Red Hat v. SCO
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The Red Hat v. SCO lawsuit - Red Hat filed suit against The SCO Group on August 4, 2003. Red Hat is asking for a permanent injunction against SCO's Linux campaign and a number of declaratory judgements that Red Hat has not violated SCO's copyrights.
This is just one of a series of lawsuits in which SCO is involved. Other lawsuits in which SCO is involved are SCO v. IBM, SCO v. Novell, SCO v. AutoZone, SCO v. DaimlerChrysler.
Background
In 2003, The SCO Group started a campaign against Linux. In this campaign they claimed that Linux is infringing SCO's copyrights and that users and vendors of Linux would possibly be held accountable for these infringements. Some statements even suggest that users of Linux could expect legal action from The SCO Group. Red Hat is a long time Linux vendor and market leader in offering Linux solutions.The lawsuit
As a response to these allegations, Red Hat filed suit against SCO on August 4, 2003. According to the filing, Red Hat has requested that the court make:- a permanent injunction against SCO's campaign against Linux
- 2 declaratory judgments, that Red Hat has not violated SCO's copyrights, that Red Hat has not violated SCO's trade secrets and several other claims for relief
- "Of course, we will prepare our legal response as required by your complaint. Be advised that our response will likely include counterclaims for copyright infringement and conspiracy. I must say that your decision to file legal action does not seem conducive to the long-term survivability of Linux."
Red Hat wanted to proceed as quickly as possible and start discovery. They send their first interrogatories, but on October 2, 2003, The SCO Group also filed a motion to stay discovery until the motion to dismiss is heard. Additionally they filed a motion asking for more time to answer Red Hat's first interrogatories.
For over 4 months, both parties waited for a response of the judge. Finally, Red Hat filed a motion to supplement the record with additional information. The additional information contained two letters sent by The SCO Group to Lehman Brothers, a Red Hat customer. In the first letter SCO once again claims ownership of Unix and that certain portions of Linux infringe on its Unix copyrights. In the second letter SCO threatens with legal action if Lehman Brothers do not remedy the infringement. A letter sent by Lehman Brothers' counsel instructs SCO to take this matter up with Red Hat, their supplier of Linux products.
The next 2 months, Red Hat and SCO fought about whether or not this additional, very damaging, information should be entered into the record. That fight came to an end when the judge finally made a decision.
In her opinion, dated April 6, 2004, Judge Robinson denied SCO's motion to dismiss. Additionally she stayed the lawsuit pending the resolution of the SCO v. IBM lawsuit, which makes the motion to supplement the record, the motion to stay discovery and the motion for more time to answer Red Hat's first interrogatories moot.
On April 21, 2004, Red Hat files a motion to reconsider the stay, claiming SCO never asked for a stay and that a stay is inappropriate because the issues in the SCO v. IBM case will not solve the issues in the Red Hat v. SCO case. The SCO Group files several memoranda in opposition of this motion.
On March 31, 2005, Red Hat's motion was denied, so the case remains stayed until SCO v. IBM is resolved. The parties have to submit a letter to the court every 90 days.
Court Proceedings
- August 4, 2003: Original Red Hat complaint against SCO [link]
- April 6, 2004: Court orders a stay pending resolution of the SCO v. IBM case [link]
- April 21, 2004: Motion by Red Hat to reconsider the stay [link]
- March 31, 2005: Red Hat's motion denied
See also
External links
- [The SCO Group] - Official website
- [Red Hat] - Official website
- [Groklaw] - An online community dedicated to following the progress of the various lawsuits and investigating the claims SCO makes
- [Tuxrocks] - An archive of court documents related to this lawsuit
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