Headlines:
Why the GPL Sinks SCO's Copyright Infringement Claims, Even if it Owned the Copyrights |
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Monday, November 16 2009 @ 02:56 PM EST
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I've started to wonder if Novell or IBM has explained to SCO's Chapter 11 Trustee Edward Cahn how the GPL works. It cuts through all the other ways SCO is bound to lose, in my view. Then, I thought: why not just explain it myself? You never know. It might prove useful to put it all in one place. So, here goes, SCO and the GPL. As you may recall, if you've been around since 2003, SCO's position on the GPL has been that while it may have distributed its code under the GPL, it didn't mean to do it, that it never knowingly distributed Unix or Unixware code under the GPL. I'd like to briefly explain why that excuse doesn't matter to either Novell or IBM. IBM of course has always taken the position that it hasn't infringed any copyrights, no matter who owns them. But let's take SCO's words at face value, and pretend that they are true. Then how does the GPL moot their claims?
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Cahn Objects to Wayne Gray's Motion to Lift Stay - Updated, as text |
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Monday, November 16 2009 @ 03:29 AM EST
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SCO's Chapter 11 Trustee Edward Cahn has filed an objection to the Wayne Gray motion to lift the stay. Cahn says that to characterize the Wayne Gray motion as "highly irregular" would be "an understatement".
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Apple Wins Like a Champ - Psystar is Toast -- What? You're Surprised? |
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Saturday, November 14 2009 @ 10:45 AM EST
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Psystar just got what's coming to them in the California case. Here's the order [PDF]. It's a total massacre. Psystar's first-sale defense went down in flames. Apple's motion for summary judgment on copyright infringement and DMCA violation is granted. Apple prevailed also on its motion to seal. Psystar's motion for summary judgment on trademark infringement and trade dress is denied. So is its illusory motion for copyright misuse. There are still issues remaining for trial, despite Psystar's attempt to present everything now as being moot. Here's what's left to be decided at trial: Apple's allegations of breach of contract; induced breach of contract, trademark infringement; trademark dilution; trade dress infringement; and state unfair competition under California Business and Professions Code § 17200; and common law unfair competition. See anything on that list that will be helpful to Psystar?
So that means damages ahead for Psystar on the copyright issues just decided on summary judgment, at a minimum. The court asked for briefs on that subject. In short, Psystar is toast. Psystar's only hope now is Florida, and frankly I wouldn't bet the house on that one. Judges notice if you were just found guilty of a similar cause of action in another state. You're surprised? I told you, I told you, I told you. So, to those who feel crushed at the moment, there could be an appeal, I suppose. And if you want freedom for your code, you certainly can find it on Planet Earth. Look in the right direction. You'll be happy you did, because you can hack away to your heart's content, and it's perfectly legal. The court's message is clear: EULAs mean what they say; if you don't want to abide by its license, leave Apple's stuff alone. We have the order for you as text.
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Bankruptcy court reschedules SCO omnibus hearing to Dec. 30 & Bert Young gets a job & Jeff Hunsaker loses one |
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Friday, November 13 2009 @ 06:50 AM EST
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The omnibus hearing scheduled for December 22nd will be held on December 30th instead. That's the one on SUSE's motion to lift the stay, I believe, so it is one not to be missed. And Bert Young has a new job. He is now CFO at a company called Benefitfocus, located in South Carolina.
Update: Jeff Hunsaker is out.
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An Explanation of Computation Theory for Lawyers |
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Wednesday, November 11 2009 @ 07:48 PM EST
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If I had to describe the fairly universal geek reaction to the oral argument at the US Supreme Court on Monday in In Re Bilski, I would have to say it's a worry that some of the participants didn't seem to understand computers or the tech behind software very well. Groklaw member PolR has written an explanation for lawyers of computation theory to try to fill a gap in their knowledge that he has observed from reading
legal briefs.
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Microsoft Patents Sudo?!! - Updated 3Xs |
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Wednesday, November 11 2009 @ 10:36 AM EST
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Lordy, lordy, lordy. They have no shame. It appears that Microsoft has just patented sudo, a personalized version of it. Here it is, patent number7617530. Thanks, USPTO, for giving Microsoft, which is already a monopoly, a monopoly on something that's been in use since 1980 and wasn't invented by Microsoft. Here's Wikipedia's description of sudo, which you can meaningfully compare to Microsoft's description of its "invention".
This is why what the US Supreme Court does about software patents means so much. Hopefully they will address the topic in their decision on Bilski. Sudo is an integral part of the functioning of GNU/Linux systems, and you use it in Mac OSX also. Maybe the Supreme Court doesn't know that, and maybe the USPTO didn't realize it. But do you believe Microsoft knows it?
