Headlines:- Updating the Mozilla Public License, 11:07 AM
- Day 3 of the Trial, Through the Eyes of Groklaw and the SL Tribune, 11:59 PM
- Volunteer Needed for Thursday Trial Coverage, Wednesday 04:52 PM
- Jonathan Schwartz: What He Couldn't Say (on Patents, OpenOffice, and Bill Gates), Tuesday 08:32 PM
- Day 2 of the SCO v. Novell Trial - Opening argument - Updated Repeatedly - 1st Witness, Frankenberg, Tuesday 06:14 PM
- More Back-and-Forth on Proposed Jury Instructions/Verdict Forms in SCO v. Novell, Tuesday 12:30 PM
- Last-Minute Filings from Judge Stewart, SCO, Novell, Monday 04:45 PM
- Day 1 of the Jury Trial, SCO v. Novell - Updated 2Xs - We Have a Jury, Monday 01:42 PM
- Novell asks for further ruling on Motion in Limine No. 4, Sunday 11:05 PM
- Novell Never Mentioned UnixWare in its press releases in 2003 - Updated, Sunday 01:41 PM
| Updating the Mozilla Public License |
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Thursday, March 11 2010 @ 11:07 AM EST
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Mozilla is updating its license, and you can participate, just as you did in the GPLv3 updating process. It'll be going on for a while, until the end of 2010, in monthly stages, and each part of the schedule will only last one month, so I'm letting you know now, even though we are all riveted to Utah and the trial at the moment, so you can begin to think about it and maybe make use of intermissions in the Utah story.
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| Day 3 of the Trial, Through the Eyes of Groklaw and the SL Tribune |
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Wednesday, March 10 2010 @ 11:59 PM EST
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Here's what the Salt Lake Tribune reports happened today at the SCO v. Novell trial, all of which it records as if it were all so. Let's see if it is, by comparing what is reported about the testimony with what we already know. Part of what Groklaw does is insist on checking facts. So, let's do that. And then I'll share with you what our reporter there today has to say.
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| Volunteer Needed for Thursday Trial Coverage |
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Wednesday, March 10 2010 @ 04:52 PM EST
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Our scheduled reporter for Thursday and Friday is still a flu patient, and so we do need someone to cover Thursday's SCO v. Novell trial. If you can, please email me and I'll give you instructions. Trust me, you'll have fun. And the rest of us will be so grateful. Thanks!
Update: I'm just learning that the two reporters scheduled for today couldn't go after all. Medical issues. So hit the Paypal button, y'all. We'll order a daily transcript so I can at least tell you about what happened. It'll take a while to get it, so stay tuned, but no need to refresh every ten minutes or anything.
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| Jonathan Schwartz: What He Couldn't Say (on Patents, OpenOffice, and Bill Gates) |
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Tuesday, March 09 2010 @ 08:32 PM EST
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I know we are all riveted on Utah today, but take a moment, please, because this is important. Jonathan Schwartz, formerly CEO of Sun, has a personal blog, What I Couldn't Say ..., where he has begun to tell us what he couldn't tell us before about events during his tenure there. He has a interesting tale to tell about Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer asking Sun to pay patent royalties to Microsoft on ... OpenOffice.
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| Day 2 of the SCO v. Novell Trial - Opening argument - Updated Repeatedly - 1st Witness, Frankenberg |
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Tuesday, March 09 2010 @ 06:14 PM EST
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Would it surprise you to find out that it turns out that apparently one of the jurors might be related to one of SCO's prior corporate officers? At any rate they have the same last name, and Salt Lake City is a big place, so perhaps not. Novell noticed the similarity in names, according to our reporter today, MSS2, only after jury selection was over. MSS2 has just sent me his first report of day 2 of the jury trial in SCO v. Novell, with more to come. Today was opening arguments by both sides. And we have lots more goodies for you from two eyewitnesses, MSS2 and Tilendor. We begin with SCO's opening argument by Stuart Singer. All I can say after reading it is maybe you needed to be there. Or SCO must be a slow learner or Mr. Singer never reads Groklaw, or ... well, see what you think.
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| More Back-and-Forth on Proposed Jury Instructions/Verdict Forms in SCO v. Novell |
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Tuesday, March 09 2010 @ 12:30 PM EST
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The parties are still going back and forth over pre-trial issues, specifically over the jury instructions and the verdict form. We may see even more on this, because jury instruction and the verdict form come at the very end, so there is still time to try to get it just right. Not that either side will be entirely happy with the result. SCO, of course, wants the last word. But in truth, the wording of these documents does matter a lot, so it's typical to have quite a lot of discussion on exactly how to phrase things. After all, when the jury is deciding, they will be reading that wording, and going over it with a fine-tooth comb on any issues where they don't immediately agree, most likely. You've seen what a mess the unclear wording in the appeals court ruling created, so imagine if the jury were to be confused into thinking they *have* to rule a certain way if they actually don't, based on a misreading of an unclear phrase.
