Below is a glossary of sorts to provide our visitors with more information about the terms we use and the people we refer to in our timeline
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A |
| AIX |
Operating system in the Unix family developed by IBM. SCO claims that
it owns the rights to the underlying Unix source code. The whole
SCO-IBM-Linux controversy stems from SCO's allegations that IBM put
AIX code into Linux.
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| amicus curiae (brief) |
Latin term meaning friend of the court. It is a report
presented to the court by a third party with intent to help the
court clear up issues surrounding the case. It is usually presented
by individuals who, though not involved directly in the case, may
have an interest in the outcome of it. |
| American Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T) |
Former monopoly owner of all of the telephone business in the United
States. AT&T developed the Unix operating system in the late 1960's
and early 1970's. Their monopoly status prohibited them from selling
Unix commercially as operating systems such as Microsoft's Windows
are commonly sold today.
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| AutoZone |
American auto parts retailer being sued by SCO for copyright infringement.
This suit and the DaimlerChrysler suit, filed in March 2004, are the
'high-profile' cases that SCO had been threatening to file for months.
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B |
| BayStar Capital |
Venture capital firm that invested 50 million dollars in SCO, reportedly after
a recommendation by senior staff at Microsoft.
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| Boies, David |
Head of the law firm that is representing SCO. Boies gained fame by
representing the US government in the Microsoft anti-trust case and by
representing presidential candidate Al Gore in the US Supreme Court
during the 2000 election controversy.
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C |
| Caldera |
The former name of The SCO Group. Caldera was a successful Linux
distribution developer based in Utah (like RedHat, SuSE, Mandrake).
Caldera bought the Unix development part of The Santa Cruz Operation
(SCO, aka old SCO) in 2000 and supposedly acquired the
rights to certain portions of the original Unix operating system
code base.
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| Canopy Group |
Venture capital firm which once owned 50% of SCO. Canopy divested itself of its SCO holdings in March 2005.
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| cease and desist (letter) |
Letter sent by an intellectual property owner (patent, copyright, etc.)
to a party who is allegedly using that property without permission which
asks the party to stop and threatens legal action if they continue.
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| CE Linux Forum (CELF) |
Organization formed by the world's major electronics manufacturers
with the purpose of promoting the use of Linux in consumer electronic
devices.
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| Chander, Anupam |
Professor of Law at the University of California, Davis. Wrote an
article for FindLaw putting SCO's claims of ownership of "Unix" in doubt.
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| Claybrook, Bill |
Tech
analyst for the Aberdeen Group who signed SCO non-disclosure agreement
and saw the alleged stolen code. Though somewhat optimistic for SCO's
chances for winning its suit, has since become more skeptical after a
public code showing at SCOForum in Las Vegas.
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| Conectiva |
Linux distribution developer based in Brazil. Conectiva is a member
of the UnitedLinux group to which SCO (formerly Caldera) belonged.
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D |
| DaimlerChrysler |
Auto giant being sued by SCO for copyright infringement. This suit
and the AutoZone suit, filed in March 2004, are the 'high-profile'
cases that SCO had been threatening to file for months.
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| DiBona, Chris |
Open source luminary. Was Linus Torvalds choice when asked if he would
like to have someone look at SCO's alleged stolen code.
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| DiDio, Laura |
Tech analyst for the Yankee Group of Boston who signed SCO non-disclosure agreement and saw the alleged stolen code. Is known for her optimism for SCO's chances for winning.
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| DDoS attack |
DDoS (acronym for Distributed Denial of Service) attack is an situation
on a network in which an attacker floods a server with
incoming messages at such a tremendous rate that the server cannot handle the load and is forced to shut down.
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| DR-DOS |
Operating system developed by Digital Research, Inc in 1987. It
was later acquired by Novell who in turn sold it to Caldera. Caldera
sued Microsoft for anti-trust related to compatibility problems
between DR-DOS and MS Windows and reached a settlement in 2000.
DR-DOS was sold in October 2002 to DeviceLogics, Inc
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| Dynix/ptx |
Operating system like AIX (see AIX), that IBM distributed and to which
SCO claims it owns the licensing rights.
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E |
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F |
| Free Software Foundation (FSF) |
Founded by Richard M. Stallman in 1984, its aim is to develop a
freely distributed Unix-like operating system, to promote the
development of freely distributed software and assure access to
source code.
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G |
| GNU (GNU's Not Unix) |
Project of the Free Software Foundation to provide a Unix-like operating
system with non-proprietary (ie. freely distributed) source code.
