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DAILY NEWS AND INFORMATION FOR THE GLOBAL GRID COMMUNITY / AUGUST 11, 2003; VOL. 2 NO. 32
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Special Features:
OSDL RELEASES POSITION PAPER ON SCO AND LINUX
The Open Source Development Lab (OSDL), a global consortium of leading
technology companies dedicated to accelerating the adoption of Linux, released
a position paper raising serious questions about SCO Group's threatened
litigation against end users of Linux. The position paper, which casts doubt
on SCO's position, was authored by one of the world's leading legal experts on
copyright law as applied to software, Professor Eben Moglen of Columbia
University.
SCO Group has not yet publicly revealed the basis for any of its claims. OSDL
is disseminating the position paper to address issues that may concern its
members and industry Linux customers as a result of SCO Group's public
threats. OSDL believes Moglen's analysis will help its members, the Linux
development community and Linux users better understand potential legal
issues.
In his paper, Professor Moglen identifies some of the legal issues raised by
the SCO Group's claims about Linux and users of the popular open source
system. He does not offer legal advice, but rather frames some of the key
questions that companies and developers should ask their own counsel about
Linux. Moglen, a faculty member at Columbia University's Law School, presented
his paper on July 24 in New York at the first meeting of OSDL's customer
advisory council, comprised of CIOs and CTOs from Fortune 100 corporations.
"It is the consensus among the end users with whom we've discussed SCO's
claims that they are not slowing their Linux implementation plans," said
Stuart Cohen, OSDL CEO. "As suggested by Moglen, absent clear, open and
publicly available evidence that using Linux violates rights that SCO has not
already conferred on users by freely distributing Linux over the course of
several years, users see no need to purchase a license from SCO at present."
Moglen makes three main points in his paper:
1. SCO has yet to file a lawsuit against end users, nor has it shared
publicly any information on what software code might infringe its copyright or
trade secret claims. Absent specific factual and legal information from SCO,
how can any individual or company threatened with a potential lawsuit respond
appropriately?
2. Moglen points out that copyright law is not relevant to customers "using"
Linux. In much the same way that readers can enjoy a book or a newspaper
without a copyright license, so can users of software -- unless they have
agreed to additional use restrictions in, for example, a shrink-wrapped box of
software. Copyright law does restrict modification, copying and
redistribution, however these activities are permitted under the GNU General
Public License (GPL) for GNU/Linux and other free software.
3. Moglen says SCO itself continues to distribute Linux under the GPL. He
argues that users should be free to modify, copy and redistribute Linux since
users can go to the SCO even today and download Linux with a GPL license.
Hence, users of Linux already have a license -- from SCO -- that allows them
to do the things that SCO claims are infringing.
"Failure to come forward with evidence of any infringement of SCO's legal
rights is suspicious," Moglen says. "SCO's public announcement of a decision
to pursue users, rather than the authors or distributors of allegedly
infringing software, only increases doubts."
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