Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
Posted Sep 11, 2008 16:58 UTC (Thu) by einstein (guest, #2052)Parent article: Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
Does novell really think that the linux community has been eagerly awaiting the opportunity to virtualize their servers under ms windows?
Of all the things that a linux user could possibly hope for from the supposed "interoperability" agreement - e.g. access to the specs for various microsoft APIs, affordable legal licensing for w32 codecs, better samba features - not even the smallest hint has appeared. No, instead they give us this kind of crap, which we never wanted and will never use.
Posted Sep 11, 2008 17:05 UTC (Thu)
by epa (subscriber, #39769)
[Link] (1 responses)
That said, you could certainly do so before this announcement, so it may appeal mostly to those who insist everything be 'certified' by 'vendors' before they can run it.
Posted Sep 11, 2008 19:06 UTC (Thu)
by einstein (guest, #2052)
[Link]
Oh, trust me, we won't.
> Your particular definition of the Linux 'community' is hardly relevant here - what matters are businesses running both Linux and Windows and wanting to consolidate their servers.
I work for a fortune 100 firm that runs linux and windows, as well as mainframe and other unix flavors. We are a big novell customer, not only sles but also edirectory. But I have to tell you, we have no use for these latest (or any other) fruits of the microsoft/novell "partnership". We have seen absolutely no benefit, only press releases promoting the supposed "interoperability" benefits.
BTW we do virtualize some servers, but with vmware.
Posted Sep 11, 2008 17:12 UTC (Thu)
by epa (subscriber, #39769)
[Link]
This is hardly ideal - we all wish swpats would just go away - but if you want a legal solution for video playback in Linux, keeping as much as possible to free software apart from those bits that have to be binary blobs for legal reasons, then it's about as good as you can get.
Posted Sep 12, 2008 8:41 UTC (Fri)
by DonDiego (guest, #24141)
[Link] (9 responses)
Posted Sep 16, 2008 13:39 UTC (Tue)
by massimiliano (subscriber, #3048)
[Link] (8 responses)
Nowadays every Microsoft codec [...] can be played entirely with free software.
Can be played, yes. And "freely", also.
But not legally (at least in some countries) due to patent issues, and even Microsoft does not own all the patents so they have to pay to license them.
In the Moonlight case, Microsoft is paying for the patent licenses, and this is one of the reasons why we get that binary blob, which you can freely replace with ffmpeg if you rebuild Moonlight from source, and if for you is legal doing so.
This comment above is really correct and informative.
Posted Sep 18, 2008 8:27 UTC (Thu)
by DonDiego (guest, #24141)
[Link] (7 responses)
Posted Sep 18, 2008 12:17 UTC (Thu)
by massimiliano (subscriber, #3048)
[Link] (6 responses)
Please explain what you mean by the term "legal". Which laws are being broken and what sanctions have people suffered due to breaking of said laws?
AFAIK, patent laws, in the countries that allow software patents and recognize the patents affecting those codecs.
This legal situation is bad, and we should push to eliminate software patents. Meanwhile, these are the rules of the game.
Who has gone to jail, who has paid a fine, who has received a warning letter?
Likely, no individual user has. But a large corporation found breaking the rules would get the consequences immediately, if somebody could profit from it.
Ciao,
Posted Sep 18, 2008 22:37 UTC (Thu)
by DonDiego (guest, #24141)
[Link] (5 responses)
Nobody has ever had legal problems by using free software codecs to play content. Please do not create FUD by pretending otherwise, you are not helping anybody.
Posted Sep 19, 2008 12:55 UTC (Fri)
by massimiliano (subscriber, #3048)
[Link] (4 responses)
Please, let's not mix unrelated things. AFAIK, using and/or distributing Free Software codecs like ffmpeg is not legal in the USA, for anybody. Large corporations and individual users are subject to the same law.
And I'd really like to be proven wrong on this!
That said, you know that doing something illegal does not mean you will be discovered, or punished. It just means you did it.
