Linus Speaks Out, Calls SCO 'Cornered Rat' 598
dexterpexter writes "In an interview with Business Week, Linux founder and guardian Linus Torvalds had, in his usual brand of blunt humor, the following to say about SCO: 'They're a cornered rat, and quite frankly, I think they have rabies to boot. I'd rather not get too close to them,' and 'There are literally several levels of SCO being wrong. And even if we were to live in that alternate universe where SCO would be right, they'd still be wrong.'" In the same issue, there's also an interview with Darl McBride where he admits that the company was failing and the Linux-related lawsuits were a last-ditch effort to prevent bankruptcy.
The question is... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The question is... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The question is... (Score:5, Funny)
ttyl
farrell
Re:The question is... (Score:3, Funny)
while
do
wget -r -l10 http://www.sco.com -O
done
exit 0; # really unnecessary
Yeah, i know, there's grammar nazis, and spelling nazis...and now, code nazis.
Re:The question is... (Score:4, Insightful)
To maintain the maximum amount of portability, don't say /bin/bash. Say /bin/sh instead.
Also, don't assume true is located at /bin/true. On some systems in may be located in /usr/bin/true, or in some cases, somewhere else entirely. You'll probably be better off using ':'
Now we have:
#!/bin/shwhile
do
wget -r -l10 http://www.sco.com -O
done
exit 0; # really unnecessary
Re:The question is... (Score:5, Interesting)
Where's he pulling this from? Who in the Linux community said it was tainted? Any links to these statements?
Or is he just pulling this out of his ass?
Re:The question is... (Score:5, Funny)
Darl is the goatse guy?
Sorry goatse guy, just kidding.
not quite yet (Score:5, Funny)
No, but he sure is going to look like him after Novel, IBM and the others gang bang him with litigation.
Re:The question is... (Score:3, Funny)
I've gotten the DDoS bits working, but the rest of the code will have to wait for when I have more time. I'll have to get what I have out to all my servers on big, fat pipes, so the performance is better than behind my little E1 connection.
the AC
I had a lot more fun today with DuMaru.Y infected machines. fsckers!
Shameless Karma Grab (Score:5, Funny)
I just can't imagine what it must be like to be constantly having to explain the same damn thing over and over again.
Hang on, my first job here was helpdesk. Nevermind.
Re:Shameless Karma Grab (Score:5, Funny)
Not to mention constantly having to read the same damn thing over and over again.
But then, this is Slashdot!
I'm glad he was honest at least (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I'm glad he was honest at least (Score:5, Interesting)
A: Very carefully over the last quarter, instead of sending out mass invoices, we stepped very carefully and really had a lot of direct one-on-one meetings with 15 or so companies. In the process of doing that, we learned a lot. We listened. We talked. And we went back and forth. About 20% of those companies signed licenses with us.
That means 3 companies signed licenses. MS, and who else? That's not a stellar record.
And now, something from the article I didn't know before:
Q: Do you think that any copyright or patent-protected Unix code has actually found its way into Linux?
A: Unlikely. There are now a number of people who have access to both Unix sources and Linux code, and literally written automated tools to find similarities. They found something like 30 lines from [Silicon Graphics, SGI ] that were dubious and that had been removed already.
I hadn't known that there were people with access to Unix source that were working on this. I guess now we know that there isn't unix code in Linux, contributed by IBM or otherwise. We don't have to wait for SCO to 'produce' (read: falsify) evidence. As far as I'm concerned, case closed.
Re:I'm glad he was honest at least (Score:4, Interesting)
He said 'about'. MS signed one and Sun signed another. Apparently, 2/15ths is about 20%.
Seems like par for the course for Darl.
Raymond is doing it (Score:5, Informative)
Does he *really* talk like that? (Score:5, Funny)
Remember, cubicals are for closers:
"We're going to go out and shine this company up."
Quick Martha, order me a set of those fancy word talking tapes:
significant asset base...Unix intellectual property...wasn't being optimized.
