That SCO Business does just seem to be a money scam

Trying to make sense of The SCO Group’s threat last week to sue any Linux user who doesn’t buy a Unix license? Forget the threat. Instead, look at the announcement SCO made the following day — the one in which SCO said it’s now in the Web services business thanks to its acquisition of Vultus Inc.

Trying to make sense of The SCO Group’s threat last week to sue any Linux user who doesn’t buy a Unix license? Forget the threat. Instead, look at the announcement SCO made the following day — the one in which SCO said it’s now in the Web services business thanks to its acquisition of Vultus Inc.

And how did SCO buy Vultus? With newly issued SCO stock, of course — stock whose price gets a boost every time the company makes yet another wild claim about who it will sue next.

Actually, the Vultus deal is a lot more complicated than that. You wouldn’t know it from what SCO said last week, but SCO has finally found a way to make money — literally.

No, not from its attempts to sell Unix licenses to Linux vendors and users. Since January, when SCO started trying to get Linux types to cough up some cash, the company has sued IBM, sent threatening letters to nearly 1,500 big companies, tried to revoke IBM’s license to sell Unix and threatened darkly that if someone didn’t start buying Unix licenses soon, it would sue Linus Torvalds. None of that seems to have sold many Unix licenses.

But every time SCO makes a new, wilder set of legal threats, speculators bid up the price of SCO stock – starting in March, with the IBM lawsuit, then in May, when the threatening letters were sent, then again in June, when SCO tried to make IBM users pull the plug, and again last week. SCO’s stock price is now about 10 times what it was six months ago.

Pretty impressive, eh? Especially for a company with no serious hope of getting cash flow from any of these threats for years.

None of the threats make legal sense. If they did, SCO would be able to get an injunction to shut down Linux users. In practice, SCO hasn’t even been able to get an injunction against IBM and won’t get a court hearing on its request to do that until 2005.

Meanwhile, a German court told SCO in June that it must stop threatening Linux users. And an Australian government agency is looking into charges that SCO is essentially running a shakedown racket by claiming that Linux users must buy a license they don’t actually need.

And SCO’s tactics don’t make business sense, either. SCO is a software company that has slashed its R&D budget, alienated its customers and demolished the value of its brand. That’s not the way you build a business.

So, what do you do when you have no real business but your stock price keeps going up? We all learned that lesson during the dot-com bubble: You use that stock as currency.

That brings us back to Vultus, which was majority-owned by The Canopy Group, former Novell boss Ray Noorda’s personal investment fund. And Canopy — surprise! — also controls SCO, as well as some 30 other small companies.

Last week, SCO didn’t disclose much information about the deal. But in fact, the details were already on the record in SCO’s recent filings with the SEC.

It turns out SCO didn’t simply use stock to buy another company. SCO printed up about $3 million in new stock. Then, in the complicated deal in which SCO acquired Vultus, the stock was cashed out, with most of the proceeds going to Canopy.

Some went to Canopy as a Vultus shareholder; the rest went to Canopy as compensation for taking on Vultus’ debt, some of which was presumably owed to Canopy.

Got all that? If it sounds like a shell game, well, that’s the way Canopy likes to move its companies around. But in effect, Canopy used SCO’s stock price, boosted by SCO’s Linux threats, to rake in a couple of million dollars in cash behind the scenes.

And apparently it worked. Which means we can expect that as long as Canopy can find ways of cashing in on SCO’s threats against Linux users, those threats will keep coming — no matter how little sense they make.

Source: Computerworld