MESSAGE
DATE | 2003-12-23 |
FROM | Michael Richardson
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SUBJECT | Subject: [hangout] FW: NYTimes.com Article: Creator of Linux Defends Its Originality
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-----Original Message----- From: krichardson-at-harryfox.com [mailto:krichardson-at-harryfox.com] Sent: Tuesday, December 23, 2003 12:44 PM To: MRICHARDSON-at-abc.state.ny.us Subject: NYTimes.com Article: Creator of Linux Defends Its Originality
This article from NYTimes.com has been sent to you by krichardson-at-harryfox.com.
Michael, I thought you would like to read this.
Ken
krichardson-at-harryfox.com
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Creator of Linux Defends Its Originality
December 23, 2003 By STEVE LOHR
Linus Torvalds, creator of the popular Linux computer operating system, defended his work yesterday as not always lovely but original - and certainly not copied, as a Utah company has contended.
The Utah company, the SCO Group, has begun sending out a round of warning letters to large corporate users of Linux, which is distributed free. The letters, dated Friday, assert that Linux, a variant of the Unix operating system, violates an SCO license and copyright. SCO, based in Lindon, Utah, owns the rights to the Unix operating system.
SCO has for months made the broad claim that Linux included large chunks of copied Unix code. But the letters being sent out - urging companies to stop using Linux or to pay SCO license fees - listed for the first time more than 65 software files that "have been copied verbatim from our copyrighted Unix code and contributed to Linux."
Mr. Torvalds began looking at these files, and their history, yesterday. As a student in Finland, he wrote the original kernel of the Linux operating system in 1991. Mr. Torvalds, who now lives in Silicon Valley, has since continued to oversee the growth of the Linux project, which relies on contributions from a worldwide network of programmers.
"Some of these files were written by me directly," Mr. Torvalds said in an e-mail exchange, and so were not contributed to the Linux project by third parties, including I.B.M., which is being sued by SCO.
The files listed in SCO's letter are written in the C programming language. Citing two files, "include/linux/ctype.h" and "lib/ctype.h," Mr. Torvalds said "some trivial digging shows that those files are actually there in the original 0.01 distribution of Linux" in September 1991.
"I wrote them," Mr. Torvalds noted, "and looking at the original ones I'm a bit ashamed."
He observed that some of the macros, or programming shortcuts, are "so horribly ugly that I wouldn't admit to writing them if it wasn't because somebody else claimed to have done so ;)" - ending his comment with the e-mail symbol for winking and smiling.
Mr. Torvalds's talent as a communicator, including his self-deprecating humor, is one reason for the remarkable progress of the Linux project.
But Mr. Torvalds is also clearly angered by SCO's accusation that much of Linux was merely copied. "In short," Mr. Torvalds said, "for the files where I personally checked the history, I can definitely say that those files were trivially written by me personally, with no copying from any Unix code, ever.
"I can show, and SCO should have been able to see, that the list they show clearly shows original work, not copied."
Darl C. McBride, the chief executive of SCO, said he stood by the company's assertions. He said that a Linux expert who will testify in the SCO suit against I.B.M., which was filed last March, went over the code closely. "As a social revolutionary, Linus Torvalds is a genius," Mr. McBride said. "But at the speed the Linux project has gone forward something gets lost along the way in terms of care with intellectual property."
The dispute over the Unix and Linux heritage became even more tangled yesterday when Novell, a software company, announced it had filed with the United States Patent and Trademark Office for copyright on some of the same Unix code for which SCO claims the rights.
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/23/technology/23linux.html?ex=1073201446&ei=1 &en=9301be841932edfa
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