Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
HP Caldera Linux Business

HP Clarifies Indemnification Offer For Linux Users 275

After HP extended an offer of indemnification to users who purchase Linux through HP, SCO issued a strange press release: in it, SCO claims that HP's action actually supports SCO's claims that "issues exist" with the Linux kernel's legal status. In an article at NewsForge (like Slashdot, part of OSDN), HP's Martin Fink roundly denies SCO's backhanded interpretation; a followup story quotes Bruce Perens, Linus Torvalds and ESR on the HP offer. Linus: "Indemnification is wonderful. It might be a cynical marketing tactic, but if people are asking for it, why not?" The first article also points out the limited nature of HP's indemnification claims, which are definitely not blanket protection -- installing patches not approved by HP could well make them wash their hands of your machine.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

HP Clarifies Indemnification Offer For Linux Users

Comments Filter:
  • by Trigun ( 685027 ) <evil AT evilempire DOT ath DOT cx> on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:21PM (#7046709)
    Didn't see that one coming, did we?
    • Gift horse (Score:5, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:29PM (#7046838)
      You gotta appreciate the turnaround time though. I wish my mechanic was this quick..
      • My guess is they had the press release written with a blank where the company name would go, and were just waiting for someone to make the offer.
    • by deuce868 ( 673251 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:32PM (#7046884) Homepage
      You have to give them credit, they can spin anything and get it out quickly. It's like a drive-thru PR dept.
    • Not only that... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by siskbc ( 598067 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:33PM (#7046896) Homepage
      Didn't see that one coming, did we?

      ...it doesn't even make sense. Why would HP indemnify if they think they're going to have to back up thousands of users with huge damages? There's no way HP does this if the lawsuit has ANY merit.

      I know I'm preaching to the converted, but SCO's take isn't even logical within their own little world.

      • Re:Not only that... (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward
        its the chewbacca defense all over again :)
        • So, who do you find more attractive, mel gibson or tom cruise

          Objection, what has this to do with the trial?

          Nothing your honour, I am just so sure of the defendants guilt that i can waste time rating the superhunks

          *awed murmers*
      • by Anonymous Coward
        You are making a big assumption that HP has thousands of Linux customers. Maybe they have only a few and this wouldn't cost them much money, but it's great publicity. It also puts lots of pressure on IBM and Dell to do something similar. If IBM or Dell had to cover all their Linux customers it would cost them MUCH more then HP.
        • No way (Score:3, Insightful)

          by siskbc ( 598067 )
          You are making a big assumption that HP has thousands of Linux customers. Maybe they have only a few and this wouldn't cost them much money, but it's great publicity.

          The publicity is only worth anything to the linux crowd, which is worthless if they're only selling a few units. For this to mean anything, they'd have to actually sell units, and at that point, there's a constant ratio of Lawsuit damages/unit sold, and there's no way they come out on top if that risk is real.

          It also puts lots of pressure

    • by burgburgburg ( 574866 ) <splisken06NO@SPAMemail.com> on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:40PM (#7046972)
      SCO representative Ima Loon pointed out that SCO had significantly more reports and comments then any other subject on /. except for Microsoft. "As we've previously shown with our big, big book of press clippings, the size and frequency of discussions concerning our company is the clearest indicator of the legitimacy of any legal claims that we are making." said Ima.
    • doublespeak (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Dalcius ( 587481 )
      :)

      On a serious note, didn't SCO banter about how if IBM/(insert other company here) was so sure that SCO had no case, why hadn't they offered indemnification?

      Even if I'm remembering correctly, it sure isn't surprising. I'm at work and don't have the time to research a link. Anyone care to find this?
      • in other news: Upon reading the SCO release, the DMA justified its stance in getting the Do Not Call registry overturned by stating "if we only lost $1 in sales from each customer on the list of 50 million, we would lose part of our competitive advantage."
        -or- "we consider it unfair to remove 50 million potential sales from each product we have to offer."

        mmmyeah.

      • by G3ckoG33k ( 647276 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @02:30PM (#7047541)
        "I'm at work and don't have the time to research a link. Anyone care to find this?"

        Yes, I care, but I don't have the time, as I am at home; reasons vary... ;)
    • And people wonder why IBM won't indemnify. All that will do is give SCO supportive public image. IBM has to project absolute confidence or the image of Linux will be damaged even more.
    • This reminds me of a story that I got from a Former Navy Seal (although I forget which one it was. I've got an acquaintance who was once a Navy Seal, and a book from a (different) former Navy Seal).. In any case.

