SCO and Novell have filed the most documents -- 16 filings, plus exhibits -- we've ever had in a single day. That only happens when I say I need to go to the beach. But one of the nicest things happened. Novell has responded [PDF] to SCO's slur against Groklaw
Read more »A Mountain of Filings in SCO v. Novell and a Kind Word About Groklaw
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Google, Microsoft-backed group ready to Defend Fair Use
Earlier this month, the Computer & Communications Industry Association filed a complaint with the FTC alleging that professional sports leagues, Hollywood studios, and book publishers were all using copyright notices that misrepresented the law. Now, the group has launched a web site called Defend Fair Use that shows they are serious about making the complaint stick.
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TorrentSpy squeezed out of the US
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Critics urge rejection of Microsoft 'open' format
A Microsoft document format that may be adopted as an international standard this weekend is a ploy to lock in customers, who could lose control over their own data in a worst-case scenario, critics say.
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How hypervisors can defeat GPLv3's "anti-tivoization"
This guest whitepaper explains how hypervisors can isolate proprietary software from GPLv2 and GPLv3-licensed software. Authored by a Trango product manager, it uses Trango's hypervisor as an example, showing how the technology could help safeguard copyright-encumbered multimedia content in a video playback device with a user-modifiable Linux OS component.
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U.S. organization edging to Microsoft's Open XML support
In a reversal, the American representative to the ISO standards body is now tentatively supporting the approval of Microsoft's Office Open XML document format as an open standard this year.
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GPLv3 growth now at 19%, week over week
"...August appears to be a watershed month for GPLv3 adoption. Last week I mentioned that the new license saw 14% growth week over week. This week? 19%..."
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Linux felon forced to install Windows
A GNU/Linux user was jailed for uploading a film onto a peer-to-peer service. Now he's being told he will have to switch to Windows if he wants to use a computer again.
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SCO Wants Novell's New Provisional Evidence Tossed --"We Played by the Rules"
SCO has filed a motion in limine, SCO's Motion to Strike Exhibits on Novell's Revised Exhibit List Not Previously Disclosed [PDF], seeking to strike some new exhibits from Novell's revised list of 26(a)(3)(C) pretrial disclosures.
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Court Ruling Clouds Open Source Licensing
""In a decision centering around the violation of the Artistic License, a San Francisco court has denied an injunction against Matthew Katzer in the favor of Roberr Jacobsen of the JMRI project. Importantly, the decision makes the point that the Artistic License is a contract, an interpretation which the Free Software Foundation has been keen to avoid as a legal stance."
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Dance on the grave of DRM video
This is a prototype of a video designed to tell the story of DRM. The life and death, the rise and fall, the here today, gone-tomorrow story of DRM.
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The Mountain Argument That Could Be a Molehill
With all of the sturmundrang out there about Micrsoft's tentative foray into the world of open source licensing, it seems people may be missing another aspect of the discussion.
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SCO's Motion in Limine - Shh! Don't Tell the Jury About IBM or "Commentary Thereon"
SCO's one motion in limine [PDF] it has filed so far is a remarkable one. It would like the court to order Novell, its representatives and its witnesses not to speak about the IBM litigation or any commentary about it to the jury. "Commentary" would be us Groklaw chickens and, SCO claims, "other similar websites".
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Can developers reclaim donated IP?
In 2004 Daniel Robbins, the founder of Gentoo Linux, walked away from the project after creating the nonprofit Gentoo Foundation to handle its intellectual property (IP). In a blog post last month, Robbins wondered if he should take back the software, since it didn't appear the foundation was taking care of things.
Read more »How Model Train Software Will Have an Important Effect on Open Source Licensing
One of the frustrations of lawyers serving the open source industry is that they have few cases which interpret open source licenses. As Eben Moglen has pointed out, such cases are few because licensees need the license be in effect to avoid copyright infringement.
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