Keeping it Simple

Story: More "Paul Murphy" Anti-Linux FUD: SCO or Son of SCO Can Still WinTotal Replies: 26
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kenholmz

Jun 22, 2010
6:36 PM EDT
I am so very grateful that Mr. Murphy keeps things simple and understandable. Groklaw is difficult, if not impossible, to read due to all the links to sources, facts and copies of original documents (years of the stuff) to sift through as well as analysis and annotation. Mr. Murphy just states his opinion and heart felt desires without making it difficult for me. Bless him.
Scott_Ruecker

Jun 22, 2010
6:58 PM EDT
I sense..sarcasm..and I like it..;-)
DarrenR114

Jun 25, 2010
3:14 PM EDT
You'll find plenty of unsubstantiated opinion coming from PJ et al. over at Groklaw.

Take this latest PJ comment (in the "Newspick" column): [PJ: ...There is no "Open Source" complaint, and the community doesn't much like being used like this. The FOSS community is made up mostly of geeks. That means brains are not in short supply. And they can recognize phony issues when they see them. And they know how to research and figure out who is really behind all this. And frankly, the FOSS community supports the rights of any programmer or company to license its work and defend it from Psystar-like attacks. That may be news to Hollywood, but the GPL is a copyright license, and it is also defended when required.]

1. Who appointed PJ as spokesman for the FOSS community? 2. Just where is PJ's proof that Neon is "using" the FOSS community? 3. Where is the evidence that this is a "phony" issue?

PJ has been sounding more and more like a IBM shill who is totally oblivious to their legal troubles of the 1980s with Amdahl.

In the 1980s, Amdahl produced IBM mainframe clones that ran IBM's MVS software. IBM was forced by anti-trust action to license their mainframe OS software to Amdahl.

This very similar to what TurboHercules is trying to do. They've created an emulator that will run IBM's mainframe OS on non-IBM hardware. TurboHercules isn't about illegal copying, but executing legally licensed software on cheaper hardware - and *that* my friends is what Software Freedom is all about. But not according to PJ.

She's a hypocrite.
gus3

Jun 25, 2010
4:05 PM EDT
(withdrawn)
tuxchick

Jun 25, 2010
4:36 PM EDT
It's OK gus3, sensible people who care about facts don't believe unsubstantiated PJ attacks. They're a dime a dozen.

It took me awhile to understand the TurboHercules deal, so here is my ten-cent summary:

1. TurboHercules is a Microsoft sock puppet, and their Hercules z/OS emulator runs on Windows Server 2. Hercules is an emulator that lets users run mainframe applications on a non-mainframe platform 3. TurboHercules requested that IBM license z/OS to them so they could bundle it as a turnkey server in combination with Windows server and HP Proliant hardware. 4. IBM said no.

This isn't even close to being a Free Software issue.

Psystar doesn't have anything to do with software freedom, either. Maybe freeloader freedom. Apple's EULA forbids third-party installations of Mac OS X, and they violated that. Psystar looked scammy anyway. Wikipedia has a good summary:

Quoting: The developers of the OSx86 Project claimed that Psystar did not get permission to use their code and then reworked their license so that it specifically forbids commercial usage...

As part of Apple’s discovery process it was revealed that in 2008 Psystar presented a slide presentation in hope of raising $24 million from investors. “Under its conservative projections, Psystar told investors it would sell 70,000 computers in 2009, 470,000 systems in 2010, and 1.45 million machines in 2011. The firm’s aggressive growth model, however, put those numbers at 130,000, 1.87 million, and 12 million during 2009, 2010, and 2011, respectively.”[8]

...After digging through invoices, purchase orders and other documents, Lynde was able to pinpoint only 768 sales of machines with Mac OS X pre-installed.[8]


Anyone who takes "Paul Murphy" (a pseudonym of possibly multiple writers) seriously really needs to invest some energy in learning to differentiate fact from fiction.
caitlyn

Jun 26, 2010
2:31 PM EDT
PJ has a lot of credibility in the FOSS community. The accusation of hypocrisy based on an interesting spin of facts to serve their own purposes is unlikely to change that.
hkwint

Jun 27, 2010
6:58 PM EDT
The more I read about PJ, the less credibility she has to me.

First, no proponent of 'openness' should keep their information about who they are (real name, which companies they worked for etc.) closed. When she says Mr. Mueller writes FUD (other article, but anyway, she did), fine. At least I know who Mr. Mueller is and why he has a certain position. About PJ, nobody knows. She may be an op-ed working for the legal lobbying firm Preston, Gates & Elliot, nobody knows.