Since a patent cause costs lots of money, people do patent causes only when they think that in the end they will get the money back and earn more in the end. If you sue a single user, there's no way he will repay you of the cost of suing him, so nobody does it. In this sense you are right, individual users are "practically safe", nobody is likely to care about them.
But I don't think this means that using ffmpeg in the USA is legal: it just means individual users will get away with it, because suing them is not worth the money it takes.
Posted Sep 19, 2008 21:09 UTC (Fri)
by nix (subscriber, #2304)
[Link] (3 responses)
Posted Sep 20, 2008 10:25 UTC (Sat)
by massimiliano (subscriber, #3048)
[Link] (2 responses)
IANAL, especially not a US L, but I didn't think patent infringement was
actually a criminal offence, i.e. illegal.
Ok, this could explain the misunderstanting.
I live in Italy, and English is not my mother tongue.
Here in Italy we have a distinction between civil and penal codes (and laws), where civil ones have as "punishment" fines and/or paying damages, while infringing a "penal law" can send you to jail.
However, we call "illegal" any act that infringes a law, be it a civil or penal matter. If English has a different word for describing the fact that infringing the civil code is against the law, and if patent laws are in the civil code (which I think is true), then sorry for defining patent infringement "illegal"...
Anyway, could we just agree that using ffmpeg and other Free Software codecs without paying royalties to the MPAA and other patent holders is "against the law" in the USA? That was the point of my original message...
Posted Sep 20, 2008 10:57 UTC (Sat)
by DonDiego (guest, #24141)
[Link] (1 responses)
There are some organizations that might (or might not) come to collect protection money from you, but you are not doing anything illegal if they do not come for you. This is a very important difference.
The only ones who may (or may not) have something to fear are big commercial distributions. Do not pretend that their situation is in any way related to the situation of the users of free software solutions for video decoding.
And remember that the world is bigger than the USA. You are making it sound as if a problem that exists for a few companies operating in certain markets extends to 6 billion people worldwide.
Also, the MPAA has nothing to do with this, you are confused.
Posted Sep 28, 2008 23:02 UTC (Sun)
by pboddie (guest, #50784)
[Link]
That's like saying, "You may be chased by the police when robbing a bank, but you are not doing anything illegal if you make a quick getaway." And before anyone repeats the civil vs. criminal distinction, be aware that various agreements and directives are in place, with more to come, which seek to erase such distinctions. On the contrary, all the lobbying for criminal penalties on previously civil matters is all about punishing "the pirates", and who else is the poster boy for that particular crusade?
Posted Sep 15, 2008 19:07 UTC (Mon)
by wmf (guest, #33791)
[Link]
Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
affordable legal licensing for w32 codecs
See Moonlight, the free implementation of Microsoft's Silverlight framework. Microsoft are paying for codec licensing so you can play patented audio and video formats on the web legally, even in countries like the United States which grant patents on software. It's not free software: the codecs come as binary blobs, and the patent licence only covers usage within the Moonlight browser plugin. (That is not to say Microsoft will personally sue you for patent infringement if you run the codecs outside that area, just that they haven't paid the various patent cartels for that usage, so in principle the MPEG-LA or whoever could sue you.) But it is 'affordable' in the sense of not paying any money.
Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
I am not a lawyer, but I work in the Mono team so I have seen from the inside (from a developer's perspective) some of the issues involved in the Moonlight agreement. Particularly, Novell would like to distribute codecs for all formats, but cannot without paying for the licenses herself, and we would have liked to have the Microsoft-supplied binary codec package also licensed for "regular desktop use" (and not just the browser), but, believe it or not, this would have meant higher licensing fees for Microsoft...
Massimiliano
Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
So, if you can demonstrate the opposite, please do, and you will make me a happier man.
Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
actually a criminal offence, i.e. illegal. It might be a civil tort over
which the patent holder could seek to recover funds from you, but that
doesn't make it *illegal*.
Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution
There are some organizations that might (or might not) come to collect protection money from you, but you are not doing anything illegal if they do not come for you. This is a very important difference.
Also, the MPAA has nothing to do with this, you are confused.
Microsoft and Novell deliver Joint Virtualization Solution