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Commentary: SCO's Tapestry of Lies

By Bruce Perens on March 10, 2004 (8:00:00 AM)

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SCO management had a problem. Their quarterly financial report was going to show only twenty thousand dollars in income for their SCOSource licensing program. And so, in an announcement timed to distract people from the bad financial report, SCO announced two new lawsuits and license purchases from Computer Associates, Leggett and Platt, and EV1 Servers.

Computer Associates' CEO was quick to blast SCO, pointing out that CA had settled a breach-of-contract suit unrelated to Linux with Canopy Group - SCO's main investor - and one of its other companies, Center7. The settlement terms compelled CA to purchase some licenses from SCO, and required that CA not disclose those terms. Leggett and Platt managers who were asked about that company's license purchase scratched their heads, maybe someone in the company had purchased a license, but they'd asked around and they didn't know about it. And EV1 Servers' CEO says he didn't pay nearly what SCO claims he paid.

When a company arranges for the appearance of sales, the way SCO seems to have done with CA and most likely has done with other companies, that's called window dressing. It's something that companies do to make their stock look better than it actually is.

On the same day that CA blasted SCO, Open Source evangelist Eric Raymond revealed a leaked email from SCO's strategic consultant Mike Anderer to their management. The email details how, surprise surprise, Microsoft has arranged virtually all of SCO's financing, hiding behind intermediaries like Baystar Capital. SCO spokesperson Blake Stowell has admitted that the email is real, but called its implications a "misunderstanding", while Microsoft softly called them "not accurate". We'd hear stronger denials if there wasn't some truth there. This was followed by a comment from the the Securities and Exchange Commission that, yeah, they're interested. Mr. Anderer, expect to see lots of subpoenas with your name on them.

SCO has suffered other setbacks recently, in their lawsuit against IBM. First, the company dropped all breach of trade-secret allegations against Big Blue. The time had come and gone for SCO to provide evidence regarding those allegations, and it hadn't been able to support them. And then came a ruling on the discovery process in the case.

The ruling requires SCO to finally reveal, with specificity, what code IBM has copied from Unix to Linux, on the same day that IBM must deliver the source code of IBM's AIX Unix system to SCO for examination. The ruling is calculated to show what infringement SCO could allege just by looking at the published source code for Linux. SCO will then have two weeks to look at AIX, and make additional allegations regarding the transfer of IBM's AIX source code to Linux.

We have yet to see SCO's specific infringement claims, but we can expect them to follow the two general theories of copyright infringement that they've stated in the case or in other public venues.

SCO alleges that code that IBM wrote on its own for AIX became SCO's property or is otherwise encumbered by SCO due to terms of the Unix license that IBM acquired from ATT, the creator of Unix. According to SCO, IBM does not have the right to put in Linux any code that has ever touched Unix. That's why the judge is giving SCO a peek at AIX. But SCO's interpretation of the Unix license was refuted by ATT itself when they announced a change in the license terms in their August 1985 Echo newsletter sent to all Unix licensees. ATT wrote:

Section 2.01 - The last sentence was added to assure licensees that AT&T will claim no ownership in the software that they developed -- only the portion of the software developed by AT&T
SCO is the "successor in interest" to the ATT license. They'll have to honor ATT's terms and ATT's own interpretation, and thus their claim on IBM's code will fail.

SCO's remaining copyright infringement theory is regarding the Unix API or ABI. SCO says that Linux contains copies of a number of the header files that define the Unix API or ABI. But SCO doesn't own that information. When Novell sold off the Unix business they'd purchased from ATT, they transferred the Unix definition and trademark to The Open Group, while SCO was sold some rights related to the Unix implementation. The Open Group maintains the Unix definition today as their Single Unix Specification, and they assert that anyone can implement it without a copyright encumbrance.

Indeed, the header files in question were released for the public to implement without a copyright encumbrance on five separate occasions in all. These included:

  • ATT's release for the ANSI C Language Standard.
  • ATT's release for the U.S. Government POSIX standard.
  • The USL v. BSDI court case of the early 1990's, in which ATT's Unix System Labs was found not to have a defensible copyright interest in Unix. Thus, Unix was in the public domain.
  • The transfer of the Unix definition to the Open Group.
  • The release of all ATT Unix implementations under the BSD license by Caldera (which now calls itself SCO) in 2002.
The chairpersons of the standards organizations are still living and able to testify regarding ATT's copyright releases, and the rest of the releases are documented in public records. And thus SCO's remaining allegation of copyright infringement will fall.

