Microsoft and Sun finally have something in common: both have signed Unix licensing agreements with The SCO Group in the last year.The licensing agreements, which cover source code and patents contained in SCO’s Unix operating system will net SCO a total of $13.25 million in 2003, according to documents filed by SCO with the Securities and Exchange Commission this week.Sun’s license is one of several it has signed with the various owners of the Unix System V source code, of whom SCO is the latest, since 1994, said John Loiacono, the vice president of Sun’s Operating Platforms group. The most recent license, signed in February of this year, “licensed several hundred drivers to connect, essentially, peripheral devices to the operating system,” he said.Microsoft announced a similar licensing deal with SCO in May of this year – a move that some industry observers interpreted as supporting SCO’s ongoing breach of contract lawsuit with IBM. Sun’s agreement can be seen in a similar light, according Harry Fenik, the president of industry consulting firm The Sageza Group Inc. “I would wager that Sun saw this as an opportunity to bolster a comrade in arms,” he said. “From Sun’s perspective right now, the big enemy is IBM.”Sun’s Loiacono disagreed. “The motivation we have is very different from what they have for licensing,” he said. “I never want to be lumped into any categories with Microsoft other than profitability,” he said. The licensing deal with Sun is important because it provides SCO with the funds to prolong its lawsuit with IBM, and not because it indicates that Sun recognizes the validity of SCO’s legal claims, Fenik said. “I don’t think it’s meaningful at all,” he said. “They made a buy versus build decision (for Solaris x86 Platform Edition) to get access to a bunch of drivers for contemporary versions of Intel hardware,” he said.Because Sun purchased strong intellectual property rights with this and the various other Unix System V licenses it has signed with SCO over the last decade, it can now indemnify users of its Solaris x86 against lawsuits, Loiacono said. “I have a different license than what IBM purchased,” he said. “I wanted complete ownership of my [intellectual property], so I bought [intellectual property] rights outright.”IBM has repeatedly stated that it would “stand by” users of its AIX operating system, who appear to be threatened by the lawsuit, but it has stopped short of saying it would indemnify them.Whether or not IBM had signed a license similar to Sun’s would have had no bearing on SCO’s lawsuit, according to SCO spokesman Blake Stowell.“It doesn’t really pertain to whether (IBM) purchased an additional license or not. What it really comes down to is whether they honored their contract or not,” he said. “This isn’t blackmail money,” he added. Related content news analysis Cisco, AWS strengthen ties between cloud-management products Combining insights from Cisco ThousandEyes and AWS into a single view can dramatically reduce problem identification and resolution time, the vendors say. By Michael Cooney Nov 28, 2023 4 mins Network Management Software Network Management Software Networking opinion Is anything useful happening in network management? Enterprises see the potential for AI to benefit network management, but progress so far is limited by AI’s ability to work with company-specific network data and the range of devices that AI can see. By Tom Nolle Nov 28, 2023 7 mins Generative AI Network Management Software brandpost Sponsored by HPE Aruba Networking SASE, security, and the future of enterprise networks By Adam Foss, VicePresident Pre-sales Consulting, HPE Aruba Networking Nov 28, 2023 4 mins SASE news AWS launches Cost Optimization Hub to help curb cloud expenses At its ongoing re:Invent 2023 conference, the cloud service provider introduced several new and free updates that are expected to help enterprises optimize their AWS costs. By Anirban Ghoshal Nov 28, 2023 3 mins Amazon re:Invent Podcasts Videos Resources Events NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe