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OpenSUSE Opens Up to Questions About the Microsoft Deal

NewsForge is reporting on the recent IRC meeting that the OpenSUSE team held to answer a few questions about the controversial deal between Novell and Microsoft. The most prominent questions are highlighted and the complete IRC log is available from the article while the questions that didn't make the discussion will be posted on the OpenSUSE wiki.

11 of 288 comments (clear)

  1. What is this? by khasim · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Nov 27 11:20:23 Novell claims to have not acknowledged any patent infringements
    Nov 27 11:20:23 by Linux. But Novell is now paying a tax to Microsoft on the
    Nov 27 11:20:23 Linux distributions it ships. What, exactly, is Novell paying
    Nov 27 11:20:23 for?

    Nov 27 11:21:05 We're paying for the promise that Microsoft made to our customers not to sue them

    Nov 27 11:21:43 Not to sue them for *what*? For problems you don't acknowledge exist?

    Nov 27 11:21:57 Well, we put together an agreement with MS to make Linux and Windows work better together
    Nov 27 11:22:05 Now, as everyone knows, MS has spent the last 10 years saying negative things about Linux
    Nov 27 11:22:11 including implying that there are IP issues in Linux
    Nov 27 11:22:30 It didn't make sense for us to do a partnersihp with MS on interoperability issues and still have this patent cloud hanging around for our customers
    Nov 27 11:22:39 and so MS asked us to put together a patent agreement as well.
    Nov 27 11:23:00 And so, we promise MS's customers that we won't sue them and they promise the same thing to our customres
    Nov 27 11:23:08 They pay us for our promise and we pay them for their promise
    Nov 27 11:23:24 It doesn't matter if the allegations from MSFT are true or not

    Microsoft asked Novell to "put together a patent agreement" so Novell could market that protection to their customers ... at a cost of $40 million from Novell.

    Does Novell often pay millions of dollars for "protection" for its customers when it does not believe that the threat has any substance?

    Microsoft is the one making the threats.
    Novell is paying Microsoft to NOT follow through on threats that Microsoft has yet to substantiate.
    Not to mention the patent battle that could erupt should Microsoft ever file a patent claim against anyone using Linux.

    WTF?
    1. Re:What is this? by Quantam · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Novell is paying for their customers' peace of mind. Regardless of what Novell says (or what may be true), MS says that Linux violates MS' IP, implying that MS might sue Linux coders and/or users. That makes Novell's users nervous. They want guarantees that either MS' claims are false, or MS will not sue them, even if they are true. This contract provides that guarantee.

      While that does vaguely resemble mafia "protection" payments (though not as closely as many Slashdotters seem to believe), I really don't see why people are having such a hard time wrapping their heads around the reason for this deal.

      This is also reminiscent of what was going on in the US during the cold war - everyone building bomb shelters, stockpiling food, etc. The reality was that none of this would have been able to keep anybody alive, had nuclear war broken out. But the fact that people thought it would put their minds at ease, and that made all the difference in the cold war.

      --
      You have tried to support your argument with faulty reasoning! Go directly to jail; do not pass Go, do not collect $200!
    2. Re:What is this? by QuantumG · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I keep reading this. Seriously, I am going to go over to one of the many patent registry websites and search for Microsoft patents and post one or two that Linux violates if you people don't stop parroting this shit. There is absolutely, positively, no doubt that any given Linux distribution violates at least a few of Microsoft's patents. That's the whole freakin' reason why patents on software is a dumb idea. It is also the reason why Microsoft will never enforce their patents as you can say the same thing about Microsoft's products and IBM's patents. STFU about Linux not infringing on Microsoft's patents.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    3. Re:What is this? by killjoe · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Why don't we do that. Why don't we put together a web site that lists all of MS patents and then declare open season on them. Let's invalidate all of them by digging up prior art. This is a fantastic opportunity for the OSS community to launch an DDOS on MS patents.

      Once MS sees it's patents start being picked apart by the community they will start to panic, it will be fun to watch.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    4. Re:What is this? by QuantumG · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Fine. Go here, enter these numbers:

      7,143,340 - a patent on the MVC pattern applied to tables in GUI. I know both the Qt and gtk+ toolkits do that.
      7,139,894 - that patent covers just about any interprocess communication that transmits "configuration information".
      7,131,112 - and here's a patent which covers basically every revision control software ever written (cvs, svn, git, etc)

      That's 3 of 5873. Go to this page, enter "Microsoft" into Term 1 and select "Assignee Name" for Field 1 if you wanna see the list.