I thought it was funny yesterday that the parties couldn't come up with a proposed introduction to give the judge to read, so he wrote his own, and when they handed up one they'd finally been able to agree on, he decided to just use his own anyway. It was too late. I expect that incident was inspirational to both parties. And as
you'll see in a minute, they are really trying on the jury instructions, with Novell putting the model instructions and both parties' competing phrasing all in one document, so the judge has it all in one place. And then Novell says SCO wants to file its own also.
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| Last-Minute Filings from Judge Stewart, SCO, Novell |
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Monday, March 08 2010 @ 04:45 PM EST
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My, if we think we're having trouble keeping up, how'd you like to be Judge Ted Stewart? Or Sterling Brennan, for that matter? So many filings already, and more today. Proposed exhibit and witness lists, a Memorandum of Authorities Regarding Excusing Potential Jurors Having Knowledge Pertaining to this Dispute -- the one I'm going to read first -- and another responding to SCO's Objection to Board Minutes and a letter from Brennan to the court. And then one more motion in limine denied. Judge Stewart has denied Novell's motion asking for a further, and broader, ruling on its already successful motion in limine #4. He views is as rearguing a point Novell lost already in the denied Request for Judicial Notice of Prior Factual Findings, and he's not going to change his mind. Of course, that's what appeals are for. And now Novell is fully positioned.
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| Day 1 of the Jury Trial, SCO v. Novell - Updated 2Xs - We Have a Jury |
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Monday, March 08 2010 @ 01:42 PM EST
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Happily, cpeterson was able to attend this morning's session.
Update: It looks like that will be all the news for today. They are keeping the public in the hall mainly, to fit all the prospective jurors in, so unless there is something unexpected, tune in tomorrow. Also, I see questions about what's hearsay within hearsay and things like that, so here are all the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure -- meaning the rules you follow for civil trials in federal district courts, and you'll find every other kind of applicable rule linked on the Utah District Court's Rules page. There are local rules as well, and then judges have their preferences, if you recall the judge's marching orders the other day. If you dig and learn something interesting, please share it in your comments. Thanks.
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| Novell asks for further ruling on Motion in Limine No. 4 |
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Sunday, March 07 2010 @ 11:05 PM EST
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Novell has asked the Court to rule further on their Motion in Limine No. 4 [PDF; text]. The Court had previously issued a ruling [PDF] granting that Motion, but Novell now asks for further ruling, stating that "[t]he Court addressed this issue solely in the context of SCO’s covenant of
good faith claim. However, Novell’s motion covered all of SCO’s claims, including slander of
title. The Court’s prior ruling did not expressly address other claims, so Novell requests the
Court to rule on the issue that was left open by its prior order."
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| Novell Never Mentioned UnixWare in its press releases in 2003 - Updated |
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Sunday, March 07 2010 @ 01:41 PM EST
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SCO's Chapter 11 Trustee Edward Cahn bragged at Friday's bankruptcy hearing that he had won all the Daubert motions and most of the motions in limine in Utah.
However, Judge Stewart has just reversed himself with regard to Novell's Motion in Limine No. 2 and No. 3 and has now granted them.If you look at the chart we've prepared you can see that and if you do the math, you'll see that Novell was denied on six of its motions in limine, but it won on five, and in won in part and was denied in part on 8.
It also wouldn't be true to say that SCO won all its motions in limine. SCO was denied without prejudice on one, denied outright on another, denied in part and granted in part on one, granted on two, and one was taken under advisement. SCO did prevail in the three Daubert motions. Just setting the record straight.
In reversing himself on Novell's two motions in limine in his recent order [PDF], I think he made a mistake in describing Novell's press releases, however. It's fundamental to what exactly are the disputed copyrights. So I thought I'd take the time to explain.
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First | Previous | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 | Next | Last |
Elliott Said to Plan Sale of Novell Business If Offer Succeeds
Elliott Associates LP, the fund manager that made an unsolicited $2 billion offer for Novell Inc., would sell the NetWare networking-software unit if its bid succeeds, a person familiar with the matter said.
Elliott ... would also try to run the company more efficiently and bring about $400 million in cash that Novell holds off shore to the U.S., said the person, who asked not to be identified because details of Elliott’s offer haven’t been made public. Elliott may also try to find a buyer for Novell’s business that specializes in an open-source operating system, the person said....The company is overspending on employees, said the person familiar with the bid. - Bloomberg
Is Microsoft Afraid to Say the “L”-word?