As if switches came in decimal or octal:
it wasn't like a binary switch
Complete mastery for metaphors:
that's like beachfront property...that's still on the beach. An elephant on a table...
Looks like those mail order degrees are good for something after all.
Re:Does he *really* talk like that? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I'm glad he was honest at least (Score:3, Insightful)
Right, so, if we abolish IP, what's to prevent Microsoft from taking all sorts of open-source software, throwing it into Windows, and continuing to make money off Windows (sure, no more copyrights, but they'll find a way!)? We can redistribute Windows all we want, but we'll never see the code.
Sorry, but IP laws are the only thing that allows
Re:I'm glad he was honest at least (Score:3, Insightful)
What incentive do I have to do it, then? Frankly, knowing that people are benefitting from my code isn't enough to make me want to spend time writing it, unless I'm getting something else in return. Since I am a (employed) scientist, not a professional programmer
"...last ditch effort..." (Score:5, Insightful)
Surprised by Linus (Score:5, Insightful)
In the end, I think we'll all look back on this as the time where Linux went from sort of a fringe software in the minds of a lot of people to a mainstream player, where corporations learned they shouldn't mess with the OSS community and when the idea of open-source really started to make people ask "Why *am* I paying for this software?"
After all, that which doesn't kill us, etc. etc.
Re:Surprised by Linus (Score:5, Informative)
You read his response here [groklaw.net]
Re:Surprised by Linus (Score:5, Interesting)
This is a seed that has been germinating in the computing underbelly since Linus posted to comp.minix.announce.
The world's largest, most influential software manufacturers are duking it out over one of the next major milestones in computing.
It's a noble thing to ignore spit, sticks, and stones,, but nobler still to stand your ground and speak the truth when the time is right.
Ask *them* why they are paying for software. They just don't know that it's out there for free. It grows on the only tree they are aware of - CompUSA, BestBuy, etc.
Mention "no more" in connection to these items:
Ad ware
Spy ware
$450 word processors
Viruses (mostly)
and most importantly, you can look under the hood to see what and who is doing what with the computer in *YOUR* living room.
The times - they are a changin'..
Re:Surprised by Linus (Score:5, Insightful)
But is the recognition good or bad? (Score:5, Informative)
The problem with this is sometimes a few bad apples make the OSS community look like a bunch of crazy lunatics. Take the nice worm that is going around now... CNN already has an article [cnn.com] which pretty much blames the OSS community for the worm. In fact, a quote like this: "Virus experts suggested MyDoom's author was a fan of the Linux open source community..." can be damaging to getting Linux and OSS recognized in a good light.
It is too bad that this has to happen because PHBs do not read message boards or surf
Re:But is the recognition good or bad? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:But is the recognition good or bad? (Score:5, Funny)
CNN already has an article which pretty much blames the OSS community for the worm
Hmm.. Where is the source for this open source worm.
Re:But is the recognition good or bad? (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah, but those arguments aren't too hard to deflate if you have a half-dozen brain cells. After all, Timothy McVeigh blew up the Murrah building in Oklahoma city and he was a Christian, but I hardly think that makes the rest of the Christian community responible for his actions.
Re:But is the recognition good or bad? (Score:5, Insightful)
Face it: every group of people has people in them that will do something stupid. They are called extremists and they are the real threat, not any one group. RMS himself is extreme enough to be a threat to his own philosophy, but thankfully not extreme enough to write a stupid virus like that luser.
Re:But is the recognition good or bad? (Score:3, Insightful)
The guy who shot Reagan did it to impress Jodie Foster, yet somehow she didn't get the blame. In the unlikely event I get into a conversation about this email virus I'll have to point that out.
Refreshingly well put.. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Surprised by Linus (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Surprised by Linus (Score:5, Insightful)
The corporate community fights legal battles, appeals to the law for redress.
The OSS community fights PR battles, and appeals to the world, and indirectly, the customer base for redress.
Think about the OSS projects that have had code ripped off - they let the company know that there may be misuse of Open Source code. If they get an unfavorable response, the make an announcement, they add the company to their "blacklist", and suddenly a very large group of consumers has been activated against them.