      The SEAL squad was going in to set up an ambush when they were, instead, caught in an ambush (possibly just an opportunistic attack) by the VC. As they hid in the cover from the attack one of the members of the squad (known for his offbeat humor) yelled to his squad mates:

      Ha! We've got them righ

  • Nice (Score:3, Interesting)

    by brotherscrim ( 617899 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:21PM (#7046714) Journal
    So, just in case you misconstrued HP's offer, your close friend SCO is happy to put some words in HP's mouth.

    How thoughtful.
  • by inertia187 ( 156602 ) * on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:21PM (#7046716) Homepage Journal
    "But I lost my indemnification, you insensitive clod!" - Linus Torvalds
  • by Chmarr ( 18662 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:23PM (#7046756)
    Although HP's disclaimer to indemnify your machine if you make modifications to the Linux kernel yourself, I think HP had every right to do this.

    After all, what would stop you INTENTIONALLY adding in copyright SysV code to the kernel, and then asking HP to legally protect you from something that you should be responsible for yourself.

    This is, of course, pointed out in the NewsForge article, but I doubt that more than half of ./ readers will get that far into the article :)
    • by Anonymous Coward
      As pointed out on GrokLaw [groklaw.com] in the third article on this page [groklaw.com], indemnification is a red herring that SCO has been throwing out there for months, but it's a trap. Linux does not need indemnification. Its very openness is its own indemnification. So any company that falls into the SCO trap and indemnifies its users will just get the kind of reaction that HP got today: SCO using it to further its goals.

      Now granted there are plenty of PHBs in the world who are clueness enough to think they need indemnificati

    • Well, I read the article, and have read many other SCO-related articles.

      The major question I've yet to see answered regarding indemnification is this:

      Why would customers even need indemnification against SCO? What action could SCO bring against someone using (but NOT distributing) Linux, even supposing the alleged code infringement did happen in the first place?

      In other words, indemnification against what? As I understand it, if a Linux user isn't distributing software, they can't be violating anyone's c
      • Sure, copyright covers use, not just distribution. If you have an illegal/unauthorized copyrighted work, you could be sued. In reality, it's entirely implausible that users could be successfully sued for this. IF the copyright violation is revealed and an unintentional copyright violator continued to even just USE the offending code, the then a suit might succede.

        My impression is that generally ignorance is a good defense for copyright violations -- if you could plausibly believe that the works weren

  • Suprise (Score:5, Insightful)

    by CaptBubba ( 696284 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:23PM (#7046764)
    Did anyone really expect anything different from SCO? They'll spin it anyway they can. HP mearly looked at the situation, siad "hey, they can't legally do anything anyway" and issued what amounted to risk-free PR. Pretty pointless though. If I offer self-propelled airborn pork insurance, according the SCO's logic, pigs not only can fly, but do it all the time.
    • I've always wondered (Score:5, Interesting)

      by FuzzyDaddy ( 584528 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:36PM (#7046936) Journal
      I've always wondered about people like Darl McBride. Obviously, they are paid a great deal of money to put a certain spin on things, and they try very hard to do it. What I've never understood about the psychology of it is this: do they actually believe themselves? Do they start out knowing they are lying, then convince themselves about it along the way? Or does the notion of truth not even cross their minds, as they are busy trying to define the reality they want?
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • When you go to work as a sysadmin/programmer/telemarketer/burger flipper, do you think you're doing the "right" thing?

          This was probably a retorical question, but yes, I do. I'm a manager/Senior Engineer at a small technology company, and doing the "right" thing is something I take seriously. I try to make sure my managees are interested in what their doing, and to treat them with respect and dignity. Same with our customers and vendors.

          People go to work because they need to, but that shouldn't preclu

        • They're doing their job, because their happiness is tied up in their success/wealth, same as you and me. When you go to work as a sysadmin/programmer/telemarketer/burger flipper, do you think you're doing the "right" thing?

          I think the parent post was asking whether Darl McBride (et al) even knows the difference between truth and untruth. If he doesn't, then asking whether he believes he's doing "the right thing" loses its relevance.

      • He is a liar. He knows he is a liar. He does not care.
      • One of my kids is a court lawyer. While the case lasts, the client is as pure as Alaskan snow and is opposed by evil, lying scum. The moment the cash is in the bank the lying loser deserves everything he got. The better you are at thinking like this, the more you really believe it, the better you are as a lawyer. It was said of my father that he could always see at least three sides to any case, so he was hopeless at litigation.
      • "I've always wondered about people like Darl McBride."

