Elastic promises "open"—delivers proprietary
Elastic promises "open"—delivers proprietary
Posted Jan 31, 2021 19:23 UTC (Sun) by Wol (subscriber, #4433)In reply to: Elastic promises "open"—delivers proprietary by kpfleming
Parent article: Elastic promises "open"—delivers proprietary
Cheers,
Wol
Posted Feb 4, 2021 0:41 UTC (Thu)
by nix (subscriber, #2304)
[Link] (6 responses)
Posted Feb 4, 2021 1:16 UTC (Thu)
by Wol (subscriber, #4433)
[Link] (5 responses)
But what happened was that, as part of their claim that Berkeley infringed AT&T copyrights, AT&T claimed ownership of utilities like vi. Berkeley promptly brought evidence that, not only was vi written at Berkeley not AT&T, but that the reason AT&T mistakenly claimed it was that they had deleted all evidence as to who owned the copyright!
That was why they capitulated so quickly, and wanted it all sealed - if they mistakenly claimed stuff that clearly belonged to other people, then they had no way to prove they owned anything, and even worse that lack of proof was down to the fact they themselves had destroyed it.
The settlement should be available on Groklaw somewhere - someone made a Freedom of Information request for it and sent it to PJ. In hindsight everyone was surprised no one had tried that earlier ...
Cheers,
Posted Feb 4, 2021 1:23 UTC (Thu)
by Wol (subscriber, #4433)
[Link]
Cheers,
Posted Feb 4, 2021 1:40 UTC (Thu)
by nix (subscriber, #2304)
[Link] (2 responses)
Posted Feb 4, 2021 9:48 UTC (Thu)
by Wol (subscriber, #4433)
[Link] (1 responses)
At some point late 70s early 80s I guess, especially given that AT&T was governed by the anti-trust rules that they weren't allowed to compete in the software business, it was *company* *policy* that all software should be supplied without copyright notices (seeing as it was believed copyright didn't apply).
Problem was, Unix as supplied by AT&T contained a LOT of code from three University sources - Berkeley who claimed copyright, that Australian university who's name I always forget, and University College London, for whom the latter two copyright definitely DID apply.
So the Judge's guidance before making a ruling said "AT&T have deleted the copyright notices, therefore it's down to AT&T to prove they own the code". Seeing as I guess they didn't have a decent and long-standing backup system to prove where the code came from, they threw in the towel pretty quick, rather than have the Judge rule that they couldn't prove they owned it therefore they didn't. Hence the extreme secrecy over the settlement ... the Emperor had no clothes ...
Cheers,
Posted Feb 4, 2021 10:02 UTC (Thu)
by amacater (subscriber, #790)
[Link]
Posted Feb 5, 2021 20:56 UTC (Fri)
by flussence (guest, #85566)
[Link]
Incidentally, this sort of scam is now the main business model of the “music rights societies” (a euphemism if there ever was one) feeding off of Youtube's automated system. Make a throwaway shell company with a name that looks like it was algorithmically generated itself, upload recordings of white noise, covers of other people's music, microphones pointed at bird feeders, and monetise, monetise, monetise. The system they abuse is built to be a death march for anyone coming in at the other side (Google will do anything to avoid employing real humans to support their products), so this is virtually consequence-free.
Elastic promises "open"—delivers proprietary
Elastic promises "open"—delivers proprietary
Wol
Elastic promises "open"—delivers proprietary
Wol
Elastic promises "open"—delivers proprietary
Elastic promises "open"—delivers proprietary
Wol
Elastic promises "open"—delivers proprietary
Elastic promises "open"—delivers proprietary