The whole OSS movement operates within the Social Conscience. It's the fact that there exists a social conscience in this world that it works in the first place. It's the companies without a social conscience that cause problems. It's the companies with a social conscience that benefit from the OSS model.
On a side note, I'm just amazed by IBM's social conscience. It's plain how few companies there are that recognize opportunities to invest in community for the benefit of the company and the community.
Differences in dealing with the OSS world (Score:5, Insightful)
IBM doesn't necessarily (well, as a company) have a social conscience. IBM, however, is smart enough to realize that dealing with the OSS community can be phenomenally profitable -- that acting as if it *does* have one is marvelously beneficial. There are, very many differences in dealing with OSS versus traditional software. Here are some of my guesses as to what to do differently:
* A feeling of good will matters. Goodwill only matters normally as far as wining and dining a negotiator to try and get him to sell out his company a little. The OSS community is *extremely* sensitive to companies, treating them like people, whom are either friendly or unfriendly to OSS. A cohesive positive-sounding OSS company policy does a tremendous amount to keep a company in the good graces of the OSS folks. Press releases about how said company uses OSS, and thinks it's a good idea. Periodically releasing some code as OSS is a nice icing. (Take OpenAFS -- IBM only benefits from having that around, and it generates lots of good will.)
* Legal issues need to be minimized. Dealing with a company, you have lawyers who can hammer things out. The OSS community likes things pretty simple and clear.
* The OSS community doesn't demand masses of money. It's appreciated, like IBM's ongoing investment in open source development (which was probably done for strategic reasons, improving software that they needed worked on, as much as PR value), but a positive attitude toward OSS can count more than donating masses of money toward OSS.
* You don't need to worry about getting screwed over legally, in general. OSS folks are not generally out to shaft people over licenses. Legally, things are simple and nice.
* The OSS community can jump to conclusions quickly, and needs to be spoken to publically when misconceptions start going around. You have a lot of people with individual opinions. If a major Linux Ethernet player, like Donald Becker, writes a letter to, LKML saying that some chipset made by a company is lousy, said company needs an official, public response quickly. If there's a Slashdot story out about how your company is discontinuing production of Mindstorms (and the story is wrong), you should probably have a press release out within the day.
* The OSS community values specs. Take a page from Matrox, who decided what they could and couldn't release (couldn't release source to some on-card microcode, which had to be distributed in binary, but *could* release specs to much of the rest of the card.) Matrox's older G200-G450 series are still among the best supported of video cards under Linux and X.
* Maintain an official presence on relevant public forums, since so much OSS-related stuff takes place in the open. You might just have a mail filter that drops any email on major mailing lists containing your company name or product names into your PR department's inbox.
* Little of the OSS community accepts legal liability. This should be noted -- however, problems like illegal code copying do not seem to be prevalant, simply because of the high visibility of doing so. There are times when you may want indemnification of code you use -- the OSS community doesn't do that.
* Giving gifts can be inexpensive and valuable. In healthy Linux tradition, if someone runs out and implements a driver for your chipset, send 'em something nice in the mail. In rich Linux tradition, a case of beer seems to work well. It also costs you about a ten thousandth of what it would to implement the thing commercially, and ensures future good will. For driver writers, it's frequently a really, really good idea to just send along a few other products that you make (ones without drivers). This encourages people who have already demonstrated willingness to produce, wi
What about the open source community? (Score:5, Insightful)
While it may be humorous to some of the immature individuals on this site, a worm to DDoS SCO is a terrible blunder. It just strengthens SCO's arguments that the open source community is made up of troublemakers that need to be stopped.
What I think is great (Score:5, Insightful)
The linux community, meanwhile, has to be absolutely perfect and saintlike and have not a single user do anything that could be interpreted as unethical, or they get blasted as scary anarchists.
This is even more funny when you consider SCO is a singular organization which can enforce ethical standards, whereas "the linux community" is an open ended, uncontrollable group of people that basically means everyone who downloads a certain program.
