| By Open Source News | Article Rating: |
|
| May 29, 2007 05:30 PM EDT | Reads: |
23,396 |
(May 26, 2007 - 5:38 PM) - Novell released a redacted copy of its controversial agreement with Microsoft last night after close of business in New York at the start of the Memorial Day weekend. It was part of the financial statements the company has owed the SEC since last July but hasn’t filed until now because of a lengthy internal examination of its options practices.Along with its 10-K and 10Qs Novell released three documents that make up its deal with Microsoft: a Technical Collaboration Agreement, a Business Collaboration Agreement and the all-important 26-page Patent Collaboration Agreement that has open source hackles up because of Microsoft’s increasingly articulated contention that open source owes it royalties for patent infringement.
The agreement enshrines the pretzel-like position Novell has been forced to adopt because it appears to be paying Microsoft not to sue its customers for using Linux. In a one-sentence disclaimer it says that, “Nothing in this agreement shall imply, or be construed as an admission or acknowledgement by a party, that any patents of the other party are infringed, valid or enforceable.”
The publication of the agreement – which makes it clear there would have been no interoperability pact without the patent concessions and vice versa – raises a new set of questions for Linux users particularly in light of Microsoft’s recent claim that OpenOffice infringes 45 of its patents, free e-mail 15, unspecified free software often bundled with Linux another 68, and the user interface some 65 Microsoft patent in addition to the 42 patent the Linux kernel is supposed to infringe.
Microsoft’s promised patent indemnification to paying SUSE users specifically excludes open source software like Wine, OpenExchange, StarOffice and OpenOffice by name.
It also excludes:
• “business application designed, marketed and used to meet the data processing requirements of particular business functions, financial forecasting, financial reporting, customer relationship management and supply chain management” (think salesforce.com);
• “mail transfer agents (a k a e-mail servers)”;
• “unified communications”;
• and video games consoles, console games, video game applications designed to run on a computer and online video gaming services like Xbox Live.
The implication is you can run SUSE free of patent concerns but you’d better be darn careful what you run on top of it. Otherwise you’re good for six years after the last of the covered patents expires.
It looks as if the agreement makes provision for the possibility that Novell will get acquired – it passes through –– unless, it appears, it goes to a private equity buy-out firm or a company that gets less than 10% of revenues from hardware and software. There are also safety nets for product spin-offs.
The agreement also relieves direct and indirect distributors of the fear of liability except for Wine and any freebie programs they may pass along.
Published May 29, 2007 Reads 23,396
Copyright © 2007 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Open Source News
Enterprise Open Source News Desk trawls the fast-growing world of Professional Open Source for business-relevant items of news, opinion, and insight.
![]() |
EOS News Desk 05/26/07 05:47:37 PM EDT | |||
The agreement enshrines the pretzel-like position Novell has been forced to adopt because it appears to be paying Microsoft not to sue its customers for using Linux. In a one-sentence disclaimer it says that, 'Nothing in this agreement shall imply, or be construed as an admission or acknowledgement by a party, that any patents of the other party are infringed, valid or enforceable.' |
||||
- Kindle 2 vs Nook
- Wave on Ulitzer: Confessions of a Google Wave Fanboy
- Confessions of a Ulitzer Addict
- IBM Hardware Chief, Intel VC Exec Arrested in Insider Trading Scam
- Cloud Computing Best Practices
- Tactical Cloud Computing Panel at 1st Annual GovIT Expo
- Ulitzer.com Named Exclusive "New Media" Sponsor of Cloud Computing Conference & Expo
- Infrastructure-as-a-Service Will Mature in 2010: Microsoft's David Chou
- Windows 7 – Microsoft’s First Step to the Cloud
- Cloud Computing & Federal IT - What Does the Future Hold?
- Jill Tummler Singer, Deputy CIO of CIA, Keynotes at GovIT Expo
- Cloud Expo and the End of Tech Recession
- Kindle 2 vs Nook
- The Difference Between Web Hosting and Cloud Computing
- Ajax in RichFaces 3.3, JSF 2 and RichFaces 4
- Wave on Ulitzer: Confessions of a Google Wave Fanboy
- Confessions of a Ulitzer Addict
- IBM Hardware Chief, Intel VC Exec Arrested in Insider Trading Scam
- Cloud Computing Best Practices
- Tactical Cloud Computing Panel at 1st Annual GovIT Expo
- Ulitzer.com Named Exclusive "New Media" Sponsor of Cloud Computing Conference & Expo
- Eval JavaScript in a Global Context
- Infrastructure-as-a-Service Will Mature in 2010: Microsoft's David Chou
- Windows 7 – Microsoft’s First Step to the Cloud
- Google Maps and ASP.NET
- Crystal Reports XI & How It Has Changed
- Converting VB6 to VB.NET, Part I
- Creating Controls for.NET Compact Framework in Visual Studio 2005
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- How to Write High-Performance C# Code
- AJAX World RIA Conference & Expo Kicks Off in New York City
- Implementing Tab Navigation with ASP.NET 2.0
- i-Technology Photo Exclusive: Bill Gates & Steve Jobs In "Nerds"
- .NET Archives: Getting Reacquainted with the Father of C#
- i-Technology Viewpoint: "SOA Sucks"
- Programmatically Posting Data to ASP .NET Web Applications

































