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What SCO Wants, SCO Gets - (Linux Assault)
Forbes ^
| 06.18.03, 12:00 PM ET
| Daniel Lyons,
Posted on 06/18/2003 4:12:48 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
NEW YORK - Linux vendors are under attack. In March, IBM was sued for $1 billion by The SCO Group, of Lindon, Utah, which claims IBM has put SCO's Unix code into Linux, the open-source software program. SCO also has sent letters to 1,500 large companies warning them that if they are using Linux, they may face legal problems. Though IBM is the only company named in SCO's lawsuit, other Linux vendors, like Red Hat and SuSE Linux, could suffer collateral damage.
So how are the Linux companies fighting back? IBM (nyse: IBM - news - people ) put out a statement saying it will fight SCO's (nasdaq: SCOX - news - people ) claim and has issued bulletins to its sales force, providing talking points to use with customers. Red Hat (nasdaq: RHAT - news - people ) is posting pro-Linux commentary and analyst reports on its Web site. SuSE Linux, a German company, claims customers aren't scared by the SCO lawsuit. "Everyone has seen through this," a SuSE spokesman says.
In other words, like many religious folk, the Linux-loving crunchies in the open-source movement are a) convinced of their own righteousness, and b) sure the whole world, including judges, will agree.
They should wake up. SCO may not be very good at making a profit by selling software. (Last year the company lost $24.9 million on sales of $64.2 million.) But it is very good at getting what it wants from other companies. And it has a tight circle of friends.
In 1996, SCO's predecessor company, Caldera, bought the rights to a decrepit version of the DOS operating system and used it to sue Microsoft (nasdaq: MSFT - news - people ), eventually shaking a settlement out of the Redmond, Wash., software giant. In 1997, Darl McBride, now SCO's chief executive, sued his then employer, IKON Office Solutions (nyse: IKN - news - people ), and won a settlement that he says was worth multiple millions. (IKON acknowledges the settlement but disputes the amount.)
McBride joined Caldera as chief executive in June 2002. Two months later he changed the company's name to The SCO Group, based on the name of an ailing Unix product that Caldera had purchased in 2001 from its creator, The Santa Cruz Operation, of Santa Cruz, Calif. The Santa Cruz Operation now calls itself Tarantella (nasdaq: TTLDC - news - people ).
As with the 1996 DOS lawsuit against Microsoft, in the current lawsuit over Unix and Linux this company aims to take a nearly dead chunk of old code, bought for a song, and parlay it into a windfall. Not only is the strategy the same--so are some of the players.
SCO is basically owned and run by The Canopy Group, a Utah firm with investments in dozens of companies. Canopy's chief executive, Ralph J. Yarro III, is chairman of SCO's board of directors and engineered the suit against Microsoft in 1996. Darcy Mott, Canopy's chief financial officer, is another SCO director, along with Thomas Raimondi, chief executive of a Canopy company called MTI Technology (nasdaq: MTIC - news - people ). In this cozy company, SCO even leases its office space from Canopy--a fact disclosed in Securities and Exchange Commission filings, along with the fact that SCO's chief financial officer, Robert Bench, has a side job as a partner in a Utah consulting firm that last year billed SCO for $71,200.
Canopy companies sometimes share more than a common parent. They form joint ventures and buy and sell one another's stock. Last November SCO formed a joint venture called Volution with Center 7, a Canopy company. In 2000, Caldera sold off part of its business to EBIZ Enterprises (otc: EBIZQ - news - people ), a Texas company in which Canopy holds a controlling interest and whose board boasts three Canopy execs, including Mott, according to SEC filings. Previously, Caldera bought shares in two other Canopy companies, Troll Tech and Lineo, and later wrote off the Troll Tech investment but sold the Lineo shares at a profit, according to SEC filings. In 1999, Caldera sold its own shares to MTI, then bought those shares back last year, according to SEC filings.
What's the point of all this horse trading? McBride says he has no idea, since those deals happened before he joined Caldera. "I wasn't involved in those transactions," he says.
Yarro says the investments were made based on each company's belief in doing what's best for itself. "There's no hidden agenda," he says.
Yarro won't apologize for the IBM lawsuit. "I'm not a guy who goes away quietly in the night. I fight," he says. "If you take something from me, if you break a promise, I'm going to come after you."
And he doesn't give up. In 2001, Canopy and Center 7 sued software giant Computer Associates (nyse: CA - news - people ) in a squabble over a business partnership that turned sour. Two years later the litigation continues.
The IBM lawsuit could bring a windfall to Canopy, which owns 46% of SCO. Another beneficiary could be John Wall, chief executive of Vista.com, a Redmond, Wash., company that last August struck a licensing arrangement with SCO. Wall got 800,000 shares of SCO stock in the deal and still holds 600,000, making him SCO's biggest individual shareholder after Canopy. Those shares, which were worth about $1 each when Wall made the deal, now trade above $10.
