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Oracle Wants Proof That Open Source Is Profitable

An anonymous reader writes "Since Oracle's acquisition of Sun, all open source projects that now have Oracle as their primary sponsor are worried about their future, and FUD is spreading quickly. Very few public statements have been made by Oracle executives, particularly regarding OpenSolaris. The community is arguing about the difficulties of forking the code base when most (if not all) of the developers are employed by Oracle. Now Oracle wants the community to prove that open source can be made profitable. What arguments can the Slashdot crowd provide to convince Oracle about that?" Reader greg1104 tips related news about licenses for Solaris. According to an account manager, "Solaris support now comes through a contract on the hardware (Oracle SUN hardware)."

15 of 393 comments (clear)

  1. Why write something people give away for free? by greed · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm curious as to why a company would spend a lot of money making something that other people will give away for free.

    It had better be really special.

    My experience in software houses over the last 20 years suggests that they are opposed to letting customers see their source code because then customers will know, beyond any doubt, that they have been thoroughly fleeced. If the vendor delivers binaries only, at least there's still the possibility that the code is good quality, cleverly engineered, or whatever they're convincing people to pay for.

  2. No. its YOUR job. by unity100 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    no exaggeration and no offense here. we are the community. users, developers, evangelists etc and so on. we just make a software/framework live by developing, adding to it, supporting and using it, or we leave it and it dies.

    its not our job to make it profitable for you or teach you. you are the private company that seeks to profit. its your job to find ways to profit from it without offending us. think of us as 'the people', the public.

    if you upset us, we will fork something and get behind it and it will take off.

  3. Grandstanding by watanabe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Larry knows exactly how to make money; he is probably the world's best businessman at holding you upside-down and shaking you vigorously until your pockets empty.

    I would be stunned if Oracle ever comes out with a credible OpenSolaris strategy -- it's not Oracle's way, nor is it in their best interests to have a vibrant opensolaris community. Unlike Linux, the best parts of Solaris have never come from outside Sun. Dtrace, ZFS, integrated hardware, all this stuff is where Sun's real value lay.

    The end game for OpenSolaris began when Sun moved ahead with the merger. From then until the official end is just drama, positioning, etc.

  4. Inflammatory summary by chance2105 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    From earlier in the conversation: http://mail.opensolaris.org/pipermail/ogb-discuss/2010-April/007700.html

    "(The following message is wholly my own, and doesn't represent anything from Oracle. While I'm an Oracle employee, I have no special privileged information or insight beyond what is already common knowledge.)"

    This could be a random guy stirring the pot. What do we have to actually think management might ditch opensolaris?

  5. Re:And The Flip Side ... by spazdor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Really, the time to deliberate about whether open source projects can be profitable, is before you buy out a bunch of open source projects.

    --
    DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
  6. Re:Not from FOSS by TheSunborn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But both those examples show what the open source business model is. Support other peoples open source software and use it to sell complete solutions to your customers.

    I mean less then 1% of the source code that Redhat supports and use are written by people paid by Redhat.

    The problem for Oracle here is that they can't do the same with Solaris, because they write most of the code themself, and if they don't write it, nobody else will.

  7. Re:Profit? Sorry comrade... by DAldredge · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It is somewhat hard to pay the power bill and your employees with "benifits to society"

  8. Re:And The Flip Side ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unless you're not really buying them for the open source projects... Oracle got the open source projects as an aside and now they're trying to figure out what they're going to do with them.

  9. refocus by bcrowell · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I just had the experience of starting up my recently upgraded copy of openoffice on my linux box and seeing an oracle logo in the startup window. Feels kind of strange, like having your mom's underwear mixed in with your girlfriend's in the laundry basket.

    I realize that TFA is about OpenSolaris, but when it comes to mysql and openoffice, it's always seemed to me that the only real reason those projects received so much attention over the last decade was that they got there first-est with the most-est. It's not like mysql is the only OSS database on the market, or the best technically. When it comes to openoffice, I'm getting kind of tired of having to apologize for it. It just isn't a very good office suite in terms of usability, quality, or features. And it's an infamously unhealthy OSS project in terms of the ugliness of the codebase and the lack of success in working with developers outside Sun/Oracle.

