The SCO Group Wednesday announced it was abandoning its Linux business and warned commercial Linux users they may be liable for intellectual property violations that, it alleges, exist in the Linux ...
Proving that its efforts aren’t focused on suing IBM in order to make money, the SCO Group is this week unleashing a version of its Linux distribution for 64-bit Intel Itanium 2 servers. The new ...
The letters, dated Dec. 19, claim the ABIs that allow customers to run Unix applications over Linux are owned by SCO and are being used without the company's permission. In the letter, SCO cites more ...
The SCO Group’s not-so-veiled legal threats made yesterday about going after commercial Linux users and vendors to protect its Unix intellectual property is being greeted with little fear, much ...
Chat boards, Web logs and Internet news services lit up with news that the embattled company--which claims its Unix code has been illegally included in Linux--had sent notices to thousands of ...
In a bold move aimed at reassuring its enterprise users that Linux is the right choice for their businesses, Hewlett-Packard Co. today is announcing that it will indemnify its Linux customers against ...
SCO just won't quit. Without showing a shred of real evidence, the SCO lunacy has moved up a notch, with the company revealing its licensing fees for Linux. And just like slimy salesmen, they're even ...