Hey SCO, Sue Me!
from the sue-me!--sue-me! dept
As SCO continues with their ridiculous plan to antagonize everyone they can possibly think of, some Linux-geeks have come up with an amusing way to protest. They're putting together a petition of Linux users, and telling SCO to go ahead and sue them. Earlier this week, of course, SCO made a lot of news for sending letters to large Linux-using corporations telling them they're liable for any intellectual property infringement in the copies of Linux they use. The petition states, in response, "I am a Linux user. I feel that SCO's tactics toward an operating system of my choice are unjust, ill founded and bizarre. I am willing to be sued because I am confident that SCO's tactics toward Linux will fail. If I have published my email address as part of this petition it is so SCO representatives can email me and begin the process of serving me a court order." Feel free to sign the petition yourself.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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What if
What is SCO's right? What if *gasp* IBM actually *did* do something really bad? What if, shock of shocks, the 800-lb gorilla forgot it needed to act responsibly for once?
Probably you will just try to forget about it. After all, writing something not-negative about SCO is apparently not permitted.
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Re: What if
Besides, I'm pretty consistently against any kind of software patents around here. I think it's a bad business model, and it does more harm for *your own* market.
Besides, SCO was selling their own version of Linux, so they've pretty much killed any claim on that one.
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Re: What if
What makes it a 'bullshit claim'?
GNU/Linux has more than one occurance of taking others code, removing copywrite info, and putting a GPL on the code.
What SCO doesn't get is if they win, people will just move in-mass off of GNU/Linux to BSD. Yea! SCO wins an empty bag! And BSD, having settled matters years ago, would be even a BIGGER fight for SCO.
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Re: What if
I am aware that some code that was released under the Berkeley copyright has been integrated into GNU code but in those cases I believe the Berkeley rules were also followed (by preserving the notice in the source along with the GPL). Is there any other case?
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Re: What if
Case 2) ATA Raid code. Seee /. for an example.
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Re: What if
More linux, more whining. Surprise, surprise.
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Re: What if
Care to provide some examples?
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Re: What if
I've already said 2. But you must be:
1) So uneducated about GNU/Linux and BSD, you don't know where to work
2) A troll
3) To lazy to go look them up.
In the interest of educating you:
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/09/24/1432223&mode=thread
You can pay me for my time to go back thru the 2.0.X series to find the 'remove the BSD copyright' file.
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No Subject Given
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