    So maybe it's a good thing that Oracle bought Sun, because it will allow the OSS community to step back and reassess their focus. Competition is good. It's not healthy that the OSS world has drifted into a near-monoculture of mysql and openoffice.

  10. the endgame scenario by fusiongyro · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The problem here isn't that open source isn't profitable, it's that it isn't Oracle profitable. Oracle is the essential part of the problem here, and to answer directly is to miss the point.

    We solve this not by huffing and wheezing about how great open source software is. We solve it by proving that we don't need closed source software, that giants like Oracle are unnecessary and useless. We solve it by using PostgreSQL and MySQL, by using Linux (and maybe Open Solaris). We solve it by publicly mocking anyone who spent the money on Oracle, finding security holes in Oracle, and generally making it unpleasant to be an Oracle customer, which won't be hard because of the great head start Oracle has on that.

    We don't have to justify our existence or our way of doing business; they do. And they're doing a great job of pissing off their loyalists. IBM was once this proud. Look at them now. The same thing can happen here, we just have to refuse to put up with it.

  11. Re:IBM by mweather · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, open source software is very profitable for IBM to get you in the door so they can get you to upgrade to their closed-source systems later on

    It's a strategy that makes open source profitable. Either you sell support, or you sell a value added proprietary version.

  12. Re:And The Flip Side ... by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Money money money. This is what Larry cares about and NOTHING else

    Yeah, cause, I'm sure the Oracle *employees* and shareholders who are trying to, well, you know, pay mortgages and feed and clothe their children and other selfish stuff like that don't give a rat's @ss about money.

  13. Re:This is how stupid Oracle can be. by JonJ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No one has disputed that, however. Red Hat _is_ profitable, and your point is somewhat... Missing. Add to the fact that Red Hat had to attack a market where Sun, IBM and Microsoft had the stronghold and that they are profitable and growing, just shows that free and open source software is indeed profitable. No matter how you spin it, Red Hat is profitable, even if Oracle is more profitable, at the moment.

    --
    -- Linux user #369862
  14. Re:And Yet Another Flip Side ... by elnyka · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If they are open source (and GPL licensed), the worse that could happen is they cease to code for it and turn the rest of the developers to other projects. The open source portion could then be forked and taken over by others who see the value Oracle missed. Obviously it presumes GPLd code which isn't probably the case here.

    Unfortunately, that will be a big bleed for those projects because, when under Sun, there were people hired, paid and on payroll (with benefits and all the nine yards) for working on those projects (which they did full-time and more.)

    The possibility of losing that kind of man-hour man power is a biggie for an open source project.

  15. Re:Oracle downloads provide hint to profits by tyen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    At this point what's to tell Oracle that Solaris is better than Linux, because, I'm not sure they're convinced?

    For my company, one acronym: ZFS. We're going to start clocking into petabytes of storage within a year, and right now we're handling the tens of terabytes of storage under Solaris with a basic support contract so I could pick up the patch updates and email with the odd, once-a-year problem I couldn't solve myself. I'm shudder to think of the supporting the same scale with any other filesystem; ZFS has seriously saved our asses several times now with just its scrubbing feature.

    Oracle's new licensing policy has now put us into a bind. We now have to pick up Oracle Sun-branded hardware, plus the hardware support contract, plus the Oracle Premium software service plan. Then re-integrate the hardware with our existing configuration, possibly picking up new controller cards. Our carrying costs per year for choosing a Solaris-based solution just jumped an order of magnitude.

    The only reason we haven't started planning a move to FreeBSD 8.x is because FreeBSD ZFS doesn't yet support iSCSI (because FreeBSD doesn't have an iSCSI target yet). ZFS just got hella more expensive.

    Considering Apple's silent dropping of ZFS, I take it as a sign that in the future ZFS development will likely clam up to just Oracle Sun Solaris. Thus, we're going to follow Apple's lead and start testing ext4 under Linux (we first came to ZFS from ext3). I like ZFS, but not enough to justify a 10X cost difference unless there is simply no other way to hold petabytes off a single server.