February 21, 2008 10:39 AM PST

Microsoft's open-source patent threat still intact

Microsoft made major concessions Thursday that should make it easier for open-source software to dovetail with or even replace Microsoft products, but a major caveat means the company's legal threats remain alive and well.

Microsoft announced a number of moves that could significantly improve its relationship with the open-source world. Among other things, the company said it will share communication protocols that govern how Microsoft software products communicate; pledged not to sue open-source programmers for developing software that uses those interfaces; and launched an Open Source Interoperability Initiative to improve how well open-source software works with its own.

Microsoft Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie (left) and CEO Steve Ballmer.

(Credit: Microsoft)

Although programmers now are apparently free to reproduce the software, Microsoft's generosity ends when the software crosses the threshold from project to commercial product.

"Microsoft is providing a covenant not to sue open-source developers for development or noncommercial distribution of implementations of these protocols," the company said. "Companies that engage in commercial distribution of these protocol implementations will be able to obtain a patent license from Microsoft, as will enterprises that obtain these implementations from a distributor that does not have such a patent license."

In other words, Microsoft hasn't backed down from its insistence that its intellectual property isn't free for the taking, an assertion made most clearly in 2007 when Chief Executive Steve Ballmer said Linux and other open-source projects violate 235 Microsoft patents.

"The promise not to sue is only for 'noncommercial' open source, which is a bit meaningless," said Jeremy Allison, a founder of the open-source Samba project that lets Linux servers substitute for Windows file and print servers by emulating the required Microsoft communication protocols.

The Thursday move suggests two forms of patent agreements. First is one in the mold of the controversial Microsoft partnership with Novell from 2006 and various other smaller Linux companies afterward. The second is an agreement directly with customers that use open-source software such as Red Hat's Linux, as Ballmer suggested last October when he said, "People (who) use Red Hat, at least with respect to our intellectual property, in a sense have an obligation to eventually to compensate us."

It's not likely Microsoft opened up its specifications and made its pledges Thursday out of the goodness of its heart. As the open-source movement and its free-software predecessor have matured over more than two decades, Microsoft has found it necessary to make accommodations.

First, the open-source programming philosophy outdid Microsoft in an area where it previously had been a leader, fostering communities of developers. Second, there have been years of antitrust litigation, first by the United States and more recently from the European Union, that called on Microsoft to share. The third, and perhaps strongest reason, is that open-source software has become a powerful force in the software industry and customer sites--and even at Yahoo, the Internet company Microsoft is trying to acquire for $44.6 billion in part because of its engineering expertise.

The Samba case illustrates the pressures on Microsoft. In December, Samba announced a complicated third-party arrangement that in effect gives it access to Microsoft's communication protocols, a move that came shortly after the European Union required Microsoft to share interoperability information with open-source projects.

Sharing protocols, while it makes it easier for others to interoperate or clone Microsoft products, also could serve to entrench Microsoft's products by making its in-house protocols into de facto industry standards.

Take OOXML, the office document format Microsoft is trying to standardize as an alternative to the ODF that was spawned from the OpenOffice.org software, an open-source rival to Microsoft Office. "The approval of OOXML, for instance, is seen as crucial by Microsoft as a means of maintaining its Office market share," The 451 Group, an analyst firm, said in a statement Thursday.

And as ZDnet blogger Mary Jo Foley noted, the ISO standards group is meeting in Geneva next week to vote on whether OOXML should be awarded official standard status.

