Think of it this way: all those years you looked at ethernet cards with "runs with netware!" stickers on the chips, not once did I ever see an ethernet card with a sticker on it that said "Runs with (Free)BSD!" Yet they all worked on FreeBSD just fine.
Do those windows stickers on PCs ring any bells for you? We're talking about exactly the same kind of people here.
Actually those stickers don't bother me assuming 2 things:
1/ They are accurate
2/ Nothing is done to prevent competitors from working with the equipment
Fine then It is AT&Ts. They all copied them.
Let me see, if I developed an operating system that set the stage for science and communications for the next century and then a bunch of copycats want to make money on my brilliance I'm probably not going to be very happy about it. Personally I'd be fine if they all copied it and gave it away.. share the love. But taking someone else's ideas pretty much exactly and then selling them is not going to make you any friends.
You may not be happy about it but so long as they don't break the law you can't do anything about it. AT&T tried vs BSD and lost. Worse the judge found that AT&T had included BSD code in Unix and they had to keep the BSD copyright marks on those files.
Whether the code is original or not is irrelevant in my mind. An old friend of mine used to call his programming staff typists. See?
I bet his programming staff neither respected him nor worked well for him.
If the code is original what would be the legal basis for SCO to make any claims towards it?
Novell deserves nothing. They owe AT&T everything. (via raping the open source community). Seriosuly, they need to go down for something. Even if it is trumped up.
Novell bought Unix lock stock and barrel from AT&T when they bought the USL subsidiary from them.
My sense of justice doesn't allow me to want anyone to go down under trumped up charges. Especially not when the beneficiary is worse than they are.
Over and above that, they need to be punished for the quality of their product. They give Linux a bad name. Much like Symantec gives Windows a bad name.
I did use OpenSuse for a while and it worked well (admittedly Novell hadn't had it for long at that time).
As bad as you think Novell is SCO is worse. SCO sent 1500 letters demanding payment for Linux infringement to top companies. Some of those companies told SCO "Stuff it we don't use Linux" (which shows the accuracy of SCO claims) others (including HP and Google) said "Show us evidence" but didn't get any. Yet somehow according to SCO those "lost profits" are Novells fault for truthfully claiming to own the copyrights.
If you authored a program and I claimed you had violated my copyrights how would you react when you knew you were innocent (and then it turned out I didn't even own those copyrights I'd claimed you were violating)? How would you react when I refused (even in court) to show evidence and continued slandering you? How about when I ran a media campaign continuing to tell about your "violations"? How about when the legal costs hit the $10s of Millions and you were not guilty? That is what SCOG has been doing to the Linux community for 7 years now. Articles have called them the most hate tech company in the world and rightly so. Compared to SCOG the Linux community loves Microsoft and you know they don't like Microsoft.
Among the SCOG nonsense is the claim to "own control" of the IBM journalling file system that they ported to Linux from OS/2. The reason being that an earlier port had been to AIX and since a version of the code once touched a version of Unix SCOG now controlled it. This in spite of statements from AT&T when they owned Unix (and had written the contract with IBM) that such "contamination" did not occur, your code is yours and they don't control it so long as it does not include any of theirs.
Among the SCOG gaffes in SCOG vs IBM was to demand copies of the Linux 2.7 kernel. There is not and has not ever been a 2.7 kernel. Which shows the quality of their legal research.