        "What I've never understood about the psychology of it is this: do they actually believe themselves?"

        The latest psychology book: Darl McBride - The Man Who Mistook His Ass For A Hat
      • It is a common flaw in a corporation going down to start believing their own PR. As with most things like this it is not always clear what is first the chicken or the egg.

        In other words, you should have an alarm siren going off in your head the moment you see the bosses lose their healthy scepticism and paint a rosy picture of the bright future.
    • If I offer self-propelled airborn pork insurance

      The last time I tried to pick up a beautiful woman at a bar, she threw my pork tenderloin at my head. I never did get the bbq sauce stain out of my shirt. So sure, I'll buy some.
  • The article was posted at 9:52 am. Between 9 and 10 am SCO's stock was going UP. But since the release, look at at the graph (upper right hand corner)... Correlation? Interesting eh? I wonder how low it'll go between 2pm and 4pm :)
  • Must be another glitch in the matrix.
  • by moehoward ( 668736 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:24PM (#7046778)
    I welcome HPs actions. But I can't help but wait for the other shoe to drop. Paranoid? Skeptical? Who was the other licensee?

    Something's afoot. I really wish that this had all been cleared up by Labor Day. It was a nice Summmer story (Summer of the SCO). But now it's just tedious. SCO has time on their side. The longer they can hang the cloud over it all, the better for them. FUD is a mysterious and marvelous thing.
  • by s20451 ( 410424 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:25PM (#7046794) Journal
    All that is left of SCO are a couple of talking head executives and a computer that churns out press releases:

    for (i=1; i num_companies; i++) {

    if ( !indemnify(company[i]) ) {
    press_release(company[i], NO_INDEMNIFY);
    else {
    press_release(company[i], INDEMNIFY);
    }

    }

    OMG, I just released their source code! The horror ...
  • Errr... okay... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by gothicpoet ( 694573 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:25PM (#7046798) Homepage Journal
    SCO: No one will indemnify users against us because they know that we're right! There's no defense against our cliams!

    later...

    SCO: HP is indemnifying users against us because they know we're right!

    So, let me get this straight... According to SCO, HP is voluntarily indemnifying users because it knows that by doing so it will end up paying out big cash to SCO to make reparations for using SCO's code? Sure. Makes sense to me. (Can you spot the sarcasm?)

    That's some really SCO'ed up logic for you!

    • by jmv ( 93421 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @02:20PM (#7047432) Homepage
      That's some really SCO'ed up logic for you!

      This looks like the same logic as: "We haven't found any WMD's in Iraq. This proves that they are hiding them".
    • There's no defense against our cliams!

      That's right, there is no defense against our clams! Go forth, unholy army of shellfish, and do our bidding!

      (sorry)

    • They present it as HP saying "We might have screwed up and have some SCO code in Linux. Of course, we don't want any of our customers to be held liable for our mistake, so we're willing to take the beating for this, indemnifying our users."

      In fact, if that had been the case, it might not be such a bad business move. I imagine the next thing that would have happened if any HP customers were to be held liable, would be to sue HP for the same amount or more for giving it to them, so HP might as well take over
  • by Henry V .009 ( 518000 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:26PM (#7046803) Journal
    From Kuro5hin.org: Schopenhauer's guide to dishonest argument. [kuro5hin.org] 38 methods to cheat your way into winning an argument.

    The scary thing is that SCO is probably quite familiar with this kind of thing, and knows exactly what it's doing.
  • by mopslik ( 688435 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:26PM (#7046811)

    This gets more amusing each day. It's like watching a bratty child try to argue against something they have little knowledge about.

    HP: "We're offering indemnity to our customers who..."
    SCO: "Ha! So you admit that your customers need indemnity!"
    HP: "No, we're saying that should a lawsuit arise..."
    SCO: "Haha! So you believe there should be lawsuits against Linux users!"
    HP: "No, listen. We're saying that your claims..."
    SCO: "HAHA! So you agree with our claims!"
    HP: "Alright, listen you little..."
    SCO: *fingers in ears* "I can't heeeeear you!"

    • Damn. I was thinking the exact same thing. They're acting exactly like a two year old. Lots of noise and whining; zero reason behind it.

