
GPLv3 touted as foil to Microsoft-Novell deal
Date: Sunday, December 17 2006 @ 09:54:56 EST Topic: Microsoft Related
GPLv3 touted as foil to Microsoft-Novell deal
Microvell will spark renewed interest in the new GPL version, says Neil McAllister
Let the spin control begin. In an open
letter issued recently, Novell CEO Ron Hovsepian attempted to distance
his company from Microsoft’s claims that open source software,
including the Linux kernel, infringes on Microsoft intellectual
property.
“We disagree with the recent statements
made by Microsoft on the topic of Linux and patents,” the letter reads.
“Importantly, our agreement with Microsoft is in no way an
acknowledgment that Linux infringes upon any Microsoft intellectual
property.”
Unfortunately, the die may already be
cast. Some experts feel the GPL (Gnu General Public Licence) is already
explicit on the subject of intellectual property restrictions, but a
growing number of open source developers are now considering even
stricter licensing as a means to forestall any future deals like the
Microsoft-Novell pact.
In its unsigned response to Hovsepian’s
letter, Microsoft states, “We at Microsoft respect Novell’s point of
view on the patent issue, even while we respectfully take a different
view.” Could it be that Novell was tricked by Microsoft into accepting
a deal it didn’t fully understand?
I asked open source guru Bruce Perens
what he thought of the apparent conflict between the two companies.
“This just doesn’t sound sincere to me,” Perens says, echoing the
sentiments of InfoWorld readers who suggested, less politely, that
those who lie down with dogs get up with fleas. “Let’s face it:
[Novell] took one third of a billion dollars, over time. And they will,
as part of that deal, take whatever Microsoft has to say and spin it
the way they want to spin it.”
Whatever the fallout of the deal may be
among the open source community, Perens predicts that it will
ultimately be short-lived. “I think there’s going to be one very strong
outcome from the whole Microsoft-Novell deal,” he says. “GPLv3 has
become much more attractive than it was previously.”
The third generation of the GPL,
currently in discussion at the Free Software Foundation (FSF) and due
to be finalised soon, includes new language that specifically forbids
companies that distribute free software from asserting software patent
claims against users of that software. According to lawyer Eben Moglen
of the Software Freedom Law Centre, the Microsoft-Novell pact “would
not clear GPLv3 by a millimeter”.
Luckily for Novell, developers have so
far been slow to get behind GPLv3. Most notoriously, Linus Torvalds has
stated that the Linux kernel will not use the new licence when it
appears. He fears that GPLv3’s strongly worded anti-intellectual
property language, including its restrictions on DRM (digital rights
management) technologies, might alienate commercial businesses that
contribute to the kernel.
Other developers are far less reluctant
to get behind v3, however. Perens suspects that even the kernel
developers may now have a change of heart. And although the kernel is
the innermost engine that makes an OS run, a typical Linux distribution
includes thousands of components in addition to the kernel itself. Many
of these projects are maintained by the FSF. If enough of them switch
to the new licence, it would become virtually impossible for Novell to
maintain the Suse Linux distribution in its current form and still
comply with the terms of its agreement with Microsoft.
“I think that the main problem is that
[Novell’s] business is failing as a Linux distribution,” Perens says.
“And unfortunately, on the way down people tend to spar around a lot
and hurt their friends.
“The whole point of [the GPL] was that we
all hang together or we will surely hang separately. Novell, by going
into this patent deal, is not hanging together with the rest of the
community, and that’s what all the developers are upset about.”
Perens says he has a message for Novell. “Just get Microsoft to drop the patent deal and we’ll stand behind the rest.”
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