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Posted in Bill Gates, GPL, Microsoft, Patents, Red Hat at 3:18 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz
Nobody is buying it, except for the press
A couple of new articles are worth recommending. The first one from Sam Varghese deals with Red Hat's response to Microsoft’s Taxoperability Program (Gartner calls it a patent trap).
=> ↺ first one | Red Hat's response | Taxoperability Program | a patent trap
At times like these, when proprietary software companies and turncoats from within the FOSS sphere are actively engaged in a battle to dominate standards, it is good to have a company like Red Hat on-side.
[...]
But looking at Red Hat’s reaction to the recent Microsoft announcement about interoperability, it is easy to see that the North Carolina-based company is not a one-dimensional firm. Few companies would react to a statement from the biggest and most powerful proprietary software company – and one which is actively trying to steal its lunch – with anything resembling these words: “Red Hat regards this most recent announcement with a healthy dose of skepticism (sic).”
The second item is more of a blog post which dissects Microsoft’s deliberate compatibility problem. It’s an offer that was designed to turn Free software into fee software, but spun as a case of Microsoft playing nice. Remember this classic:
=> ↺ which dissects Microsoft’s deliberate compatibility problem
“If you can’t make it good, at least make it look good.”
–Bill Gates (Microsoft’s CEO at the time)
Anyway, from the post:
So, a software created under the Microsoft Open Premise may not be licensed under a free license, if it violates, or may violate a Microsoft patent. In other words, one should excercise extra care when FOSS-licensing such a software. MOP is only partially compatible with the free licenses, and it could be safer to regard it as generally incompatible with them.
This ‘openness’ from Microsoft brings more harm than good. Again, it’s about turning Free software to fee [sic] software (using software patents). Microsoft should be slammed rather than praised for it. This gift came from the Greek, surely, encouraging costly development of proprietary software at the expense of libre and gratis software. █
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