Nothing much has changed
Nothing much has changed
Posted Nov 3, 2006 20:45 UTC (Fri) by rfunk (subscriber, #4054)In reply to: Nothing much has changed by irios
Parent article: Various responses to Microsoft/Novell
So, if I'm a large business and I buy SLED or SLES today, I know that I'm safe from Microsoft, because Microsoft has just promised so.
Nope. As soon as Microsoft goes after Red Hat for patent infringement in GPL code, Novell loses the right to distribute the same code. So as a Novell customer you lose support for that code.
Posted Nov 4, 2006 0:39 UTC (Sat)
by mjr (guest, #6979)
[Link] (4 responses)
Nothing much has changed
As soon as Microsoft goes after Red Hat for patent infringement in GPL code, Novell loses the right to distribute the same code. So as a Novell customer you lose support for that code.
IANAL, but since anyone can claim anything, wouldn't it have to stand up in court first? (Settling with less than GPL friendly terms would of course disqualify the settler from distributing, but I don't think others, including Novell, should be affected in this case.)
In the end, the result is the same though if one of these claims goes through trial. Novell just bought some time to react at the expense of a lot of goodwill. That loss is well deserved.
Posted Nov 4, 2006 11:40 UTC (Sat)
by seyman (subscriber, #1172)
[Link] (3 responses)
Nope. The only thing that SCO has proved in their case against IBM is that you can make any odd claim and make the resulting lawsuit drag on for 3+ years.
Posted Nov 4, 2006 12:35 UTC (Sat)
by mjr (guest, #6979)
[Link] (2 responses)
I fail to see the relevance of your comment on the actual subject matter. Sure, lawsuits can take time, but until there's a court decision, it's still all allegations and no more.
Posted Nov 4, 2006 15:09 UTC (Sat)
by seyman (subscriber, #1172)
[Link] (1 responses)
Note that while the lawsuit is taking place, the legal fees are going to increase. If Microsoft does go after Red Hat, they may file a claim and then seek delay after delay, waiting for the legal fees to start hurting Red Hat. I doubt Red Hat's customers will take it that calmly.
Posted Nov 5, 2006 14:52 UTC (Sun)
by job (guest, #670)
[Link]
IANAL, but since anyone can claim anything, wouldn't it have to stand up in court first?
Nothing much has changed
Nothing much has changed
Nope. The only thing that SCO has proved in their case against IBM is that you can make any odd claim and make the resulting lawsuit drag on for 3+ years.
Sure, lawsuits can take time,
Nothing much has changed
What we also learned from SCO was that Linux is of strategic importance to IBM and they won't take threats against it lightly. Given that Red Hat (and Novell) has some sort of Linux partnership with IBM, a lawsuit against Red Hat could quickly turn nasty.Nothing much has changed