      Somebody spank them already and put them out of our misery.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:27PM (#7046820)
    I currently work at HP in the Enterprise Integration Department and this latest development does not surprise me.

    The take that our department has is that Linux is well past the point where we have to worry about reliability. Our customers now ask for Linux support just in case they become disenchanted with Microsoft. We have about 350+ technicians who travel the US and Canada providing their expertise for Linux deployments in large organizations. HP never had a close relationship with Microsoft like Compaq did, and since we're on the driver's seat our ties with Microsoft are longer important.

    Our next push is to deploy 64-bit server iron to most of the organizations while reducing the price of the 32-bit servers to half. What we intend to do is to convert the Win32 extension framework and recompile everything in gcc with the "-make64bit" flag. We have already re-compiled Word, Excel, Visio, Solitaire and Notepad. We're running into problems with Access and Microsoft Bob. The paperclip is at least twice as fast in Word 97.

    Which is nice.
  • So... (Score:5, Funny)

    by smackjer ( 697558 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:27PM (#7046822) Homepage
    So if I offer my personal security services to young college girls who don't want to be raped, does that imply that the girls who DON'T hire me WANT to be raped?
  • HP code review? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by mikeee ( 137160 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:28PM (#7046830)
    What's interesting is that HP obviously has access to SCO's Holy System V Magic Code (TM), and undoubtedly did their own comparisons before issuing this annoucement...
    • Re:HP code review? (Score:2, Insightful)

      by ekasteng ( 683332 )
      Quite certainly they did, and either they found nothing or they found something that in a court of law (where sometimes reality is suspended) they found a sticking point. Being a UNIX vendor themselves, "if" there were something questionable in there, by indemnifying users of HP Products running HP authorized software only, they are covering their asses. If it comes down to a court fight, they can always use a fallback of "We released our authorized software on our authorized machines." Something similar
  • by sammy baby ( 14909 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:28PM (#7046833) Journal

    From the article as written by Roblimo [newsforge.com]:

    Fink was asked what he thought about SCO's allegation... [that HP's actions reinforced SCO's position.] He called SCO's words, "An interesting spin," and carefully pointed out that HP has no official position on the validity of SCO's claims. "That's up to the courts to decide," he said.

    After passing through the Timothy filter: "HP's Martin Fink roundly denies SCO's backhanded interpretation."

    C'mon, man. At least make an effort.

    • No, Timothy got it right.

      If you run Martin Fink's statement through your CorporateSpeak Reverse Obfuscation Defenestrationator(tm), you'll find that he said more or less what Timothy said he did.

      - Robin

    • If he says that HP has no official position, that means that he denies SCO's interpretation that HP supports SCO's position, doesn't it?

      Also note that Fink said: "HP's thinking was the indemnification was better than countersuits and other possible measures." In other words, even thought about countersuing them. They wouldn't think about that as a serious possibility if they believed that SCO's claims are valid. They probably decided to indemnify their customers instead because it gives them a marketing ad

    • roblimo's article:

      Fink was asked what he thought about SCO's allegation... [that HP's actions reinforced SCO's position.] He called SCO's words, "An interesting spin," and carefully pointed out that HP has no official position on the validity of SCO's claims. "That's up to the courts to decide," he said.

      Timothy:

      HP's Martin Fink roundly denies SCO's backhanded interpretation.

      sammy baby:

      C'mon, man. At least make an effort.

      No, I think Timothy's interpretation is correct. There are two SCO asser

  • This sentence clearly reeks of the "make the statement fit my argument even when it contradicts itself" mentality of SCO. They say that because HP is indemnifying that this is true:

    "SCO claims HP is validating its claim that it owns at least some Linux code by doing this."

    Which follows the recent, If (insert company name here) doesn't indemnify you, it validates that there is SCO code in Linux. Since if there wasn't, you would indemnify SCO. But if you do indemnify, then you are proving the same.
  • by smackjer ( 697558 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:29PM (#7046850) Homepage
    Since I have car insurance, does that mean I am admitting that I am a bad driver? No, it just means that I need to protect my own ass from various idiots and greedy a-holes (ie, SCO).
    • I have car insurance because my state requires I have it, and I would not have it if not required. I have insurance on my truck because it is worth enough that I want it insured lest it is stolen, or I do crash (despite not having done so)

      The benifits of insurance for an $800 car to not make sense to me. For a $10,000 truck they make sense.

