Slashdot Mirror


Jeremy Allison Resigns From Novell In Protest

walterbyrd writes to alert us to word from groklaw.net that Jeremy Allison has turned in his resignation at Novell. "The legendary Jeremy Allison (of Samba fame) has resigned from Novell in protest over the Microsoft-Novell patent agreement, which he calls 'a mistake' that will be 'damaging to Novell's success in the future.' His main issue with the deal, though, is '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.' He leaves the company at the end of this month. He explained why in a message sent to several Novell email lists, and the message included his letter to management."

5 of 344 comments (clear)

  1. Putting your money where your mouth is by astrashe · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Whatever you think about what Allison has done, you have to repsect him for living up to his convictions. This sort of thing can't be good for your career, or for your bank account.

    I really admire people who choose to live by their principles, even when it's hard or costly to do so.

  2. Re:Excellent! by Eggplant62 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't care what Novell says. They're trying to smooth feathers is all. Go back and read the entire statement Ballmer made and tell me you didn't feel physically revolted by his words. I know I did.

  3. Novell would be the one with the fork. by khasim · · Score: 4, Interesting
    This is what I predicted from the beginning. The goal here was fragmentation of the Linux development community. It looks like they could succeed.

    Okay.

    It's basic "divide and conquer" because there will be some developers who don't see much wrong with the deal and will support the Novell Microsoft deal and there will be others who will not.

    But that does not seem to be happening.

    So far it is just Miguel who supports it ... and everyone else who opposes it.

    The ones who don't MAY start new forks/projects and join other distros, or... they may just move on to other things entirely.

    I think you're confusing those items.

    If the legendary Jeremy Allison moves to Red Hat or Canonical, he'll probably still be working on Samba. And when the GPL v3 comes out, it will probably be adopted by Team Samba.

    So in that specific case, it would be Novell who would have to fork the project and do all the work without the help of Team Samba.

    This ensures a two-tiered Linux world with crappy underdeveloped software in non-blessed distros (Gentoo, Debian, etc...) and second-rate (compared to Microsoft Windows solutions) software in the intentionally stunted Novell Suse Linux and anyone else who decides to sign on.

    Huh? So Red Hat (where Alan works) is "second-rate"?

    Or is it that Ubuntu is "crappy"?

    I don't see that happening. Instead I see a company flailing at its declining marketshare and signing an agreement to FUD everything else Linux related.

    Just like SCO did.

    And Novell will die, just like SCO is dying.
  4. You miss the point by Eric+Damron · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You miss the point. Novell and Microsoft are saying that they can release code under GPL v2 that is encumbered by patents. If this is the case FOSS CANNOT use that code without denying the freedoms that were the intent of the GPL.

    Microsoft could, for example, help Novell inject their IP and later tell users that they must pay or be sued for patent infringement.

    I didn't support GPL v3 in the past but I do now. Let's close this loophole and shun Novell until they straighten up and fly right!

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  5. They would run Windows, not Linux. by khasim · · Score: 4, Interesting
    It's all hypothetical, but I'm speaking strictly from the vantage point of a non-technical person (I am an IT person, I'm just playing non-tech's advocate.) and that is likely the way they will see things.

    I'm not seeing that. If people question Linux, they'll choose Windows instead.

    Just like Novell's CEO saw when he tried to go head-to-head with Microsoft ... and kept losing the deals.

    "Oh... I heard that you shouldn't use RedHat in the server room because it can't run on the latest servers since they didn't go with the Trusted Computing option that Novell did". Or... "Yeah, I could use Debian to run a web server but this review I read said that Novell's Apache based web server has full IIS compatibility and is able to essentially duplicate the previous version of IIS". To those people, Novell is going to seem like the easy choice and the others will be fairly irrelevant.

    No, the "easy choice" will be Windows. The "easy choice" in IT is always to go with a single vendor. That way there's no finger-pointing about why something won't work that way the salesperson said it would.

    Why would anyone be looking for "full IIS compatibility" from a different vendor when they can have IIS itself? Migrations are expensive and the customers know that deals between IT companies can go sour. It's safest to involve the fewest companies and that means buying from the vendor selling the product itself. Not from someone promising "compatibility" with that product.

    Linux has a few advantages over Microsoft products. And licensing is one of the biggest advantages for the end user. Once that is gone (and it is under Novell's deal), there really isn't any reason for the end user to consider "compatibility" with Microsoft's products when they can just go with Microsoft itself.

    Particularly when Novell has to maintain its own "forks" of projects such as Samba because Team Samba has gone with GPL v3.