Another day another Microsoft patent deal
Posted Jun 9, 2007 18:19 UTC (Sat) by
mikov (subscriber, #33179)
In reply to:
Another day another Microsoft patent deal by marduk
Parent article:
Another day another Microsoft patent deal
Yeah I know this has to do with businesses, and this might affect Linux adoption in business, but whether it succeeds or fails in the business sector does not determine, IMO, whether it is "as good as dead". If that were the case Linux would have been DOA 16 years ago.
I agree that "as good as dead" is much too strong - but you know what I mean.
15 years ago there was a law suit against BSD. Some people consider this to be a major factor why *BSD has enjoyed relatively small commercial success (others argue that Linux simply has better technology/better license). Regardless, I don't think the *BSD people then or now consider BSD to be "as good as dead". Rather some would say that BSD is going ahead strong because the developers and community stood behind it.
I don't think that we can draw parallels - positive or otherwise - with the BSD lawsuits 15 years ago. The OS and computing landscape was very different then. That said, objectively speaking *BSD currently is close to being "as good as dead". It also enjoys the benefit of flying under the legal radar so to speak, but any serious legal thread would kill it because there would be no Red Hat or IBM or Novell to come to the rescue. (Perhaps Yahoo could - I think they are the only major user of FreeBSD ?) Don't get me wrong though - I have nothing against *BSD - I just don't see how any of its variants currently have a chance of going anywhere.
But again, people were saying the same thing when companies started buying SCO licenses. And again even earlier than that when some idiot decided to trademark "Linux" and demand royalties from Linux companies (yes, there *were* people saying that would be the end of Linux in the commercial world). But in spite of both situations Linux has continue to survive and even thrive in industry. Even in that sense it's way too early at this point to start playing Chicken Little.
I remember that big Linux companies indemnified their customers at that time. Obviously their customers needed that assurance. A smaller business however could never afford to do that. So, what is its choice - lose customers or avoid the risk and not use Linux ?
Bottom line, if it ever turns out that in order to use Linux you must buy it from a big company which can afford to either offer indemnification or sign deals with patent holders, then at that exact moment Linux is effectively dead. At least in the US. Hopefully the rest of the world will keep their IP laws a bit saner.
Are you convinced that such a scenario is completely unlikely ?
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