The following should not be used in a court of law, but it is fact as
far as I am able to determine.
If by SCO you mean The SCO Group (Darl & Co), then yes. Here's why:
Santa Cruz Operations (Old SCO) sold pretty much everything to Caldera
in 2001, and Old SCO became Tarantella, Inc, since that was all they
did now. Bye-bye Old SCO.
Caldera changed their name to The SCO Group as a result of this
purchase. Anything owned by Caldera therefore is now property of The
SCO Group (New SCO, same company, new name).
There were multiple developers of S5 platforms/products, Old SCO was
one of them. Old SCO probably developed it, so in all likelyhood it
went to Caldera, and thus New SCO.
On 9/14/07, Jeremy C. Reed <
reed@reedmedia.net> wrote:
> Does anyone know if SCO would own software copyrighted by Caldera from
> 2001-2002?
>
> Copyright(C) Caldera International Inc. 2001-2002. All rights reserved.
>
> I am working on PCC which was shipped with System V Release 2 (I think) in
> early 1980's and was started in 1970's. It now has those 2001-2002 Caldera
> copyrights.
>
> See the grant of the fee free license at
> http://www.in-ulm.de/~mascheck/various/Caldera-license.txt
>
> Did Caldera really own that software? Does SCO own it now?
>
> I am trying to figure out the timeline and ownership of all this since I
> am also looking at a nroff based on that code.
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