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Is Fear Reducing the Publicity for Open Source?

sebFlyte writes "Are companies deliberately keeping quiet about moves to open source because they are afraid of the reactions of proprietary vendors they still have relationships with? ZDNet raises and tries to answer this question in a two-part special report, 'Open source behind closed doors'. It comes to the conclusion that, in all probability, companies are keeping quiet to avoid reprisals of one sort or another. One part of the fear of publicizing migrations is nicely summed up in the second part by Tristan Nitot of Mozilla Europe: 'Guys are really shy -- it's the Munich Linux thing. They start talking about it and suddenly Ballmer comes in and twists your arm until you cry.'"

6 of 210 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Not quite by NineNine · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Here's a little secret kiddo: lots and lots of suppliers are like that. All of the suppliers that we use give us large volume discounts. If they start losing some of our business, they'll try to keep us, but they'll also jack up their prices. Loyalty is rewarded in every aspect of business. Just because this is new to you doesn't mean it's new or at all unusual.

  2. We don't tell the managers by johnjaydk · · Score: 4, Insightful
    To a very large extend we, as IT proffesionals, don't tell the managers that we use OSS.

    They don't understand it and are afraid of things they don't understand.So there is little incentive to inform them. We only really need the managers when we need their approval to buy something. So they only ever hear about things that costs money and gets a distorted view of things.

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    TCAP-Abort
  3. Re:Of course FUD works by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And why is it you're not validating user input? Bad data should never have a chance to get to the database in the first place.

    I disagree with the implication that the application layer is the only layer responsable for data intgrety.

    Maintaining a constant database is as important as maintaining a secure network.

    You wouldn't simply install a firewall on your network, ignoring all other security measures and saying "but it's the firewalls job to do that..."

    The same applies to data integrity. Both the app layer and the data layer should do their own validation.

  4. Maybe companies are keeping quiet about by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 4, Insightful

    their internal tech moves because nobody really gives a damn. It would be the height of arrogance for a company to assume that the world cares whether it moves to open source or any other tech for that matter. Most companies aren't in the business of announcing to the world what their internal tech moves are.

    I don't know what internal tech McDonalds uses, and don't care. McDonalds knows that I don't care, and therefore doesn't waste time bothering to make irrelevant declarations to the world regarding their internal tech.

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    -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
  5. Competitive advantage by Epeeist · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is another explanation. I worked for an expert systems company when it was "the next big thing". There were very few reports in the press about companies developing expert systems, though people in the field knew a lot was being done.

    The major reason was that the possibility of getting a competitive advantage by producing something that nobody else had.

    The same may be true here but in a different way - you just removed a large amount of your cost base, but you don't want your competitors to know about it because they might start doing the same thing.

  6. Re:Not quite by killjoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Two wrong don't make a right. I know it's fashionable to ignore ethics in American business but that does not mean the consumers are not allowed to complain about sleazy businesses or point out their slimy behavior.

    MS is amongst the top of the sleaziest corporations. YOu can bitch and moan all you want about how people should not be allowed to say that but it's futile. You are not going to be able to silence people who have a bone to pick with a corporation who is working so hard to destory open source and calling people who use and write open source software communists and anti-american.

    What is good for the goose and all that. Why is it OK for Bill Gates to call me a communist just because I like linux but not OK for me to call him a criminal because he (his company) was tried and convicted despite an appeal?

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    evil is as evil does