I don't put much stock in this type of thing at all (and probably most
of us UUG'ers don't), but in our current climate, anything is possible. 
I mean viruses can now be transmitted successfully by e-mail.  Probably
the best conspiracy theory I've ever read.  It is logical, but I really
don't think Microsoft can actually do this legally.

BEGIN SLASHDOT POST
New light to shed on Bill Gates, Microsoft and SCO (Score:5,
Interesting) 

by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 25, @02:31PM (#7056797)  

It's been a long time coming and a lot of us in the OSS community were
aware that this was always a possibility. I post this anonymously to
avoid endangering my reputation at my company. Today, we just got a memo
from the CEO of our firm. Starting next Monday, all open source software
that we use and any development taking place using open source tools
(this includes GNU tools) must be removed and all OSS related projects
will cease. The CEO got a "tip" from some of our stockholders that
Microsoft and SCO are working out a partnership that may make it next to
impossible to use open source/free software without violating some new
clauses in the MS EULA. In addition, Microsoft is planning to help SCO
out in much the same way that they helped Apple. These two "facts"
combined made our CEO very uncertain about the future of open source and
to hedge all bets, he felt it in the stockholder's best interests to
disassociate ourselves from OSS/Free.

I heartily disagree with his position, but since I am not the CEO I
can't change it. Personally, I think he's fallen victim to FUD. From
what we've all seen, SCO doesn't have a prayer of getting anything out
of this lawsuit with IBM. And they definitely have no way to tell people
that they can't use OSS/Free software. But, from a business perspective,
the CEO probably has no choice.

Further "rumours" I heard from the folks upstairs are that Bill Gates
and Steve Ballmer have been working pretty closely with SCO and Darl
McBride on this suit. Originally, it was just supposed to cast Linux in
a negative light. But now they supposedly have an opportunity to
permanently displace Linux in the business world through some new EULA
clauses that are going to be tightly related to the licensing that MS
bought from SCO. Hopefully, all this rumour will amount to is just water
cooler talk. Again, I can't see how MS could legally make a EULA that
would affect competitors in such an obvious way and not get pulled back
into court for anti-trust violations.

But, just in case this is all true, we need to prepare ourselves for the
ultimately bad scenario and find a way to keep free computing alive even
in the face of all the adversity it may encounter in the near future.
Forget about the desktop, this is now about survival and the human right
to software access.

END SLASHDOT POST
-- 
Michael L Torrie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

____________________
BYU Unix Users Group 
http://uug.byu.edu/ 
___________________________________________________________________
List Info: http://uug.byu.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/uug-list

Reply via email to