
The Microsoft/Novell Deal: Has It Divided The Linux Community?
Date: Thursday, January 25 2007 @ 11:17:22 EST Topic: Novell News
When Microsoft and
Novell announced that they would work together, Linux enthusiasts were
shocked. How has the agreement affected the open-source community, and
can it recover?
In November, 2006, Microsoft and Linux vendor
Novell knocked the software industry for a loop with their
multifaceted, multimillion dollar business agreement unveiled. However,
the biggest effect may be on Linux, the open-source software operating
environment that many companies (and some consumers) are increasingly
adopting as an alternative to Microsoft's proprietary but pervasive
Windows operating system.
Initially announced on news conference
November 2, 2006, the deal called for Microsoft, long seen as an enemy
by many Linux advocates, to start working hand-in-hand with Novell,
producer of the SuSE Linux operating system, in areas that included
licensing, support, and joint research and development around
Windows/Linux interoperability.
Also under the agreement, the two software makers inked a software
patents covenant stating that Microsoft won't be able to sue Novell's
customers for any potential infringements of Microsoft's patents, and
Novell won't be able to sue Microsoft's customers for potential
infringements on Microsoft's patents.
Meanwhile, hundreds of millions of dollars will change hands between
Microsoft and Novell over the next three years for software licensing
and patent protection, with a net balance of $118 million going to
Novell.
The deal does have supporters among industry analysts ISVs, and VARs,
who foresee benefits to Novell and to the advance of Linux in the
enterprise. "Novell needs to look at its opportunity to gain Linux
customers from highly Microsoft-loyal accounts. And when you consider
the money, there'll be a lot of it going into Novell's coffers," said
Raven Zachary, an analyst with The 451 Group.
Recognition by Microsoft lends more credibility to Novell as a second
major Linux distributor (behind industry leader Red Hat Software),
according to Adam Braunstein, an analyst at the Robert Frances Group. "No enterprise customer wants to get locked into a single distribution," Braunstein said.
The Linux Community Reacts
But what about the developers who create the actual Linux code, and who
form the heart of what's known as the open source community? How will
they be affected? As the calendar turns the corner into 2007, is this
community of ISV and corporate developers, already split into hundreds
of different distributions, only becoming more divided? Or conversely,
is this community growing even more unified through joint opposition to
the deal?
So far, the answer seems to be yes on both counts. By and
large, Linux developers see the deal as an unwelcome intrusion by
Microsoft, a huge and unabashedly proprietary vendor, into the open
source world, where software development is highly collaborative, a lot
of code is available free of charge, and vendor business models are
frequently based more on service contracts than on software licensing.
Linux organizations that sounded disapproval for the Microsoft/Novell plan range from Red Hat to smaller Linux distributors such as Linspire and Mandriva, and open source projects such as Samba, a group that includes even some Novell employees.
"I obviously can't speak for the entire community, but I see more
banding together [against Microsoft] than divisiveness," said Nicholas
Petreley, a professional open source consultant, author, and editor,
and the creator of VarLinux.org.
But beyond shared distaste for Microsoft's perceived intrusion,
reactions within the Linux community vary, from a cautious watchfulness
to a conviction that the deal represents an intentional ploy by
Microsoft to destroy the open source movement by pitting one Linux
distributor — namely, Novell — against the rest of the Linux community.
"[It] is clearly true [that] the agreement sets SuSE apart from the
rest of the crowd. The Microsoft message here is clear. 'I can pick and
choose among the players and bribe whomever I want,'" contended
Francois Banchilhon, CEO of the French-based Mandriva.
Going Against The GPL?
Others are angry that, in looking out for its own best interests,
Novell appears to be ignoring the rest of the Linux community. In one
major bone of contention, some have taken Novell to task for going
against the grain of the GNU General Public License (GPL), which describes how open source software may be used.
Immediately after the Novell/Microsoft announcement in November, the Samba Project shot off an open letter to the Linux community,
drubbing Novell for displaying a "profound disregard for [the
relationship they have] with the Free Software community." Then, in
late December, Jeremy Allison, a member of Samba, quit his position as a high level programmer at Novell in protest of the deal. (Allison took a job with Google.)
"As many of you will guess, this is due to the Microsoft/Novell
agreement, which I believe is a mistake and will be damaging to Novell
in the future. But my main issue with this deal is I believe that even
if does not violate the letter of the licence [sic] it violates the
intent of the GPL license the Samba code is released under, which is to
treat all recipients of the code equally," Allison wrote in a letter
posted on the Groklaw Web site.
