On Thu, Mar 14, 2024 at 12:38 PM Stuff Received <stuff(a)riddermarkfarm.ca>
wrote:
On 2024-03-13 23:40, Steve Nickolas wrote:
On Wed, 13 Mar 2024, Marc Rochkind wrote:
> Don't know the answer to your question, but last I knew the trademark
> (not
> the copyright) was transferred to The Open Group. They came up with a
set
of rules
for what UNIX is and, as I understand it, for example, Linux is
not a UNIX-like system, it is a UNIX system. (The Open Group isn't
interested in implementations of the UNIX standard, only the standard
itself.)
Only those distros that paid them for the right to be called such.
Not quite -- they do to pass the Single Unix Spec tests.
Only the people that pay for the certification get to claim certified
results.
The Single Unix Spec is about 20 years old at this point, though. There's
been two soon to be three major revisions to Unix since then.
It doesn't matter if they pass w/o payment. That confers no rights to use
the name Unix. Otherwise, FreeBSD, NetBSD and I think OpenBSD
would all be able to use the name 'Unix'. They've all passed some
variation
of
the Unix tests over the years...
Warner