The first Linux kernel was bound to a C programming language compiler
and other tools developed by the GNU project thus forming the first
GNU/Linux operating system.
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| GNU General Public License (aka GPL) |
Software license created by the Free Software Foundation. It permits
the free and uninhibited distribution of the source code for programs
falling under that license. The Linux kernel is an example of
software that uses the GNU GPL.
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| Groklaw |
Weblog maintained by paralegal Pamela Jones that provides a comprehensive
analysis from a legal point of view. Jones first-rate research
into less publicized aspects of the case gives visitors a insightful and
fresh perspective on the whole controversy.
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| Guarino, Trink |
Spokesperson for IBM. Has made several statements on the SCO case
for the company.
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H |
| Hall, Jon 'maddog' |
Chairman of Linux International and the "guardian" of the Linux Trademark.
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| Hellwig, Christoph |
Linux kernel contributor and former Caldera employee. Hellwig is
cited by Linus Torvalds as saying that it would be too difficult both
technically and politically to incorporate SCO Unix code
into the Linux kernel.
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| Heise, Mark |
Lawyer for Boies Schiller & Flexner LLP and head lawyer in the
SCO vs IBM case. Heise set off a controversy when he revealed that
part of his strategy will be to try to get the
GNU General Public License declared incompatible with US copyright
law.
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| Heise Online |
German news site that published slides of some code that SCO alleged
was stolen from them and incorporated into Linux. The slides set off
a controversy as they supposedly showed code that had been in the public
domain since the 1970's.
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I |
| International Business Machines (IBM) |
Technological giant based in Armonk, New York. In the process
of being sued by SCO for allegedly taking proprietary Unix code
and putting it in the Linux kernel.
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J |
| Jones, Pamela |
Maintainer of the website Groklaw. (see Groklaw)
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| journaling file system (JFS) |
A file system that keeps a record of its activity in a 'journal', so
to speak. In the event of a system crash, information can be quickly
recovered about what files were contained in your hard disk. One of the
early allegations of SCO was that Linux could not have developed
the capability of using this kind of file system without misappropriating
it from Unix code via IBM developers.
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K |
| kernel |
Core computer programs of an operating system. Allows hardware to interact
with software. The Linux kernel is at the heart of the SCO-IBM lawsuit.
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| Kimball, Dale |
Federal judge for the United States District Court, Utah. Presiding over SCO v. IBM
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L |
| Landley, Rob |
Co-author with Eric S. Raymond of the OSI Position Paper on the
SCO-vs.-IBM Complaint (see Raymond, Eric S.)
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| Linux |
Name popularly given to the operating system which is made
up of programs from the GNU project and other sources
bound around the Linux kernel developed by Linus Torvalds.
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| Love, Ransom |
Co-Founder and former Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of
Caldera (later SCO/Caldera).
Presided over the company when they purchased the Unix systems
division from The Santa Cruz Operation (aka old SCO) and
when UnitedLinux was formed. Ousted in June 2002 and replaced
by Darl McBride. (see McBride, Darl)
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M |
| McBride, Darl |
Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of The SCO Group (formerly Caldera).
McBride took over operations at Caldera in June 2002. He is seen
as the "heavy" in the whole SCO-IBM-Linux affair.
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| Messman, Jack |
Former CEO of Novell. Messman widened the controversy when, in May 2003, he
issued a statement challenging SCO's claims of ownership of
Unix code. He later backed up IBMs claims that their AIX operating system
licenses were irrevocable. (see AIX, Novell)
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| Moglen, Eben |
Columbia University law professor, former counsel for the Free Software Foundation
and author of the Open Source Development Lab's Position Paper on SCO
and Linux. Professor Moglen is perhaps the foremost authority on
the GNU General Public License and its application.
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N |
| Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA) |
A Non-Disclosure Agreement is a document that a party signs that essentially
makes him/her promise not to publicly reveal information that
a company or individual considers confidential in exchange for letting
him/her see it. SCO let various tech analysts see a comparison of
SCO Unix source code and Linux code under a Non-Disclosure Agreement.
The clauses in SCO's NDA reportedly were so strict that few Linux developers
could actually hope to sign them and then continue with their kernel
work. (see kernel; Claybrook, Bill; DiDio, Laura; Taylor, Ian Lance and
SCO Forum)
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| Novell |
Founded by Jack Messman as as Novell Data Systems Inc.
CEO Ray Noorda went on to found Caldera (see Caldera) with Ransom Love.