Secondly, there's the O'Gara case - where Ms. O'Gara wanted to disclose the personal information PJ didn't disclose. A storm of protest followed, it was made impossible for Ms. O'Gara to keep writing for the company she used to write for. If Ms. O'Gara wrote an article that was unethical and it had to be rejected (effectively censorship), fine, but that didn't mean Ms. O'Gara had to be 'fired'. Sure, she wasn't the one protesting, but she thanked "the ones who supported her", which effectively are the ones who got Ms. O'Gara fired.

Third, PJ is a "para-legal". And legal / para-legal are exactly the types that try to maintain the status-quo in the IT sector, where lawyers thrive and innovation - and as a result society - suffers a great disadvantage from the interference of thousands of lawyers and law-makers.

Mr. Mueller has a point when he says OIN is not acting in favour of Free Software. Since PJ has called it 'FUD', so basically speaking out in favour of OIN, she lost all credibility to me. Shes just another "IP-troll" which can be added to the list of IBM, MS, BSA, RIAA, MPAA and the like:

Those who want to earn money with licensing deals, even if it harms innovation and society as a whole.

Of course, lawyers and courts are needed, but it got way out of hand.

There are those who support a world where lawyers control which software can be published and which hardware can be released and which cannot, and if not who has to be paid 'taxes' to allow their product on the market. PJ seems one of them, but I don't want to live in such a world.
tracyanne

Jun 27, 2010
8:15 PM EDT
Quoting:First, no proponent of 'openness' should keep their information about who they are (real name, which companies they worked for etc.) closed


Depends on what you call openness. There is the openness of Free Open Source Software, which PJ obviously supports, advocates, and defends, and there is the openness of giving away your personal space to all and sundry. I choose not to give away my personal space to all and Sundry, although clearly I've given away a bunch more than PJ, by publishing personal information on this site, consequentially I see nothing wrong with PJ maintaining anonymity.
tuxchick

Jun 27, 2010
8:18 PM EDT
Oh geesh, Hans, nice strawmen and ad hominems. PJ's work speaks for itself. Just like it does for anyone. She gives the reasons and source documents for her conclusions, so whether you agree or disagree at least you can understand the basis for them. Unlike most commentators, analyists, and tech reporters who pretty much pull their 'Web Content' out of thin air. Hey, so they use their real names, does that give more credibility to their pointless crud?

O'Gara is a slimy bottom-feeder, and apparently you didn't notice that she didn't stay fired, when she should have. She shouldn't have a job anywhere within a thousand miles of anything journalism-related. But fortunately for her the Sys-Con publisher, Fuat Kirkaali, is even slimier and less ethical. His dirty exploits would fill a book.

Florian Mueller doesn't impress me either, not when he says things like

Quoting: After years of pretending to be a friend of Free and Open Source Software (FOSS), IBM now shows its true colors. IBM breaks the number one taboo of the FOSS community and shamelessly uses its patents against a well-respected FOSS project, the Hercules mainframe emulator.


There are so many things wrong with that I hardly know where to begin.

I'm still waiting for the "PJ is an secret shill for foo" crowd to put up or shut up.
bigg

Jun 27, 2010
8:32 PM EDT
I don't think there's any question that PJ is being fed information from somewhere. I'm not impressed at all with her commentary. But the thing is, she should be judged based on the accuracy of the information she provides. Most tech commentators call Microsoft to get talking points and run with that. It's an easy job. I'm not a fan of PJ, but you can judge her by the information she posts, and that's good enough for me.
jdixon

Jun 27, 2010
9:40 PM EDT
> there's the O'Gara case

O'Gara was probably being paid by SCO, and was trying to stalk PJ (an action which is, in the way she tried to do it, almost certainly illegal). And, IMO, you'd have more credibility giving Enderle the benefit of a doubt than O'Gara. I have nothing but contempt for her.

> And legal / para-legal are exactly the types that try to maintain the status-quo in the IT sector,...

That's too broad a brush, Hans. Not every legal or para-legal worker supports the status quo.

> There are those who support a world where lawyers control which software can be published and which hardware can be released and which cannot, and if not who has to be paid 'taxes' to allow their product on the market.

That would be those who believe in the law, since the law of the land (even in Europe) largely says they can. Now, I disagree with that specific law, and I am quite willing to admit that having lawyers write and interpret the laws is a big mistake. However, that doesn't mean that having laws is a bad thing in general. Merely that things have gotten, as you said "way out of hand". And that's a problem of governments and governence, not the law as such. As I'm sure Bob will be more than willing to tell you if you let him. :)

> PJ seems one of them

In the sense I mention above, undoubtedly. In the sense you mean, perhaps not. See my broad brush comment above.

Look, PJ's not perfect. But she's right far more often than she's wrong. In fact, she's been right enough that if I disagree with her, I'll carefully check my assumptions before concluding she's wrong.
gus3

Jun 27, 2010
9:57 PM EDT
Hans, have you ever been stalked? I have. It's no fun.