SCO's suit against Daimler Chrysler alleges that Daimler failed to give SCO an accounting of their use of Linux, which SCO feels is a violation of their Unix license. Daimler is a very large company used to nuisance suits. Their legal department alone is several times the size of SCO's entire staff. This suit places SCO in an expensive two-fronts war against the giant companies IBM and Daimler, or should we count the medium-sized companies Novell, Red Hat, and AutoZone and say a five-fronts war? In selecting AutoZone and Daimler, SCO was clearly targeting troubled companies that might be more likely to settle than sustain a long lawsuit, whatever its merit. But probably not likely enough. Companies that settle lawsuits with no merit just buy themselves more, similar lawsuits.

SCO's mounting legal costs have prompted a financial analyst at Decatur Jones to forecast that SCO's stock will post a significant loss. The same company downgraded its forecast of full-year earnings from the SCOSource licensing program from $7 Million to essentially zero in January ahead of news of the twenty-thousand-dollar quarter.

SCO's suit against AutoZone is related to AutoZone's use of Unixware compatibility software for Linux previously released for free on the net by Caldera, before they stopped being a Linux business. Apparently, AutoZone had old applications that ran on Unixware and could not be recompiled. IBM documented their use of the compatibility software in a case-study of AutoZone's migration from SCO Unixware to Linux. This is unusual, in that most Linux users will not be moving software that they can't recompile. But Caldera, now SCO, gave that compatibility software away for years, so they're going to have a very hard time showing that AutoZone didn't have a right to use it.

SCO has run its campaign against Linux for over a year now, kiting their stock from fifty cents to over twenty dollars on many statements that, it is turning out, weren't true. When a company makes unfounded assertions for a month or two, it can be dismissed as a mistake or wishful thinking. When the distortions go on for a full year, it becomes difficult to explain their behavior as anything but a deliberate fraud meant to hurt Linux for Microsoft, their financial backer, while bringing SCO Millions in stock windfalls.

Perhaps the saddest part of this whole fiasco is its human dimension. Canopy Group was created and funded by Ray Noorda, who also founded Novell. Noorda would have hated SCO's current strategy. In fact, when the very similar USL v. BSDI lawsuit came up in the early 1990's, Noorda himself brokered the settlement between ATT's Unix System Labs and the University of California, so that Unix could go on without ambiguity. But more recently, Noorda has been afflicted with a very severe senility disorder and no longer participates in managing his own portfolio.

Canopy Group director Ralph Yarrow, the self-proclaimed mastermind of SCO's strategy, was a graphic illustrator at Novell when he befriended Noorda. Noorda is said to have seen Yarrow as "the only person who isn't after my money". Although we don't have oversight on the privately-held Canopy group, people close to the situation say that Yarrow has been generous to his own portfolio with bonuses and other compensation. Yarrow will probably be the major person to profit from SCO.

From a financial standpoint, Canopy Group has already won. Because it's not a public company like SCO, we can't see all that's going on there. However, we know that they have swapped some of their other holdings, including a company called "Vultus", for SCO stock. And of course they've multiplied the value of their existing SCO stock as much as forty times over the past year. I've no doubt that much of this stock has already been converted to cash. The leaked email forecasts SCO's exit from this business in the near future. When they exit, Yarrow and Canopy will walk away with tens of millions.

This article was originally published at http://perens.com/ and is reprinted here with the author's permission.

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on Commentary: SCO's Tapestry of Lies

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Inaccurate statement

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 10, 2004 08:54 PM
"The release of all ATT Unix implementations under the BSD license by Caldera (which now calls itself SCO) in 2002."

I wanted to point out that it was a "BSD-style" license that the code was released under, not the actual BSD license. Also, not all versions of Unix were released. They excluded System V. Ransom Love said in a recent interview that they wanted to release all the Unix code, but they discovered it was full of other companies' copyrights, like Intel, who wouldn't give permission to release it.

http://www.lemis.com/grog/UNIX/
http://www.eweek.com/print_article/0,3048,a=10808<nobr>2<wbr></nobr> ,00.asp

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Re:Inaccurate statement

Posted by: Bruce Perens on March 11, 2004 04:26 AM
Fixed in <A HREF="http://east.perens.com/SCO/March2004.html" TITLE="perens.com">the master copy</a perens.com>. Email is better if you have nits - I might not have read this.