We need a media that knows how to do more than reprint press releases.
it's not the open source community.... (Score:4)
I find it hard to believe that the "open source community" could be responsible for this DDOS against SCO.
My guess is that the SCO attack is a red herring -- what better way for the spammers to divert your attention from the fact that this virus enables remote access of infected computers than to get people all in a huff about the supposed "baddies" in the open source community.
Re:it's not the open source community.... (Score:3, Insightful)
It has nothing to do with the community. It has to do with one stupid putz with too much time on his hands and too few brains in his head. SCO has been busting its butt trying to stay in the news and here this moron goes and gives them a headline on a silver platter. Check their stock price [yahoo.com] over the last few days and see what effect the worm has had. SCO wouldn't risk launching the worm themselve
Re:What about the open source community? (Score:4, Insightful)
The world is quite used to their Windows machines getting infected. This time is exactly the same.
Who's SCO, anyway? Nobody anybody is interested in.
Don't worry about it; it's a WINDOWS virus, not a Linux virus, THAT'S the thing to point out.
Re:What about the open source community? (Score:5, Insightful)
The worm's real goal is to install invisible keystroke monitors in an attempt to gather passwords and bank account numbers of infected users. With all the noise coming from those infected PC's going to SCO, a few packets going elsewhere slip through very easily if you're not looking for it.
It's classic prestidigitation. Make a big show with one hand while the other does the dirty work.
Re:What about the open source community? (Score:3, Funny)
It's classic prestidigitation. Make a big show with one hand while the other does the dirty work.
I thought that was classic masturb... er... never mind.
Why part of the open source community? (Score:5, Funny)
I've got some crazy ideas that would make this worm even slower / more bloated / more error-prone, and would love to try and split the community with a fork. It would be so much better if it was recoded in obfuscated Perl on an XML base with full x86, Sparc, NeXT, and Amiga source compatibility. Besides, the current maintainer is a power hungry jerk. When I find out who he is and where his sources are hosted, his project will be obsolete.
Where did you hear that this worm is part of the open source community again?
Re:What about the open source community? (Score:3, Interesting)
Food for thought (if nothing more).
n/a
Re:What about the open source community? (Score:3, Insightful)
I might be wrong, but somehow I would be willing to bet their best programmers left LONG ago.
Re:What about the open source community? (Score:3, Insightful)
History is full of examples of people creating or allowing disasters to happen, then blaming some enemy for them.
When all is said and done (Score:5, Insightful)
Other people have said it and I agree with it... those attempted extortion, excuse me, licensing letters they sent out are should be pursued as federal mail fraud, and the SEC should take a long hard look at Mr. McBride and his lawyers, and how they're playing their own company's stock.
Re:When all is said and done (Score:5, Insightful)
Granted, if I get busted with a loose joint and I have another in my pocket I'd probably be busted with intent to sell. But lawyers don't seem to be comfortable making those quantum assumptions about fellow lawyers.
I think Linus... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I think Linus... (Score:3, Informative)
Editor Spin (Score:3, Insightful)
Way to make it sound very sordid. The company was falling towards bankruptcy, yes. It was a last ditch effort, yes. But.....oh.....
Love this quote.... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm sure everyone would like their money back from the tech-bust, but there's this little thing called reality. Unless you're Darl, of course.
Linus should be careful (Score:5, Funny)
Litigious Bastards! (Score:5, Interesting)
You may remember my attempt at starting a GoogleBombing where "litigious bastards" links to SCO as the first hit. (see this
Way to go! It's a good day for slashdot and the net as a whole.
Re:Litigious Bastards! (Score:3, Funny)
I wonder why?^)
Re:Litigious Bastards! (Score:3, Insightful)
Why?
SCO has shown that it is willing to use every tool at their disposal (bogus lawsuits, attacking public image to damage stock prices, etc). They are acting decidedly unethically.
Google has a very simple, easy way to impact SCO -- simply make it difficult for people using their service to access SCO.
