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Ownership of Unix copyright headed to trial

Mon Aug 24, 2009 9:40 PM EDT
business, technology, us, novell, sco-group
P. Solomon Banda, Associated Press
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DENVER — A federal appeals court on Monday reversed a judge's decision that granted the copyright of the Unix computer operating system to Novell Inc.

A three-judge panel of the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that a judge erred in August 2007 by granting the copyright to Novell. The panel ordered a trial to determine ownership.

Novell, a software and computer infrastructure company, has been locked in a yearslong legal battle with The SCO Group Inc. of Lindon, Utah, over ownership to the copyright.

SCO said the ruling paves the way for resumption of the court case.

SCO filed for bankruptcy protection in 2007, drained by unsuccessfully filing lawsuits claiming its software code was misappropriated by developers of the open-source Linux operating system.

"For us it's a case of survival, of protecting what we own." SCO chief executive Darl McBride told The Associated Press.

Part of the Unix computer code, which was developed by AT&T in 1969, is used in the Linux operating system.

McBride said the development and distribution of Linux has caused the company's revenues to drop from $250 million a year to $15 million, forcing the company to file for bankruptcy.

"There are 20 million versions of Linux running around the world," McBride said, referring to his estimate of company servers using Linux. "Linux at the end of the day is a knock off of our Unix."

Novell has operations in Provo, Utah, and Waltham, Mass. A Novell spokesman did not return a message seeking comment.

SCO has another lawsuit pending against IBM Corp., claiming Big Blue's Unix license for IBM's core AIX system was canceled in 2003 and IBM improperly gave away Unix source code for use in Linux.

McBride said the appellate panel's ruling reinstates SCO's claims against IBM, most which had been dismissed because of Novell's claim to the Unix copyright. A message left after business hours for IBM was not immediately returned.

Trial dates for SCO's lawsuits against Novell and IBM have not been set. Both cases are pending in U.S. District Court in Salt Lake City.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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Daniel Glasser

"Part of the Unix computer code, which was developed by AT&T in 1969, is used in the Linux operating system." The above is SCO's claim, not a fact. They have so far failed to provide any real evidence of this, only of some similarities in header files that were published and/or in the public domain. Their suit against IBM claims misappropriation, but IBM produced the code in the first place and put the same functionality into a Licensed SysV variant and into Linux, but did not take the code from Unix and put it in Linux. I suggest that you visit Groklaw and look over the whole sad saga of SCO vs. the world.

    Reply#1 - Tue Aug 25, 2009 12:53 AM EDT
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