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Intel contributes to anti-SCO Linux fund
Big guns continue to organise
By Stephen Shankland
Published: Monday 12 January 2004
Intel has become involved in the legal battle between the SCO Group and Linux, contributing money to a defence fund geared to protect users of the open source operating system.
The Open Source Development Labs, an industry consortium that employs Linux leader Linus Torvalds, is organising the legal defence fund. OSDL plans to announce details of the fund later today.
"It would be made available to some Linux customers that come under litigation from SCO," said the OSDL's executive director, Stuart Cohen. A sub-committee of the consortium's board of directors will decide how to allocate funds, he said.
Intel has been largely quiet in the legal case but it and several other major computing companies are actively involved in the OSDL.
OSDL hopes to raise $10m, Cohen said. So far it's raised $3m from a group of companies that includes IBM, Intel and MontaVista Software.
The funding would be used to protect Linux users who are sued for Linux issues common across the industry, not for issues particular to that user or company, an OSDL representative said.
SCO, which claims to own several key Unix copyrights, argues that Unix software was illegally moved into Linux and is demanding that companies using Linux pay licence fees or face legal action.
Linux uses interfaces that are covered by SCO's copyrights, SCO has argued. Thus, the use of Linux "constitutes a violation of the United States Copyright Act", the Lindon, Utah-based company has said. Legal experts have advised Linux users to see what comes of court cases before agreeing to any licence deals, however.
SCO's legal actions so far have targeted IBM, though leading Linux seller Red Hat has brought a suit against SCO in return.
OSDL isn't the first to offer protective measures in the legal domain. Hewlett-Packard indemnifies its Linux customers against SCO Group actions. And Red Hat has begun a legal defence fund of its own for open source programmers.
Stephen Shankland writes for CNET News.com.
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