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Welcome to virtuallinux.org. You are currently reading the article "Open-source leader leaving Novell for Google". All articles on virtuallinux.org pertain to the ongoing assult on the worlds greatest Operating system. Continue on reading about "Open-source leader leaving Novell for Google"
Open-source leader leaving Novell for Google
Posted on Thursday, December 21 2006 @ 16:26:09 EST by linuxwiz |
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Jeremy Allison, a high-profile open-source programmer, has resigned
from Novell because of objections over its patent deal with Microsoft
and is moving to Google.
In his resignation letter, Allison said Novell's patent pact with Microsoft
has crippled the Linux seller's relations with the open-source
community. At Google, he'll continue his work on Samba, the open-source
project he helped launch. Samba is software that lets Linux servers
share files on Windows networks.
"Whilst the Microsoft patent agreement is in place there is nothing we can do to fix community relations...Until the patent provision is revoked, we are pariahs," Allison
said in the letter, quoting from an earlier message he sent to Novell
management. Allison joined Novell in 2005 after working at
Hewlett-Packard.
Groklaw, a site that monitors open-source legal affairs, published Allison's resignation letter
Thursday. Allison on Thursday confirmed the letter's authenticity,
saying he had sent it to internal Novell mailing list, but declined to
comment further on his departure from Novell.
Google is a major open-source software user and participates in several open-source programming projects. Andrew Morton, a key lieutenant to Linux leader Linus Torvalds, works there, for example.
Novell spokesman Bruce Lowry declined to comment on Allison's views,
but said the company still employs two Samba programmers. "We wish him
the best," Lowry said.
You win some, you lose some
Meanwhile, Novell has rehired another open-source figure, Hubert Mantel,
a co-founder of Suse Linux. He left the company in November 2005, but
returned in December of this year. "I had more than one year of time to
think about my future and came to the conclusion that the thing I'm
most interested in still is Linux," he said in an interview with the
online magazine Data Manager.
Mantel also defended the Microsoft deal: "I understand that many people
don't like it as Novell is collaborating with the 'evil empire,'" he
said in the interview. "But I don't like this way of thinking. We are
not working against somebody, but we are working for Linux. Fundamentalism always leads to pain. I think it is a good thing, especially for the users."
Under the Microsoft-Novell partnership, Microsoft purchased coupons to sell 350,000 copies of Novell's Suse Linux Enterprise Server
and agreed not to sue Suse users for patent infringement. The two
companies also are working to make elements of each others' software
work together. Microsoft is paying Novell a net amount of $308 million for the five-year deal, much of it for Novell agreeing to not to sue Microsoft over patent claims.
But Allison said the Novell-Microsoft deal violates the open-source
principles of giving equal rights to all users of a particular program,
even if it doesn't technically violate the General Public License (GPL) that governs Samba and the Linux kernel.
"My issue with this deal is I believe that even if it does not violate
the letter of the license it violates the intent of the GPL license the
Samba code is released under, which is to treat all recipients of the
code equally.
The deal caused rancor among open-source fans. Richard Stallman,
founder of the Free Software Foundation and original author of the
General Public License (GPL), said in November that Novell's Microsoft partnership doesn't violate version 2 of the GPL but that changes coming with the version 3 under development will preclude such deals.
Linux rival Red Hat has pounced on Novell's move, as well. Mark
Webbink, one of Red Hat's top lawyers for the company, called Novell's
move "appeasement...the sacrifice of principles"
in his blog, likening it to British Prime Minister Neville
Chamberlain's ill-fated "peace in our time" announcement that he
thought would stave off World War II.
And although Novell and Microsoft have scrapped over some particulars of the deal, both companies have defended it. Last week, Novell and Microsoft touted survey results that showed most customers approve.
Source
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