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SCOs Licensing Fight Turns a Profit





  Table of Contents:
  1. SCOs Licensing Fight Turns a Profit
  2. ' Whats Ahead for SCO '

The company said its efforts to wring fees from its Unix copyrights helped push it into profitability during its fiscal third quarter.

SCOs Licensing Fight Turns a Profit
( Page 1 of 2 )

The SCO Group Inc. on Thursday reported a boost in profits and revenue for its fiscal third quarter, including $7.3 million of revenue from its controversial Unix-licensing efforts.

In fact, the companys SCOsource licensing efforts boosted the company to a profit. SCO reported net income of $3.1 million on revenue of $20.1 million, versus a loss of $4.5 million on revenue of $15.4 million for the same quarter last year.

SCOsource generated $7.3 million in revenue and contributed $5.6 million to gross margin, while SCOs operating systems produced $12.8 million in revenue, the company said.

"These [SCOsource] activities have nearly tripled our cash balance and strengthened our balance sheet," said Darl McBride, president and chief executive of SCO, in a conference call with analysts Thursday morning.

In the conference call, McBride said the company was determined to continue the fight. "We have a very strong resolve to defend our intellectual-property assets," he said. "We have pretty thick skin at this point. We have a lot of people throwing rocks here. ... Weve been called into a fight, and were not backing down."

SCO spent less than half of its legal budget for the quarter—approximately $700,000, McBride said—which will be recorded as part of a "cost of sales" item on the companys balance sheet. "Weve still got a huge budget," he said.

McBride disclosed that the companys first Fortune 500 licensee received a small discount from the licensing terms revealed last week. SCO has said previously that it intends to license its Unix System V patent portfolio to customers for approximately $699 per CPU per server, with the amount doubling in October. The Fortune 500 customer received a "slight discount" to the $699 fee, McBride said.

"Its a positive sign for the future for the licenses and the licenses that will flow from that," McBride said.

SCO continues to invite companies to visit the companys headquarters in Lindon, Utah, to view the disputed code under a nondisclosure agreement, SCO executives said. More details of the disputed code and SCOs licensing activities will be detailed in a Monday session next week at SCOForum, the companys developer conference in Las Vegas.

"Its a strange situation—they continue to say we wont show the code, and we continue to offer it up," McBride said of the companys detractors.

Next page: What SCO plans next.



 
 
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