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Microsoft's Patent Pledge "Worse Than Useless"
Posted by
Zonk
on Fri Nov 10, 2006 03:22 PM
from the infinity-bad dept.
from the infinity-bad dept.
munchola writes "The Software Freedom Law Center has declared that Microsoft's patent pledge to open source developers is 'worse than useless'. SFLC chief technology officer, Bradley Kuhn, has written to FOSS developers warning them that 'developers are no safer from Microsoft patents now than they were before'. According to Kuhn: 'The patent covenant only applies to software that you develop at home and keep for yourself; the promises don't extend to others when you distribute. You cannot pass the rights to your downstream recipients, even to the maintainers of larger projects on which your contribution is built.'"
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Microsoft's Patent Pledge "Worse Than Useless"
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Well.... (Score:1)
Re:No kidding (Score:5, Interesting)
The point is, open source people _aren't_ hippies. They've been running successful businesses for years now. But microsoft wants them to be hippies, wants the world to believe them to be - and now, is trying to make them be, using software patent monopolies to shut down open source businesses. The message is "if you're a hippie hobbyist coder, we won't sue you. But dare to build a business, and we will". Remember, patent and copyright monopolies DESTROY free market capitalism. Microsoft, like most large software corporations, are absolutely terrified of a true free market in software.
"hippy and communist" are just wrong when applied to free software folk: "Raging gun-nut libertarian" is far more accurate. Microsoft are playing with fire.
Re:No kidding (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://www.lulu.com/zotz | Last Journal: Sunday December 17 2006, @11:19AM)
Bingo. A point I have been trying to make for what seems like ages.
There are no free markets when it comes to goods protected by copyrights or patents. With copyleft you can perhaps get close to a free market in those goods.
all the best,
drew
http://www.ourmedia.org/node/262954 [ourmedia.org]
Sayings - Deterred Bahamian Novel
Surprised? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Surprised? (Score:4, Informative)
(Last Journal: Saturday November 04 2006, @11:33PM)
But if Novell released said code under the GPL, then the genie is out of the bottle. Stick with the code that pre-dates the agreement between MS and Novell, and I think you're okay.
Oh, and stop contributing code to Novell.
Re:Surprised? (Score:5, Insightful)
(Last Journal: Sunday August 06 2006, @10:39PM)
They created ME and Vista. I would consider the users that left Windows because of ME or the ones who might leave because of Vista, something truly good for OSS.
Because we all know... (Score:2)
(http://slashdot.org/ | Last Journal: Sunday September 09, @05:43PM)
duh. (Score:1)
Boycott Novell (Score:2, Interesting)
(http://www.edu-nix.org/)
Re:Boycott Novell (Score:4, Interesting)
(http://www.labyrinth.org/)
Ok... (Score:5, Funny)
DUH (Score:2)
Not the Novell Deal (Score:5, Informative)
Note, this article is not talking about the deal with Novell as almost every post thus far has assumed. It mentions that deal, as something still being researched. This is about MS's recent promise/contract to not sue hobbyists for patent violations.
Re:Not the Novell Deal (Score:4, Interesting)
Meaning the stuff they would never know about to sue for in the first place. Gee they won't sue you for stuff they don't know you did, how generous
Ya' know... (Score:1)
Enough (Score:1, Troll)
No one writing about this knows any more of the details than what was released to the press. At best all of this is blind supposition and wasted mental bandwidth.
If all of the effort that went into these various prognostications of impending doom had been spent on coding we'd all be a lot better off.
Re:Enough (Score:5, Insightful)
This is getting worse than Zune news. No one writing about this knows any more of the details than what was released to the press.
I know it is not normal to RTFA, but if you did you'd see it was a press release about the license MS released with regard to their promise not to sue open source hobbyists over patent violations. It is not about the Novell deal, despite the fact that every comment thus far (except my previous one) seems to be assuming otherwise. So people do know more than was published in the press release, just not about what you seem to have thought this article was about.
There's already a (correct) way to open a patent. (Score:3, Informative)
It shows people people that your patent was only filed to prevent other people from patenting the idea and causing trouble. People tend to look very favorably on dedications.
For isolated, uncompensated, unimportant developer (Score:5, Informative)
Groklaw also raised questions about Novell's deal [groklaw.net]:
Something of intrest and my $0.02 (Score:1)
(http://kaddy.no-ip.org/)
huge number of patents (Score:2)
(http://www.s5h.net/)
Itsatrap AGAIN?! (Score:1, Offtopic)
Patent Pledge for Hobbyist Contributors missing? (Score:4, Interesting)
The "Microsoft's Patent Pledge for Non-Compensated Developers" is indeed rather useless, because it only covers creation and local use, and specifically excludes distribution.
The "Microsoft's Patent Pledge for Individual Contributors to openSUSE.org" is also not interesting, since it covers the transfer of code from an author to SUSE, and only that and nothing else.
The "Microsoft's Patent Pledge for Hobbyist Contributors" is referenced from the above one. This should be the one that is covering the community distribution part. But is missing on the Microsoft website: Either it doesn't exist at all and the reference is a mistake, or there is a reason why it was left out from the web.
Has anyone managed to find it? Why Bradley Kuhn doesn't mention it?
One question comes to mind, (Score:2)
People need to vote with their pocketbook and put Novell out of business, ASAFP.
By what right... (Score:1)
(http://www.linicks.net/)
What terrible arrogance.
So... (Score:2)
Basically, this agreement is saying that Microsoft won't wield patents against those contributing software to OpenSuSE until after the Microsoft-Novell deal runs out or you try to wield patents against MS themselves.
