Linux companies settle copyright suit

Stephen Shankland

14 October 2003 12:40 PM

Tags: lineo, montavista software, linux, sco, sue, gpl, lawsuit, caldera

Two companies that sell Linux for computing devices such as network equipment or DVD players have settled a lawsuit involving alleged mishandling of open-source software.

MontaVista Software accused its competitor Lineo in April 2002 of selling software that originally came from MontaVista that had its copyright notices removed, said Jason Wachal, MontaVista's lead lawyer. MontaVista filed suit in federal district court in Salt Lake City.

"It appeared to us that Lineo, which was still in its original incarnation, was distributing computer software to its customers or potential customers that had code in it that appeared to be written by MontaVista but that had all of the MontaVista copyright information stripped out of it," Wacha said.

Lineo later renamed itself Embedix and was acquired by Motorola subsidiary MetroWerks in December 2002. The suit was settled in the third quarter of 2003, Wacha said. Terms of the settlement are sealed.

Metrowerks spokesman Jack Taylor declined to comment on the case.

Because MontaVista has a strong interest in Linux and the General Public License (GPL) that governs it, it makes sense for MontaVista to want to settle the case so the license doesn't come under question, said John Ferrell, an intellectual property attorney at Carr and Ferrell not involved in the matter.

"It's not surprising they would offer some kind of settlement issue just to avoid the GPL being litigated. MontaVista has been a big proponent of the GPL and says they're doing quite a nice business because of it," Ferrell said.

And the strategy overall is working, Ferrell added. "As time goes on, with each month and quarter that passes, I think the GPL becomes stronger and stronger," he said.

The MontaVista-Lineo case has some similarities to the much higher-profile legal battle between IBM and SCO Group, such as the GPL involvement, but one major difference is that both companies involved in the MontaVista-Lineo case support the GPL.

In the SCO-IBM case, SCO accused IBM of violating its contract by moving code from Unix to Linux that SCO argues should have remained proprietary. In its countersuit, IBM argues that SCO's actions violated the GPL and thus IBM's copyrights.

In contrast, the MontaVista-Lineo case involves software that was covered by the GPL from the very beginning. The GPL explicitly permits code to be copied freely, as long as copyright notices and the GPL license are preserved.

Another connection between the two cases is that SCO and Lineo sprang from the same company: Caldera. In 1999, Caldera spun off Caldera Thin Clients, later renamed Lineo. Caldera was funded by the Canopy Group, an angel investment firm launched by former Novell Chief Executive Ray Noorda.

Canopy Group became a minority investor in Lineo as investment rounds from other companies such as Motorola took a stake in the start-up. Canopy also lent Lineo money as it was "winding down," but never became a large shareholder again, Canopy Chief Executive Ralph Yarro said in an interview.

Lineo had initial public offering aspirations in 2000, but the company scrapped the plan in January 2001 because the previously manic investor interest in technology companies evaporated.

SCO spokesman Blake Stowell pointed to the case as evidence that open-source software such as Linux needs to be handled and tracked more carefully. "Fundamentally, there needs to be some mechanism in place to better police open source," he said.

Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!

Advertisement

Talkback 2 comments

  1. The GPL is vindicated, once more! To all you nay-sayers, go earn some cluepons... Anonymous -- 14/10/03

    The GPL is vindicated, once more!

    To all you nay-sayers, go earn some cluepons...

  2. "SCO spokesman Blake Stowell pointed to the case as evidence that open-source software such as Linux needs to be handled and tracked more carefully. "Fundamentally, there needs to be some mechanism in place to better police open source," he Nathan Hand -- 14/10/03

    "SCO spokesman Blake Stowell pointed to the case as evidence that open-source software such as Linux needs to be handled and tracked more carefully. "Fundamentally, there needs to be some mechanism in place to better police open source," he said."

    But Lineo was the guilty party by stealing code from an open source project. Why should Linux developers do a better job of policing when it is companies like Lineo stealing from open source projects? I think SCO and Lineo are the companies who need to implement better mechanisms to police their own developers. Lineo, a company related to SCO, is the guilty party who was caught stealing code from open source projects. The open source developers are innocent and the settlement proves that.

    I'm also betting this isn't the last incident of companies stealing code from open source projects. There is growing suspicion that SCO has stolen Linux code for use in Unixware, thus the reason for SCO's unprompted lawsuits and attempts to discredit the GPL in the media. IBM has asked for discovery to attempt to determine the extent of infringement by SCO. The Lineo case now proves beyond any doubt that the SCO/Lineo/Caldera group has a great deal of experience in stealing code from open source projects.

    How deep does the rabbit-hole go? I'm willing to bet it goes right down into the core of SCO's business.

Add your opinion


Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Renai LeMay MyPerfect.com.au has potential
    Victorian Web start-up My Perfect has a strong story and rationale for why it will succeed. But it has to overcome some challenges and design flaws first.
  • Array Storage infrastructure on the tender track
    For a large-scale storage project, it's not uncommon to go out to tender for the best deal — but when was the last time you had to put together a tender for a document management room?
  • Array Apple has killed the video store; will ISPs be next?
    The Olympics are nearly over, and the Australian team deserves kudos for an excellent performance all around. Yet even as the Olympic sun sets on the Bird's Nest for the last time this weekend, millions of spectators around the world will be scanning their dials in the hope of finding something else to fill their viewing hours.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured