SCO has apparently let the Aberdeen Group take a look at the code in question for analysis and comparison to Linux code.
Linux-Unix ties spelled outHere is my analysis:
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The two blocks of software, they said, contained as many as 80 lines of identical code, along with identical developers' comments.
OMFG a whole 80-line block of code. OMG, Linux has 500,000 lines...that means that allegedly 0.016% of Linux code was stolen from SCO.
"Developers comments" are not operating code. The similarities imply something, but it's not enough to prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that anything was copied. I'd be interested to see the comments and see how unique the comments are. Programmers don't tend to have loft diction nor a wide vocabulary to describe the basic functionality of 80 lines of code.
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"Can SCO prove that this code came from SCO to Linux, and not from Linux to SCO?"
Still a possibility. Linux
is open source and the code is wide open for use.
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SCO's actions angered Linux supporters, who allegedly deluged the company with angry e-mails, threatened drive-by shootings, and posted SCO's executives' home phone numbers and addresses on Web sites.
Hmmmm...thanx for the idea SCO :-D
Violence is never the answer. After all, we're not George "dubya".
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SCO contends that by co-opting code from Unix, Linux has severely damaged SCO's intellectual property. According to some estimates, the company collected annual revenue of between $200 million and $250 million on Unix System 5 software before the rise of Linux. After Linux reached the mainstream, those revenue figures dropped to about $60 million a year.
First off, this code was apparently submitted around 1999 by IBM. That's only four years ago. Linux was created around 1993, could have been back in 1991. In any case, $60 million x 4 years does not equal the $1 Billion they're suing IBM for. Even if they successfully sue IBM, I dont' think they can continue to sue Linux end users and distributors when all of their monetary damges had been accounted for from the IBM lawsuit, and the open source community was not aware of IBM's offense.
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