But, really, what was the situation before? Either you wrote software that DIDN'T violate MS patents, or you DID and just hoped like hell that they wouldn't use their patents to sue you. There is a false sense of security in violating MS patents because there is a perceived "MAD" policy of MS's patent farms versus IBM/Novell/etc.'s patents, but, realistically, there's no saying they'd come to your rescue if you contributed something to an open source project.
So really, how does this change the strategy of contributing to linux through open source projects or the kernel itself? Either don't violate patents or hope they won't wield them against you. Either route you choose hasn't been closed by this agreement between Microsoft and Novell.
Trying to trap people into getting sued (Score:1)
(http://none.right.now/ | Last Journal: Tuesday August 07, @11:27AM)
I've said it befoe and I'll say it again (Score:1)
This is why software patents are stupid (Score:2)
(http://slashdot.org/ | Last Journal: Wednesday November 07, @10:21PM)
You know, I can build anything damn thing I want to with my Craftsman tool set and sell it. Sears has never had to promise that they won't sue me. I can even build, sell, and distribute competing products as long as its done under a different brand name.
Microsoft seems to be forgetting all those nice shareware programs built for Windows that added value to the platform (Paintshop, Pkzip, TextPad etc). I wonder if those applications would have been written if the Programmers thought they were going be sued by distributing them.
Enjoy,
Hmmm, why do this now? (Score:3, Interesting)
I reckon they are terrified about Vista... They're terrified it'll be a dead loss with millions jumping ship to Linux. They're trying to fence of Linux from their ex-customers in advance of it's release.
Has Microsoft Ever Sued Someone Over a Patent? (Score:1)
No Suit Promised where No Suit Possible (Score:2)
(http://bcgreen.com/~samuel | Last Journal: Friday April 30 2004, @02:42PM)
Even if it was legally possible, how is MS going to find out about me violating their retroactive patent on sudo (oops, loose lips!) in order to sue me, if I'm not allowed to distribute the result?
For somebody who claims that it is possible to sue someone for private use, can you point me to a case where such a case was successfully prosecuted?
I'm still not sure this Novell/M$ deal is bad (Score:1)
Do I have this right? (Score:2)
(http://trillian.mit.edu/~jc/ | Last Journal: Saturday August 14 2004, @05:03PM)
Is this the basic import of this story?
If so, it seems that Novell has just signed their own death warrant.
In any case, until I get a reliable (i.e., from a knowledgeable lawyer), I probably won't be using anything from Novell in the future.
Sorry, I'm excited about this M$ Novell deal (Score:2, Interesting)
Now, that being said, let me get to the point (and please don't mod this as flame bait because I'm just trying to give my honest opinion.
I'm excited about this Novell/M$ deal. I'm excited about it because it will allow IT departments to give their end users the M$ applications (most office drones do like them) they want. Now, lets get down to this lawsuit business. Hypothetically, lets pretend M$ decides to sue a company for coupleing their applications with a non-Suse distro if Linux. They could manage to squeeze all the money from their bank account (sorry guys/coal mine canaries). This however would never go unnoticed by the business world. It would trigger every company running M$ applications on a non-SuSe back ends to dump their M$ applications an revert to their old OSS applications (if they're running Linux backend, they probably ran a Linux front end at one time). This would be a painful switch, but not the end of the world for them.
M$ is trying to get the Linux community to adopt their applications. We're obviously not going to touch their OS. The money they get from that first lawsuit would never equil the revenue they receive from the expanding Linux community using their applications. It would be very "penny-wise pound-foolish" to choose the money from that one lawsuit over continued revenue in application sales (and it would not take more then one or two of these lawsuits to scare every IT department away from M$ applications forever).
So, here's to a brand new day. Lets drink to not being the first company eaten by the M$ wolf.
"I don't have to outrun the troll, I just have to outrun you"
Evil on one side, evil on the other (Score:3, Insightful)
(http://aqpeag.blogspot.com/ | Last Journal: Saturday April 21 2007, @05:39AM)
This from the man who believes [omnipotent.net] that the GPL is the only FOSS license with the right to exist.
Mr. Kuhn, you are every bit as much a part of the problem as Microsoft are themselves. In fact, you are moreso. At least Microsoft do not try and pretend to be anything other than what they are. You are not one micron less a fascist...merely from a different direction.
You can take your warped, cultic distortion of the word "freedom," and cram it where you feel most appropriate. You and Richard Stallman are open source's answer to David Miscavige and L. Ron. Hubbard, respectively. You are the proverbial scorpion on Linux's back.
Some who use Linux with the total inability to think for themselves may delude themselves that they need to use your brain and Stallman's in leiu of their own. I am not among such people, and I defy, reject, and repudiate both you, Stallman, and the entirely *false* freedom which the FSF stands for. You would have us reject Microsoft as our masters, only to install yourselves in their place.
You do not speak for everyone who uses open source. You most certainly do not speak for me.
Re:Patents don't protect that anyway - wrong (Score:3, Insightful)
(http://deron.meranda.us/)
But I think this commonly held misconception might be one reason why the general public sees nothing wrong with patents...they think it only applies if you're trying to make money off the idea or running a company, e.g., it doesn't apply to them so why care. But a patent is an absolute abridgment of freedom, and really has nothing to do with money or intent at all, nor does it have anything to do with stealing (like copyright or trade secrets) as you can unknowingly infringe even if you thought up the idea all by yourself. Of course any legal remidies, actions, rewards, etc may be based on money and scale, but not the determination if you're guilty of infringement or not.
IANAL applies, but I have read through the US Law as best as I could understand it. If somebody more knowing than me knows something else, please be kind and point out exactly where in the law such distrinction is made because I can't find it.