As far as morality goes, SCO is pretty much in the wrong. I mean, if you were supposed to be in a bare-knuckle fight, and someone pulled out a sword and sta
Regardless (Score:3, Interesting)
Hopefully and finally SCOX will now start showing the true worth of the company. BTW, does anyone know what the top execs have cleared thus far from this scam? Was it worth it and is this going to be an unforunate part of doing business like SPAM?
This is especially funny (Score:4, Interesting)
This is absolutely hilarious when you consider that if you are one of the hypothetical companies that actually bought a license, SCO's response has been to threaten you with more litigation.
SCO is basically treating "UNIXWare Licensees" as "people we can stomp all over". Recently they sent a letter to all of their licensees stating that they have to prove they aren't using a version of linux that contains SCO code-- thus opening themselves up to a lawsuit if this can be shown to be wrong-- or lose their license.
Now, think about this-- SCO is saying publicly that if you buy a UNIXWare License, you get to use the linux infected with hypothetical SCO code without fear of lawsuit. Then when they buy one, you demand you stop using the linux infected with hypothetical SCO code or face a lawsuit!
WTF?
By the way, in this P.R. war... (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, and in the financial sector, which seems to cling to the stubborn belief that there might be something to their tactics and/or allegations.
It's quite likely that "truth will out", as they say, but if public opinion has any bearing on the outcome of this struggle IBM and Linus need to get better visibility in the more widely consumed (and moronic) news channels. I haven't seen anything but negativeish stuff there, but it's what gets out to the masses.
I love this quote... (Score:5, Insightful)
You gotta love that guy's way of making a point.
I don't (Score:4, Funny)
I don't care who is he is, that offends me as a programmer.
Actually, Linus is technically logical (Score:3, Informative)
No, it makes sense in logic, though it's an awful way to put it. He's just stating the final step before the introduction of an inverse proof rule in proving the SCO is wrong. "If you assume that SCO is right then one can still demonstrate that they are wrong."
Remember that if SCO is right about its claims (which include Linux not being legal to distribute and them being able to legally distribute Linux), then they themselves are in violation of many copyrights?
SCO not cornered rat, unless the rat can paint (Score:5, Interesting)
The BusinessWeek/Information Technology/Online Extra [businessweek.com] is pretty slick. As I read it, it appears that if McBribe is a cornered rat, then it's by his own devices.
Within 30 days he leaps into action. He then sandbags IBM after he sends out a Shareholder's letter
Then he get's all pissy, claming IBM goes ballistic when Big Blue flexes it's muscles.
The more I read about this the more and more it's clear to me that McBribe isn't leading this company into profitability, but a death march
Sounds to me like SCO has no one to blame but themselves here.
"Operating systems shouldn't be free" (Score:5, Interesting)
This guy actually believes in a blanket statement like that?
Re:"Operating systems shouldn't be free" (Score:5, Funny)
article > shouldn't be free in our camp, and you have people over there who
article > think operating systems should be free in IBM's camp.
comment > This guy actually believes in a blanket statement like that?
Yes, and he's probably right. Look, people who think that "operating systems shouldn't be free" are people who think that there should not be free operating systems. Ever. So, basically, What Darl is saying is that you have Microsoft (maybe), SCO, and a few outright loonies who got hit by cosmic rays during their econ class on SCO's side, and the entire rest of the world on IBM's side. Sounds about right to me.
Re:"Operating systems shouldn't be free" (Score:3, Insightful)
Darl's "blanket statement" is patently false. Just go ask IBM for your free copy and source code for MVS, OS/390, VM, OS/400, AIX, OS/2, (see note) etc. and you'll find out that IBM only believes in free/open source OSes for commodity hardware as a alternative to Microsoft. SCO had the bad luck to get caught in the crossfire and to have an idiot like Dar
Re:"Operating systems shouldn't be free" (Score:3, Interesting)
Read: Microsoft. IMHO that was a *direct* reference to them
Lies, damn lies (Score:5, Interesting)
In concept it was great, it wasn't until December when we came out and said here's where the problems are with Linux, and we have a program where you can deal with that.
