SCO Licensing Debated Hotly in Online Forums

  • By theWHIR.com , March 17, 2004
  •   Digg
      Delicious
    submit to reddit  Reddit
      Newsvine
      Stumbleupon
      Twitter
    Facebook

    (close)

    From:
    To:
    Share | Send | Print | Comments (0)

Verio Attracts Resellers with Free Month of VPS Hosting: Companies looking to boost revenues are finding Verio's Free VPS promotion the right fit for getting started as Hosting Reseller.

SCO Licensing Debated Hotly in Online Forums

Karen Snider, theWHIR.com

March 17, 2004 -- (WEB HOST INDUSTRY

REVIEW) -- Discussion on message boards heated up across the Web after

hosting firm EV1Servers (ev1servers.net)

announced its decision to purchase UNIX licenses from the SCO Group.

While a handful of users showed support for EV1, many in the outspoken

open-source community condemned its decision.

Following EV1 CEO Robert Marsh's

announcement at the beginning of the month, the bulk of responses made

on the various Web hosting forums accused EV1 of helping to fund future

SCO lawsuits - which claim that the UNIX code found in Linux violates

its intellectual property rights. By doing so, forum users wrote, EV1

betrayed the Linux community it claims to support.

Marsh responded to the accusations

on the EV1Servers forum by reiterating that EV1 does not endorse SCO.

He added that SCO already had $60 million and EV1's licensing fee

(referred to as "worth seven figures" by SCO representatives, but

considerably less by Marsh) would not "go very far in defending an

action such as this, much less prosecuting one."

Forum users put up more than 440 replies to Marsh's statement in a thread that was viewed almost 63,000 times.

"It is absurd that you claim giving over

$1,000,000 to SCO does not help them," one user writes. "Even if you

paid SCO nothing, you've given them credibility, as you're the only one

to publicly take out a license. Had you wanted to stay out of this,

you'd not have agreed to go public and become SCO's poster child."

Another user writes, "I don't care if you

gave SCO 1$ or 1,000,000,000$, the fact you gave them ANY money is the

issue here for me. This is just ridiculous. Your money spent has made

the statement for you. If you truly did not endorse them nor believe

their claims as having any truth to them, you would not have paid such

a high price to buy their licenses."

Some users were so upset that they threatened to leave EV1, or felt they had no alternative.

"If I continue giving EV1 my business

now, I see myself essentially contributing to the fight against Linux

and open source software in general," one WebHosting Talk (webhostingtalk.com) user wrote.

Another just flat-out said he was

leaving. "Whatever the reasons EV1 has for bending over for crooks, I

simply won't be party to filling the legal war chest of crooks," the

user writes. "I'm moving my servers from EV1elsewhere starting today,

and will be transferring all of my clients out of there as well."

EV1 has not said how many customers - if any - it might have lost since its announcement.

Forum users said they were upset

because EV1 is a large enough company that its decision would likely

influence those of other companies. "The fact that they do this sends

the message that action like SCO's is okay, and will possibly open up

for a lot of similar bold fraud attempts from random companies," one

SitePoint (sitepoint.com) forum user writes.

On other forums, users accused EV1 of pulling a publicity stunt

because Marsh made his announcement about the decision to purchase the

licenses only days before his second data center was opened in Houston.

"If I had to guess, it was nothing more than a marketing deal," one person writes on the HostHideout (hosthideout.com) board. "I can think of some other hosts who I wouldn't be surprised if they signed up just to get their name in the paper."

"SCO will not win," another user writes.

"But this is a smart move anyway. Why? It got you people talking... and

not just you, a lot of people. It's better then paying for ads."

Marsh later said in an interview with theWHIR that while EV1 was expecting "a few concerns," he had not anticipated a reaction of the size the company encountered.

Whatever EV1's intentions, the issue was bound to come up again, and it did when eWeek revealed that Microsoft acted as a matchmaker for a $50 million investment led by Baystar Capital into the SCO Group.

The same news story, pointed out one

WebHosting Talk forum, raised suspicions that Microsoft played a part

in EV1's decision to purchase the license because of its ties as a

business partner to Microsoft.

OLDER:  Yahoo, SBC Combine Strengths to Serve SMEs | NEWER:  Defending Against the Internal Security Threat

Comment anonymously or log into your WHIR account

Logging in allows enhanced commenting features (such as external linking) in news, features, blogs and more.

User:

Pass:

(reset password)

Don't have an account yet? Register now!