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China Mobile Joins the Linux Foundation

eldavojohn writes "As a gold member, China Mobile has joined The Linux Foundation putting it next to AMD, Google, HP and Cisco in the roster of the foundation's gold members. This marks the very first time a Chinese enterprise has joined The Linux Foundation. Earlier this year, we saw the first Chinese company openly participate in open source and now China Mobile, ranked 77th in the world by Fortune with over half a billion customers, has joined the foundation that fosters the growth of Linux."

11 of 56 comments (clear)

  1. Watch out!! by powerlord · · Score: 5, Funny

    China Mobile probably just joined so they could get access to the Linux source repositories and steal the code.

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    1. Re:Watch out!! by AHuxley · · Score: 2, Insightful

      State capitalism has viewed the efforts of a theocracy to work with Nokia Siemens in catching/tracking dissidents and other NGO funded protesters.
      Much better to grow and be part of any phone system than have to request outside help on your own phone network.
      If the gov is part of the formation of any new phone system, the phone system is part of the gov.
      A NSA Room 641A in your pocket. No need for sloppy push upgrades or requests outside the country. No Costas Tsalikidis, Adamo Bove style telco software needed. Linux shaped in the state image will give peace of mind to a generation of political leaders. With Linux on your phone, the state can find you before you stand in front of a column of Type 59 tanks.

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      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  2. However... by derGoldstein · · Score: 3, Funny

    Only the Platinum members are allowed to bug the kernal. I think that Gold members just get a discount.

    --
    Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
  3. Doesn't open source kind of clash... by Arancaytar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    With the Chinese government's view of technology?

    1. Re:Doesn't open source kind of clash... by Enderandrew · · Score: 4, Informative

      I believe the Chinese government puts out their own build of Linux and their own build of OpenOffice.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Flag_Linux
      http://www.redoffice.com/

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  4. Re:In before by Yvanhoe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I hope Americans see this as a bad thing and that it will sting them to be more competitive.

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    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  5. we did we did by unity100 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    but we have either posted or dont have mod points handy

  6. Actually You Didn't Beat Me, the Submitter by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In before Americans spinning this as somehow a bad thing, bla bla communism, bla bla Obama health plan.

    I'm the submitter. I'm American. The submission wasn't edited at all and I don't think I put a negative spin on it.

    I even omitted some things like China Mobile being a state-controlled and state-owned company. But you can find that int he linked Wikipedia article. The company has been terrible with it's move to 3G. And, as a telecommunications company with 570 million customers, it's probably done a lot of harm as well as a lot of good. The most xenophobic statement you'll get from me is that it's a Chinese company so there's probably a lot of corruption at all levels. And that's not to say that there isn't corruption in the lobbyists of the American equivalent but I'm guessing the customers have even less rights when it comes to dealing with a state-controlled massive corporation.

    So there's that but, you know, regardless of whether or not they're a member of the Linux Foundation, that's going to persist. If the Linux Foundation refused their entry (and, come on, Google and HP are in there so ethics like privacy aren't huge concern) I doubt China Mobile would break down and clean up just so they could get in. But now that they're in, maybe they can offer better service to customers? They're definitely paying dues to the Linux Foundation so unless you see that as 'blood money' it's a really good thing. It's good for us, it's good for the Linux community, it's good for people who want cheaper mobile phones and it's good for the people of China.

    Getting the evilest of the evil to use Linux is a net positive for everyone involved. The only people who lose are the companies that make money off of everyone by selling a cash cow operating system like Windows hammered down into some sort of Frankenstein mobile operating system.

    bla bla communism

    Ha. I wish. If China were truly Communist without social classes, the bulk of the people would be treated a whole lot better and the system would either collapse or work properly for the first time Communism has been put into practice. Instead you've got some sort of hybrid closer to socialism than the United States is that keeps itself working by slowly implementing more and more capitalism. I still can't understand how people can call China "Communist" when the income, living conditions and rights of a rice farmer in BFE greater China is not even comparable to a banker in downtown Beijing.

    I think this is just another sign that the year of Linux on the desktop is a dead dream but the year of Linux in the server farm and the year of Linux on the mobile device are already here.

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    My work here is dung.
  7. The word is spreading. by sosaited · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't care who joins the Linux foundation and who doesn't, as long as more corporations are supported OSS in some way. The Windows monopoly needs to end, even if Google develops a Linux based distro and starts selling it for money (Though I don't wish for this to happen)

    All the excuses of hardware-compatibility and user-friendliness has been long gone. For example in my very own experience where I had to run a PCMCIA card via a PCI-PCMCIA adapter on my desktop, it took me 3 days to find a solution in Windows, while both the adapter and PCMCIA card worked out of the box on Ubuntu without any further settings.

    1. Re:The word is spreading. by mspohr · · Score: 2, Insightful
      A Linux monopoly would be fundamentally different than a proprietary software (OSX or Windows) monopoly. A monopoly is only bad when it leads to lock-in and abuse of customers by companies charging a monopoly profit. This happened with Windows where Microsoft was convicted of abuse of their monopoly (not for having a monopoly).

      However, it would be hard to implement customer lock-in with Linux since the software is all open source and the file formats for data are all open source. Any attempt to lock-in customers would be futile since they can just take their data and their software and go to another vendor.

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  8. Not more innovation stolen by the Chinese by scourfish · · Score: 2, Funny

    Just like all other technology ventures that have gone to China, the chinese are just going to infringe on the innovation from the western world's Linux technology and copy it without payi- oh I see what you did there.