Q: What was the reception to that?
A: It seemed everyone in the industry was either positive or neutral to that, except for IBM. IBM had a violent reaction to it, even though it wasn't targeted directly at them.
Everyone was either positive or neutral to it? What are you smoking today Darl? Give me an f'en break.
Re:Lies, damn lies (Score:5, Interesting)
The better quotes?
McBride: We spent two weeks talking to IBM about how we could work together, and that didn't get anywhere.
IBM (written statement): SCO did not give IBM any notice or warning of them prior to filing its lawsuit.
And...
Q: So your lawyers are talking to their [Google's] lawyers?
A: We've got a team that's engaged in going back and forth.
A Google spokesman says the search giant has not discussed with SCO its demands.
So, how, exactly, are they going back and forth? Is your team going to Google, asking to talk to someone, being told to shove off, and coming back? That's not "back and forth". That's humiliation.
And, finally...
We came out last summer and put out some code that the Linux community on one hand said, preposterous, that's [Berkeley software]. On the other hand, some people in the Linux community said, hold on, you may have some copyright issues there....
The code that I saw was under the BSD license and/or in the public domain. The ties back to SysV had been severed repeatedly. The SGI code was removed shortly after it was put in place and isn't in any current kernel or distro, and hasn't been for a long time. There is no copyright issue -- copyright law would only allow you to get a court order to cease infringement, which is exactly what happened.
So, exactly what is he talking about here? Or is it just all spin and the same BS we've been seeing for months now? SCO would be well advised to stick to the small bits of their case that they might have a chance with (namely contract breech with IBM)... but, of course, those don't have anywhere near the payoff they need.
20% success rate eh? (Score:4, Insightful)
: Have you had direct talks with customers yet?
A: Very carefully over the last quarter, instead of sending out mass invoices, we stepped very carefully and really had a lot of direct one-on-one meetings with 15 or so companies. In the process of doing that, we learned a lot. We listened. We talked. And we went back and forth. About 20% of those companies signed licenses with us.
Q: Can you name any of them?
A: We have taken the stance not to,
let's see 20% of 15, that's what.. ~2. so let's see, Microsoft and Sun perhaps?
Re:20% success rate eh? (Score:4, Insightful)
15 X
But you probably already knew that. That means SCO has enough cash to operate...let's see here...
$699 X 3 = $2,097 - Boies' legal bills = -A Bajillion Dollars
Plus or minus a few bucks for the valet parking guy at their favorite bistro.
SCO is done. IBM simply has to take a print out of this article, hand it to their trial judge, and watch Darl start crying...
IBM's "We don't talk to the media about litigation." response is much better than SCO's "Please, believe us, help, we're desperate, I'll say something stupid so you'll print the interview, just god, please, believe what we have to say..."
Wow, that was close! (Score:5, Funny)
Wow! They were down to their last 75 cents and they were able to come back this far!
That's quite an accomplishment indeed.
Why cornered? (Score:3, Funny)
"Levels of lies" (Score:5, Interesting)
They've dug such a web of lies and confusion, and I think that is actually helping them keep their garbage claims going for so long!
Google (Score:5, Insightful)
"Q: There has been a rumor in Silicon Valley that you're going to sue Google. A: Yeah, Google gets brought up a lot. They're high-profile, and they're one of the largest users of Linux. They have nearly 10,000 boxes, from what we can tell. They're a poster child. I think what's interesting about them is they have been able to develop a low-cost operating model because of Linux. If your model is going to hold up, you better make sure you don't have any infringing code in there. Otherwise, you need to adjust your financials based on how much you pay for your servers. "
The emphasis is mine. This is SCO's trump card for going after google. You see, any lawsuits based on IP would look VERY bad for potential investors when google wants to go public. I mean, licensing all of their 10k boxes would cost $6,990,000, but any amount looks bad to shareholders, especially since if SCO were to win (yeah yeah I know) they could basically say " we don't care how much you offer, we're not letting you use our IP" and google would be in a tight spot, and probably have to spend a LOT more than 7 mil to fix it.
