Companies not bothered by SCO Linux threat

By Ed Frauenheim, Special to ZDNet
15 October 2003 11:10 AM
Tags: suisse, linux, sco, cio, boston, credit, first, percent
Who's afraid of SCO Group?

Apparently just a small portion of companies thinking about implementing Linux, according to a recent survey of 100 chief information officers by investment firm Credit Suisse First Boston.

The survey, published Monday, found that 84 percent of CIOs with Linux installation plans had not re-evaluated their plans in response to the SCO litigation. Of the respondents, 73 percent had Linux implementation plans, according to the survey.

SCO Group, owner of several key copyrights related to the Unix operating system, has rattled the information technology world with its claims about the Linux operating system. In March, the company sued IBM, alleging Big Blue misappropriated SCO's Unix technology and built it into Linux. SCO also has sent letters to about 1,500 large corporations warning that they could be liable for using Linux.

A major question facing companies selling Linux products has been whether the litigation and threats will slow adoption of the operating system.

The C.S. First Boston study, conducted in September, found that Linux seems to have established a "beachhead" in the data center and "mission-critical" applications vital to an organization's operations. The study found that 29 percent of respondents had implemented Linux for mission-critical applications and 23 percent had installed it in the data center.

"Linux seems to have a beachhead in the midrange and high-end server markets," C.S. First Boston wrote. "As companies gain experience with Linux and developers and administrators increase their skill sets, we expect Linux deployment to increase with negative implications for Unix and probably Microsoft."

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Talkback 1 comments

    NYTIMES: SCO's sister company ...Anonymous -- 15/10/03

    NYTIMES: SCO's sister company already guilty of GPL copyright violation

    Lineo is a sister company to SCO, and they were caught in GPL violation:

    http://slashdot.org/articles/03/10/13/0355241.shtml?tid=123&tid=130&tid=185&tid=187&tid=190&tid=88&tid=99
    http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/13/technology/13sco.html?ex=1066622400&en=702453fa899adaac&ei=5062&partner=GOOGLE

    Both Lineo and SCO are owned by Ray Noorda's Canopy Group...

    Lineo were scared to test the GPL in court, so settled out of court. It's interesting that one arm of SCO's parent insists the GPL will not stand up in court, yet the other arm, when offered the chance, turned tail and ran from this opportunity.

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