
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."
@sam
You obviously are trying to scramble and find a way out of your contradicting statements, and are becoming more irrational and taking about stuff that has nothing to do with my initial comments.
Let me dumb it down for you, since you don't see your own contradicting statements.
If you read my post again, I'm saying is that this lawsuit could possibly cause companies to rethink/question adpoting GNU/Linux (at least temporarily). There's a lot of uncertainty out there on how all the pieces fit until this thing is over and done with.
If you think that decreasing investor/market confidence in a company (RH, Suse, whoever) has no correlation to long-term strategic business decisions, than you need a good whack with the clue stick.