SAP and Oracle have failed to reach an agreement in court in the increasingly
acrimonious dispute over TomorrowNow, a company SAP acquired from Oracle in
2005.
The court will now
follow
up proceedings (PDF) in a telephone conference with both parties on 20
October 2008.
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The lack of agreement in the private case, in which no details can be
disclosed, follows Oracle's
extension
of the lawsuit against SAP in July this year in which it added further
claims of unlawful behaviour.
TomorrowNow provides cut-price software support for users of enterprise
applications such as PeopleSoft, JD Edwards and Siebel. The firm was acquired by
SAP in February 2005 with a view to tempting customers away from Oracle's
acquisitions.
But the deal turned sour when Oracle accused TomorrowNow of "corporate theft
on a grand scale".
Oracle had alleged that TomorrowNow's staff had stolen software and technical
support materials, and launched legal proceedings against SAP seeking
significant damages.
The company later filed an amendment to those complaints, after being given
access to some of SAP's internal records.
Oracle further alleged that TomorrowNow had implemented a systematic
programme to steal vital technical information.
This included establishing a centre dedicated to downloading Oracle's
technical information, along with a customised software tool called Titan that
was programmed to bypass customer log-in restrictions.
SAP is to close its controversial subsidiary TomorrowNow by the end of
October. In the meantime customers will be helped to move to new support
providers, including arch-rival Oracle.
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