why would SCO be using Windows 98 machines internally? Indeed, one would expect them to be using SCO UnixWare.
In response to the yawns... (Score:3, Insightful)
There are very few universally accepted truths in this world, and it is nice to be reminded of them once in a while.
Insurance (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, I got a friend named Guido who sells "insurance policies" too... his catch phrase is "Nice place you've got here... be a shame if anything should happen to it!"
Am I misreading the law, or does this actually qualify as extortion?
Wait!!!!! (Score:3, Funny)
Just because you have no case (Score:3, Insightful)
Especially if you have lots of lawyers and elitists who care nothing for truth and honor.
Especially especially if you have msft's $$$ (Score:4, Insightful)
behind you.
Scox would not have been able to pull off the scam without lots of help from msft and sunw.
Media vs. Reality (Score:3, Insightful)
I think this happened to SCO on a grand scale - and they fed upon the media of the time and the desire for ANYTHING to stop Linux coming from MS and it's closest allies. They even got money from them. They got fame from the reporters like O'Gara. Their stock would go up when they reported more.
Fortunately, just because a newspaper prints it, it does not always mean it's true.
Sad sad Caldera (Score:4, Interesting)
It's a bummer, my real first heavy use of Linux was with Caldera. I remember visiting threir booth at a Comdex in the late 90's
What seems weird to me is how such a small startup could buy UNIX, you think someone ike IBM would pay 10 times as much to get a hold of it and lock it away.
In the end I think McBride should be brought up on criminal charges as this was totally a stunt to juck up stock prices.
I predict that after this si all over the rights to UNIX will be bought to someone and then releae free into the world, just like those groups that get together and buy up empty land just to keep it empty. I do not know how long it will take but I will refer back to this when it does.
I know what threw them... (Score:5, Funny)
#include
and...
{
and...
}
as for all the other lines that *don't* match - aha! That's the obfuscated part!
Don't know (Score:2)
Don't know. Was there surprise on Gates' and Ballmer's faces?
Re:Jail time (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Perhaps more interesting than the email itself. (Score:5, Interesting)
Because it was printed off and scanned into a computer (and no, it is not fake).
The document was submitted in printed form as part of the discovery process. The clerk of the court then took the document and scanned it in as a PDF, allowing an image of the original (as opposed to an OCR'ed copy) to be stored electronically. This version of the document is the one released to the public on demand. Doing it this way is
than trying to photocopy originals of all of these documents.
Re:Perhaps more interesting than the email itself. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:You Linux people just wait.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Truth will have no matter when the sued companies cave or go bust.
Yeah, sure. IBM is gonna go bust. Right.
BSD = legal security (Score:4, Informative)
BSD. Duh.
Not just the lawsuit (Score:5, Insightful)
- it appears that scox's showing of the code to select journalists, who signed an NDA, was a stunt specifically designed to decieve the public. No wonder there was an NDA.
- it appears that scox's showing the code in Las Vegas ScoForum, was not just a mistake, it appears to be another possible deception.
- apparently scox filed the law suit in bad faith, right from the begining.
- scox letters to 1500 businesses, demanding payment for the scox code in linux, appears to be an attempt at outright extortion.
- scox execs enriching themselves by selling scox in the high teens appears a blantant stock scam.
- mcbrides numerous public statements about millions of lines of code, appears to be somewhat less than truthful.