      Unfortunatly we have some liability laws that mean I'd likely have insurance anyway, but it is stupid, and the world would be better off if liability insurance was i

  • by Donald_Knuth_Esq. ( 710517 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:30PM (#7046852) Homepage Journal
    During our summer vacation this year, my wife and I amused ourselves by taking leisurely drives in Ohio and photographing every diamond-shaped highway sign that we saw along the roadsides. (Well, not every sign; only the distinct ones.) For provenance, I also stood at the base of each sign and measured its GPS coordinates.

    This turned out to be even more fun than a scavenger hunt, so we filled in some gaps when we returned to California, thereby proving my theorum of indemnification to users who purchase Linux through HP, which can be found in LaTeX format on my website.

    Sincerely,

    Donald E. Knuth, Esq.
  • by pb ( 1020 )
    Yes, HP does agree that there are some serious issues here. Namely, that SCO is trying to shake HP's customers down for cash that SCO didn't earn and doesn't deserve. It's nice to see HP taking a stand against that.
  • by WwWonka ( 545303 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:32PM (#7046882)
    [SCO] I'm going to stab you in the heart with this stick cause you may be cheating with my wife!

    [HP] Buy and wear our armor chestplate and if they really do stab you you'll be protected.

    [SCO] SEE!!! They have proven by you wearing their chestplate that you are banging my wife!
  • Come on guys.. this article kinda sux.. can't we get a better funnier SCO of the DAY ARTICLE?

    patiently waiting here for more SCO goodies..
  • by Performer Guy ( 69820 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:41PM (#7046995)
    Bruce needs to take another read of HPs offer, they do not merely offer to refund the purchase price. They say they will take up the case on your behalf.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:42PM (#7047001)
    Personally, I think what IBM, SuSE, and Red Hat are doing -- directly challenging SCO's claims -- is preferable.

    I actually agree with SCO that HP's sending the message "phear free software, pay us for the right to use GPL stuff safely".

    I hope companies are smart enough to stay away from this type of extortion.

    Indemnification == extra cost you're paying HP, so they can buy insurance to pay people like SCO. This is a bad thing.

  • by 3Suns ( 250606 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:44PM (#7047036) Homepage
    SCO Before: If companies really thought that we don't have a case, they would offer indemnification.

    SCO Now: Since HP is offering indemnification, that means they think we DO have a case.

    They don't have a SHRED of continuity in their statements, do they? The above statements are BOTH demonstrably stupid, and mutually exclusive. Methinks Darl needs to take a logic class.
  • What I hope we don't see more of is the way that Sun use the indemnity issue to scare customers.

    Sun have been suggesting that without indemnity SCO may come after you (which is nonsense). They have even gone as far as suggesting that SCO are right which is a truly disgusting way of coercing customers towards your product.

    - Brian
  • by braddock ( 78796 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:51PM (#7047110)
    Has Eric Raymond found incriminating similarities between Linux and the System V r4 source trees???

    1) August 20th: In his "Smoking Gun Fizzles" [catb.org], Raymond agressively attacks SCO's claims. He even reveals that he has access to proprietary System V R4 sources.

    2) Sept 3rd: Eric Raymond publishes "Comparator", a program for the comparison of things like large source trees, with the obvious intention of using it in the context of the SCO case. Eric says "I am grinning a grin that should frighten the thieves and liars at SCO out of a week's sleep." (see eweek [eweek.com])

    3) Sept 9th - Eric writes his response [catb.org] to Darl McBride's Open Letter. He defends himself against Darl's personal attacks and misrepresentations. However, it is notable that he makes no claims that he believes SCO has no evidence, and he ends with:

    "We will swiftly meet our responsibilities under law, either removing the allegedly infringing code or establishing that it entered Linux by routes which foreclose proprietary claims."

    His comments today refer very strictly to the indemnity issue.

    Surely Raymond has run comparator on the System V R4 source tree. What are the results? In his Smoking Gun Fizzles piece he had no hesitation to release a diff of Linux and his SVr4 sources, flouting it in the face of SCO lawyers. Yet now he is unwilling to compile an analysis of his Comparator results??

    Does Eric Raymond's gaurded comments since releasing Comparator indicate that the results were not favorable????

    braddock gaskill
    • by sloppydawg ( 660580 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @02:17PM (#7047397)
      Does Eric Raymond's gaurded comments since releasing Comparator indicate that the results were not favorable????

