Microsoft Corp. Thursday rejected the idea that its deal last year with Novell Inc. ties it to the new General Public License Version 3 (GPLv3) and said it will not support any software distributed under the just-released open-source license. The Microsoft-Novell partnership signed in November 2006 featured promises to make Windows interoperable with SuSE Linux, a pact in which Microsoft vows not to sue Novell for any potential patent infringement, royalty payments on the part of Novell to Microsoft based on Linux sales, or a major purchase of Linux support contracts by Microsoft.
In a statement Thursday, Microsoft disavowed any link between itself and GPLv3. "Microsoft is not a party to the GPLv3 license and none of its actions are to be misinterpreted as accepting status as a contracting party of GPLv3 or assuming any legal obligations under such license," said Horacio Gutierrez, Microsoft's vice president of intellectual property and licensing, in a statement. GPLv3, which was unveiled only a week ago, has been touted by its creator, Richard Stallman, as a poison pill that will prevent future deals like the one Microsoft made with Novell.
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News source: PC World
In a statement Thursday, Microsoft disavowed any link between itself and GPLv3. "Microsoft is not a party to the GPLv3 license and none of its actions are to be misinterpreted as accepting status as a contracting party of GPLv3 or assuming any legal obligations under such license," said Horacio Gutierrez, Microsoft's vice president of intellectual property and licensing, in a statement. GPLv3, which was unveiled only a week ago, has been touted by its creator, Richard Stallman, as a poison pill that will prevent future deals like the one Microsoft made with Novell.
















The only thing achieved by using GPL is all the problems you get with Nvidia drivers or opy protection schemes not being implentable on Linux and such.
The only thing achieved by using GPL is all the problems you get with Nvidia drivers or opy protection schemes not being implentable on Linux and such.
Yes, Bill would certainly love if no one used the GPL to protect their own work. Actually the GPL protects a developer b/c it lets them put their source code out there and then get changes back, and it also lets them dual license their code so they can make money for it for people who want to use it in proprietary products (see Trolltech and QT). It also has ancillary advantages such as unifying codebases and stopping the classic lock-in tactic of embrace and extend.
Keep in mind it's ONLY a distribution license. The nVidia problems are because the Linux kernel makes the (correct IMO) choice not to have stable binary interface: they want the drivers' source, and this enables them to be portable and solve security (yes you can get root exploits, see madwifi and nVidia drivers) and other buggy issues-- compare nVidia bugs that are not fixed, like black windows and problems with ACPI and suspend, and you will find the open source drivers are much higher quality.
Anyways, since the GPL is a copyright license that only comes into effect on *public distribution*, scripts like that which Ubuntu has are fine.
The only things GPL has achieved...GCC, GNU Project, Samba, the Linux kernel, KDE, GNOME, GTK, QT, Safari (KHTML, Webkit), Mozilla/Gecko, just stupid things that anyone can replace. Who would ever use GPL! /sarcasm
Don't let them bull**** you.
Microsoft likes DRM? You reading right? Microsoft HATES DRM, but they LIKE being able to play DRMed stuff.
Microsoft likes DRM? You reading right? Microsoft HATES DRM, but they LIKE being able to play DRMed stuff.
No, MS likes DRM, period, so much that include it in their own products! Windows Activation, Genuine Advantage, etc.
http://www.forbes.com/digitalentertainment...f_0208bach.html "MS: We Like DRM"
APIs...righto, I'll ask Wordperfect and Netscape how they fared with Microsoft's open APIs with that when they had competing products. Or Samba. Or that .NET developer that MS threatened who dared to use "open APIs" (shame on him, MS says!
"Shared source" does not mean anything or provide free software benefits. It is a PR term.
Microsoft likes DRM? You reading right? Microsoft HATES DRM, but they LIKE being able to play DRMed stuff.
I wouldn't exactly call Microsoft's APIs open. If you'll remember, they programmed in features that only Windows products could use (specifically MS Office programs) to kill off the competetion in the early 90s (anyone remember Lotus 1-2-3 ?). I wouldn't be surprised if they still had tricks like this up their sleeves.
Microsoft likes DRM? You reading right? Microsoft HATES DRM, but they LIKE being able to play DRMed stuff.
I wouldn't exactly call Microsoft's APIs open. If you'll remember, they programmed in features that only Windows products could use (specifically MS Office programs) to kill off the competetion in the early 90s (anyone remember Lotus 1-2-3 ?). I wouldn't be surprised if they still had tricks like this up their sleeves.
That's really not the case, maybe they don't document everything, but that hasen't stopped other programs, free ones, from running on windows and doing a good job. There are lots of non-MS apps that people love and will use over any MS made apps. If the APIs used by both gave MS a advantage then wouldn't their apps be better?
Microsoft likes DRM? You reading right? Microsoft HATES DRM, but they LIKE being able to play DRMed stuff.
I wouldn't exactly call Microsoft's APIs open. If you'll remember, they programmed in features that only Windows products could use (specifically MS Office programs) to kill off the competetion in the early 90s (anyone remember Lotus 1-2-3 ?). I wouldn't be surprised if they still had tricks like this up their sleeves.
That's really not the case, maybe they don't document everything, but that hasen't stopped other programs, free ones, from running on windows and doing a good job. There are lots of non-MS apps that people love and will use over any MS made apps. If the APIs used by both gave MS a advantage then wouldn't their apps be better?
That's a spurious argument at best, and you know it. The fact that some of the other developers (besides Microsoft) don't lock-down their APIs with DRM has nothing to do with the fact that MS has a long history of creating software that comes with unnecessary restrictions.
For example, the PC Game "Sahdowrun" is made by Microsoft to be Vista-only... but if you know which files to copy from Vista to XP you can install and run the game on XP with little trouble. (there's a bit of a hack involved, but it's dead simple.) The game doesn't depend on DX 10 or anything like that, so why did MS make it Vista-only? Simple: They want to move game development to the Vista platform, whether or not it actually needs to move there, because they want to sell more copies of Vista.
There's a hundred other examples I could give, but that was a very recent one.
Another brainwashed one... but this one is so dumb!
That ".Net developer" just created a crack for Visual Studio and released it with his plugin.
That has nothing to do with .Net Framework.
Lots of people have good free apps that aren't under GPL, a license should never tie you down.
Is it more free to use a BSD-style license where people can lock up the community code, make secret changes to it and re-license it under very un-free terms? Or to force all given freedoms GPL-style to be passed on, so that everyone downstream also receives the same freedoms you received the code under.
GPL guarantees (forces) code openness. BSD is so 'free' that people can close the code in proprietary branches/forks.
There is no right/wrong. Just differing perspectives.
Is it more free to use a BSD-style license where people can lock up the community code, make secret changes to it and re-license it under very un-free terms? Or to force all given freedoms GPL-style to be passed on, so that everyone downstream also receives the same freedoms you received the code under.
GPL guarantees (forces) code openness. BSD is so 'free' that people can close the code in proprietary branches/forks.
There is no right/wrong. Just differing perspectives.
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