All those topics that i wish i had time to pursue more earnestly.
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Tue, 27 Apr 2004 19:35:04 GMT

A Democrat Grumbling. Why is the Kerry campaign spending precious political capital fighting this stupid battle over medals? Yes, sure the Bush campaign is trying to smear him, but they do that. They're going to do that until the election. It just seems… [Kathryn Cramer]

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you should always expect republican's to run negative campaigns, they are very effective at negatives, they can run anything into the ground.

April 27, 2004   No Comments

Tue, 27 Apr 2004 19:33:03 GMT

Blogging at Ten Cents a Minute, the $400 Yoyo, and related contemplations. This is Duncan's” Cold Fusion Yo-Yo, made of aircraft-grade aluminum and featuring a ball-bearing axle, is one of the longest spinning yo-yos in the world. Holder of previous World Records for spin time, the Cold Fusion is capable of spin times over 10 mi [Funlog]

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i have two yoyo's in my office, neither cost $400, but i probably would buy a $400 yoyo if i had the money, because there is nothing quite like the state of yo…..

April 27, 2004   No Comments

george bush at work

he cleaned his glasses on another person's clothing. presidents should not do such things, it is not appropriate even with permission. gentlemen carry their own glass cloth, and boy scouts should be prepared. he apparently is neither.

April 27, 2004   No Comments

Tue, 27 Apr 2004 17:31:14 GMT

Pizza? Not Tonight. As Gary of Amygdala writes, ordering a pizza may get you in hot water with the government: It's dinnertime, and you're hungry and tired, so you pick up the phone and order your favorite pizza. But you might have just… [TalkLeft: The Politics of Crime]

April 27, 2004   No Comments

Tue, 27 Apr 2004 16:00:26 GMT

IP Memes: SCO Many Lawsuits, SCO Little Time.

(My April contribution to IP Memes follows. Many thanks to the indefatigable Pamela Jones of Groklaw for the inspiration, and for maintaining such a useful and vibrant site. You can read more about Pamela at Wired News, Linux Online, Linux Planet, and eWeek.)

Happy World Intellectual Property Day: “[A]n ideal opportunity to promote, inform and teach the importance of intellectual property as a tool for economic, social and cultural development. The theme of World Intellectual Property Day 2004 will be 'Encouraging Creativity.'” WIPO is the U.N. agency that administers the international treaties governing intellectual property protection.

IP Memes this week takes a look at the lawsuits and positions pursued by The SCO Group, in connection with its claim that Linux violates its intellectual property rights. Linux is a popular open source operating system, originally the brainchild of Linus Torvalds. SCO, which purchased rights to the UNIX operating system from Novell, began claiming last year that Linux improperly uses portions of UNIX code. SCO has sued IBM, claiming Big Blue's contributions to the Linux environment incorporated key portions of the UNIX code. SCO likewise has sued Novell for corporate slander due to the company's statements challenging SCO's claims to UNIX. And recently SCO has begun suing major corporate users of Linux (DaimlerChrysler, AutoZone), claiming their unlicensed use of Linux violates SCO's intellectual property rights. Red Hat, a Linux developer and distributor, has sought to protect its ongoing ability to do business by suing SCO for declaratory relief and damages. For a lengthy discussion of the pending actions, see Darl McBride, CEO of The SCO Group, speaking at Harvard Law School on 2/2/04.

SCO v. IBM

SCO's $5 billion suit against IBM is pending in the U.S. District Court for the District of Utah. It is in the discovery phase, with trial scheduled for April 2005. SCO recently moved for a continuance to September, claiming its ability to complete discovery has been hindered by untimely responses from IBM. On March 26, IBM filed an amended counterclaim in the case, seeking declaratory judgment that it did not infringe SCO's copyrights, that it breached no contractual obligation to SCO, and that the code in which SCO claims a proprietary interest is subject to the same open source license that controls Linux (the GPL).

Unsurprisingly, SCO denies any of the UNIX code is subject to the GPL. In a recent interview, SCO's CEO also characterized IBM's infringement as involving both literal and nonliteral copying, with the latter having more to do with “sequence and organization” than line-by-line duplication. Among the items SCO says were copied verbatim were certain application binary interfaces (ABIs), but it is unclear whether SCO's IP interests extend to the ABIs, and whether the ABI headers are copyrightable as SCO contends.