Well, PJ even has her own personal stalker in MOG, who took her cue from Blake Stowell, PR guy for SCO. http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20100312150121798

And now this week, thanks to the volunteer efforts at Groklaw, we have even more evidence suggesting Microsoft is the chief enabler of this fiasco. http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20100627122353935

A lot of people want to shut down Groklaw. Some of those people would no doubt commit a crime against PJ's person to accomplish that. I will never begrudge her near-anonymity, and I look askance at anyone who does.
azerthoth

Jun 27, 2010
10:08 PM EDT
Gus, the judge said you weren't supposed to tell about me .... oh, whoops.

although happily we agree on this one, keeping oneself safe on the net, regardless of what or how you say it is just good practices.
hkwint

Jun 28, 2010
9:31 AM EDT
Obviously, my comment was perceived harsher than I intended. Sometimes I get a bit emotional about the software patent trolls (including IBM, MS, to a lesser extent Royal Philips and the like) who are destroying innovation and chances for small companies. So probably I'm the one to blame. Anyway...

Quoting:I'm still waiting for the "PJ is an secret shill for foo" crowd to put up or shut up.


I'm all for it. You know the website of the EP?

Any European Parliament member has to disclose which presents they received, and which companies they are / have been working for. Apart from their real names. That's how we know some of them are shills who sold out, and some of them (most likely) can be trusted.

For PJ, I repeat, we just don't know, so there's nothing to "put up". I'd like to trust her, but she makes it pretty hard. Mentioning sources is what Rob Weir (& co) do as well, but at least we know who he is and who he's working for.

Apart from that, IBM is the biggest patent polluter, so anyone defending IBM or OIN for that matter has lost most of his / her credibility to me when society is at stake. No matter how well informed they are. They still might be part of a lobby, and if so, I'd like to know.

I didn't say I won't give PJ any credibility, it's just the more I read about it, the less I trust her. I thought PJ to be 'almost perfect', but at a second thought, I'm a bit disappointed. Disclosing who you are adds credibility I'd say. However, PJ is in something which can be considered a dirty war so I understand she wants to stay behind the curtains.

I think Groklaw is a great website and PJ is doing great work, and so does OIN BTW. At this time, it's absolutely necessary somebody is doing that kind of work, and I should be grateful. Still however, they're proponents of a system I detest and they lack full disclosure. That's why my trust diminished from 'lots of trust' to 'I trust them'. That's what I tried to express. If you are unaware of the saga's PJ went through and you read for the first time about O'Gara and such, it's hard to tell what happened, and I think my comment reflects that confusion. So, confusion (is it the U of FUD?) diminishes credibility.

OK, now I have to hurry because I have to watch 'some important match'...
ComputerBob

Jun 28, 2010
10:49 AM EDT
Anonymity != No Credibility Name Disclosure != Credibility

For personal security reasons that are too complicated to reveal here, for more than 13 years since I first created ComputerBob.com, I have always veiled my true identity behind my online pseudonym, "ComputerBob."

As far as I know, no one has ever questioned my credibility or motives.

But I'll bet that at least a few of you can think of a writer who always writes under his real name. A writer whose articles are regularly linked to from this site -- and whose motives, credibility and writing skills are called into question after nearly every single article.
hkwint

Jun 28, 2010
11:02 AM EDT
But it does help.

When you read Klaus Heihne Lehner is related to TaylorWessing, at which Microsoft gets a 10% discount - and stuff like that.
gus3

Jun 28, 2010
12:35 PM EDT
Quoting:Still however, [PJ and OIN a]re proponents of a system I detest and they lack full disclosure.
Microsoft and Apple also lack full disclosure, and there is ZERO chance that will change any time soon.

It's foolish to think full disclosure from PJ and OIN, for the sake of "principles," won't be playing right into the hands of those who would destroy them.
hkwint

Jun 28, 2010
1:01 PM EDT
Quoting:Microsoft and Apple also lack full disclosure


They don't have to, because we know which interests they are defending.
gus3

Jun 28, 2010
2:23 PM EDT
We also know whose interests PJ and OIN are defending: hobbyists, tinkerers, and volunteers.

I still don't see how pulling back the curtain on "Who is PJ?" and the decision processes of OIN will help matters.
hkwint

Jun 28, 2010
5:56 PM EDT
Quoting:hobbyists, tinkerers, and volunteers.


Those would be helped by restricting patentability. It seems PJ agrees:

http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20100628100422167

which is a bit odd given her defence of OIN.
DarrenR114

Jun 28, 2010
6:37 PM EDT
The TurboHercules case is about one thing: executing mainframe software developed and licensed from IBM on non-IBM hardware. That's it. Nothing more or less. The IBM supposition that Microsoft is somehow involved is an unproven red herring argument of the sort that deservedly earned IBM the bad rep it had for many, many years in the IT industry.