Re:Google (Score:5, Informative)
That's why website owners get cease and desist letters instead of being dragged immediately into court. Someone unintentionally infringing who makes a timely and good faith effort to stop infringing will likely not be liable for any damages at all, and certainly cannot be compelled to purchase a license for a product they are not using.
In other words, if any code even exists, once SCO shows it and it's expunged from the kernel, there's no more infringement. And no reason to buy a license.
To put it even more bluntly, SCO's licensing theory is invented out of whole cloth, and completely without precedent.
In a way, SCO has already won (Score:3, Insightful)
It's sorta like arguing if a speech I wrote violates the Kings laws, rather than asking if the king should have the right to restrict peoples speech at all to begin with.
[Wow!] (Score:5, Funny)
[Several paragraphs of, more or less, praise for BW Online's work]
[This post edited by BW Online.]
Ryan Fenton
Excuse me? (Score:4, Funny)
I'm sorry, I just don't see that. Nowhere in that article did I see an admission that it was a last-ditch effort to prevent bankruptcy. I see him talking about "protecting UNIX IP rights"...I'm not even touching that part.
Let's let people read the article and draw their own conclusions instead of making some up to make Darl sound worse. He can do that all on his own.
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Poker game (Score:5, Interesting)
They can't have rabbies (Score:5, Funny)
Linus, you're overestimating them. Rabbies only occurs in warm-blooded animals.
"Intellectual Property" (Score:5, Informative)
Re:"Intellectual Property" (Score:5, Interesting)
"Linux doesn't have any SCO IP" would be quoted as "Linux doesn't have any [intellectual property belonging to SCO]".
"I couldn't automate a grep through my mail store" would be quoted as "I couldn't automate a [search through my saved email messages]".
steveha
Re:"Intellectual Property" (Score:4, Funny)
"You're breakin' the law over there, assholes!" *click*
Preposterous, that's BSD (Score:3, Informative)
We came out last summer and put out some code that the Linux community on one hand said, preposterous, that's [Berkeley software]. On the other hand, some people in the Linux community said, hold on, you may have some copyright issues there.... There are 2.5 million servers out there today that have this code in it. When are Linux customers going to clean that stuff up? So that's one issue, Linux is tainted, even by their own admission.
Amazing. "some people in the Linux community said... you may have some copyright issues there..." Um, who, exactly, said this? And he leaps from that to "Linux is tainted, even by their own admission."
"When are Linux customers going to clean that stuff up?" Well, given that this code had already been removed from the Linux 2.5 kernel before SCO showed it in obfuscated form, and given that even the 2.4 kernels have had it removed now too, I'd say it has already been cleaned up.
"There are 2.5 million servers out there today that have this code in it." This code only ever existed in Itanium kernels; are there even 2.5 million Linux Itanium servers in the world? Of the Linux Itanium servers, how many are still running an old kernel with this code in it? (Not many, I should think, since there are some security holes that have been fixed in newer kernels.)
It's like studying a fractal. The more you look at the details of what he's saying, the more wrong stuff you find.
steveha
site crashes mozilla (Score:3, Funny)
Microsoft angle (Score:5, Informative)
THE MICROSOFT FACTOR
But who stands to gain the most from an SCO win? Microsoft. Linux is the primary force standing between Microsoft and domination of the computer world. The software giant is happily fanning customers' fears with an anti-Linux campaign while pumping money into SCO. Even though neither company has disclosed a dollar figure, sources close to SCO say Microsoft has spent more than $12 million on SCO licenses. Microsoft says it needs the licenses because it sells technology that allows its customers to run applications that were designed for Unix, the operating system Linux was modeled on. Critics believe it is just helping SCO finance its lawsuit.
Scary History of SCO / Linux (Score:4, Informative)
Gerald Holmes, yes that Gerald Holmes [freeyellow.com], has provided yet another lucid and in depth analysis of the SCO situation at this excellent site [freeyellow.com].
