Microsoft EU Decision Protects OSS Projects From Suits 186
rfc1394 writes "An article in Australia's IT News mentions that under its antitrust agreement with the European Union, 'Microsoft will publish an irrevocable pledge not to assert any patents it may have over the interoperability information against non-commercial open source software development projects.' Essentially, in addition to getting them to comply with the anti-trust decision, the EU has forced Microsoft to back off of its saber-rattling when it comes to EU open source projects. That protection in no way extends to US projects, of course."
you gotta love eu bureaucrats (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:you gotta love eu bureaucrats (Score:4, Insightful)
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So while it might be that Paris has way too many people, it doesn't seem to be too extreme to me.
Re:you gotta love eu bureaucrats (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:you gotta love eu bureaucrats (Score:5, Insightful)
In short, the right decision was made in spite of (and not because of) the European Commission.
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As happens all too infrequently in the USA now days. *sigh* It used to be at least a LITTLE better here (USA), but , sadly not so much anymore.
Not trying to 'put words in your mouth' or imply this was your point; I own up to this one as my own thoughts. Your comment just triggered my thoughts and reply.
But I also agree with your point...as seen over the internet news and my rare foraging on network TV from my p
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Well, perhaps. But also remember that it was the faceless, unelected, bureaucratic EU Commission
Though I agree with the gist of you comment I have to point out the Commission is supposed to be bureaucratic precisely because they are unelected (at least not directly).
The commission members are appointed by the democratically elected governments of the individual EU member states and as such have to answer to the voters in their respective home countries.
Further I do not consider the commission member faceless, maybe because I actively follow European politics instead of only reading about it in nati
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only eu bureaucrats could pull such 2 stunts in just one gig. when a bureaucracy works, it really shines.
While better than nothing, this settlement doesn't go far enough as open source projects that are profitable still has to pay MS royalties, only .4 percent but they still have to pay them.
FalconRe:you gotta love eu bureaucrats (Score:4, Insightful)
Think of it as follows. TrollTech charges something like 3900 USD, which translates into a Microsoft revenue stream (assuming 0.4%) of about a million dollars. Trolltech has a small business of up 200,000. After that you pay full dollar. So Trolltech is charging profitable open source companies more than Microsoft...
Don't know about you, but this does make Mono attractive on Linux. Mono on Linux is pretty good, and on Windows
.net (Score:2)
Don't know about you, but this does make Mono attractive on Linux. Mono on Linux is pretty good, and on Windows .NET is the way to go. So once your company makes a million bucks you need to start forking 3900 total (not per developer) over some money to Microsoft. Fair deal actually...
I don't see or know what good .net is over other technologies such as Ruby on Rails, I'm not a developer now though I want to learn.
FalconRe: (Score:2)
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Re:you gotta love eu bureaucrats (Score:5, Interesting)
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Cool. (Score:3, Interesting)
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The *more interesting* question is probably, Does this agreement mean business will feel comfortable using open source projects?
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proper attire is mandatory (Score:5, Funny)
Which is good, because the OSS crowd is more into t-shirts and jeans.
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The last I heard ( when R. Stallman was attacked by Ninjas), he was only wearing a t-shirt and sandals- did not even have his katana. (probably because no pants=no need for belt, thus no suitable place to belt the scabbard)
Yes, I can see the media event of the OSS century:
RMS, Theo, and Linus in nothing but t-shirts and sandals Deathmatch in a Cage! Coming to a theater near you soon!
Hey, Jack Thompson, what would be the rating on this videogame?
Did I stray way offtopic here?....Heh! Heh! Shame on me!
in no way extends (Score:3, Insightful)
This, of course, insures profitable OSS projects will not be based in the US. Damn shame. Some of us like Tech jobs.
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Actually, it ensures nothing of the sort... "profitable" (read, for-profit) OSS projects aren't protected; only non-profit ones. I'm sure MS will have a heyday with the definition of "non-profit".
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If they give away their software they are non-profit. If they have a different branch that sells support not software they should be safe. I can see no real way for MS to go after a company that only sells support.
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All will depend on the correct split between the "non-profit project" and the "for-profit service".
There should be no need for any split, unfortunately this ruling almost makes it mandatory.
FalconRe: (Score:3, Interesting)
The problem will be for companies that use dual licensing models.
OS employment (Score:2)
in a sense, it is already narrowly defined and practiced. A developer who writes FLOSS code may be paid for his work. However, an employee is not in "business", but is making a living. There is a difference between a company making money and a person being paid wages.
And who's going to pay the developer? A business? The business would still have to pay the royalties.
FalconRe: (Score:2)
The business would still have to pay the royalties.
Why?
Because it's not a nonprofit.