Perhaps Microsoft would like everyone in the world to pay them a toll at least, even if they don't want to use Microsoft's software? Like SCO, but with more muscle behind the request? Or maybe it might be used as a barrier to competition? What do you personally believe Microsoft wants patents on things like sudo for? To make sure innovative new companies can compete on an even playing field with Microsoft?
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SUSE Moves to Lift Stay on Arbitration; Novell Asks to Consolidate with IBM Litigation or Have Both Cases Assigned to That Judge |
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Tuesday, November 10 2009 @ 05:42 PM EST
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Novell has made two moves. In bankruptcy court, SUSE asks that the stay be lifted so the arbitration can go forward. And in Utah, Novell has filed a Notice of Related Proceeding, asking that the SCO v. Novell and SCO v. IBM litigations either be consolidated with SCO v. IBM or at least be assigned to the same judge, Tena Campbell.
Updated with further filings, including the transcript of the October 23, 2009 bankruptcy hearing.
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In Re Bilski - Transcript of Today's Oral Argument at the US Supreme Court - Updated 3Xs |
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Monday, November 09 2009 @ 09:14 PM EST
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I know you are dying to know what happened today in oral argument in
In Re Bilski before the US Supreme Court. Here is the transcript [PDF] so you can read it for yourself and not have to depend on me or any journalist. For sure the questions from the court to Bilski's attorney, J. Michael Jakes, and to the attorney for the government, Deputy Solicitor General Malcolm L. Stewart, are interesting. I conclude that the justices are way ahead of them on just how crazy the current patent system has become. Thank heaven there were so many amicus briefs, because reasonable, logical arguments were few and far between from either attorney, in my view, in that they each seemed to argue very much for the status quo, or in the case of Bilski's lawyer for an even broader free-for-all in patentability.
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Transcript of the July 27, 2009 SCO Bankruptcy Hearing - Updated - as text |
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Friday, November 06 2009 @ 08:57 AM EST
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Finally, the transcript [PDF; 1.5MB] of the marathon July 27, 2009 SCO bankruptcy hearing is available to the public. This was the longest hearing in the history of the SCO Litigation Follies, 527 pages long.
It continued until 10 o'clock at night, with Darl McBride testifying. In fact, it's his swan song as CEO. And it's the one where SCO was fighting to avoid Chapter 7, which it did, but also against the appointment of a Chapter 11 Trustee, where it failed.
Update 2: For those of you on dialup, ausage has been kind enough to divide it into parts: -
Part 1 - Opening Statements
- Part 2 - Testimony of Ryan Tibbitts
- Part 3 - Testimony of Ken Nielsen
- Part 4 - Testimony of Darl McBride on Direct Examination
- Part 5 - Testimony of Darl McBride on Cross Examination
- Part 6 - Testimony of Darl McBride on Redirect Examination
- Part 7 - Testimony of Stephen Norris
- Part 8 - Testimony of Jeff Hunsaker
- Part 9 - Statements by LNS and Oracle
- Part 10 - Closing Statements
Isn't it great to have it divided so logically and usefully? He's even color-coded the various speakers. Erwan has done it for us as one complete transcript, so click to read the full transcript. Click on ausage's links instead, if length is an issue for you. Thank you both very much. Enjoy!
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Pelican Opposes McBride's Motion to Dismiss |
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Friday, November 06 2009 @ 12:25 AM EST
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Pelican has filed its Memorandum in Opposition to Darl McBride's Motion to Dismiss its complaint against him. It's a scorcher. First, it says it was McBride who personally led and oversaw the smear campaign against Mark Robbins on the website SkylineCowboy.com. However, we have yet to hear from McBride on that point, as this filing points out. He hasn't denied it, but then he hasn't spoken about it substantively yet, relying instead on jurisdictional arguments. Most of the filing is in response to McBride's assertion that the court lacks jurisdiction over him.
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YouTube Direct launches
YouTube Direct allows you to embed the upload functionality of YouTube directly into your own site, enabling your organization to request, review, and re-broadcast user-submitted videos with ease. News organizations can ask for citizen reporting; nonprofits can call-out for support videos around social campaigns; businesses can ask users to submit promotional videos about your brand. With YouTube Direct, the opportunities to connect directly with the YouTube community are endless. [PJ: It's open source, so it's customizable. More info, including a video, here.] - YouTube Direct
YouTube to Help Sites Gather News Clips
YouTube has signed up NPR, Politico, The Huffington Post and The San Francisco Chronicle for YouTube Direct, a new method for managing video submissions from readers. - NYTimes
Obama Creates Task Force to Fight Financial Fraud
The aim is “to prevent another meltdown from happening,” Attorney General Eric Holder said. “We will be relentless in our investigation of corporate and financial wrongdoing.” - Bloomberg
RGI : François Fillon's gift to Microsoft
The decree validating the General Interoperability Framework was published in the French "Journal Officiel" on the 11th of November 2009. It ratifies the 12th of May 2009 version which spreads confusion by recommending two rival standards for office documents. April had already denounced a writing opposed to the goals of interoperability and accessibility of e-administration for all citizens.
"RGI as it is written maintains the confusion about office documents standards. It hands public administrations over to Microsoft's deceptions and dooms their data to be kept locked in proprietary formats" explained public affairs manager Alix Cazenave. "Far from promoting interoperability this duplicity will generate discrimination between citizens for the access to electronic administrations."
In April's opinion, this record confirms that the French executive authority hardly pays attention to competition in the software market. "After the intervention of the President's people in favor of Microsoft's OOXML standardization, the fact that the Prime Minister ratifies this order confirms the support of the French executive authority to Microsoft's dominant position. We have just missed a historical opportunity to support openness and innovation in the software market" denounced Frédéric Couchet, executive director. [PJ: The silliness of this decision can be gleaned from footnote 4, which reads in part: "The current document recommends the use of either Open Document format or OOXML format. DGME, French Directorate-General for State Modernisation, however admits that 'no implementation of this standard currently exists'." It's quoting from the RGI document, which you can verify by reading it -- it's a pdf and in French -- and then look at page 61. Sean Daly translates paragraph five for us: "Office Open XML is an XML-based office productivity format. It
natively supports a subset of existing binary formats. As of this
writing, no implementation of this standard exists." And the last paragraph on that page: "This sheet is based upon information available as of May 2009 and
will be revised before the official publication of the reference
document [RGI] if new information pertinent to the evaluation
appears." So you can use either ODF or OOXML, except actually you can't use OOXML currently, and in fact nobody in the world is, but they chose it anyway as an interoperability standard. Silly or what?] - April press release
SAP wants an open Java process (pot, meet kettle)
SAP NetWeaver and, well, everything the company ships remain firmly proprietary last time I checked. Complements to SAP's proprietary products should be open, however--or so the argument goes.
Sikka does suggest that "SAP software also needs to be open and adaptable in order to allow customers and partners to be nimble and benefit from the speed of innovation within the SAP ecosystem," but apparently he means that everything but SAP's software should be open and adaptable. - Matt Asay, The Open Road
Verizon tests sending RIAA copyright notices
Customers of Verizon Communications who pirate music files may soon receive an unwelcome letter from the company.
Verizon, the second-largest phone company in the United States, is expected to begin issuing "copyright notices" on behalf of the Recording Industry Association of America to those accused of illegally downloading songs from the Web, according to sources with knowledge of the agreement. - CNET News
A Problem Course in Mathematical Logic
Parts I and II, Propositional Logic and First-Order Logic respectively, cover the basics of these topics through the Soundness, Completeness, and Compactness Theorems, plus a little on applications of the Compactness Theorem. [...] Part III, Computability, covers the basics of computability using Turing machines and recursive functions; it could be used as the basis of a one-term course. Part IV, Incompleteness, is concerned with proving the Gödel Incompleteness Theorems. [PJ: This is for those who found our article on An Explanation of Computation Theory for Lawyers [PDF of interest and would like to know more.] - Stefan Bialuk, Department of Mathematics, Trent University, Ontario
Google Scholar Now Includes Legal Decisions and Articles
[PJ: This is beta, and no doubt the contents will be growing over time, but it's an exciting development. As a test, I searched for a case cited in the Pelican litigation, Lewis v. Rosenfeld, and it was the first result in Google Scholar, not even on the first page of regular Google, which provided a lot of other cases that cited it instead. You can find it either way, but this new way is certainly an advance. Just make sure to click on the choice for legal opinions and journals.] - Google Scholar
Google scoops up ex-Microsoftie Don Dodge
As you may remember, in Microsoft's most recent round of layoffs, the company laid off Director of Business Development Don Dodge. Dodge is very respected in the start-up community and tirelessly defended Microsoft's technologies at conferences and to developers during his time at the company. When he was let go, many people were shocked by the move and were watching intently to see who would pick him up. On Monday, Dodge announced on his blog that he will be joining Google in a similar capacity to his role at Microsoft. - CNET
Panel to Focus on Bilski Oral Argument - Updated
On Thursday, November 19, 2009, the American University Washington College of Law Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property and the Federal Circuit Bar Association (FCBA) will be offering a panel discussion entitled "Patentable Subject Matter After the Bilski Oral Argument."...
A webcast of the panel discussion will be available for a registration fee of $15 (government/academic/retired FCBA member), $35 (government/academic/retired nonmember), $65 (private practitioner FCBA member), or $105 (private practitioner nonmember). Instructions for accessing the webcast can be found here. - Patent Docs
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