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SCO and Software Liability: What To Consider 7

mristau writes "I wrote my senior thesis on the problems of software liability in the context of both proprietary and open source software development. I used the SCO v. IBM issues as a basis for further hypothetical analysis. The work provides sufficient technical background for a general audience. I'm not a legal scholar so my analysis isn't perfect, but the issues are relevant to us all."
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SCO and Software Liability: What To Consider

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  • by tcopeland ( 32225 ) * <tom AT thomasleecopeland DOT com> on Wednesday June 02, 2004 @03:42PM (#9318189) Homepage
    ... as a final goal. I wonder which she feels would be more effective - certification in the sense of process - i.e., CMM levels? Or certification of individual programmers?

    It sounds like she favors the latter - I'd be interested to hear what she thinks (and why).
  • Here's the abstract (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    Software liability increasingly affects software developers and computer users. Programmers today typically subscribe to one of two main paradigms of software development: proprietary development or open source development. Each model presents unique problems of legal liability. Proprietary development puts software firms and individual programmers at potentially enormous risk if their work harms others. Open source development muddies the waters of authorship and legal responsibility extensively while put

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