| Harvard is Pleased to Invite Darl to Speak |
| Friday, January 30 2004 @ 05:45 PM EST |
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The Harvard Journal of Law and Technology, for whatever its reasons, has invited Darl McBride to speak. There will also be a webcast, RealPlayer required. The talk is Monday, February 2 at 6:30 PM EDT, and the subject is "Defending Intellectual Property Rights in a Digital Age". What? You thought he'd lecture on Aeschylus? He's a one-trick pony. Chris Sontag will participate also in the Q & A. This isn't the only Harvard news.
"Harvard Business School Press said it will publish a cobranded series of professional handbooks for senior executives in partnership with Gartner Inc., the technology research firm based in Stamford, Conn. The series will tentatively be titled "The Gartner Growth Agenda: Leading and Managing Strategic Growth with Technology." Under their partnership, HBS Press will also distribute Gartner research reports." Is Harvard under new management or something? Then there is Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet & Society, which is having discussions online about the SCO-IBM case. For some reason they continue to call it Caldera v. IBM, despite Caldera being dropped in July and the name being changed to SCO v. IBM, after the company changed its name. That isn't the only inaccuracy. Here's how they describe the case and the positions of the parties:
"The Case in Point is Caldera v. IBM, also called the case against open-source. Obviously, this is not accurate. First, no copyright infringement claims have been added by SCO. IBM has denied all of the claims, not most of them. The only things its Answer admits is things like admitting its principal place of business is in New York. The blurb does not mention that IBM has filed counterclaims, including patent infringement and violation of the GPL, with a claim of copyright infringement against SCO, and has affirmative defenses. A Groklaw reader brought this to the attention of Diane Cabell, Clinical Program Director, who is in charge of Case in Point materials, on January 23rd. Hopefully she will correct the inaccuracies eventually. I expect that the next Filter will have the material updated and corrected. Meanwhile, you might find it of interest to read how they describe SCO's ABI claims, which are not part of the IBM lawsuit, so far as we know, so it's a puzzlement what they are doing in a blurb about the IBM case, but it's a clear description of SCO's position, without, I notice, any counter information, such as Linus' statements claiming the code or even a mention that Novell claims copyright ownership of all Unix code anyway:
"Since the last Filter report, SCO notified Linux users of more than 65 files ('ABI Code') that it says have been copied into Linux 2.4.21 from SCO’s UNIX code base. Although these files were covered by the BSDI settlement, SCO points out that they are part of the 'UNIX Derived Files' and the particular settlement terms that apply to them do not permit distribution without copyright notice. SCO demands that users remove all ABI Code because such copying violates the U.S. Copyright Act and because the removal of SCO’s copyright notice violates the DMCA §1202’s rights management provisions. See SCO's letter at http://www.sco.com/scosource/abi_files_letter_20031219.pdf. Darl was interviewed on CNN today about the virus and the reward SCO is offering, and he continues to imply that Linux enthusiasts are responsible. We're entering willful waters now, I think. He must know by now that experts have said it isn't so and that professional spammers are responsible. Here's a snip of a transcript, thanks to Brenda's eagle eye. Notice that the url ends lol.01.html, which one Groklaw reader jokingly writes to me must stand for "Laughing Out Loud":
MCBRIDE: This is a new digital frontier. We came out, we found that key parts of our code -- we owned the Unix operating system -- was showing up in this new upstart program called Linux. These new programmers working with IBM. We found that things were violated against our copyrights.
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