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Re: Software patents and... Re: [LUG] Economist on SCO and IBM and Linux



> Looks like premium content... probably cheaper to break into my lurking
> WHSmiths voucher if it is worth a read?!

It just opened for me - i think there may be a weirdness in their content 
management system.

I propose to buy a paper copy this week though, which is unusual for me so 
they have made one sale as a result.

Of monkeys and penguins
Aug 28th 2003
From The Economist print edition


Darl McBride, capitalist crusader against the commie horde of Linux users

SCO, for anyone who has never heard of the company, is pronounced ?skoh?, 
as in Scopes. Indeed ?the SCO case? of 2003 sounds increasingly like the 
famous Scopes Monkey Trial of 1925, which pitted religious fundamentalists 
against progressives wanting to teach Darwin alongside the Bible in 
American classrooms. The SCO case plays the same role in a culture war now 
consuming the software industry. On one side are the equivalents of the 
fundamentalists?buttoned-down types clinging to proprietary and closed 
computer systems. Facing them are today's evolutionists?the pony-tailed 
set championing collaboration and openness in the form of Linux, an 
operating system that anybody can download and customise for nothing. The 
1925 trial had a monkey as its symbol; the 2003 case has the Linux 
trademark, a cute penguin.

Leading the fundamentalists is Darl McBride, who was hired as SCO's chief 
executive a year ago. SCO was called Caldera at the time, and was in a 
sorry state. It distributed Linux, but was bad at it and made losses. 
Caldera had, however, recently bought the rights to UNIX, an old operating 
system, from a Californian firm, Santa Cruz Operations, which in turn had 
bought them from Novell, which had got them from AT&T. Mr McBride, like 
several directors at Caldera, has worked for Novell and is a devout 
Mormon. He seemed a natural choice to rescue the firm.


Other contents

IBM and Linux 
Jun 19th 2003
Jonathan Schwartz and free software 
May 22nd 2003


Computer technology


Intellectual property


SUSE and Red Hat comment on SCO's legal

actions.




Immediately, he says, he started thinking about
?how to monetise our assets??ie, Caldera's rights to UNIX. Roughly as apes 
and humans allegedly have common ancestors, several operating systems can 
trace their lineage to UNIX, including Linux. Sure enough, says Mr 
McBride, he soon found ?massive and widespread violations? of Caldera's 
intellectual property in the Linux code. At a more general level (and 
surprisingly for a Linux distributor), he found the entire free- software 
trend ?communistic?, he says: ?We don't get the whole free-lunch thing.?

So Mr McBride prepared for war. He changed Caldera's name to SCO (the 
initials of the less obscure Santa Cruz Operations), and hired David 
Boies, a lawyer who had gained an international reputation by representing 
the American government against Microsoft, and then Al Gore in the 
hanging-chads episode in Florida in 2000. Then he opened fire. In March, 
he sued IBM, a huge backer of Linux, for damages of $1 billion, later 
upping this to $3 billion. In June, he opened a new front by threatening 
1,500 companies that use Linux. In July, he said that licence fees would 
be $699 per server.

At first, industry gossip was that Mr McBride's strategy was simply to 
manoeuvre IBM into ending SCO's misery by buying the firm. There were 
precedents. Before Mr McBride's time, Caldera's owners once profitably 
sued Microsoft. And in 1998, Mr McBride himself won what he calls a 
?seven-figure settlement? by suing his employer at the time, IKON Office 
Solutions (who, he says, had breached contract by urging him to move to an 
office outside Utah). The Linux battle, however, ?is not about suing but 
about doing the right thing,? Mr McBride insists.

Be that as it may, IBM shows absolutely no inclination to buy SCO. 
Instead, in August, IBM sued right back, charging that SCO has violated 
the open-source licence that governs Linux (which SCO, after all, has been 
distributing) and infringed four of IBM's own UNIX patents. Meanwhile, SCO 
has become widely hated. In a cruel irony, the boss of Novell, Mr 
McBride's alma mater, wrote a letter (?Dear Darl?) arguing that SCO is 
confused about what it owns and challenging SCO to end the ?vagueness? of 
its accusations. SUSE, the biggest European distributor of Linux, has 
taken SCO to court in Germany. In August, Red Hat, the world's biggest 
Linux distributor, did the same in America.

What most bothers the open-sourcers is SCO's refusal to reveal which lines 
of code it considers problematic. ?Here are these people who claim we are 
pirates but refuse to say where and how,? says Bruce Perens, an 
open-source evangelist. After all, he says, remedying the situation would 
be ?trivially easy?. The Linux ?community??numberless hobby hackers? would 
simply converge on the code and rewrite it within hours or days.

Mr McBride argues that he cannot reveal the detailed code that SCO lays 
claim to because to do so would be, in effect, ?open-sourcing? it?which to 
his mind would be capitulating to communism. He will show the code, he 
adds, to anybody who signs a non-disclosure agreement?but what use would 
it be for a Linux hacker to see the code but forever shut up about it? On 
August 18th, Mr McBride seemed to give in a bit by showing a few slides of 
partially encrypted code in a Las Vegas conference room. Somebody took a 
photo and showed it to Mr Perens, who found that the lines have been 
published so many times over the years that a simple Google search will 
point to them. Legally, the sample seems a non- issue.


Kulturkampf

In terms of impact, however, it is an issue. SCO has caused enough 
uncertainty that
technology consultancies, such as Gartner and Yankee Group, are advising 
clients to wait and see before adopting Linux. This certainly suits the 
rest of the fundamentalist camp, above all Microsoft, whose proprietary 
Windows operating system is Linux's most bitter rival. It has not gone 
unnoticed that Microsoft is one of the few companies that has actually 
paid SCO for a Linux licence, even though Microsoft has no use for one. 
Microsoft and SCO vehemently deny that they are in league, but most 
open-sourcers assume that the evil Redmond giant is bankrolling a 
mercenary.

Thus the two sides are digging into their trenches. ?We're absolutely not 
going away, and they're not giving up, so we got a big problem,? says Mr 
McBride. Like the fundamentalists of 1925, he may end up being a footnote 
in history; or he may arrest the Linux evolution. As yet, it is too early 
to tell.


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