From: rmtodd@servalan.servalan.com (Richard Todd)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: da17f0301bfabe61d27d3bdceb32d260bb6e80dbc47d443ed02dc25f999ffc58
Message ID: <m0ss2Mm-00078PC@servalan.servalan.com>
Reply To: <199509110443.WAA00476@wero.byu.edu>
UTC Datetime: 1995-09-11 07:28:30 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 11 Sep 95 00:28:30 PDT
From: rmtodd@servalan.servalan.com (Richard Todd)
Date: Mon, 11 Sep 95 00:28:30 PDT
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: Document Fingerprinting
In-Reply-To: <199509110443.WAA00476@wero.byu.edu>
Message-ID: <m0ss2Mm-00078PC@servalan.servalan.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
In servalan.mailinglist.cypherpunks you write:
>I seem to recall a lawsuit where somebody like Tandy was suing
>somebody else, claiming they copied the computer's rom code.
>As proof they pulled out the competitors computer, pressed a
>certain key combination, and the Tandy copyright flashed up on
>the screen. As I also recall, they LOST the suit believe it or
>not...
Dunno about that one, but there was one where Tandy/Radio Shack was being
sued by the guy (Randy Cook) who originally wrote TRSDOS 2.1, claiming
RS owed him royalties (which they weren't paying) because the current
shipping TRSDOS for the Mod I at the time (v2.3) still had Randy's code.
RS claimed otherwise. Randy Cook showed that if you held down two keys while
booting TRSDOS 2.3, (either the '2' and '4' keys, or '2' and '6', I forget
which), instead of going into the OS the machine would show a nice
copyright screen, including "Copyright (C) Randy Cook". Oops. Tandy/RS had
to pay up. (For those who still have a working Model I and a copy of TRSDOS
from that era, the message is located in one of the sectors on Track 0; it's
fairly easy to spot with a sector editor like SUPERZAP...)
There was also the famous Apple/Franklin case, where Apple showed that
Franklin's Apple II clones contained the original Apple II ROMs, right down
to the copyright notice.
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