FslconThe business isn't selling the software their (Score:2)
Because it's not a nonprofit.
That's not relevant.
employee is developing.
It is relevant. Not all Open Source is developed only for the company to use. A lot of OSS is developed by a community and some by those who intend to sale the software. Samba isn't developed by one company only for that company! Redhat sales Linux as well as provides services for it. The same applies to Suse/Novell and many other distros.
FalconRe: (Score:2, Interesting)
They are promising to not sue "non-commercial" interests. If you look, they are orchestrating a proxy campaign against commercial open source, while senior executives such as Ballme
Re:in no way extends (Score:5, Funny)
Nah, it just means that you guys in the US will have to keep living the American DRM.
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All US projects will have to do will be to have someone in Europe touch the code, and license it back to them. They will have received it from the EU, and therefore will be under the same protections.
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For a lot of patents they can't anyway.. we have no software patents here so a lot of the MS patents are basically US only in the first place. It's an easy shoe-in for microsoft to say they won't assert them, since they don't (in a legal sense) exist... they've lost nothing.
However by the fact that whoever accepted the terms on not suing for patent violations, I'd say they were looking at a tyme when software patents were valid in the EU.
FalconWell at least... (Score:2, Funny)
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Between the US and the Japan/China eating Europe's (Score:4, Insightful)
lunch
What exactly is it the US produces now, other than food? Knowledge? With both China and India graduating more and more engineers and scientists the US's lead may not last long. One thing they both need are accountants and US accountants can make a boat load of money showing Chinese and Indian companies how to setup an accounting system. Actually as my sister is a CPA, Certified Public Accountant [wikipedia.org], and runs her own business, I've thought of suggesting she learn Mandarin Chinese then go to China.
FalconRe:Between the US and the Japan/China eating Europ (Score:4, Funny)
1) Music/movies (we outsell the rest of the World in these combined).
2) Advanced weapons sales
3) Software of any sort
4) Basic research and devt. (not readily marketable AND given for free to the rest of the world. We are the absolute leader in "pure" research investment, though starting to slow down for obvious reasons).
5) Applied research, design, and devt. (sattelites, pharmaceuticals, consumer electronics, you name it)
6) Agriculture (including the GM foods that EU farmers are scared of).
7) Exporting Democracy!
A few things we still kick ass in: (Score:2)
1) Music/movies (we outsell the rest of the World in these combined).
Other places like Bollywood [wikipedia.org] are coming on strong.
2) Advanced weapons sales
You've got me there. However more weapons aren't needed.
3) Software of any sort
Software could be, and is, done all over the world. Take Microsoft, MS has opened campuses in both China and India. "Business Week" has an article on where US companies are send jobs to including programming jobs, Major Players in Outsourcing [businessweek.com] . Ubuntu has African roots [easy-ubuntu-linux.com].
AUstralians for change (Score:3, Interesting)
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(Ducks)
Re:WTFians 4 branes? (Score:2)
When thinking about Microsoft and patents on algorithms, I cant't help remembering the way toast goes black when I burn it - or paint it black.
Maybe I'm off-topic, or maybe you just can't see the meta4.
One thing about elections is people vote. Then sometimes the votes are counted. That's what I like about toast... and GloboCorp. Got me?
Then again, maybe some Australians are just Turkeys - y'know, the ones who get their values from the US?
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EU membership (Score:2)
Turkey is having a hard time getting membership
That is where Europeans are messing up. Turkey has elected politicians who toned down the rhetoric in the hopes of joining the EU. However if Turkey isn't allowed to join hardliners could gain control of the government. Possibly it could form a Caliphate [wikipedia.org]. Turkey is already about to enter northern Iraq to fight Kurds who they've repressed since WWI.
Falcon
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As for Iraq, they are going to in fight a terrorist group - listed as terrorists by the US and Iraq and Iran and Syria - that a
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The US doesn't need any more enemies, and the Turkish population opinion of the US is at its lowest level it's been.
Personally, I don't see the point of "morally bearing witness" to some genocide that happened 80 years ago or whatever. If the US went around condemning every other government that has screwed somebody or other over, we'd have to condemn every country on the planet including ourselves.
I'm an anarch
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I thoght I answered but I don't see it now.
listed as terrorists by the US and Iraq and Iran and Syria - that are killing their soldiers. Has nothing to do with anything else going on, although it will screw up Iraq more than it is already. This incursion has the possibility of becoming a full scale war between Turkey and the Kurds
Yea, Iran Iraq, Syria, and Turkey all consider Kurd as terrorists because Kurds make up large populations in all these countries and they want what they were promised by the A
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There is the flaw. People who kills soldiers are not terrorists, they are a military enemy. It is only terrorism if you attack civilians.