Some critics contend that, although Novell and Microsoft are in
technical compliance with the GPL, the deal between these companies
violates the underlying spirit of the document, which was designed to
encourage developers and users to share software freely instead of
being forced to sign restrictive proprietary licensing agreements or
patents. According to members of this camp, the two companies have
managed to achieve compliance by exploiting new stipulations in GPL
version 2, the current version of the document, meant to prevent
specific deals among developers around distribution of free software.
Yet others feel that Novell is being victimized by Microsoft. "If you
see Microsoft start to bully [other] Linux vendors for [intellectual
property] licensing, Novell will have a hard time recovering in the
open source community," said Kevin Carmony, CEO of Linspire. In fact,
some community members are convinced that the patent covenants
component is a sign that Microsoft already holds intellectual property
in Linux, although Novell has denied this contention.
Bad Publicity Creates Bad Feelings
Contributing in large part
to the controversy are the scattershot methods used by the two
companies in imparting information about the deal. According to
Steinman, Novell's decision to push the announcement to November was
prompted by a sudden move by Oracle,
a long-time partner of Red Hat, to come out with its own version of Red
Hat Enterprise Linux. "We said, 'Let's not let [Oracle] get the market
momentum,'" he said.
Many people, ranging from competitors to some Novell partners,
claim they were left in the dark about the deal until the last minute.
"Red Hat was unaware of the Microsoft/Novell arrangements until just
prior to the announcement," maintained Mark Webbink, Red Hat's deputy
general counsel for intellectual property.
Marc Potter, director of business development for Redjuju,
a Novell reseller, admits to feeling alarmed at the outset of the
announcement, when Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and Novell CEO Ron
Hovsepian appeared side-by-side on his PC screen. "My first thought
was, 'Oh, no. Microsoft just bought Novell,'" he said. But Potter said
he now favors the agreement, on the grounds that Microsoft's
willingness to "step to the plate for Linux" has reassured some
customers about Linux.
Another factor contributing to disagreement is that the deal
stands to impact various Linux distributions quite differently. Some
analysts have predicted that Novell's partnership with Microsoft, and
other recent industry deals, will spell increased consolidation in the
Linux ranks. According to Zachary, Linux distributions most likely to
survive the cut include Novell, Red Hat, Debian, and a Debian-based distribution from Canonical Ltd.. known as Ubuntu.
Linux Advocates Act
Some members of the open source community have decided to do more than
watch and wait. Bruce Perens, primary author of the GNU contract, has
organized a petition urging Novell to recant the patent protection portion of the deal with Microsoft.
Other developers have tried to hit Novell in the wallet. "The community
feels
that the only way to react properly to this deal is to boycott
Novell, or at least some of Novell's products," Petreley explained. On
November 3, 2006, developer Rich Morgan posted a letter accusing Novell of violating the GPL and calling for a boycott of Novell on his company's Open Addict Web site.
Morgan later posted a response to the boycott letter from John Dragoon,
Novell's senior VP and chief marketing officer. According to Morgan's
blog, Dragoon wrote, "As to your belief that we have violated the GPL,
we disagree. We have made no admission of patent violation within Linux
and would take no action that knowingly prevented us from selling and
supporting SUSE Linux. We have been a long time supporter of the Open
Source community and its many efforts to create and distribute world
class Open Source software. We remain committed to that goal."
In response, Morgan noted on the site, "In all fairness, the
guys from Novell have been taking our criticisms seriously and I'll
give them that. However, this deal has had serious negative effects on
the community. There are still many unanswered questions which are not
likely to be answered any time soon because of NDAs Microsoft implemented surrounding the deal."
Morgan eventually retracted his charges about GPL violations, citing
the loophole in version 2. "It doesn't violate version 2 of the GPL,
true, and I've conceded that point," Morgan wrote. "However, the
loophole they used will certainly be closed in version 3 of the GPL.
So, for now, they're in shaky compliance with the GPL." The boycott is
still on.
Of course, the success of any boycott attempt depends upon how
much support can be generated among those who actually buy a company's
products. It would take a considerable number of influential boycotters
for Novell to spurn a multimillion dollar deal with Microsoft.
In fact, if the Perens petition and Novell boycott effort prove
anything at all, it's that despite any individual differences of
opinion that might exist, independent Linux developers can still get
heard when they unite behind a common goal — even if they don't
necessarily obtain everything they want.
Source
|
|