HZFQ.COM
welcome to my space
X
Welcome to:hzfq.com
Article search:  
EBooks | Time Management | Flights | Tea | Quit Smoking | Printing | RSS | Banking | Related articles
NAVIGATION: Home >>

Oracle Throws More Charges at SAP

Published by: admin 2008-08-21

Oracle ratcheted up its suit against arch-rival SAP, adding infringement and breach of contract claims to its original suit that charges corporate theft "on a grand scale" among its laundry list of allegations.

In its original complaint, filed on March 22, 2007 in California's Northern District Court in San Francisco, Oracle accused the German software company of engaging in "systematic, illegal access" to its computer support systems.

In the 50-page amended complaint, Oracle makes numerous charges of illegal use of materials. For example, Oracle said SAP's TomorrowNow division distributed a solution to the Daylight Savings Time bug that it said was "substantially similar in total -- and in large appears to be copied identically from - Oracle's DST Solution."

Oracle claims the SAP TN solution included minor errors in Oracle's original documents that it later corrected. The SAP TN logo appears instead of Oracle's.

Former Oracle customer Yazaki North America, an automotive parts supplier, is also listed in the amended complaint. In the month leading up to the end of its support rights to Oracle products on January 3, 2007, the complain said, users using Yazaki credentials downloaded "an enormous number" of Oracle software and support materials relating to Canadian payroll, homebuilder management and real estate management "and many other software products, which make no sense for a U.S. automotive supplier supporting its U.S. business."

Oracle said 11,000 distinct software and support materials were downloaded over a two-week period including 1,500 items Yazaki had no license for. Oracle claims the "illegal downloads are associated with the same IP address belonging to SAP TN in Bryan, Texas."

Steve Bauer, SAP's vice president of global communications, e-mailed the following response to internetnews.com:

"Oracle today filed its long promised amended complaint, after repeated delays. Oracle now apparently has registered some s, so it adds a claim. And, it adds a breach of contract claim based on previously stated allegations. Interestingly, it removes the prior claims of conversion, conspiracy and aiding/abetting.

"SAP plans to respond to the amended complaint by July 2, in accordance with the Court's schedule. At that time, SAP will set the record straight regarding Oracle's allegations. We are eager to vigorously defend this case."

An Oracle spokesperson said the company had no further comment for now beyond what's in its amended complaint.

The original Oracle lawsuit alleges that TomorrowNow, an SAP subsidiary that provides maintenance and support for Oracle-owned PeopleSoft and J.D. Edwards products, gained access to Oracle's knowledge bases in November and December, 2006 and January, 2007.

SAP acquired TomorrowNow in January 2005.

According to the original 44-page complaint, employees of TomorrowNow (SAP TN) downloaded thousands of mission-critical items from Oracle's knowledge bases by using the passwords of former and current Oracle customers.

"Through this scheme, SAP has stolen thousands of proprietary, ed software products and other confidential materials that Oracle developed to service its own support customers," the complaint said.




Pre-Article:It's Official, Google Buys FeedBurner
Next-Article:Court Rules VoIP Providers Must Pay USF Fees

You are looking at:hzfq.com's Oracle Throws More Charges at SAP, click hzfq.com to home
#If you have any other info about this subject , Please add it free.#
Your name:
E-mail:
Telphone:

Your comments:


If you have any other info aboutOracle Throws More Charges at SAP, Please add it free.
  • Technical Analysis: A Big Ugly Gain
  • PeakSoft Upgrades PeakJet With Java Technology
  • Cyber Criminals Prove Elusive
  • IBM Buys Solid Information
  • Excite to Mix Content With Results
  • A Better Longhorn Through Blogging
  • Shrinking Solaris
  • Hiway Introduces Server-Based Web Authoring
  • Nokia Takes Qualcomm Patent Beef to ITC
  • Data Breach Lawsuits Pile up on T.J Maxx
  • Salesforce.com Tackles Outsourcing On Demand
  • The State of Open Source Business
  • Refocused Jamcracker Turns Host
  • Technical Analysis: Repelled Again
  • 'People Ready' to Drive Microsoft's Growth
  • Motorola, Nortel in Talks to Combine Units: Report
  • Apple Booting up Adoption of 'Jaguar'
  • EFF Goes After AOL
  • Bank's Tape Loss Puts Spotlight on Backup Practices
  • Demo: Bigger Storage Performance is Better
  • Stocks Shake Off Brief Slump
  • Technical Analysis: Stocks Stall at Big Round Numbers
  • Macromedia Rolls New Flex Builder Tool
  • Oracle Takes on Collaboration Market
  • Dell's To-Do List: Find New Channels
  • Data Breach Law Back in Senate
  • Sun to Bridge the Java Skills Gap
  • Accused eBay Hacker Re-hires Lawyer
  • SIA Sees Strong Chip Sales Ahead
  •  
  • DirectRevenue to Pay Back 'Spyware' Gains
  • New Patents Could Propel Microsoft's Digital Media
  • eXcelon, Extensibility Push B2B Standards
  • Open Source Semantic Desktop Is Coming
  • Drumbeat 2000 Offers JSP Support for IBM Server
  • Q&A: Tom Glover, IBM and WS-I Web Services Exec
  • Citrix Hit With Patent Infringement Suit
  • IBM Announces Mainframe Tools For SOA Development
  • Mea Culpa: Audit Finds Dell Misled Investors for Years
  • Gates To Lay Out Future of C++, C#
  • Avenida Ships 100% Pure Java Web Server
  • IBM Rolls Out IPTV, VoIP Services
  • Stocks Mixed on Amazon, Jobs Data
  • Macromedia Takes Flash Beyond the Browser
  • Tech Leaders Shepherd File ID Spec
  • RIM Gets More Time in Patent Dispute
  • Burst.com Files Counter Suit Against Apple
  • Microsoft Offers to Buy Yahoo Search
  • SBC Creates Anti-Hacker Lab
  • Learning From Sprint's Stumble
  • The Big IT Guns Are Coming to Web 2.0
  • After Buying EDS, Will HP Lose Focus?
  • End of The Line For Red Hat Linux 9
  • RIM Gives BlackBerry Server IT-Friendly Makeover
  • Microsoft's Battle Lines Shifting to Office?
  • Cisco's Solid Quarter
  • Microsoft Aims at Cluster Computing

  • About us -Site map -Advertisement -Jion us -Contact usExchange linksSponsor us
    Copyright© 2008 hzfq.com All Rights Reserved
    Site made&Support support@hzfq.com    E-mail: web@hzfq.com