Posted on 05/28/2004 6:56:11 AM PDT by shadowman99
Man AdTI Hired to Compare Minix/Linux Found No Copied Code |
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Thursday, May 27 2004 @ 05:01 PM EDT |
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Andrew Tanenbaum has published the most remarkable email from the man hired by Ken Brown to do a line-by-line comparison of Minix and Linux, Alexey Toptygin, who summarizes his findings and posts them on the Internet:
"Around the middle of April, I was contacted by a friend of mine who asked me if I wanted to do some code analysis on a consultancy basis for his boss, Ken Brown. I ended up doing about 10 hours of work, comparing early versions of Linux and Minix, looking for copied code. When he turned in his work, he had a conversation with Brown:
"Apparently, Ken was expecting me to find gobs of copied source code. He spent most of the conversation trying to convince me that I must have made a mistake, since it was clearly impossible for one person to write an OS and 'code theft' had to have occured. So, I guess what I want to say is, pay no attention to this man. . . " Eric Raymond has also answered Ken Brown's Samizdat. Another very detailed response here, on Newsforge, by Jem Matzan. I'll end your suspense. No, they didn't like it.
"In the history of publishing there has never been a less scrupulous work than this book. It's a stinging insult to real books and genuine authors everywhere, harming the credibility of all of us who write for a living." Raymond publishes his email to AdTI, who inexplicably (unless the book is an elaborate troll) and foolishly sent him a copy to review:
"Judging by these excerpts, this book is a disaster. Many of the claimed facts are bogus, the logic is shoddy, some of the people you claim to have used as important sources have already blasted you for inaccuracy, and at the end of the day you will have earned nothing but ridicule for it. . . . There is a great deal more, and I encourage you to visit all four sites, to get the complete picture. Honestly, how incompetent must you be to think attacking Linus Torvalds' integrity is a good strategy? He is loved and admired internationally by folks who do understand the code, unlike Mr. Brown, and everyone knows such a man would never knowlingly steal anyone's code, period. Nobody else would either. It's not the FOSS way. |
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. |
Look lets put it on the line, fine something (fully quoted and in context, and preferabbly linked) where Linus or anyone on this board said he did this in a box? Of course UNIX and its POSIX standards were the inspiration, just like apple was the inspiration for windows (to a much lesser degree or windows might be somewhat more secure)..
So which is it is your complaint about non proper attribution (he admitted porting gcc and bash, never claimed to write them). Or is it that he copied code, you're all over the place...
Nice try. The context of that thread, and of this one, and your comment is whether Linus could have written the kernel alone in that time. Instead of gracefully admitting your theft claim was wrong, you try to change the argument into something not one knowledgeable Linux person would ever claim -- that alone Linus wrote anything more than the initial Linux kernel. We know he ported various utilities (which in itself was actually a pretty good job) to make the kernel usable, but Brown's assumption and your claim were that Linus stole code for the kernel.
So far, all you've quoted is Tanenbaum's interpretation of Brown's book -- not Brown, himself.
I was going on the researcher's email where he got the code comparison contract from Brown, and Brown freaked and went into denial when he found no stolen code. Knowing what went on behind the book's publication is much more revealing about Brown's intent that the book itself could be. Read the email and the supporting data.
Oh wait, I'm sorry, he did find similarities! You're right! NOT! He found code that predates MINIX and Linux that is part of ANSI standard libraries, code necessary to be POSIX compliant, and two almost similar lines required to correctly implement the file system. Obviously this isn't smoking gun stuff since Brown freaked.
That's an outright lie.
First realize that you've been supporting brown the whole time, supporting his claims. After that, time to get up to date on the available information:
He did, all right there in the original email. He said he was re-making MINIX using his own code for the kernel. He said he ported GNU apps to work on his new kernel. Where's the lack of attribution? Maybe like Stallman, you're mad that people don't usually call it "GNU/Linux" which is the real name of the whole package (kernel+utilities).
BTW, I have to give you a little bit of credit. I expected you to say "I said I didn't say 'borrowed code' and all you were able to find was 'borrowing code.' See, I told you I didn't say 'borrowed code.'" The false "out of context" claim at least sounds a bit less like it's coming from an obstinate child.
With Stallman you have to be careful. When this liberal leftist hippie starts talking about all sorts of stuff and ideals, especially relating to commercial software, you need to learn to tune him out.
But what he does know is his organization, the definition of the free software movement, GNU and GPL. Basically, he says Brown is attempting to use popular confusion over definition of these things to further his goal by misstating them.
Another interesting find is that after all these people coming out to tell Brown he's a liar, they are reworking the report and it won't be released for a while yet. Instead of publishing a report that can stand on its own, Brown will try to incorporate responses to his detractors. I would love to see the difference between the advance copies and the final.
.. many Linux advocates here who believe..Who are "they?" I'm really curious..
I have no idea. But they're "here" (on FR?) somewhere, and there are "many" of them.
Or maybe B2K is just confused.
The book claimed extensive interviews with Richard Stallman, Dennis Ritchie and Andrew Tanenbaum to support it. So let's look at the current scorecard:
It's like interviewing Bush to write a total liberal trash piece on him. During the interview Bush may have told the author he's full of it, but the author claims on the book "Extensive interviews with President Bush!" so people will think the book has some element of truth in it.
Yeah, ADTI's big-time $8.95-a-month Geocities site (I'm not kidding - look it up) got a little overloaded from all the PR they brought on themselves. Hell, just the Freepers clicking on the article link could've brought that thing to its knees. Hackers schmackers, the ADTI is a mail drop in a UPS store (somebody went and looked) with a Geocities web site. Some "institute."
Microsoft needs a better class of freinds. They are really hanging out with some sleazeballs these days. For $50 billion, they could've at least gotten an Institute that had a cubical in one of those "executive office suite" places. Instead they spring for one that has a mailbox in a UPS store. And a Geocities web site! LOL!
This guy is advocating open source software (BSD license, not GPL), even being funded by the government, so he's commpletely opposed to Microsoft in many regards. Open source guys like him just don't have much money, I'm not surprised if he doesn't have an office or major website either, they just don't have a lot of income, nature of the beast obviously.
Oh, stop it with the BS, my fine feathered friend. The fact that this outfit gets money from Microsoft is well-documented. It has been stated by Microsoft. The guy is a shill. He gets paid to be one. Microsoft pays lots of people to be shills. Hell, their employees have even caught posing as "ordinary users" on Internet forums while advancing the company line. At least this guy is out in the open about what he does.
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