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Date:      Thu, 23 Jan 2003 20:44:11 -0800
From:      Terry Lambert <tlambert2@mindspring.com>
To:        Harry Tabak <htabak@quadtelecom.com>
Cc:        freebsd-chat@freebsd.org, "Gary W. Swearingen" <swear@attbi.com>
Subject:   Re: Lawyers to be sicked on *BSD?
Message-ID:  <3E30C49B.51D10FAC@mindspring.com>
References:  <0gvg0gn1o4.g0g@localhost.localdomain> <3E2F3BE6.A8FEEFA5@mindspring.com> <3E30B7AA.7000008@quadtelecom.com>

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Harry Tabak wrote:
> I wonder if the SCO Group has done its homework. *BSD and SVR* are
> hopelessly entangled. The original code for BSD came from AT&T, and
> AT&T/USL versions were at least 50% UCB developed. In 1994, UCB and USL
> settled a nasty lawsuit which resulted in an unencumbered 4.4 BSD-Lite
> Release. The settlment requires that certain files in BSD-Lite include a
> USL copyright notice and certain USL files to include UCB credits.
> 
> See <http://www.daemon.org/bsd-releases/misc/USL-lawsuit>; for more info.
> 
> I believe that all USL files in *BSD and Linux are derived from that
> unencumbered BSD-Lite release, and are therefore properly "licensed". Or
> have people gotten careless?  I think that SCO is trying to make money
> on FUD.


Speaking of FUD...

The thing that touched this off was SCO announcing that they would
be licensing intellectual property, and retaining a rather famous
lawer, whose name is "Boies".

The reason they retained him was to obtain advice on licensing the
"System V on Linux" code; basically, IBCS2 and other binary pieces
needed for running System V programs under Linux, including the
shared libraries.

FWIW, the UCB/USL lawsuit, which was primarily a result of BSDI
hiding behind UCB after yelling "Due Dilligence!", after pissing
off the AT&T lawyers into "anticompetitive mode" through their
illegal use of the UNIX trademark, had as one of its settlement
stipulations that there would be no future actions filed against
BSD 4.4-Lite derived code bases.  Like FreeBSD, NetBSD, and
OpenBSD.

So this tempest is meaningless on BSD mailing lists, no matter what.

Also, FWIW, there area number of Novell patents which were
non-exclusively licensed to USL, and thereby to SCO, that at
least one Linux FS is substantially infringing.  BSD got around
those by implementing full soft updates, instead, which are not
covered by the patents.  In any case, it would be Novell, not
USL (now SCO) who would have to enforce the patents, since the
license was non-exclusive.  Even so, the settlement stipulation
for BSD 4.4-Lite derived code may in fact act as a blanket
patent license.

In any case, I'm sure that all the Open Source projects are
substantially infringing any number of patents (though not as a
result of code that I wrote, if I could help it).

As one example, SQUID infringes on no less than 5 IBM patents,
which is why we were required to not ship it as part of the
software on the Whistle InterJet, after IBM acquired Whistle,
to avoid granting a blanket license to use those 5 IBM
patents, under terms of GPL'ed distribution granting perpetual
rights without fee, and the requirement that licensing be on
parity terms, in order for IBM to be allowed to bid on Federal
Goverment contracts (effectively, if you charge on person $0,
you have to charge every person nor more than $0).

In any case, it's unlikely anyone wants to push such a case,
since to do so risks binding case law... which is why no such
case has ever been taken to the appellate level, so far, and
is one of the main reasons (IMO) that the USL/UCB suit was
settled.

I'm actually still angry about there being a settlement in that
case: UCB had a strong case, and DMR was willing to testify that
there were no USL trade secrets embodied in the code, and MIT
was willing to put their patent portfolio behind the case, and
back it with $, at one point (try to prove that UNIX is not
infringing at least one MIT patent... 8-)).

I rather expect that if anyone really pursued something like
this to the apellate level, we'd find software patents being
at risk of being declared invalid altogether.

-- Terry

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