In fact, if you read most software EULAs, you will find 
that they "do not guarantee the fitness of the product for the purpose 
intended."  So it may not even work as an operating system.  I really 
wish people would start reading before clicking to agree and stop spouting this 
crap about having someone to sue.  Honestly, when is the last time any of 
us have heard about MS getting sued be someone other than a 
government?
 
Brian Kelsay
On Fri, Oct 31, 2008 at 5:29 PM, James Sissel 
<> wrote:
And 
  companies like to have a good company to support
the OS which gives them 
  someone to sue if things go
bad.
#include 
<ianal.h>
But there wouldn't be any grounds to sue a support company 
"if things go bad", because support contracts aren't written in a way that 
exposes the support company to any liability for "bad things".  The 
contracts require that the support company "respond" to problems within certain 
time limits, but they cannot guarantee that that response will result in the 
resolution of the problem to the satisfaction of the customer.
And that's 
because it isn't possible to make such a guarantee.  MS doesn't guarantee 
it to their customers, nor does any other proprietary software company, and 
neither do Red Hat, SuSE, or Canonical.