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SCO v. Novell

SCO's rights to UNIX derive from Novell, who acquired them in turn from AT&T. SCO's action against Novell, filed in January, contends the company improperly has sought to file copyright registrations for UNIX that conflict with SCO's copyrights. It also takes issue with statements Novell has made challenging SCO's ownership of UNIX copyrights and patents. The court currently is considering whether to grant Novell's motion to dismiss, filed in March.

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Red Hat v. SCO

After several months of consideration, on April 6 District Judge Sue L. Robinson (for the District of Delaware) denied SCO's motion to dismiss Red Hat's declaratory relief action. The Court concluded there is an actual controversy sufficient to support Red Hat's claims, despite the fact it has not yet been the target of action by SCO: “SCO's conduct has created a reasonable apprehension of suit. Moreover, there is no question that Red Hat is a LINUX software developer who is engaging in the allegedly infringing activities.” The suit however is stayed pending the outcome of SCO v. IBM: “From the allegations found in the complaint, the core issue of whether the LINUX system contains any misappropriated UNIX system source code must be decided. It is a waste of judicial resources to have two district courts resolving the same issue, especially when the first filed suit in Utah involves the primary parties to the dispute.”

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SCO v. End Users

In addition to its pending actions against DaimlerChrysler and AutoZone, SCO has threatened additional actions against the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center.

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SCO Invokes Free Enterprise, National Security

In January, SCO's CEO Darl McBride sent correspondence to the members of the U.S. House and Senate, characterizing open source software as a “much more serious threat to our capitalist system than U.S. corporations realize,” as well as a threat to world peace: “A computer expert in North Korea who has a number of personal computers can download the latest version of Linux, complete with multi-processing capabilities misappropriated from UNIX, and, in short order, and in short order build a virtual supercomputer.”

Link:

SCO Investor Wants Its $20 Million Back

Citing alleged breaches of the disclosure provisions of its Exchange Agreement, on April 15 SCO investor BayStar Capital notified SCO it wants to cash out of its $20 million investment in the company. The Royal Bank of Canada, SCO's other major investor to the tune of $30 million, is reported to be reviewing its investment as well.

Links:

Resources

For blow-by-blow coverage of the Linux-related SCO lawsuits, please see Groklaw, and the SCO v. IBM Wiki.

[Bag and Baggage]

April 27, 2004   No Comments

Tue, 27 Apr 2004 15:54:06 GMT

Sweet BBQ [bOing bOing]

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i want one.

April 27, 2004   No Comments

Tue, 27 Apr 2004 15:51:09 GMT

Academic Calvinism.

Eugene Volokh points to a very good Chronicle article on Invisible Adjunct’s decision to call it a day. The piece does an excellent job in capturing why her site was important. Adjunct faculty often find themselve systematically excluded from the collegial supports that allow tenured and tenure track faculty to chat, compare situations, and figure out common problems. It’s hard to engage in corridor talk when you’re a non-person. Invisible Adjunct’s site created a very real space for conversation.

[Crooked Timber]

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i still think that it is fundamentally wrong to think of academic jobs as a market, it is closer to a braudelian anti-market or a cartel than a market. maybe on a very very large scale it seems to operate as a market, but at local and personal levels of interaction, it most certainly does not.

April 27, 2004   No Comments

Tue, 27 Apr 2004 15:45:32 GMT

Why people don't share what they know. The ideas for blog-based communities now being advanced by Jonathan Briggs reminded me of an interesting table of different knowledge behaviours posted by Mopsos. It charts Knowledge Web, Knowledge Ladder, Knowledge Torch, and Knowledge Fortress against definitions, examples and recommended… [Designing for Civil Society]

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it should be clear why, in general terms, people don't do this, and why they don't share knowledge generally. if your most significant point of capital leverage is knowledge of some sort, then if you share it…. you lessen your relative value. this is a problem in higher education right now.

April 27, 2004   No Comments

Tue, 27 Apr 2004 15:42:01 GMT

Can we connect every village?. Run – do not walk – over to First Monday and read Larry Press' “The Internet in developing nations: Grand challenges.”… [InternetPolicy.net]

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i'm less optimistic that information technology can do much for most of the world, right now, but maybe in a few years. but there are serious structural barriers to infotech adoption and benefits. if places don't have electricity…..

April 27, 2004   No Comments

invisible adjunct in the chronicle.

it isn't a bad writeup….. scary parts :45% of faculty are adjuncts….

April 27, 2004   No Comments