What TurboHercules is attempting to do is exactly the sort of thing that Amdahl did back in the 80s (contrary to IBM's wishes but they were having problems with anti-trust issues in court) - and where the term FUD originates.

The Psystar case is very similar in that it is about one thing: executing an OS licensed from Apple on non-Apple hardware. That's it. Nothing more or less.

And like it or not, the first principle of software freedom means having "The freedom to run the program, for any purpose (freedom 0)."

By taking a stand and supporting IBM and Apple in these two cases, PJ is taking a stand against "freedom 0" as defined by the Free Software Foundation. Ipso facto, PJ is taking a hypocritical position.

gus3

Jun 28, 2010
6:54 PM EDT
Quoting:which is a bit odd given her defence of OIN.
OIN may not be restricting patentability, but it's using the system in a way that helps preserve the freedom that Free Software devs and users do have. Kind of like using the copyright system in defense of copyleft.

Quoting:the first principle of software freedom means having "The freedom to run the program, for any purpose (freedom 0)."
But that freedom, like so many others, is not absolute; it can be negotiated away. Just like an NDA abridges one's free speech. A customer licensing the software, with the intention of breaking the license, is dealing in bad faith. (SCO, anyone?)

In this case, attempting to nullify the IBM license, endangers the enforceability of the GPL. That's why PJ is defending IBM.
hkwint

Jun 28, 2010
8:13 PM EDT
Quoting:OIN may not be restricting patentability


While in the article linked, PJ says restricting is a good idea. Nonetheless, she defends OIN. Probably suffers from the same problem as I do: If I'm in a building which is on fire, I'm glad there's asbestos protecting me and I'd celebrate it's existence, but it doesn't mean it's needed / good for society and shouldn't be replaced.
jdixon

Jun 28, 2010
10:20 PM EDT
> ...which is a bit odd given her defence of OIN.

With current patent law in place, she thinks having defensive patents protecting FOSS is a good thing. That's reasonable, not odd.

> The IBM supposition that Microsoft is somehow involved is an unproven red herring argument...

I'll agree with that position. It doesn't change the basics of the disagreement however, as you detail. I'm still undecided as to whether IBM is breaking the spirit of their agreement while abiding by the letter or not. However, quite frankly, it's not worth my time to figure it out, given the difficulty of getting the true facts of the matter. They do appear to be abiding by the letter of their agreement, and that's all I can expect from a corporation, especially one whose cash cow is being threatened.

> Probably suffers from the same problem as I do:

A fair summary, yes.
tuxchick

Jun 29, 2010
12:55 AM EDT
IBM's FOSS-pledge patents are a tiny number anyway, something like 500-odd, out of a total patent portfolio the size of the sands on the beach and the stars in the universe, so it's not something I think is all that significant. http://www.ibm.com/ibm/licensing/patents/pledgedpatents.pdf

And it's good for a giggle that the PDF was made in MS Word.

DarrenR114

Jun 30, 2010
10:57 AM EDT
Who here supports the validity of MS's EULA on MS-Windows?

There are many who would argue (correctly so, IMHO) that there are many invalid clauses to the EULA.

So, why do those same people defend PJ when she supports and defends license terms that are just as invalid as the EULA (when applying the same lines of reason to them), especially when those license terms directly contradict the principles of Software Freedom?

And notice, I never wrote that PJ was/is a shill: A closer reading of that sentence will reveal that I wrote that she is sounding more and more like a shill. Big difference.

As for PJ "usually being right" - I'm still waiting for all the big bad things that she predicted would happen as a result of the Novell-MS agreement.

She is not a goddess, she is not infallible, and she is most definitely NOT a spokesperson or leader for the whole of the FLOSS community and she should stop writing as if she were.
gus3

Jun 30, 2010
11:42 AM EDT
Quoting:So, why do those same people defend PJ when she supports and defends license terms that are just as invalid as the EULA (when applying the same lines of reason to them), especially when those license terms directly contradict the principles of Software Freedom?
Because, among her audience (geeks and lawyers), there is absolutely no excuse for not knowing what's in a license. The fact that a user (individual, or site) purchases an onerous license, or continues to use software under an onerous license, carries with it the implicit approval for its terms.

In other words, you knew it was a snake when you picked it up. Don't act all indignant when it bites you.

If one is going to attempt to invalidate the EULA, then one first must have purchased that EULA to have standing in court. Second, one must actually take the case to court. But note very, very well:

FOSS Freedom 0 does not (yet) have the force of law.

It does no good to cry, "Freedom 0! Freedom 0!", when trying to invalidate a EULA. If you want Freedom 0, use FOSS instead.

Quoting:I'm still waiting for all the big bad things that she predicted would happen as a result of the Novell-MS agreement.
These people didn't have to wait: http://www.kmfms.com/whatsbad.html#predatory They can tell you first-hand what dealing with Microsoft is like, with or without an agreement.

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