SCO Lawsuits Fail To Sustain Company
    SCO's story is mildly intriguing, but I fear it would take more time to explain 
  the whole saga than real interest levels would support. On the plus side, the 
  tale is twisted, complex and possibly sleazy. 
SCO was a major player in Linux back the day. In fact, Microsoft licensed SCO's 
  software and sold it as Xenix until Redmond got single-OS religion. 
In more recent years, SCO has claimed ownership of Unix (created by AT&T) 
  and used that to sue Linux vendors (Linux was derived from Unix, which is one 
  of the reasons I often doubt the originality and creativity of the open source 
  movement). 
The suits against powerhouses like IBM didn't work out, and now sue-happy SCO 
  is filing for Chapter 11 so it can pay its creditors (maybe lawyers?) pennies 
  on the dollar. 
SCO may get a taste of its own medicine as Novell -- which bought Unix System 
  5 from AT&T but later sold rights to SCO -- can possibly claim ownership 
  of some parts of Unix/Linux, and go after what's left of SCO for royalties. 
Even more strange, SCO was bought by Caldera, which was founded by Novell founder 
  Ray Noorda (now deceased). 
Here's a possibly accurate 
  view of SCO.
Got all that? If so, and if you have an opinion, write me at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on September 17, 2007