Xerox sued Apple over the Intuitive Interface and lost because too much
time had elapsed since the infringement began. In my humble legal
studies, I learned if an injured party doesn't seek remedy within a
reasonable period (judged to be two years in when dealing with the
Federal Government), then the injured party is assumed to accept the
infraction, and they lose their right to pursue further remedies. This
is why the ISA is Industry Standard - IBM didn't enforce its IP. The
industry adopted it, and it became a standard.
I'm not going to sweat it.
George
Nathan England wrote:
>
> > For those who haven't read this yet...
>
> http://www.sys-con.com/linux/articlenews.cfm?id=381
>
> SCO is claiming they have IP right s to ?System V? stuff in linux and they
> will start charging users a per seat fee of $96 bucks, or else they'll sue!
>
> nathan
>
> - --
> Nathan England
>
> plug at the-arcanum.org
> jabber id: linuxjunkie@jabber.earth.li
>
> "A free society is one where it is safe to be unpopular."
> - --Adlai Stevenson
>
> - -----------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Registered Linux User #189789, Machine #106603
> www.sincerechoice.org
>
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