One team that won't benefit is the folks at Tarantella, the company that sold its Unix code to Caldera in May 2001. After the deal, Tarantella still held 3.6 million shares of Caldera. But last year Caldera bought back all of them, paying 95 cents apiece for most. All told, Tarantella was paid a mere $36 million for its Unix code--the same code that Yarro and McBride now hope could generate $1 billion from IBM.
These guys in Utah are no dummies. The crunchies in the Linux community should be paying more attention.
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Extended News; News/Current Events; Technical
KEYWORDS: aix; ibm; linux; sco; techindex
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2
posted on
06/18/2003 4:13:39 PM PDT
by
Ernest_at_the_Beach
(Recall Gray Davis and then start on the other Democrats)
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Talk is cheap. Let 'em fight it out with the blue dinosaur.
3
posted on
06/18/2003 4:18:08 PM PDT
by
dark_lord
(The Statue of Liberty now holds a baseball bat and she's yelling 'You want a piece of me?')
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
The beauty of a software suit is that it is a physical thing: Either the code exists in the product or it doesn't.
We'll just have to see if SCO has rights to the code they claim Linux uses.
4
posted on
06/18/2003 4:18:23 PM PDT
by
PatrioticAmerican
(If the only way an American can get elected is through Mexican votes, we have a war to be waged.)
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Hard to root for Microsoft or IBM, but these people are techno-vultures, pure scum of the earth.
SO9
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
So basically SCO are a bunch of lawyers out to grab what they can. The only problem is that IBM has lawyers upon lawyers. SCO are fools to think they will prevail.
6
posted on
06/18/2003 4:26:00 PM PDT
by
ikka
To: ikka
At least IBM invents and manufacturers some useful products. SCO is nothing more than a patent boutique now.
7
posted on
06/18/2003 4:35:52 PM PDT
by
HAL9000
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
My favorite thing about this case is trying to make people sign an NDA to view some of their code. If its in the linux source then its publically available so just tell us where the damn code is.
And if you do, open up yours to an independant auditor so that we can see if there's any GPLed code in there.
8
posted on
06/18/2003 4:36:14 PM PDT
by
lelio
To: lelio
My favorite thing about this case is trying to make people sign an NDA to view some of their code.One Swedish or German company was sent the code but without the NDA demand. Was a mistake of the lawyers. This company then posted at slashdot? (I think another forum) that they saw no code match. No stolen code .
9
posted on
06/18/2003 4:43:40 PM PDT
by
dennisw
(G-d is at war with Amalek for all generations)
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
What is a
"crunchie in the Linux community"? An open source potato chip?
Was this article supposed to be a Microsoft zealot anti-Linux user hit-piece, or is this particular writer always rude and condescending.
To: rdb3
Ping!
To: Servant of the Nine
Why is it hard to root for IBM? They make a fine product, have excellent service, and run a damn fine place to work. What more could you ask?
To: dwollmann
crunchie in the Linux communityDon't you know? All linux people are
European dope smokers according to a managing director at Continental Airlines.
quote:
Having one vendor throat to choke [Microsoft] is helpful in crisis situations, Hanks said. An IT pro can't go to the CEO and say that a server is down, "and hopefully some guy in Amsterdam" will get to a fix when he gets back from the "dope house," he said.
13
posted on
06/18/2003 5:04:42 PM PDT
by
lelio
To: Still Thinking
Why is it hard to root for IBM? They make a fine product, have excellent service, and run a damn fine place to work. What more could you ask? A leftover from the 60s and early 70s. They were very heavy handed back then.
So9
To: PatrioticAmerican
Either the code exists in the product or it doesn't. Not exactly - The likely explanation is that both code bodies grabbed it from third place - a version of the free berkly unix that is public domain. This is a M$ funded attempt to create FUD to hurt the Linux movment.
15
posted on
06/18/2003 5:06:24 PM PDT
by
paulk
To: dennisw
Yes, we captured that in one of the threads!
16
posted on
06/18/2003 5:15:03 PM PDT
by
Ernest_at_the_Beach
(Recall Gray Davis and then start on the other Democrats)
To: Servant of the Nine
I don't recall us being that heavy handed!
17
posted on
06/18/2003 5:16:38 PM PDT
by
Ernest_at_the_Beach
(Recall Gray Davis and then start on the other Democrats)
To: dennisw
18
posted on
06/18/2003 5:22:16 PM PDT
by
Ernest_at_the_Beach
(Recall Gray Davis and then start on the other Democrats)
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
To: Servant of the Nine
"Hard to root for Microsoft or IBM, but these people are techno-vultures, pure scum of the earth."
Got Root? I guess not.
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