Oracle/Sun Enforces Pay-For-Security-Updates Plan
An anonymous reader writes "Recently, the Oracle/Sun conglomerate has denied public download access to all service packs for Solaris unless you have a support contract. Now, paying a premium for gold-class service is nothing new in the industry, but withholding critical security updates smacks of extortion. While this pay-for-play model may be de rigueur for enterprise database systems, it is certainly not the norm for OS manufactures. What may be more interesting is how Oracle/Sun is able to sidestep GNU licensing requirements since several of the Solaris cluster packs contain patches to GNU utilities and applications."
Just because they're selling the security updates doesn't mean they're in violation. I think it's highly likely that Sun/Oracle will go right ahead and sell their updates, and make the source code available (via the web?) for the GNU parts. Offering the source for the GNU packages wouldn't cut into their sales much, as most of their customers are probably not inclined to compile this code for themselves anyway (if they were, my thinking is that they probably wouldn't be running Sun). And even if they were, they'd miss out on updates to the proprietary parts of the code.
I'm having trouble seeing what the big deal is here.
By that measure then no need for Toyota to recall anything. You paid for the current version of the vehicle so they can just charge to fix your death trap. As long as its reasonable, labor, parts of course! I'm waiting for someone to set a legal precedent here. The day a software company becomes liable for negligence will forever change IT. I can see it happening at a hospital where access to vital information was lost and someone dies.