CEO Darl McBride continues SCO's Linux attack
He released an open letter to the open-source community this week
December 5, 2003 12:00 PM ETIDG News Service -
Continuing its war of words against the Linux community, The SCO Group Inc. this week accused free software advocates of threatening the intellectual property protections provided by U.S. and European law.
"There is a group of software developers in the United States, and other parts of the world, that do not believe in the approach to copyright protection mandated by Congress," SCO CEO Darl McBride wrote in an open letter posted on SCO's Web site Wednesday.
The letter argues that Linux's GPL (GNU General Public License) software license is "exactly opposite in its effect from the 'copyright' laws adopted by the U.S. Congress and the European Union."
It accuses the creators of the GPL, the Free Software Foundation (FSF) and Red Hat Inc. of seeking to eliminate the profit motive from software development and argues that the profit motive "underpins the constitutionality of the [U.S.] Copyright Act."
The letter was written in response to a position paper written by FSF general counsel Eben Moglen and published Nov. 24 on Open Source Development Labs Inc.'s Web site (download PDF), a SCO spokesman said.
Linux backers blasted the letter, pointing out that the GPL requires copyright protection in order to be enforceable and accusing SCO itself of being a copyright violator by distributing Linux under terms contrary to the GPL. McBride's argument has its "fundamental facts wrong," said Linux creator Linus Torvalds.
"I'm a big believer in copyrights," Torvalds wrote in an e-mail interview. "Of all the intellectual property [laws], copyright ... is the only one that is expressly designed so that individual people can (and do) get them without having scads of lawyers on their side."
"If Darl McBride was in charge, he'd probably make marriage unconstitutional too, since clearly it de-emphasizes the commercial nature of normal human interaction and probably is a major impediment to the commercial growth of prostitution," he wrote.
McBride's company sued IBM in March, claiming that IBM's Linux contributions had violated SCO's intellectual property. Since then, SCO has escalated its rhetoric, accusing Linux developers of copyright violations and of threatening to destroy the software industry itself.
SCO has been reluctant to provide proof of its claims, and in August, the Lindon, Utah-based company was sued by Red Hat, which maintains that SCO's allegations are unfounded and are causing harm to Raleigh, N.C.-based Red Hat's business.
"It's amazing that this type of letter gets any attention. We're trying to get these issues resolved in court, and instead we're seeing delay tactics," said a Red Hat spokeswoman. "I think that should be examined instead of these further allegations that SCO brings to the media."
SCO recently moved to delay the discovery portion of its legal dispute with Red Hat, she said.
One attorney who has been following the case expressed surprise that SCO is continuing with its public attacks on Linux, even while it has engaged the high-profile law firm of Boies, Schiller & Flexner LLP to handle its legal disputes. David Boies served as special trial counsel for the U.S. Department of Justice in its antitrust case against Microsoft Corp.
"It's consistent with the approach of trying to have this thing tried in the court of public opinion," said Jeffrey Neuberger, an intellectual property lawyer at the New York firm Brown Raysman Millstein Felder & Steiner LLP. "If it wasn't for the fact that David Boies is representing them, I'd say that they were acting in desperation."
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
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