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Posted in Deception, Free/Libre Software, Law, Microsoft, Mono, Novell, OSI, Windows at 3:31 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz
“…Microsoft got its way and received what it once considered “unamerican”, “a cancer”…”After the previous rejection, Microsoft got its way and received what it once considered “unamerican”, “a cancer”, and something which is inherently insecure. Yes, the Open Source Initiative fell victim to another invasion tactic that would enable Microsoft to hurt GNU/Linux. It wasn’t long ago that Ballmer talked about his plot to hijack open source away from Linux. That was last week. OSI shoots itself in the foot again despite Eric Raymond’s observations of fraud in the fight for OOXML.
=> ↺ the previous rejection | ↺ last week | ↺ Eric Raymond’s observations of fraud in the fight for OOXML
What’s wrong with Microsoft being part of the “Open Source” movement? Remember that many of the projects to be considered are tied to Sharepoint or SQL Server or whatever proprietary stack is necessary for these arbitrary blocks of code to run. We covered this issue many times before. The “open source” terminology has just become less relevant than ever before. Sad day.
=> ↺ less relevant than ever before
For now though it’s all eyes on Microsoft to see what the company will do next, and in many ways this will be more interesting than whether or not the OSI approved the licenses. For reasons that were never fully explained, Microsoft wanted open source licenses.
Now that it’s got them, will it use them to release significant code to the community?
Remember what Microsoft did to Mono a couple of weeks ago. Microsoft’s open source moves are no reason for celebration, especially when one looks ahead and sees highly-anticipated voids.
=> ↺ did to Mono a couple of weeks ago | ↺ are no reason for celebration
Novell ’s Mono chief demonstrated an early incarnation of “Moonlight” before .NET developers Tuesday but he warned that a full implementation of Microsoft’s Windows Presentation Foundation/Everywhere (WPF/E), aka Silverlight, is unlikely — at least under his watch.
Remember the arguments about Novell allowing Linux to become a subordinate second-class citizen and a follower? That’s exactly it. That’s the sign. One among many.
=> ↺ subordinate second-class citizen | ↺ a follower
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