Shares in SCO
fell by nearly 72 per cent on Monday as shareholders responded to a court ruling
stating that the company
does not own the
copyright to the Unix operating system.
At $0.44, SCO is valued at a mere $9.4m. SCO's value peaked at $400m in 2003,
shortly after it kicked off a legal campaign against Linux users and developers,
claiming that the open source operating system had illegally used code from
Unix.
In a legal claim against
IBM, SCO demanded
billions of dollars in damages.
SCO briefly offered a licensing programme through which companies could buy
indemnification from any legal claims.
The programme produced several million dollars in revenues.
Microsoft
and Sun
Microsystems respectively paid $16.8m and $10m for a licence.
The SCOsource programme was
suspended
when Novell
claimed that it was the legal owner of Unix intellectual property.
A judge ruled in Novell's favour on Friday, eliminating the foundation
underneath SCO's claim against IBM.
The ruling also stated that SCO should have paid its Unix licence revenues to
Novell.
If upheld, the latter will effectively bankrupt the organisation as it has
spent the past licence revenues on its legal case and to cover losses from its
dwindling software business.
The plunge in its stock price puts SCO back in delisting territory. The
Nasdaq exchange where SCO stock is traded requires that stock prices surpass $1
and will cease trading if a company fails to comply.
SCO had been briefly
delisted in 2005
when it missed several filing deadlines for its annual report and
averted another
delisting earlier this year after its stock price briefly fell below the $1
mark.
SCO said in a
statement
posted on its website that it was disappointed in the ruling, and vowed to
continue litigating where possible.
"Although the district judge ruled in Novell's favour on important issues,
the case has not yet been fully vetted by the legal system and we will continue
to explore our options with respect to how we move forward from here," the
company said.
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