In her ruling, the judge wrote that SCO hasn't produced enough proof to back up its allegations that IBM moved proprietary Unix software to new Linux systems. SCO Group filed its $5 billion lawsuit against Big Blue nearly one year ago, on March 6, 2003.
"In keeping with Magistrate Judge Wells' wishes, The SCO Group will not be making comments on this ruling at this time," SCO said in an email to the media announcing the ruling.
The judge's ruling included these key statements:
"SCO should use its best efforts to obtain relevant discovery from the Linux contributions that are known to the public, including those contributions publicly known to be made by IBM. IBM, however, is hereby ordered to provide to SCO any and all non-public contributions it has made to Linux," the court said.
SCO has not complied with the court's first order issued on Dec. 12, 2003, to "provide and identify specific lines of code that IBM has alleged to have contributed to Linux or Dynix." SCO had been ordered to provide these lines of code within 30 days (by Jan. 12, 2004) but did not do so. In a separate hearing on the matter held Feb. 6, SCO was able to convince the court that it is proceeding in good faith, and the court lifted its 30-day discovery stay.
As a result of this newest court order, SCO now has another 45 days, or until April 17, to produce the disputed lines of code and explain them clearly to the court.
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Real change is hard. Even when there is concensus, when there is no concensus it is even harder, and slower.
BTW<nobr> <wbr></nobr>... You seem to hate America, don't be shocked if you find hate reflected back to you from the Americans you just insulted. Freedom of speech is not freedom from consequence.
Put up or shut up
Posted by: madchris on March 04, 2004 08:57 AM#