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Cox Crow

Asking the Stupid Questions Since 1971
 Wednesday, May 21, 2003

A Journey of a Thousand Miles Has a Few Stops

Travel websites are great at finding things given a destination. Some can even plot a route. But they fail at finding things along a route. The AAA comes closest with their on-line TripTik® feature. Being car people, they understand that a trip is not just a departure and an arrival, but is full of potty breaks, license plate games, and excursions into the Great Unknown.

So what I want from my on-line travel service is this: given a route, find the best place to stop.

If I make it to the next exit, is the food better? Is the cheapest room another twenty miles? Another hundred? Are smokers' rooms the only rooms available? Does the hotel have a history? Am I better off driving all night?

Update: Request Two: Plot a route given more than two points.

2:40:04 PM # Google It!

What was Inappropriately Transferred?

One of the mysteries of SCO v. IBM is that SCO has not mentioned what the inappropriately transferred knowledge was, preferring instead to wait until they go to court. This, reasonably enough, has some people in a tizzy: It's easier to make an informed decision when one is informed. But, how could SCO do otherwise?

There are four classes of intellectual property. This case considers only one of those four.

trademarksowned by the Open Group, and thus not at issue in this case
patentspublic knowledge
copyrightA work may or may not be published, but the GNU/Linux code is. In a case of plagiarism, a simple comparison between two items is revelatory. Since the one is published, there's no need to hide the other.
trade secretsA trade secret is, first and foremost, secret. It is most emphatically not public knowledge. Revelation of the secret destroys it.
On March 6, 2003, The SCO Group filed a civil lawsuit against IBM citing misappropriation of trade secrets, tortious interference, unfair competition and breach of contract. [emphasis mine]

So what secret was inappropriately transferred? I know someone who was told by a SCO system engineer that there is a fundamental flaw in the Linux kernel, one that is obvious once you know where to look. Could that be it?

11:29:01 AM # Google It!
categories: Industry, Law