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DENSRAW

Grammaton Cleric
Dec 21, 2000
1,229
0
0
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/030805/latu094_1.html

SCO Announces Intellectual Property License for Linux
Tuesday August 5, 12:43 pm ET
SCO Provides Commercial Linux Users With Run-Time, Binary License to Run SCO's Intellectual Property in Linux


LINDON, Utah, Aug. 5 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The SCO Group, Inc. (Nasdaq: SCOX - News), the owner and licensor of the core UNIX® operating system source code, today announced the availability of the SCO Intellectual Property License for Linux®. The run-time license permits the use of SCO's intellectual property, in binary form only, as contained in Linux distributions. By purchasing a SCO Intellectual Property License, customers avoid infringement of SCO's intellectual property rights in Linux 2.4 and Linux 2.5 kernels. Because the SCO license authorizes run-time use only, customers also comply with the General Public License, under which Linux is distributed.
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/19990421/SCOLOGO )
SCO announced in July that it had registered the copyrights to its software releases of UNIX System V and UnixWare® with the U.S. Copyright office and that it would offer licenses to cure the SCO IP infringement issues for Linux operating systems. Beginning this week, SCO will start meeting with commercial Linux customers to present the details of this right to use SCO intellectual property binary licensing program.

"We have identified numerous files of unlicensed UNIX System V code and UNIX System V derivative code in the Linux 2.4 and 2.5 kernels," said Chris Sontag, senior vice president and general manager of SCOsource, the intellectual property licensing division of SCO. "We believe it is necessary for Linux customers to properly license SCO's IP if they are running Linux 2.4 kernel and later versions for commercial purposes. The license insures that customers can continue their use of binary deployments of Linux without violating SCO's intellectual property rights."

Pricing and Availability

SCO will be offering an introductory license price of $699 for a single CPU system through October 15th, 2003. Pricing for multiple CPU systems, single CPU add-ons, desktop systems and embedded systems will also be available. Linux users who are interested in additional information or purchasing an IP License for Linux should contact their local SCO sales representative or call SCO at 1-800-726-8649 or visit our web site at http://www.sco.com/scosource .

About The SCO Group

The SCO Group (Nasdaq: SCOX - News) helps millions of customers in more than 82 countries to grow their businesses with UNIX business solutions. Headquartered in Lindon, Utah, SCO has a worldwide network of more than 11,000 resellers and 4,000 developers. SCO Global Services provides reliable localized support and services to all partners and customers. For more information on SCO products and services visit http://www.sco.com .

SCO and the associated SCO logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of The SCO Group, Inc., in the U.S. and other countries. UNIX and UnixWare are registered trademarks of The Open Group in the United States and other countries. All other brand or product names are or may be trademarks of, and are used to identify products or services of, their respective owners.




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Source: The SCO Group

I'm speechless.
 

Freon

Braaaaiinss...
Jan 27, 2002
4,546
0
0
43
France
www.3dfrags.com
wait and see. this case is getting nasty :rolleyes:
on the bright side, it looks like they're are getting more and more desparate. they haven't progress much since March.
 

EtherRex

Englishman
Mar 19, 2002
74
0
0
London.
www.MPClan.com
Er, well, SCO claim the linux kernel contains code that they have not licenced for distribution under the GPL and is a trade secret that belonds to them, right? Yet they have distributed versions of the Linux kernel under the terms of the GPL. Therefore, there is no code in the Linux kernel that is not freely distributable under the terms of the GPL.

Im paraphrasing Eben Moglen in Linux User and Developer magazine. Seems pretty cut and dried though.