Quote:
Originally Posted by richlevy
Just because a case is not automatically thrown out does not mean it has real merit, only that it has met a very minimal standard. In a technically complex case, especially one where 'hundreds of lines' out of 'millions of lines' of code are involved, a judge would almost automatically have to allow the case to proceed since s/he would have no real mechanism for judging the merits. SCO's incredibly restrictive NDA would make if very difficult for the defense to find rebuttal experts, which might be one reason for the NDA.
If management of every troubled company followed the standard of feeling duty bound to pressing tenuous, if not outright frivolous, lawsuits as a last ditch effort to stave off disaster, the already overburdened legal system would grind to a halt. The only reason SCO was able to proceed with theirs was because of venture capital funding and selling shares publicly.
|
The management of SCO and probably every other company in SCO's situation may just agree with you. And yet they all have no choice. Lawsuits are that routine because none of those managements have a choice. If they file any case that only has enough merit to not be thrown out, then they must proceed with that lawsuit. The alternative is that any management that does not perform every legal act to promote their case - not matter how frivolous - must be sued by stockholders into bankruptcy.
Again, the principle is quite blunt. The company must do anything legal to survive. And yes, the courts are chock full of such cases as they have always been. I held evidence where one company patented how switches were pressed and responded to. I had to maintain code that showed I had programmed that more than ten years earlier. And the twist? Company that was doing the suing was also replacing me in the company that was being sued. Frivolous? Yes. These cases that frivolous - far more frivolous than SCO's case - are that routine.
Again, every SCO executive may agree with you 100%; their defense of Unix license was that frivolous. And again I use that phrase ... I have sympathy .... for SCO's management and stockholders. They were completely blindsided by Linux AND they had to do anything legal to save the company. They had no choice.
You may find it frivolous. But things far more frivolous have ended up in court. SCO had no choice. A company must do anything legal to survive. There is no way around that business principle. If SCO management did not file, then stockholders had every right to sue management.
More interesting is what SCO's president did in a desperate attempt to save his company. He spoke fluent Japanese. So he took source code into offices of major Japanese corporate presidents in a desperate attempt to convince Japanese corporate presidents that Linux was pirated code. If anyone could have made the case, SCO's president could have. Last I heard, Japanese response was apathetic. But again, SCO's president had no choice. He had to do anything so that SCO would survive as required of all corporate executives.
My sympathies for SCO manageent and stockholders. He was fighting an almost impossible task that no one ever saw coming. He was required to do that for his stockholders no matter how futile he perceived the fight. Stockholders were also blindsided by something completely unexpected. Notice THE fundamental phrase in my every post ... my sympathies for their 'no win' situation.