      I don't think so. MD5 conparisons are good for finding exact matches not partial matches as would be used in a derivative/obsucated claim so I'm not sure his program would find all of what SCO is claiming. I don't know the details of how his program works but knowing the problem space it would take some time to run a comparison against copied snippets within a file since it would involve splitting up the file many different ways and comparing all of these chunks agains chunks of another source tree split up and MD5'd in a similar fassion. So to confirm a negative requires a lot of caution and due diligence to avoid getting egg on the face.

      More importantly his program may find matches and each of those matches must then be researched to determine the source of the IP. Remember code can be indentical and still legal. So needing to do all the legal research required to validate each similarity as legal or not would take some time. I think any assumptions on what may or may not be found by Comparator is a bit premature given all the work needed to produce a meaningful conclusion. If Raymond simply threw out a number like "Comparator only found 2% similarity between code bases" he'd be just as guilty of FUD slinging as Mr. McBride claim that millions of lines of SYS V code match linux 2.4 kernal code.
      • by braddock ( 78796 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @03:57PM (#7048458)
        Comparator works by eliminating white-space and comparing overlapping three-line snippits.

        Remember, the (sco released) "Ancient Unix" sources are publically avilable, as well as all BSD/FreeBSD/NetBSD and all versions of Linux. And comparator is FAST...it only hashes each snippit once.

        It would not be hard for ESR to Comparator all publically available Unixes/Linuxes to his SVr4 tree and find any matches between Linux and his copy of SVr4 that don't appear in any of the other public unix variants.

        That should provide VERY meaningful results. It wouldn't be perfect, but it would tell a LOT.

        This shouldn't take ESR (or any guru out there who has access to proprietary Unix sources...) more than a day for the initial results.

        The areas of Linux code which match could be made public on a Wiki or other web site and the community can comment on them. The community can then play clean-up and research and try to find the overlapping code matches, adding any additional source trees.

        I can't honestly think of any reason ESR hasn't done this, except that he doesn't like the results he obtained. He did, after all, already go through the trouble of writing Comparator, which is most of the work. If I had access to proprietary unix code I'd do it myself.

        braddock gaskill
  • by Kiaser Zohsay ( 20134 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:52PM (#7047119)
    They're one of the perpetual Unix licensees from way back -- ESR.

    ...so HP has seen SCO's source. They *know* that there is no merit to SCO's claims. If there were a hint of a claim, you can bet that they wouldn't be leaving their asses uncovered with an indemnification offer.

  • by nedwidek ( 98930 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @01:52PM (#7047127)
    As much as I like newsforge, I have an issue with the fact that I have only seen the rebuff there. Going to the yahoo summary page for SCOX [yahoo.com] shows the story on HP's indemnity offer, SCO's stupid press release, and then a couple of newswire articles about the offer and SCO's pr with no rebuttal to the SCO position.

    HP needs to clarify its position in the main stream press. What impression are investors being left with?
  • SCO is dying (Score:3, Insightful)

    by gfilion ( 80497 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @02:27PM (#7047502) Homepage
    SCO will die much before any BSD, but that's just too easy to predict. It's seems to me that SCO is just making a big bluff in pretending that they "own" Linux. Their CEOs will run with the money and declare bankruptcy when the bluff is exposed.

    We should start a pool for which date SCO will declare bankruptcy, I bet on December 18th 2003.
  • Didn't Darl say that since IBM and RedHat WOULDN'T indemnify their customers it was proof that there were issues? Now its proof if they DO indemnify... make up your mind Darl.
  • agreement (Score:2, Insightful)

    by potpie ( 706881 )
    I think we can all agree that SCO's lawsuits are the wretched spasms of a dying corporation, grasping at life any way it can in its final moments. Perhaps this sounds too biased, but I must admit that I am extremely offended by SCO's actions. Although Linux is, in the long run, not as important as the Open Source concept, the principle of the thing must be defended. I will never give up my operating system, and neither should you.
  • SCO is right (Score:3, Informative)

    by penguin7of9 ( 697383 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @02:50PM (#7047770)
    HP's and Sun's indemnification of Linux users who have purchased Linux from them is bad for open source. SCO is right: it acknowledges that SCO's claims are plausible.

    Furthermore, it points the way by which companies could make open source software effectively proprietary: company A gets company B to make allegations and threaten lawsuits and then company A sells indemnifications. If company A plays their cards right, they come out looking OK, they don't run afoul of the GPL intellectual property provisions, yet they still can make money off the software when others can't as easily.