Thanks

Bruce

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Re:Inaccurate statement

Posted by: agentorange on March 11, 2004 08:28 AM
Not inaccurate. The document is still available, I have a copy of the original in PDF.

Here is the wording EXACTLY:

CALDERA
240 West Center Street
Orem, Utah 84057
801-765-4999 Fax 801-765-4481
January 23, 2002

"Dear UNIX enthusiasts,

Caldera International, Inc. hereby grants a fee free license that includes the rights use, modify and distribute "

That is pretty clear to me...

"this named source code, including creating derived binary products created from the source code."

Even clearer still...

"The source code for which Caldera International, Inc. grants rights are limited to the following UNIX Operating Systems that operate on the 16-Bit PDP-11 CPU and early versions of the 32-Bit UNIX Operating System, with specific exclusion of UNIX System III and UNIX System V and successor operating systems:

32-bit 32V UNIX
16 bit UNIX Versions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
Caldera International, Inc. makes no guarantees or commitments that any source code is available from Caldera International, Inc.

The following copyright notice applies to the source code files for which this license is granted.

Copyright(C) Caldera International Inc. 2001-2002. All rights reserved.

Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:

Redistributions of source code and documentation must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.

Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.

All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software must display the following acknowledgement:

This product includes software developed or owned by Caldera International, Inc.Neither the name of Caldera International, Inc. nor the names of other contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission.

USE OF THE SOFTWARE PROVIDED FOR UNDER THIS LICENSE BY CALDERA INTERNATIONAL, INC.AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL CALDERA INTERNATIONAL, INC. BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
(INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

Very truly yours,<nobr> <wbr></nobr>/signed/ Bill Broderick

Bill Broderick
Director, Licensing Services
* UNIX is a registered trademark of The Open Group in the US and other countries."

That is what the document says. There has not been any violation of that document.

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SCO cratering again, just keeps getting better

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 10, 2004 11:10 PM
SCO is still being <A HREF="http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=SCOX&t=5d&l=on&z=l&q=l&c=%5ESPX,%5EIXIC,%5EDJI" TITLE="yahoo.com">bloodied</a yahoo.com> on Nasdaq as of this morning. Nice to see Calpers is one of the <A HREF="http://www.nasdaq.com/asp/Holdings.asp?FormType=institutional&symbol=SCOX&selected=SCOX#" TITLE="nasdaq.com">shareholders</a nasdaq.com>. Great way to "invest" public employee retirement money, don't you think?

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Re:SCO cratering again, just keeps getting better

Posted by: Charles Tryon on March 11, 2004 12:24 AM
They've been going up and down for a while, but it looks like they are finally into their last tail-spin. They have been pretty consistently down since the start of the year, and have lost close to 50% from their high around $20/share. I think people are finally starting to get the point that SCO is a lot of smoke with no fire.

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You ROCK Bruce!

Posted by: pitr256 on March 10, 2004 11:30 PM
I doubt any one could have written this better!

Here's hoping to the mainstream media (not to mention investors) picking up on some of the questions raised in your article.

Thanks again Bruce!

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SCOX: Look out belooowww!

Posted by: flacco on March 11, 2004 12:41 AM

i think the money-chasers are finally catching on:

http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=SCOX&t=5d&l=on&z=<nobr>m<wbr></nobr> &q=l&c=

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Re:SCOX: Look out belooowww!

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 11, 2004 02:30 AM
with the valuation drops since the middle of March 8 corresponding with large transaction spikes, it looks to me like certain individuals with large holdings are dumping them, and there is no interest in holding the value up. Does that mean that now that Halloween X has been published, that M$ is cutting SCO loose to fend for itself? Could this be the mis-understanding surrounding that leaked e-mail?

Just thinking out loud.

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Re:SCOX: Look out belooowww!

Posted by: flacco on March 11, 2004 03:31 AM
Does that mean that now that Halloween X has been published, that M$ is cutting SCO loose to fend for itself?


my theory is a bit more cynical. given that anyone with have a brain realizes that SCO's only hope for future income depends on its lawsuits, maybe SCO intentionally leaked the MS memo to tell the investing community that they're not going to run out of litigation money anytime soon. they've got a corpulent sugar-daddy behind them with a big roll of greasy $100 bills.

