I've just checked, and ibiblio has retained the Groklaw blog, static
now, over the past few years. It was perhaps the best dissection of the
case from a legal point of view:
though it seems that only the last pages have in fact made it to
ibiblio. You may have to browse the Wayback Machine for the earlier ones.
Wesley Parish
On 4/11/24 15:31, Greg 'groggy' Lehey wrote:
On Sunday, 3 November 2024 at 19:17:03 -0600, Will
Senn wrote:
It happened in September, apparently, but is only
now making the rounds.
Darl McBride, known for taking everybody and his brother to court over
stolen code, has passed away.
https://fossforce.com/2024/11/once-linuxs-biggest-enemy-darl-mcbride-dies-a…
Oh. As you say, RIP.
I actually remember liking SCO back in the day,
before the company
leadership went dark-side. These days, we get to play with ancient unix cuz
of their license.
Yes. SCO really changed between 2002 and 2003.
Is there a concise summary of the SCO suits and
fallout out there? I've seen
a lot on the AT&T side of things, but other than having lived through it,
I've not seen much on what eventually happened and why it all sort of just
dissappeared.
Not quite what you're looking for, but at the time I kept quite
a bit
of information at
http://www.lemis.com/grog/SCO/
It's a bit of a mess, and a lot of the links have atrophied, but some
of it could be interesting. Potentially the reference to BSD code in
the fossforce article could be related to
http://www.lemis.com/grog/SCO/code-comparison.php
Greg
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