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Licensing Dispute Threatens Future of Skype

tomlins writes "eBay is faced with the prospect of having to close down the hugely popular VoIP app Skype due to its reliance on proprietary code still owned by Skype's original founders, who are threatening to pull the plug on the licensing agreement they have with eBay."

10 of 282 comments (clear)

  1. Wait a minute... by ustolemyname · · Score: 5, Insightful

    eBay paid $2.6 Billion for a dinky little 8MB program, and don't even bother to make sure they got everything?

    Wow.

    1. Re:Wait a minute... by Shaiku · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I've been wondering for a long time why eBay even bought skype. There is no relationship whatsoever and it doesn't come as a surprise to me that they're recently looking to dump it. They paid an outrageous sum, didn't get full rights, and failed to leverage that technology in any way useful to the company. Bizarre move..

    2. Re:Wait a minute... by sopssa · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Because large companies usually try to expand to new areas too. For example see Virgin Group and even Microsoft, who are doing hardware (and xbox) even if their core business is in Operating Systems.

      You dont always need a direct connection between a parent company and the one bought - They can continue to operate like they have, which is even more true when you're buying an existing company.

    3. Re:Wait a minute... by iYk6 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There is no reason that a parent company and a bought company have be in related fields. However, it is common that they are. For example, eBay's auction and payment companies. Microsoft's OS and game consoles. Nintendo's game consoles and toys.

      The primary reason is that the parent companies assets, including human, are more aligned to fill the needs of the smaller company. eBay and Paypal was a perfect merge for Paypal, and now they effectively get twice the money per auction after forcing their eBay users to offer Paypal. When Microsoft started making Xboxes, they already had most of the operating system, which is a non-negligible part of a console, and more MS employees would be able to take apart and build a computer than say, the employees of a bank. Nintendo has a name which helps them sell toys.

      Sometimes, the smaller company can fill a need of a larger company. Perhaps an airline company will buy a computer retailer right before a major IT upgrade, and they will effectively have a discount.

      eBay and Skype fulfill none of the examples above and was truly a bizarre move.

    4. Re:Wait a minute... by Shikaku · · Score: 4, Insightful

      On each login session, Skype generates a session key from 192 random bits. The session key is encrypted with the hard-coded login server's 1536-bit RSA key to form an encrypted session key. Skype also generates a 1024-bit private/public RSA key pair. An MD5 hash of a concatenation of the user name, constant string ("\nSkyper\n") and password is used as a shared secret with the login server. The plain session key is hashed into a 256-bit AES key that is used to encrypt the session's public RSA key and the shared secret. The encrypted session key and the AES encrypted value are sent to the login server.

      I would love if they broke all of those. Nevermind that the entire Skype protocol is decentralized already, which is a security risk already because you get random packets from random people using Skype.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skype_protocol

      Dumb AC troll.

    5. Re:Wait a minute... by schon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Can you explain what part of this is "security by obscurity"?

      My guess would be the "closed source" part, thinking it's stopping people from finding bugs in the code.

      Hint: there's a difference between design and code. You quoted the design, and assumed that since the design is secure, that automatically translates to the code being secure too.

    6. Re:Wait a minute... by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's NOT that they didn't want to contact each other.

      eBay couldn't figure out, once they examined the potential fraud angle, how to keep the buyer and seller from colluding to terminate auctions, and conduct the sale privately - without eBay getting the fee.

      This was one of the many scenarios they already faced in text communications - and is highly monitored. Voice - especially SkyPe voice - was harder to track, capture and analyze for ToS violations and fraud. This problem remains unsolved.

      --
      "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
  2. Old bait-and-switch by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1. Provide a good service, a tool, a format.
    2. Make it cheap.
    3. Wait 'til everyone uses it because it was cheap.
    4. Jack up the price.
    5. Profit.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  3. Re:Something is missing here by qbast · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why would the founders of Skype be threatening to revoke the licensing agreement? What is their side?

    Isn't it obvious? "Gimme more money!"

    And why would eBay pay billions of dollars for something without some guarantee that they'd be able to run it for a while?

    Their lawyers allowed themselves to get suckered? There is lesson to all those FUDing about how using open sourced pieces of software makes company vulnerable to legal problems. Guess what? With closed source the problem is the same, only worse - you don't have several widely used and well understood licenses - every company creates its own and every time you sign one you risk your legal team missing some well-hidden minefield.

    This is like a super-sized version the story about the music industry claiming that it's ridiculous that people would think they could forever listen to their DRM music.

    On an individual level, people allow themselves to be screwed for a few dollars at a time, just to be able to listen to the music but - paying more than 2 billion for most of something without a contract ensuring that it's not a total waste of money? Wow.

    Wow indeed.

  4. a nelson moment by cas2000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Ha ha"

    proprietary code. what else would you expect?