http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1104-5098610.html
In its lawsuit against IBM, the SCO Group has begun a direct challenge to the General Public License--the legal foundation for Linux, numerous other open-source programming projects and software that SCO still ships today.
"The GPL violates the U.S. Constitution, together with copyright, antitrust and export control laws," SCO Group said in an answer filed late Friday to an IBM court filing. In addition, SCO asserted that the GPL is unenforceable.
The assertions direct even more attention to the license, which already was at the center of many of IBM's arguments against SCO in August.
:eyes: Good grief.
Also, has anybody considered the copyright, antitrust, and export laws might be wrong? Yet alone the DMCA which is despicable right down to the core and has been abused (naturally) by many companies, namely the hypocrites of Lexmark who ought to be grateful nobody sues them for the same reasons (they went after a company who made toner kits for their printers and Lexmark went after them. Of course, Lexmark also happens to sell their own toner brand for other laser printer brands...)?
Sigh.