    To me, these "indemnifications" from Sun and HP really amount to an insult of open source developers and an attack on the integrity of open source. The sooner Sun and HP stop this practice, the better.
    • Re:SCO is right (Score:4, Insightful)

      by grwufwuf ( 632826 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @04:50PM (#7049145) Journal
      I'm no lawyer, nor do I play one on TV, but:
      Indemnification does not imply that what is being indemnified against is a valid claim. I'm indemnified through auto insurance against damages suffered or caused should I strike another car on the way home from work or if the other driver strikes me. That doesn't mean that it is OK to go play "bumber cars" on the interstate. HP is simply agreeing under certain circumstances to stand up for their commercial customers to any (unjustified in this case, IMBHO) claims made by SCO.

      It doesn't make SCO's case any better (or worse), no more than my potential claim that I should be allowed to drive right over the slow sunday drivers who won't get out of the fast lane this evening on the way home justifies me to do so.

  • I think I finally understand what SCO is up to. They want to be in show business. They're writing a script for an episode of The Powerpuff Girls. Darl will be played by MojoJojo.

    It all makes sense now.
  • HP's actions this morning reaffirm the fact that enterprise end users running Linux are exposed to legal risks.

    HP has realised that it can bag a few orders from customers who are worried about SCO's Linux claims by indemnifying them without having to worry about paying up 'cos SCO have proved nothing.

    Rather than deny the existence of substantial structural problems with Linux as many Open Source leaders have done, HP is acknowledging that issues exist and is attempting to be responsive to its customers'
  • Well, at least wall street doesn't feel that this helps SCO: This is the first time that I've seen a /. story on them and their stock price [yahoo.com] actually is down 10% for the day.
  • Doesn't the fact that HP offered to indemnify it's customers, without increasing the cost of it's products, indicate that HP doesn't beleive there are any issues? If HP honestly beleived there was even a snowball's chance in hell that it would ever have to reimburse a customer, it would be putting money away for that eventuallity.

    Now let's look at SCO's claims:
    1) "If IBM really feels there are no issues with Linux IP, they would offer to indemnify their customers."
    2) "The fact that HP has offered to indemn

  • Acts ... not words (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Zero__Kelvin ( 151819 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @04:45PM (#7049080) Homepage

    If it were up to me to speak for the entire population of the planet except SCO I would send Darl a letter to the following effect:

    Darl:

    Nobody in their right mind believes SCO has any claim whatever with regard to Intellectual Property rights against Linux or any other Open Software products. Your actions show that you do not believe so either. People who have legitimate legal claims file lawsuits. They have no need to posture, threaten, or otherwise attempt to influence potential defendants. Consider yourself to hereby be officially laughed at uncontrollably by an entire community and know that you have made a fool of yourself and drove the final nail in the coffin of SCO. Take solice in knowing that, aside from being the detriment to a few unfortunate employees of SCO, you are by and large a harmless joke. We have, however, grown tired of hearing the same joke over and over, and it is beginning to get very old. Therefore, we will no longer be paying any attention to you or responding to your ridiculous diatribe in any manner way, shape, or form. Say whatever you want. Nobody believes a word you say, and so nobody is listening.

    Sincerely,

    The Open Source community


    Thereafter, no articles would appear in Slashdot or any Open Source affiliated news source dealing with SCO in any way.
  • by GQuon ( 643387 ) on Wednesday September 24, 2003 @05:58PM (#7049797) Journal
    I'm going to file a patent on a new business model: Indemnfying and insuring people agaoinst completely impossible liablities and accidents.
    There are some inherent problems with this: What is impossible today might be possible somethime in the future. If I, for example, offer indemnification from all lawsuits brought by bisexual Smurfs, an alien race called "Smurfs" might be discovered in the future. One possible solution to this would be to just indemnify people from lawsuits brought by bisexual Smurfs in the Jurasic age, without the use of a time machine.
    The second problem is that most people won't see bisexual Smurfs as a possility. The solution to this is a massive FUD campaign about how bisexual Smurfs are terribly offended by breathing, drinking, eating, [insert something that people do every day]. This FUD will create the demand for indemnifications.
    All we need is a PayPal account, and a license to operate as an insurance agency.
    I'm going to let people utilize my patented business model for a 30% cut of gross income.

Almost anything derogatory you could say about today's software design would be accurate. -- K.E. Iverson

Working...