No future in proprietary software (ZDNet)
Posted Dec 4, 2002 22:55 UTC (Wed) by
proski (subscriber, #104)
In reply to:
No future in proprietary software (ZDNet) by mnummeli
Parent article:
No future in proprietary software (ZDNet)
Microsoft is bound by contracts and cannot open the source code for
the software without permission of the copyright holders. Even if they
decide to open source e.g. Internet Explorer, they'll have to strip
parts copyrighted by third parties. Netscape did it with Mozilla.
Sun did it with OpenOffice.
Even if the copyright on the closed source software is abolished,
Microsoft may still have contractual obligations that would survive the
abolition.
Even if Microsoft releases some software under a free license, most of their
software will remain non-free. I don't think that releasing "Microsoft
UNIX" will make people trust them. I just cannot imagine Microsoft abandoning all their codebase, including MS Office and MSIE, in favor of their new free OS. Microsoft is not Apple - it's a software company, and their main asset is the existing codebase.
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