I highly recommend it.
Me too. I laughed and I cried.
M$ connection (Score:4, Interesting)
3 licensees (Score:3, Interesting)
A: Very carefully over the last quarter, instead of sending out mass invoices, we stepped very carefully and really had a lot of direct one-on-one meetings with 15 or so companies. In the process of doing that, we learned a lot. We listened. We talked. And we went back and forth. About 20% of those companies signed licenses with us."
20% of 15 = 3.0
Re:SCO (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:SCO (Score:5, Insightful)
more interesting is what will happen to the companies that paid the licensing fees. if they decide they've been ripped off (well, that's only a matter of time) they're going to have a bejesus of a time recouping their costs. there will definitely be civil action. that's a given. but will there be criminal action to follow suit?
you can't sell the brooklyn bridge to tourists, after all. they put you in jail for that.
Tax write off (Score:5, Interesting)
Besides, right now lawyers are running the show over at SCO. You really think they're gonna let the licensees get paid before they do? Once that company folds, the lawyers get paid first, probably creditors next and then anyone who threatens to sue last.
How many licenses? (Score:5, Funny)
Q: Have you had direct talks with customers yet?
A: Very carefully over the last quarter, instead of sending out mass invoices, we stepped very carefully and really had a lot of direct one-on-one meetings with 15 or so companies. In the process of doing that, we learned a lot. We listened. We talked. And we went back and forth. About 20% of those companies signed licenses with us.
15 companies x 20% = 3
So, ABOUT 3 companies have signed the licenses. I'm inspired. I'm going to throw money at SCO and drive up their stock even further.
SCOX (Score:4, Funny)
I'm going to throw money at SCO and drive up their stock even further.
Please let me know when you do, so I can short it afterwards.
Re:Darl has been infringed (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Stop saying "literally!" (Score:4, Informative)
**Usage Note: For more than a hundred years, critics have remarked on the incoherency of using literally in a way that suggests the exact opposite of its primary sense of "in a manner that accords with the literal sense of the words." In 1926, for example, H.W. Fowler cited the example "The 300,000 Unionists... will be literally thrown to the wolves." The practice does not stem from a change in the meaning of literally itselfif it did, the word would long since have come to mean "virtually" or "figuratively"but from a natural tendency to use the word as a general intensive, as in They had literally no help from the government on the project, where no contrast with the figurative sense of the words is intended.**
anyways I didn't read the Linus's comment.. but 'literally','kirjaimellisesti' in finnish is almost never used in the sense of meaning that you got something in written(well, maybe sometimes, but mostly it's used that something is almost exactly as written), if you had something on paper you would say "minulla on mustaa valkoisella asiasta"(I got black on white about the issue", meaning that you literally have something on paper to back your opinion, which is what darl is saying).
well that was a ramble and didn't mean much beyond that 'literally' is sometimes used like you wouldn't except if it just meant some writing on paper(actually come to think of it 'literally' is sometimes used in english when you would use 'in practice' in finnish).
Now, if you have issues about the incosistency of the english language I'd suggest that you move into some country that has their own language and is sufficiently small that you actually even can say which way of saying something is 'right'. in finland for example there is an instituion that literally has the final say-so in which way of saying something is the officially approved way and should be teached in schools, english has spread too wide for such institution to be possible for it. also modern english is actually a quite young language.
Re:no, it is so wrong. (Score:4, Insightful)
Since the who fiaSCO is about the kernel, I'd say that leaving out the GNU is quite appropriate. And Linus did do the first work on it.
Re:no, it is so wrong. (Score:3)
1) The GNU organisation started a kernel, and loads of programs, the programs were good
2) Linus made (and finished) a kernel, and was convinced to GPL it (although he doesn't care for licences himself)
3) The GNU moved their apps to linux, just until their own kernel is finished
So some questions:
1) Is GNU's kernel finished yet?
2) Will SCO be suing *them*?
ObDr. Evil (Score:3, Funny)