Microsoft licenses Unix technology from SCO
By Juan Carlos Perez
,
IDG News Service
, 05/19/2003
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In a deal that brings together companies that Linux backers consider bogeymen, The SCO Group announced Monday it has shook hands on a licensing agreement with Microsoft over SCO's Unix operating system.
Through the deal, SCO has licensed Unix technology, including source code and patents, to Microsoft, said Chris Sontag, senior
vice president and general manager of SCO's SCOsource, a division in charge of managing and protecting the company's Unix
intellectual property.
This deal ensures Microsoft is in compliance with SCO's Unix intellectual property and will help Microsoft improve the Unix
compatibility of its products, specifically Microsoft Windows Services for Unix, Sontag said.
Windows Services for Unix, now in version 3.0, consists of different components that bridge the gap between Windows-based
and Unix-based systems running in the same network, according to information on Microsoft's Web site.
The product's services include file sharing, remote access and administration, password synchronization, common directory
management, a common set of utilities, and a shell, according to Microsoft's Web site.
Microsoft didn't immediately return calls seeking comment on the deal.
The deal is not a reward from Microsoft for SCO's recent legal challenges to the Linux operating system, Sontag said. Microsoft
has been very vocal about the threat that Linux poses to its business.
"That is simply not the case," he said. "This is a standard, straight-up Unix licensing agreement like many we've done in
the past" with other companies, he said.
The deal appears to be a normal Microsoft attempt to make sure it is honoring properly SCO's intellectual property rights,
IDC analyst Dan Kusnetzky said. Those advancing a conspiracy theory to explain the timing of the deal will have a hard time
proving it, he said.
"I'm not sure there's a way to support a quid pro quo notion. It is certainly an interesting theory, but it's one that would
be almost impossible to prove or disprove," he said.
Asked to comment on the news of the licensing deal at Monday's press conference, Oracle Chairman and CEO Larry Ellison seemed
to have no compunction about drawing a link between the agreement and SCO's litigation. "Bill (Gates) is innovating. Microsoft
has always had incredible innovation. You've had advanced bundling and what you see now is extreme litigation. They have a
lot of experience with extreme litigation, actually," he said.
Microsoft once licensed Unix source code from AT&T, Unix's creator, but that license ran out after Microsoft abandoned the
Unix-related project that had prompted the licensing, Sontag said.
The licensing agreement announced Monday is one of two SCO signed in its second fiscal quarter, ended in April, worth a combined
total of over $10 million, Sontag said. He declined to be more specific on how much the Microsoft deal was worth.
SCO and Microsoft both have grievances against Linux. SCO, which owns Unix, claims Unix code has been illegally copied into
Linux. Meanwhile, Microsoft sees Linux as a rising threat to its desktop and server operating systems.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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