It seems that, having lost its position as monarch of the world of computing, Microsoft has decided to become the industry jester. Last week I wrote about its amusing suggestion that we should all be taxed to clean up the mess its software has caused. Now we have this witty post on Microsoft's Port 25 site, which involves writing about open source software applications and the platforms they run on without mentioning “Linux” once. [PJ: As best I can tell, they removed the comment, and in fact at the moment there are no comments. But Moody quotes it all.] - Glyn Moody, ComputerWorldUK
Opera releases Mini browser beta for Android
Mini is designed to work on less-capable phones with smaller screens, slower network connections, and less-sophisticated user interface abilities. Version 5 offers support for features including Speed Dial, which is a grid of favorite Web pages, compression through Opera's servers to speed download of Web pages that aren't tailored for mobile phones, and tabbed browsing.
- Stephen Shankland, CNET
i4i Review Redux
Microsoft has prevailed upon the CAFC to rehear, en banc, only the
willfulness portion of its affirmation of the district court ruling in i4i
v. Microsoft. In other words, the CAFC cut Microsoft a break, probably
because the CAFC wants another bite at cleaning up the willfulness standard.
A revised CAFC ruling was issued today that takes out the sentence:
"Microsoft does not challenge the jury instructions on willfulness or the
sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury's willfulness finding," and
adds a section on willfulness to its revised ruling.
The revised ruling.
The order:
IT IS ORDERED THAT:
(1) Microsoft’s Motion for Leave to File a Reply in Support of Combined Petition for Panel Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc is granted. (2) Microsoft’s Petition for Panel Rehearing is granted for the limited purpose of revising portions of the discussion of willfulness. (3) The previous opinion in this appeal issued December 22, 2009 and reported at i4i Ltd. v. Microsoft Corp., 589 F.3d 1246 (Fed. Cir. 2009), is withdrawn and replaced with the revised opinion accompanying this order.
- Patent Prospector
Rackspace hires to align with MySQL offshoot
"I don't know whether [Oracle CEO Larry Ellison] understands that cloud computing and infrastructure-as-a-service, platform-as-a-service, and database-as-a-service will eventually put his beloved Oracle cash cow in its place or not," he wrote. "But what I do know is that Rackspace is betting that providing these services is what the future of technology will be about."
Oracle has no public plans for a competing public cloud service along the lines of Rackspace and Amazon Web Services. Instead, it is expected to focus on selling tools and services for building private clouds. - BusinessWeek
Court Reaffirms I4i's Patent Win Against Microsoft
Microsoft asked the appeals court to reconsider its decision, and on Wednesday the appeals court upheld its previous affirmation of the district court ruling. Much of the latest decision is identical to the December document, except for an expanded explanation of the three-judge panel's decision to uphold the "willfulness" issue. - Nancy Gohring, PCWorld
Microsoft Technical Fellow Honored with A.M. Turing Award
A Microsoft Research technical fellow, Charles Thacker, was named the winner of the 2009 A.M. Turing Award for his work in designing the Alto, the first modern personal computer. The award comes with a cool $250,000, which Thacker will likely contribute to the University of California, Berkeley, where he earned a bachelor's degree in physics in 1967 and stumbled upon the field of computer engineering. - eWeek's Microsoft Watch
Novell: Macquarie Sees Potential Sale To Strategic Acquirer
Zelnick’s view is that the software company’s current valuation “merely reflects the financial value of the company’s recurring revenue streams,” and that the assets could be worth more to a strategic acquirer, either in whole or part. He lists CA, BMC and Microsoft as the most likely buyers, with potential interest as well from Oracle and IBM. I would note that Zelnick’s view runs counter to some other analysts who doubt there are any likely strategic buyers for the whole collection of Novell assets. - Eric Savitz, Barron's
W3C pulls former Novell CTO for CEO spot
Filling a position left open since 2008, former Novell CTO Jeffrey Jaffe has taken on the role of chief executive officer for the W3C (World Wide Web Consortium).
Jaffe will work alongside Web inventor Sir Tim Berners-Lee, who will remain the organization's director. - Joab Jackson, BusinessWeek
European Parliament slams digital copyright treaty
By a remarkable vote of 633 to 13, the Parliament rebuked European negotiators who have been drafting the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) in a series of confidential meetings around the globe. No version of the document has been disclosed by the participants, which include the United States, the European Commission, Japan, and Canada.
Parliament's resolution demands that the European Commission--the EU's executive branch--grant "public access" to the ACTA documents. If the negotiations are not sufficiently transparent, the resolution says, Parliament "reserves its right" to take legal action. - Declan McCullagh, CNET
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