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What a crock

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 11, 2004 04:02 AM
If Bruce Perens even had half an idea of what he was talking about he would be a dangerous man. SCO has done nothing illegal and the only thing this fiasco has made me not want to do is use Open Source software. I reformatted all my drives and installed Windows XP on all my machines, I dont want to be associated with a community of liars and theives anymore.

P.S. No I dont work for SCO, Im just sick and tired of the open Source communities crap. I am embarrassed to tell people about Linux and the Open Source movement because you idiots cant act over the age of 12.

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Re:What a crock

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 11, 2004 04:18 AM
Well-documented and well-reasoned versus emotional and baseless. Guess who we believe.

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Re:What a crock

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 11, 2004 04:23 AM
OK, your freedom of speech is guaranteed, but what is "theives"?

It sounds like Elvish.

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Re:What a crock

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 11, 2004 05:35 AM
"a community of liars and theives"

Give one example.

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Re:What a crock

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 11, 2004 06:34 AM
It's your prerogative.

This is an anti-SCO site, you're in the wrong place, but you come here everyday and post to every anti-SCO thread and post inflamitory (aka hurt vs. help) posts and then have the gaul to call us 12 year olds? Right.

An adult would take their opinion to some place where their opinion would matter, and not try to be destructive by posting hate such as you are. And if your so certain that you are right, all you have to do is bring on the facts. You present your arguement, and I will refute it in a civilized manor, then you refute me in a civilized manor, and through this process, hopefully, we will find a positive solution.

But please stop coming here everyday just to flame. If you don't want to use Linux, more power to you. But coming here and doing what you're doing only highlights problems you have in the real world with obsession and depresion. Let go, dude, it's going to kill you.

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Re:What a crock [Don't feed the troll]

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 11, 2004 06:49 AM
Seriously folks, we should know better by now...

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Get your Troll Feed here

Posted by: Realmkeeper on March 11, 2004 11:51 AM
Get your Troll feed here...

Troll feed, Troll feed... $2.00 per cup... $5.00 per bag...

Troll feed, Troll feed... $2.00 per cup... $5.00 per bag...

Get your Troll feed here...

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$20k for nothing?

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 11, 2004 04:13 AM
Bruce,

Nice spin on the fact that the SCOSource product wasn't even ready for sale.

Do ya look deeply into anything, or just avoid that bit of diligence in order to claim ignorance later on?

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Re:$20k for nothing?

Posted by: Bruce Perens on March 11, 2004 04:22 AM
Dear Darl,

Well, they managed to sell some to Microsoft a while ago, just to help them FUD Linux. My guess is that nobody wanted them last quarter. SCOSource licenses being not ready for sale is sort of like the Brooklyn Bridge not being ready for sale. It's not theirs to sell.

Enjoy the fall.

Bruce

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What does Didio know, and when did she know it?

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 11, 2004 04:48 AM
Microsoft has already purchased a license from SCO to free the company of future claims against Linux. The deal is estimated at about US$10 million. SCO spokesperson Blake Stowell would not discuss the terms of the deal, but confirmed that Microsoft IS AN ALLY.


  "THERE'S A LOT GOING ON BEHIND THE SCENES," Yankee Group senior analyst Laura DiDio <A HREF="http://www.technewsworld.com/perl/story/31252.html" TITLE="technewsworld.com">told</a technewsworld.com> TechNewsWorld. "Not necessarily coming out to say they support SCO or coming to their defense, but I think there are a lot of behind-the-scenes machinations."

Stowell would not discuss the terms of the deal, but confirmed Microsoft as a SCO ally.

"We sold Microsoft a license in the second quarter of this year and they're in compliance and good standing and CONTINUE TO BE A PARTNER OF OURS," he said.


Would DiDio make an unfounded allegation involving a multi-billion dollar lawsuit in companies that she gives advice on? Or is her allegation founded on information that she was privy to when she made the statement?

What does Laura DiDio know, and when did she know it?

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Excellent, but get the name right, Bruce!

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 11, 2004 09:35 PM
The names Yarro, not Yarrow. A mistake a lot of poeple make.

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The 'D' word

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on March 13, 2004 12:17 AM
Great summary/analysis of events. And you didn't even have to mention the name of the gun-toting D man.

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