Google Partners With OIN For Linux
lymeca writes "Groklaw reports that Google has become the Open Invention Network's first end-user licensee. The OIN was established by companies such as IBM, Red Hat, and somewhat ironically Novell to accumulate patents and license them royalty-free to any company promising not to leverage their own patent portfolio against key applications available on GNU/Linux, including many GNU projects as well as Linux itself. Google's support bolsters the OIN's effectiveness as a shield against patent attacks against GNU/Linux and many popular applications that run on it."
It's a stupid term made up by RMS, and it looks and sounds retarded. Linux is what it is, using GNU/ in front of it is irrelevant and meaningless to most people.
OK, I've been thinking about this setup for at least five minutes now, and I admit, it seems like a genuinely good idea (the OIN bit, not just the Google going for it bit). Companies using their patent portfolios to shut down patent trolling is this =>= close to giving me a warm fuzzy right under the cockles of my heart.
So what's the catch? What am I missing, here, that turns this from an actual Good Thing for the software community (with concomitant benefits to the involved organizations, of course) into an attempt to rape the commons for short-term profit? Or is my cynicism, for possibly the first time ever, completely unwarranted?
Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
Is the buyer bound by Google's promises?
For that matter, is *Google* actually legally
bound by a promise to not use patents against any
particular person/group/corporation?
I get the feeling the OIN is a feel-good thing,
and actually doesn't have any legal teeth in it.
This OIN arrangement may be effective at bolstering defenses against patent aggression but it does nothing to defend against flying chairs!
What would they call the training arm of OIN? Open Invention Network Knowledge?
come Here but now gawker At most we aal know, from within. sorely diminished. Partner. and if MOVIE [imdb.com] at my freelance future. Even one or the other
IP-investing FOSS-patent-acumulating Google overlords!
-WtC
*please insert sig*
Creator of RPerl, Scouter, Juggler, Mormon, Perl Monger, Serial Entrepreneur, Aspiring Astrophysicist, Community Organiz
That was his response when OIN was formed. Linux and Free Software do not, repeat DO NOT ned the OIN for gaining mindshare or marketshare - the OIN is largely a distraction sponsored by an elite club, at odds with reality.
Now that GPL3 has neutered patent threats from Microsoft, Google's tie-up with the OIN seems actually a bad PR move.
If you keep throwing chairs, one day you'll break windows....
What kind of software does OIN protect?
Any Open Source non-profit software? If yes, then it is good. If on the other hand it only protects the software distributed in Novel/RH distributions, we are screwed. Because the kernel hackers and the friends of OIN will support the absurd idea of software patents while the rest of us will be on our own.
Why doesn't OIN protect MPlayer for a start?
Since the OIN is Linux only, how can this be reconciled with the GPL?
Another name for OIN is GNU/Linux Open Invention Network (GLOIN). I've also heard rumors that the companies involved are going to create a group to endorse the increased usage of Linux on Internet servers. It'll be called the Greater Internet Mobilization of Linux Initiative (GIMLI).
Rob
The one right up there by your name, "gregandmarci.com"... time to pay that registration, bud. :D
;) )
(Unless, of course, you own register.com/NetSol, and just put that link there there so that the REAL greg would see it, and pay his overdue fees...
Essentially, OIN sounds like it's got this big honey-pot of patents, and it's using it to bribe people who Lunix has ripped off.
Isn't that bribery?
Now granted it still ends up as a quid-pro-quo arrangement, but let's call it what it is: Lunix ripped them off, so OIN is settling the bill... after the fact.
"somewhat ironically Novell" -- yes, somewhat. What is Sony doing there?