i-Technology News
"Not a Single Line of Code" Violates SCO's Trademark?
New Finding in SCO/IBM Case
Jul. 17, 2005 01:45 PM
An internal investigation at SCO in August
2002 reported that not a single line of code in the Linux kernel was
found that violated SCO's copyright, according to an e-mail obtained by
legal Web site Groklaw.
Much of this was reported in Forbes online, and Forbes also notes that "although the e-mail obtained by Groklaw pleads
against SCO, it does not suggest that the company has no other evidence
that incriminates Linux and IBM. When contacted IBM declined to comment."
Here is what Forbes has reported:
Michael Davidson, an outside consultant, spent between four and six months comparing Linux with the so-called AT&T Unix code. "SCO was sure that it was going to find evidence of copyright violations," the author of the message wrote.
An outside consultant spent between four and six months comparing Linux with the so-called AT&T Unix code.
"At the end, we had found absolutely nothing: no evidence of any copyright infringement whatsoever," the e-mail said.
In cases where there was an overlap between SCO's Unix code and Linux, both software suites obtained the code legitimately from some third party, the e-mail stated.
The message was addressed to SCO Senior Vice President Reg Broughton, who forwarded it to Chief Executive Darl McBride.
SCO made a statement in response to the posting:
"This memo shows that Mr. Davidson’s e-mail is
referring to an investigation limited to literal copying, which is not
the standard for copyright violations, and which can be avoided by
deliberate obfuscation, as the memo itself points out.
"Even more importantly, this memo shows that
there are problems with Linux. It also notes that additional
investigation is required to locate all of the problems, which SCO has
been continuing in discovery in the IBMand Autozone cases.
"Thus, even aside from the fact that SCO’s
central contract claims in the IBM litigation involve later Linux
versions and different conduct, it would simply be inaccurate--and
misleading--to use Mr. Davidson’s e-mail to suggest that SCO’s internal
investigation revealed no problems."
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