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Recent Posts
 Thursday, April 15, 2004
I'm Missing the Point

Like a lot of techies and/or Penguin-heads out there, I've been following the whole SCO-vs.- [well, everyone] battle that has pitted the small Utah-based Unix company against...well, the entire, global Linux community and beyond.

For those not familiar with the whole mess, here is an encapsulated summary:
SCO says it owns the rights to Unix; SCO says this same Unix code is in Linux, so SCO is busy suing a lot of Linux vendors/users (IBM, Daimler-Chrysler, Autozone) and being sued by others (RedHat, Novell) for same actions.

Yes, that is a greatly over-simplified version of the whole mess. But necessary for what follows.

There was a very good story on Salon.com today (subscription or "view ad get daily pass" required) about the SCO frontal - and the OSS backlash - titled Making the world safe for free software.

In the article, a short summary (far better than mine) outlines the whole issue of SCO vs. [everyone], and what is happening - pre-legal outcome[s] - to combat this issue. In general, it addresses how Linux - or any such non-company product - can survive our litigious times.

The focus of the article is on Open Source Risk Management (OSRM), a company that is trying to act as an independent - yet OSS-friendly - insurance agency for companies using Linux. Notable among OSRM's hires is Pamela Jones, the Head WebMistress of Groklaw, the simple blog turned open-source legal defense for Linux. Groklaw - the Anti-FUD.

It's an interesting article and OSRM has an interesting tack on the whole indemnification issue, but - to me - this should be only a first step. Maybe it is; however, neither the article (nor anything else I've written) seem to indicate otherwise.

Bear with me, as I'm not a lawyer and just not that bright (obviously...), but here are some of the issues/contradictions I see, as well as comments on the current condition:

I'm sure I'm missing something, but why not some sort of move where a third-party (OSRM, for example) can give blanket indemnification? Instead of each RedHat client (for example) having to apply for this insurance Yes, it could be a bundled cost, but doesn't that point to the need for something "UL-like" as I've pointed out?

People who run Linux that is not UL-listed, well, same as building your own power strip.

Your house may burn down.

If it does, you don't have a recourse.

Which is fine - keeps choice open, but protects those (yes, at some cost) who want protection.

- Posted by Lee at 3:01 PM Permalink #
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