
SCO's
lawsuit filed in Utah last week claims that IBM integrated computer code belonging to another company into the Linux operating system, touching off speculation that
the lawsuit could hurt other Linux companies, including Red Hat, the country's largest distributor of the software. Red Hat isn't involved in the dispute, but some analysts say that the Raleigh-based company won't be able to escape the fallout. "
It's kind of irrelevant who wins the lawsuit," said Victor Raisys, analyst with Soundview Technology Group in San Francisco. "
You can't take back the fact that someone has tried to claim intellectual property on Linux. The genie is out of the bottle."
The lawsuit isn't about code in linux at all. The lawsuit is about a contract that SCO had with IBM about a joint venture that they were going to persue.
I don't understand how this has anything to do with IP in linux. SCO is not attacking Linux, they're attacking IBM for a breach of contract.
Redhat and other Linux distributions will probably be quick to point this out if they have any trouble with customers pointing out that there is IP problems in Linux.