(see Love, Ransom) The company was a pioneer in software and hardware for
networks. It acquired the rights to AT&T's Unix source code in 1993. It
sold some of the rights to them to The Santa Cruz Operation
(aka old SCO) in 1995. Novell still claims it still maintains
certain rights over the source code.
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O |
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P |
| Perens, Bruce |
Tech analyst, Open Source luminary and consultant. Was one of the
first to post a detailed analysis of the code samples leaked out of
SCO Forum (see SCO Forum) in Las Vegas in August 2003.
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Q |
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R |
| Raymond, Eric S. (aka ESR) |
Author, Linux developer and Open Source luminary. Has been working
on amicus curiae brief and other documents to contest some of the
claims SCO has made. Raymond was accused by Darl McBride (see McBride, Darl)
of being on IBM's payroll.
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| Royal Bank of Canada |
Bank that provided 30 million of the 50 million invested in SCO by BayStar
Capital. (see BayStar Capital)
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S |
| [The] Santa Cruz Operation (aka old SCO) |
Popularly known currently as "old" SCO to distinguish them from what
is now The SCO Group. SCO was founded as a Unix consulting company
in 1979. SCO produced XENIX, the first Unix operating system for
Intel processors. In 1995 SCO acquired Unix system source code
from Novell (see Novell). Linux distributor Caldera (see Caldera)
acquired the Unix division of SCO in 2000. What is left of
The Santa Cruz Operation was renamed Tarantella.
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| SCO Forum |
SCO Forum is a gathering of SCO resellers and developers and SCO's
business customers. At the 2003 event in Las Vegas, SCO showed
samples of source code allegedly taken from Unix and placed in Linux
during a slide show. Someone attending the presentation took photos
of the slides and provided them to German website Heise who quickly
published them. Open source advocates such as Bruce Perens
and others immediately set to tracing the origin of the code.
Analysis revealed that the code on the slides were examples of
routines developed in the 1970's and were most probably already in the
public domain. It was later revealed that the code was not even
in useful to the Linux kernel and had been removed. SCO later tried
to explain by saying that they were using the samples to show how
they looked for the stolen code but not that these actually
represented stolen code. (see Heise Online; Perens, Bruce; Unix; Linux)
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| [The] SCO Group (aka SCO, SCO/Caldera) |
Utah-based company at the heart of the SCO-IBM-Linux controversy.
The SCO Group is essentially the fusion of Linux developer Caldera
with The Santa Cruz
Operation's Unix development division of
which was acquired by Caldera in 2000.(see Caldera, Tarantella)
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| Sontag, Chris |
SCO Group Vice President and one of the principal spokesmen for the
company throughout the whole affair.
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| Stallman, Richard M. (aka RMS) |
Founder of the Free Software Foundation and principal promoter of the
GNU project.
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| SuSE |
German Linux distribution company and one of the
companies that made up the UnitedLinux (see UnitedLinux) group.
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| SystemV |
Major version of Unix originally developed by AT&T (see AT&T)
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T |
| Tarantella |
Remaining non-Unix divisions of The Santa Cruz Operation
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| Taylor, Ian Lance |
The only (at least mentioned publicly) tech analyst sympathetic to
the Linux side who signed a non-disclosure agreement to see the
alleged stolen SCO Unix code.
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| Torvalds, Linus |
Inventor of the Linux operating system and principal maintainer of the
Linux kernel.
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| TurboLinux |
Based in Japan, it is one of the Linux distribution companies
that made up the UnitedLinux group (see UnitedLinux).
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U |
| UnitedLinux |
Now defunct joint effort to develop a Linux distribution aimed at corporate customers. The partners in th is project were Caldera, SuSE, Turbolinux and Conectiva.
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| Unix (or UNIX) |
Operating system developed originally at AT&T Laboratories.
Spun off into different versions (AIX, Solaris, BSD, UnixWare, XENIX)
and extremely successful in enterprise settings. SCO claims that
through a series of acquisitions over the years, the main part of the
Unix code base is owned by them. Linux is considered a Unix-like
operating system which mimics some of the operating characteristics
of Unix but is not based on Unix code. SCO's main contention is that
Unix code has made its way into Linux principally via IBM and they
filed suit in March 2003 for breach of contract based on these
claims. (see Linux, IBM, The SCO Group, AIX, Novell)
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V |
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W |
| Wells, Brooke |
US magistrate judge presiding over the discovery phase of SCO v. IBM
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X |
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Y |
| Yarro, Ralph |
Chairman of the board and principal shareholder of The SCO Group. Former president of the venture capital firm The Canopy Group.
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Z |
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