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Posted on 02/10/2004 7:35:57 AM PST by Salo
Now They Own It, Now They Dont: SCO Sues Novell to Stay Afloat
~ Eben Moglen February 5, 2004
The SCO licensing campaignwhich has been all bark and no bite since its introduction by way of threatening letters to the Fortune 1500 last summerlost a wheel last month, and is now headed for the wall.
From the beginning of this irresponsible attack on the freedom of free software, SCO has promulgated public positions about the nature of its supposed rights that conflicted with facts known to the free software community, and relied upon legal positions that were untenable given the real state of facts. SCO supposedly responded to demands to see some evidence of code copied from Sys V Unix into the Linux program, first in a public presentation in August and then in a court filing in January. But both demonstrations actually showed that SCO was claiming copyright infringement in material whose copyright it didnt own. Now, a new party has begun casting serious legal doubt on SCOs ownership of the rights on which it bases its demands for license fees, to the complete destruction of SCOs licensing campaign. The new party raising fundamental legal doubt about SCOs copyrights is SCO itself.
1 You Cant Sue Over What You Dont Own
The SCO Group claims to hold copyrights in AT&Ts implementations of Unix as a consequence of a conveyance by Novell to SCOs predecessor in interest, Caldera. Novell and SCO have disagreed throughout about the meaning and effect of the asset purchase transaction. The most relevant document, the purchase agreement, is a matter of public record, having been attached to IBMs answer to SCOs complaint in the lawsuit brought by SCO against IBM. At a minimum, Novell claimsand the document seems on its face to showthat Novell retains an independent right to license the copyright and other legal interests conveyed by the agreement.
Novells claim to an independent right to license the Unix technology at issue has been invoked twice since the start of the controversy. Novell renewed licenses to IBM and Silicon Graphics originally granted by AT&T that permitted the production and distribution of the two vendors flavors of Unix, thus cancelling revocations of those licenses supposedly issued by SCO. Those two licenses were side issues: SCO is trying to destroy free software as a competitor, not AIX and Irix. But Novells acquisition last quarter of SuSE AGEuropes leading commercial distributor of free software, including the Linux kernelthreatens the complete overturning of SCOs licensing program. If Novell indeed holds residual rights for itself in what SCO claims are its exclusive rights, Novell can distribute Linux through SuSE without any theoretical liability to claims from SCO. And because the Linux program is distributed under GPL, anyone who got code from Novell/SuSE has the right to distribute it to anyone else, under GPL, without limitation.
So on January 20th, SCO sued Novell in Utah state court, on a claim of slander of title, seeking a judicial declaration that SCO owns exclusive rights in the copyrights it has threatened to enforce against Linux users. That lawsuit, in which SCO has demanded jury trial, will ultimately require a Utah jury to decide the meaning of the asset purchase agreement and associated documents, in a dispute between SCO and Utahs largest hightech employer, Novell. If SCO cant carry its burden of proof in that action, and convince the jury it has asked for that Novell has no rights in Unix, its whole campaign is over, and SCOs destiny is dissolution.
2 You Cant Threaten B, C, and D While Litigating With A
Even if one is unsympathetic to SCO, one cant help but feel sorry for the quandary its lawyers faced in deciding whether to sue Novell. Had they not done so, their clients ultimate fate would have been sealed. But suing Novell destroys SCOs licensing campaign for the present just as fully.
Put yourself in the position of a General Counsel whose client has received threatening letters from SCO demanding that the client take a license for the use of the Linux program. As I have argued in past essays on this controversy, there are strong legal reasons for rejecting the demand for a license anyway. But now SCOs pitch to the GC has become well-nigh impossible: Pay us money, SCO is saying, because sooner or later, after we win a lawsuit against Novell in the Utah courts, we will turn out to own some copyrights on which you might be infringing. For the GC whose task it is to protect the shareholders assets, the answer is simple: Come back when youve won that lawsuit, and well talk. After all, theres no downside for the GCs client in waiting to see what happens in SCO v. Novell. Usually, when the target of a license demand shows a determination to wait out the claimant, the claimant says If you ignore my demand, youre engaged in intentional copyright infringement, and thats a no-no. When I sue you the judge wont like you, and the Copyright Act says I get double damages. But SCO itself has put the ownership of the relevant copyrights in doubt by suing over them, and no judge would hold that it is intentional infringement to refrain from taking a license while the plaintiff itself scrambles to show it owns what it is trying to sell.
Many of the large, sophisticated enterprises who are the targets of SCOs efforts responded to their claims last summer by taking copies of the Linux program, under GPL, from SCOs own FTP server, where the code remained publicly available. They therefore have an auditable license from SCO to use, copy, modify and redistribute the code about which SCO continues to threaten legal action. For such enterprises, which now can also get a copy of the same program, under the same license, from Novell, any action by SCO to bring a copyright infringement claim would be particularly foolish.
Judge, such an enterprise would tell the court in the event of a lawsuit, SCO and Novell disagree about who wound up with the power to license these copyrights, even if they are somehow infringed. Theyre suing one another in the Utah courts over that. But I have here copies of the supposedly infringing work I got from SCO with a license that says I can use, copy, modify and redistribute, as well as copies I got under the same terms from Novell. So no matter who wins that action I have a license that lets me freely use, copy, modify, and redistribute. Judge, can I go home now? Thats a pretty strong defense. Given that the first party sued would also have the benefit of the $10 million legal defense fund administered by the Open Source Development Lab, the prospects that SCO can convince neutral parties to take licenses under existing circumstances are slim at best.
3 Where the Buck Stops
By bringing the action against Novell, SCO has fessed up to yet another fundamental weakness in the tissue of non-truths, half-truths, and exaggerations that constitute its attack on the freedom of free software. It has given the targets of its licensing campaign the clearest possible reason for remaining on the sidelines, and by doing so it has triggered the forces that are going to bring this nuisance to an end.
If SCOs licensing campaign fails to generate the revenues SCO has been predicting for potential investorsbecause it turns out that SCO never owned what it claimed to be legally entitled to force others to license SCO and its principals will have plenty to answer for, and not just to its shareholders, but to the SEC as well. It is not good practice to attempt to force people to buy from you what you may not own. It is even worse practice to mislead investors into thinking that they will benefit from such sales without disclosing that you may not own what you are trying to sell. Now that SCO itself has begun unraveling this aspect of the situation, the end is in sight. The winter of SCOs discontent is likely to give way to a glorious summer for open source software.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Eben Moglen is professor of law at Columbia University Law School. He has served without fee as General Counsel of the Free Software Foundation since 1993. This paper is based on a presentation given to the Open Source Development Labs User Advisory Council in New York City January 22, 2004.
Copyright Eben Moglen, 2004. Verbatim copying of this article is permitted in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
SCO has been toast from the day IBM chose to litigate rather than buy them out to shut them up. The only thing SCO has been doing since is trying to damage the UNIX and open-source communities as much as possible -- for which they are being nicely compensated by Microsoft while performing a pump-and-dump scheme with their stock.
It's a pretty long reach to say that filing suit to vindicate a right puts that right in doubt.
Eben Moglen is professor of law at Columbia University Law School. He has served without fee as General Counsel of the Free Software Foundation since 1993.
At least we know he is objective.
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