After being ordered by a federal judge on Tuesday to stop selling its Mac clones, Psystar was reported to be going out of business, according to a Dow Jones Newswires story last Thursday. Psystar's Web site was also inaccessible late last week.
Psystar attorney Eugene Action told Dow Jones that founder and President Rudy Pedraza will be "shutting things down immediately," and that all eight employees will be let go. However, Computerworld reported last Friday that another attorney for Psystar, K.A.D. Camara, of the Houston, Texas, firm Camara & Sibley, says the company is not shutting down and that Action was "misquoted," and Psystar "does not intend to shut down permanently."
The Florida-based company was found to be infringing on Apple's copyrighted Mac OS software in a November ruling by the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.
Last Tuesday, U.S. District Judge William Alsup granted Apple's request for a permanent injunction against Psystar's sales of its Open Computer. In that ruling, the judge wrote: "Defendant must bring its conduct into compliance with the injunction by midnight on Dec. 31, 2009, at the latest...Defendant must immediately begin this process, and take the quickest path to compliance; thus, if compliance can be achieved within one hour after this order is filed, defendant shall reasonably see it done."