So Turkey attacking them is justified, because they are a military enemy, but calling them terrorists smells bad, "Russia in Chechnya" kind of bad.
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All good reasons not to let Turkey join. (Score:2)
I think you're mixed up. If Turkey is a member of the EU it will much easier for the rest of Europe to control Turkey. Otherwise the EU has no control over what Turkey does.
A country, especially a large country which would have lot of voting power and economic influence (good and bad) can't be so unstable that it could change into a dictatorship.
Check out Augusto Pinochet [wikipedia.org] in Chile, the Shah [wikipedia.org] or Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini [wikipedia.org] in Iran, or Saddam [wikipedia.org] excepting the Ayatollah all of whom the US supported.
Falcon
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I'm not entirely sure why Turkey was ever considered a potentia
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I'm not entirely sure why Turkey was ever considered a potential entrant, but I suppose in this, as in everything, standards slip.
Because Turkey is a European country! If not all of Europe is allowed to join I don't think it's appropriate the call it "Europe". Maybe "half of Europe" or "Only European nations we like".
The EU is a self-serving alliance of countries, not a charity
Do you know how many people from Turkey live in Germany? Fact is is many live there now.
Falcon
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European Union, not Europe. The fact that the name is different should hint that it is not all of Europe.
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As is Turkey.
Is or is not "Europe" in the name?
Is or is not "America" in the name of the United States of America?
I see your point, but it's kind of meaningless.
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Define "Non-commercial" (Score:4, Insightful)
Umm... Is it just me or is this just mealy mouthed enough to get projects into HUGE trouble down the road when they are distributed commercially? Just what is Microsoft's definition of "non-commercial"?
They can still go after end users and distributors (Score:5, Interesting)
These were also my first thoughts in reading the summary. From the article, the European Commissioner for Competition Policy says (emphasis is mine):
Presumably all this means is that Microsoft won't be going after developers, but it may still be going after anyone who makes use of those developers' efforts. It's some good news for developers, but it's not exactly a let off the hook if you can't tell your users with any confidence that they won't be sued by Microsoft for obscure patents that wouldn't hold up in the face of anyone who could afford to defend themselves. If anything, this might give Microsoft more power to spread FUD about OSS. They're just narrowing the target, basically saying that it's okay to develop OSS, but they might not let people use it without paying up.
Hopefully the linked article isn't representative of what the actual arrangement is. For the thing to be of any use, Microsoft really needs to be pledging that they won't enforce whatever patents they claim to have at all.
Re:They can still go after end users and distribut (Score:3, Informative)
Therefore: "commercial software distributors and end users."
Might read: "commercial software distributors and [commercial software] end users."
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In fact, it is so reasonable, that it makes me wonder if, should MSFT decide to take on OSS legally in the US, the software innovation pendulum would swing in-favor of the EU.
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non-commercial only (Score:3, Insightful)
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Non-commercial development, not non-commercial use (Score:2)
Open source can still be commercial. All open source is is a business model, there's closed source proprietary and open source business models, along with others.
FalconRe: (Score:2)
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Right, but MS have only said they wouldn't hassle non-commercial OSS developers. That set doesn't contain OSS users, nor commercial OSS developers.
That's why it is bad, it doesn't shield OSS projects that are for profit, ie commercial.
FalconRe: (Score:2)
Now, this only applies to technologi
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Why should it? If you're making a profit based on a technology someone else poured millions on R&D into, why should you be able to use that technology without contributing back to the company that paid millions to invent it?
Why should it? Because it creates it's own way to interoperate and tries to prevent vender lockin.
FalconRe: (Score:3, Insightful)
Bill gets tired of EU, a conversation. (Score:5, Funny)
Bill: Man, I am getting so tired of the EU. I am going to have to buy Europe. Bring me my checkbook.
Accountant: Sir, it's a little out of your price range.
Bill: (Staring blankly) Price range?
Accountant: Yes, sir. It costs more than you have, especially since most of your money is in dollar currency.
Bill: (Picks up phone.) Steve, get in here. And bring your chair.
Seems Muddled (Score:2)
What makes a project non-commercial? If one unemployed guy runs a project that 99 developers from Red Hat contribute to, is the project non-commercial?
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What makes a project non-commercial? If one unemployed guy runs a project that 99 developers from Red Hat contribute to, is the project non-commercial?
Conversely, if a Red Hat developer submits a ten-line patch to a project, is that then a commercial project?
With FLOSS, it's not useful to talk of a project as commercial or noncommercial in most cases. The distribution can be commercial or noncommercial, though. So if I create a project in the EU, never get any money for it, and it gets distributed with Suse (for instance), Suse's commercial and their distribution of my code is commercial.
