The SCO Group is trying to revive the name of the AT&T subsidiary that once owned the rights to the Unix operating system and, in the process, stirring up controversy with the industry group that claims ownership of the Unix trademark.
SCO has applied for a U.S. trademark on the term "Unix System Laboratories," the company confirmed Thursday. SCO filed an application to register the trademark on June 21, according to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Web site.
"The company has filed to receive that trademark because we believe there's some value in that. How we plan to use that trademark in the future has yet to be determined," said Blake Stowell, an SCO spokesman.
If registered, the name could be used for a variety of purposes, Stowell said. "It could be used for our company; it could be used for an initiative within our company; it could be used in any number of areas," he said.
SCO Chief Executive Officer Darl McBride is expected to reveal details about how SCO intends to use the trademark at the company's annual SCO Forum user conference in Las Vegas next week.
But whether SCO ultimately will be granted the Unix System Laboratories trademark is in doubt. The Open Group, a San Francisco consortium that owns the trademark to the term Unix, claims that registering the name Unix System Laboratories would not only conflict with the Open Group's Unix trademark but would also violate a license between SCO and the Open Group, which allows SCO to use the term Unix.
"We'll be taking the issue up with the Patent and Trademark Office and objecting strenuously, and we'll be taking the issue up with SCO because it's a breach of the license they already hold with us," said Graham Bird, vice president of marketing with the Open Group.
The Open Group has already had a number of discussions with SCO over the software vendor's claim that it owns Unix, Bird said. "They claim, for example, that they own Unix. They do not," he said.
SCO's Stowell declined to comment on Bird's take on the issue.
Unix System Laboratories was once a subsidiary of AT&T that owned both the Unix trademark and the Unix System V source code. The company was dissolved when it was acquired by Novell Inc. in 1993. Novell eventually sold some of the Unix System Laboratories assets, which were acquired by The SCO Group in 2000. As part of its Unix divestiture, Novell transferred the Unix copyright to the Open Group.
Though the question of whether SCO actually acquired the Unix copyright is now the subject of a lawsuit between SCO and Novell, the NetWare vendor apparently holds no claim on the Unix System Laboratories trademark. "We don't claim ownership of that trademark," said Novell spokesman Bruce Lowry.
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Making the Business Case for IT Consolidation
IT executives face the need to improve service delivery with limited resource increases. Two common strategies for achieving this are network and systems management tools and datacenter consolidation. Read on to discover how you can make a strong business case for IT Consolidation.












