Q Cubed, your point about the programmer moving between companies is valid, but the case in the real world is even more confused. As I mentioned earlier, the influence of a professor (that actually teaches) at a major university can make it even worse. The programming techniques he teaches often result in a "fingerprints", techniques of coding and solving problems that clearly identify people from the program. That is why when Phoenix duplicated the IBM PC Bios, they not only used a "clean room" technique - every line of code, every statement, every memo was preserved, they hired fresh graduates from colleges that had absolutely now association with IBM, nor were favored by IBM for new hires. They beat IBM in court when IBM tried to shut them down.
Ned, this is why the SCO situation is such a mess, and highly suspect. From what I understand (cursory reading, not the excellent research shown here) linux has pretty much kept track of who contributed what. The problem is that in some cases of the takeover/merger/consolidation mania of the software industry, the paper trail is less than clear. SCO's refusal to supply the programming history makes their claims suspect, at best. Add into that openly defying the judge, even MS has gotten into trouble with that (follow their history of defying court orders regarding abuse of "temporary" hiring laws and their own company policies). Judges have absolutely no sense of humor when it comes to "contempt of court".
I think I see the difference between Ned and all the other programmer types in this thread. Ned, what would you consider the ratio of your knowledge of legal, as opposed to coding, knowledge? Please note I am talking writing actual lines of code versus visual whatever, speadsheets, or macro languages. That's why I said coding, not programming.
Many of the people here who dislike SCO have at least a tolerable language on computer programming (or work in IT from the business side), and if we took a poll I'll bet you half of us here slamming SCO have done coding in the past. That highlights a major problem in the IT, which exists in many industries. The technical people understand the field and believe in the legal system as an area to deal with disagreements and conflicts. Bill Gate's brilliance, as is the case of many large businesses, is knowing how to highjack and abuse the legal system to gain an advantage over his competition.
I could list the examples, from "Stacker", "Dr. Dos", "Netscape", et al (google them, I assume somewhere on the web the first two cases are still explained). The difference is that SCO has nobody of the calibre of Gates, and they took on a much bigger fish at first, IBM. Of course, if there intent was to simply bump the stock, and the MS comes in and gives them money with after stating, for example, "We like how you do business" (avoids direct conspiracy charges, but when the almost everyone else in IT is pissed at you, doesn't it state volumes?).
The history of patent and copyright law in recent years has resulted in some egregious abuses in the USA, and from what I understand also in Europe. Don't get me started on the abuses of it in the Biotech field, I could write a multi-page missive off the top of my head (it would be so BORING ). Other countries in the third world also have problems with it (and then turn around and use that to justify their own piracy of things, like movie copyrights, that are much more clear cut). Add into that activist judges appointed to from both the left and the right (activist equals will warp or ignore the law to get the results the judge believes in) and the resulting venue shopping, and the resulting copyright litigation in the USA is a disaster. That protects large companies, and results in the little guy who won't sell, or gets his idea stolen, being ground up.
Look up the case of Ford and the inventor of intermittant windshield wipers. If I remember correctly, it took him twenty-thirty years, it cost the inventor his marraige and job, and in the end, when he could show that Ford had gained a benefit of almost $300 million (based on manufacturing plants, value of sold parts, etc. over the life of the patent) the JUDGE SUMMARLY REDUCTED THE AWARD TO UNDER 10 MILLION. Who says crime doesn't pay. Gates understands this all to well. SCO's problem is that it started off with IBM, and that it's case is just muddy enough to get it into court. Without the MS money, it would probably be in serious financial trouble.
Ned, this is why the SCO situation is such a mess, and highly suspect. From what I understand (cursory reading, not the excellent research shown here) linux has pretty much kept track of who contributed what. The problem is that in some cases of the takeover/merger/consolidation mania of the software industry, the paper trail is less than clear. SCO's refusal to supply the programming history makes their claims suspect, at best. Add into that openly defying the judge, even MS has gotten into trouble with that (follow their history of defying court orders regarding abuse of "temporary" hiring laws and their own company policies). Judges have absolutely no sense of humor when it comes to "contempt of court".
I think I see the difference between Ned and all the other programmer types in this thread. Ned, what would you consider the ratio of your knowledge of legal, as opposed to coding, knowledge? Please note I am talking writing actual lines of code versus visual whatever, speadsheets, or macro languages. That's why I said coding, not programming.
Many of the people here who dislike SCO have at least a tolerable language on computer programming (or work in IT from the business side), and if we took a poll I'll bet you half of us here slamming SCO have done coding in the past. That highlights a major problem in the IT, which exists in many industries. The technical people understand the field and believe in the legal system as an area to deal with disagreements and conflicts. Bill Gate's brilliance, as is the case of many large businesses, is knowing how to highjack and abuse the legal system to gain an advantage over his competition.
I could list the examples, from "Stacker", "Dr. Dos", "Netscape", et al (google them, I assume somewhere on the web the first two cases are still explained). The difference is that SCO has nobody of the calibre of Gates, and they took on a much bigger fish at first, IBM. Of course, if there intent was to simply bump the stock, and the MS comes in and gives them money with after stating, for example, "We like how you do business" (avoids direct conspiracy charges, but when the almost everyone else in IT is pissed at you, doesn't it state volumes?).
The history of patent and copyright law in recent years has resulted in some egregious abuses in the USA, and from what I understand also in Europe. Don't get me started on the abuses of it in the Biotech field, I could write a multi-page missive off the top of my head (it would be so BORING ). Other countries in the third world also have problems with it (and then turn around and use that to justify their own piracy of things, like movie copyrights, that are much more clear cut). Add into that activist judges appointed to from both the left and the right (activist equals will warp or ignore the law to get the results the judge believes in) and the resulting venue shopping, and the resulting copyright litigation in the USA is a disaster. That protects large companies, and results in the little guy who won't sell, or gets his idea stolen, being ground up.
Look up the case of Ford and the inventor of intermittant windshield wipers. If I remember correctly, it took him twenty-thirty years, it cost the inventor his marraige and job, and in the end, when he could show that Ford had gained a benefit of almost $300 million (based on manufacturing plants, value of sold parts, etc. over the life of the patent) the JUDGE SUMMARLY REDUCTED THE AWARD TO UNDER 10 MILLION. Who says crime doesn't pay. Gates understands this all to well. SCO's problem is that it started off with IBM, and that it's case is just muddy enough to get it into court. Without the MS money, it would probably be in serious financial trouble.
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