What the courts decide is something else entirely, and I look forwa
Actually, it only protects developers (Score:2)
I wonder if the EU defined what is "revenue from OSS projects that infringe on MS patents."
While the agrement will help protect developers it still leaves a lot of open questions concerning the sale and use of the resultant programs.
For example:
What is commercial use?
What
What about open source distributors and users? (Score:2)
Apparently.... (Score:4, Funny)
Unbelievable. (Score:2)
I hope the EU's regulators have too much on the ball to swallow this malarkey. Microsoft couldn't keep a promise if their very existence depended upon it.
What's stopping them... (Score:2)
EU and software patents? (Score:2)
Aren't software patents banned in the EU anyway? So, aside from the fact that this was forced out of them, does it mean anything in the first place?
Re:EU and software patents? (Score:5, Informative)
Actually EU doesn't have anything to do with patents right now. A few years down ago EU Commission tried to bring legislation that would have introduced EU wide harmonization of patents and brought unified judicial system. As the European Parliament didn't accept the directive, the attempted legislation was withdrawn. More about the subject. [wikipedia.org]
How ever there is European Patent Organization [wikipedia.org] which works by the power of European Patent Convention. EPO is fully independent organization and isn't part of EU. EPO actually is the only organization in Europe causing real grief in regards of patents. They award software patents even if they don't have any power to do so. Many big corporations and also smaller companies have applied basically pure software patents from EPO. How ever as the EPO really doesn't have power to award these kind of patents, the situation is that those patents are more or less worthless. They also will stay worthless even if EU would make software patents legal as those patents were filed and awarded before they were legal.
In my company we have talked and researched the software patent issue some what. My own point of view is that software patents are worthless and as long as the member state we operate doesn't allow software patents, we don't have any reason to worry. I really do hope that this situation will stay the same as the business of software company is to make software and solve customers problems, not pay big fat checks to lawyers.
Interesting (Score:3, Insightful)
I hear a "giant sucking sound"...
How do you establish whether an OSS project is "here" or "there" anyway, when the developers are all over the place?
Am I missreading or... (Score:2)
I'll suspend my disbelief until I see the pledge. (Score:2)
Re:I'll suspend my disbelief until I see the pledg (Score:2)
That protection in no way extends to US projects (Score:2)
A) I am the primary coder
B) My friend and I contribute equally
C) My friend is the primary coder
Useless (Score:2)
So how does this protect me as a business owner who wants the freedom to hire whomever I want to maintain my in-house software? Oh, it doesn't? Great!
"non-commercial"? (Score:2)
Now, I don't think it matter much; Microsoft is slowly painting themselves into a corner, and it's implausible that they really can assert those patents at all in the future. Nevertheless, it would be better if the EU were alert to those kinds of weasel words and would
Yeh, I saw "non-commercial" and thought "oops". (Score:2)
And, yes, I think it DOES matter.
Microsoft has managed to pretty much completely win everything that people keep saying they'd lost. This kind of thing is why I was skeptical of the EU deal from the start.
HUH? (Score:2)
I thought open source projects are all international.
Re:Three... Two... One.. (Score:5, Informative)
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Could you clarify what you mean by "reduce the price proportionally"? Do you mean that it should be reduced "proportionally"
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There was no way to determine a non-zero price for WMP which would be used to reduce the price of XP N; not a way that wouldn't have been very easily appealed anyway. The EC knew that.
So, not only where they stupid, they knew they were being stupid. Willful stupidity is just so much better...
As it is, the EU is forcing Microsoft to hand over Active Directory to its competitors for next-to-nothing.
Only its NON-COMMERCIAL competitors, which is pretty much meaningless since software Freedom is about liberty, not cost.
Has Red Hat, IBM, or anyone in the OIN made a similar pledge regarding non-commercial software projects?
Red Hat has, and it is a whole lot broader because it includes commercial projects and is applicable world-wide: http://www.redhat.com/legal/patent_policy.html [redhat.com]
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The thing that helps (and at the same time limits) the EU is its amazing diverseness. There are so many parties involved with each their own agenda that the end result of any ruling is nearly impossible to predict. This gives a bit more chan
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Well, you're half right. It was the unbundling idea itself that was stupid, not the price. This was a gift to Real and provid
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Just look at how the RIAA tricked the various US attorney generals into accepting all those CDs for schools and libraries as a 'penalty' when they were just unloading dead inventory.
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Indeed, Microsoft's strategy in this respect (->SCO) hasn't been very successful up to now. Which doesn't mean they didn't try.
Not all problems: Nobody claims 9/11 was done by MS. :-)
But seriously, MS has a long history of applying unfair methods against their competition (see e.g. DR DOS,