      Enjoy.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
  2. Stupid by dotslashdot · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Thanks to some opensource proponent (was it the FSF?), MS knows where to look to find infringing code in the kernel! Someone did an analysis (to prevent software patents, which was not going to work in the U.S.) to convince every linux user that patents were bad by demonstrating how the linux kernel potentially infringed on 200+ patents. You're going to say "potential," but NO opensource developer will have the $ to defend themselves against MS. I predict MS is going to start suing like a motherfucker and linux is going to go away.

  3. Scripted by PR? by HiThere · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This think reads like it was scripted by the PR department.

    Also, I notice that they had things rigged so that they could censor any questions they didn't like. (Reasonable, an open forum would have been a mad house, but not exactly a process that builds trust.)

    They also didn't say anything about which of their customers could redistribute what. The short answer appears to be "We aren't interested in developers."

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  4. Look at what Microsoft is paying for. by khasim · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The balance of payments are by far in Novell's favor from what I've seen. I don't remember the exact numbers but Microsoft is paying far more than Novell is paying them for the patent agreement.

    Yes, that is correct.

    Microsoft is paying hundreds of millions of dollars for SuSE support licenses. Far more than Novell is paying Microsoft.

    Now, when was the last time anyone tried to buy SuSE from Microsoft? Has anyone here tried to? No?

    Okay, when was the last time anyone called Microsoft's tech support about a SuSE issue? Has anyone here tried that? No?

    Well, it seems that Microsoft paid a LOT of money for licenses that it will probably never use and didn't seem to need in the past. You might want to look up the history of the SCO lawsuit and see how Microsoft also paid for SCO licenses that Microsoft will probably never use and didn't seem to need prior to that.

    So, it looks like Microsoft paid for Novell's signature on that "patent agreement". Novell couldn't say "no" to that big of an instant payoff.

    Now, go back and read about Microsoft's other "partners" and how Microsoft treated them. There isn't any reason to believe that Microsoft is suddenly going to play nice and fair with Linux (or Novell). Microsoft's who business model is based upon their monopolistic control of the desktop.
  5. Real reason for deal revealed! by Azureflare · · Score: 3, Interesting
    5. This deal does not violate GPLv2.
    Eben Moglen read our agreement and hasn't said a thing about GPLv2 violation. It's abundantly clear that he doesn't think there is any.
    Instead, he and Richard are using the community energy to try to get people to adopt the previously-controversial GPLv3 (which we support also)

    Hey, this is actually a cool way to get GPLv3 accepted. Reading over the log, and seeing their responses, I feel a bit better about the deal. I'm still suspicious but I'm no longer at the point where I am ready to remove openSuSE from my system and install debian.

    I really hope this works out, Novell has done a lot of great things in the past and I would like to see them continue their good work.

  6. This is unusual by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 4, Interesting
    In what feels like 10 years of participating on Slashdot, I have never come upon a post which makes its point so excellently, and also contains so many F-words. Those two things have been mutually exclusive. Until now.

    Do me a favor. Take your anger here for a moment and help me out, if you haven't done so yet. But no F-words there, please, it would detract from the document. Even if Novell tosses it off, it's point is already made to a lot of Novell users and VARs and investors and the press. They've been calling me.

    Bruce

  7. Re:wow, is it just me? by Nat+Friedman · · Score: 4, Interesting


    People keep saying this, but there are counterexamples.

    In 1997 Microsoft invested $150 million in Apple. The deal also involved a promise from Microsoft to make Office available on Macintoshes, and there was a patent agreement as well. Bill Gates appeared on the big screen at MacWorld to jeers and shouts. People said Apple had done a deal with the devil and was dead. But in fact the deal gave Apple the money and the breathing room to build itself up and they are far from dead now (though not the most open company in the world, obviously).

    In 2004 Sun did a deal with Microsoft, were paid $1 billion, and signed a patent agreement with MS as well. This month they announced they are GPLing Java.

    So while I agree that MS is a dangerous company and you have to be careful when you do anything with them, it's simply not true that doing a deal with them is always fatal.