Recent posts from Underexposed
Firefox add-on infected with Trojan
Linux video project evades DMCA, back on Google Code
Google: Unicode conquers ASCII on the Web
Google yanks open-source project after copyright complaint
Adobe toys with standardizing DNG raw photo format
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 25 comments (Page 1 of 1)
Punish the Good Samaritan
by cmwendy February 21, 2008 11:28 AM PST
This falls under the rubric, "no good dead shall go unpunished." Thus, under the author's analysis, no competitive move could be made by such a company because it must move from pure motivations...and clearly, MS has "scienter" working against. Baloney. Does it matter how the company arrived at its new direction? The info will still be gobbled up - even by the FOSS-oriented (their latest guilty pleasure). Congratulations, MS! This analysis/story reveals those against you feel truly scared. You're on the right trail.
Reply to this comment View all 6 replies
FREE!!! EVERYTHING FOR FREE!!!
by kojacked February 21, 2008 12:07 PM PST
Patent or no patent why should Microsoft have hand over software they wrote for free? Let's see I'll write some software, give it to you for free, and let you make money off of it... That makes perfect sense if you believe in communism.
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
M'rf*krs For Consumer Choice, eh?
by fokwp February 21, 2008 12:39 PM PST
Microsoft, alias M'rf*krs For Consumer Choice, again takes pains to assure us all that leaving it all in the hands (and pockets) of MS will in the long run assures us the best software at the fairest price, an easy path to developing add-ons for their system, and - above all- Consumer Choice - as long as you choose a MikeySoft owned-and-lawyered product, that is!
Reply to this comment View reply
CNet keeps hiring brain-dead writer
by Pixelslave February 21, 2008 12:40 PM PST
If CNet keeps hiring brain-dead writer like this one, I can't see the future of CNet. The logic of this article is totally bizarre. According to Stephen Shankland, MS should hire programmers to code (and pay them a good amount of money), then give it out for FREE to other companies to make money out of their software. Let me make a proposal, Stephen. Why don't you go to CNet's CEO, and politely asks him to continue to pay you, but gives out all CNet's content for free for everyone who wants to make money out of its content. If you succeed, please let me know, because my wife's business can use some help from CNet's large library of product reviews!
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
Ms is brain dead.
by inachu February 21, 2008 1:09 PM PST
desktop. GUI menus that drop down are not inventions from microsoft. Maybe the taskbar is microsofts.... not sure though.
Reply to this comment View reply
C'mon, Monkeyboy! Assert! Do it!
by Sumatra-Bosch February 21, 2008 6:57 PM PST
Monkeyboy knows he can never assert because the moment he attacks anyone for infringement against some bogus claim in a MSFT patent, and they're all bogus, there will be 664 companies attacking MSFT's assertion and moving to invalidate the patent. This annoying tactic of Ballmer's is proof positive that MSFT is not a software company but a barely competent law firm (who can forget the anti-trust follies?) and Junior-Achievement organized crime ring that just incidentally develops unstable operating systems and bloated, nearly useless office 'productivity' software. What next from Monkeyboy? Walking around department stores, biting the faces of people carrying iPods? Stephen, please call up 30 patent lawyers and ask them to dissect Ballmer's claims. It's called reporting. Listening to a guy with a bizarre kind of Tourettes that provokes him to spout legal pornography and quoting him verbatim is just your weird way of making fun of the handicapped. Shame on you.
Reply to this comment
Why should MSFT Give Away It's patents
by pabonatl February 21, 2008 9:20 PM PST
I thinks it's great that MSFT is sharing information. Why should they provide a free lunch to developers claiming to make OSS, benefit from their years of work and billions spent. Those developers seeking to make commercial software should pay for privilege. It wasn't free to MSFT. Why should any government agency have the right to tell a company that it must support oss standards or any other software standards. The market should decide. I guarantee ya' that if MSFT doesn't produce software that customers want it won't be in business for long, but judging by it's last fiscal quarter, it's doing something right. Just look at Sun! She might still be around, but she ain't what she used to be! And, getting standards approvel for office file formats, is just a formality. Regardless, of what the outcome of the vote, OOXML is the STANDARD. 1,000,000,000 + installations says it is.
Reply to this comment View reply
Powered by Jive Software
  • About Underexposed

  • This blog sheds light on digital photography, science and open-source software--Stephen Shankland's eclectic beat. Shankland joined CNET News.com in 1998 after a five-year stint as a science writer. He's a lab rat who grew up in Los Alamos, New Mexico, and graduated from Harvard.

    Contact Stephen at Stephen.Shankland@cnet.com

Add this feed to your online news reader
Google
Yahoo
MSN

Stuff I'm reading:

Latest blog posts from News.com

Featured blogs

Beyond Binary by Ina Fried A look at how technology is changing our lives and at the people behind all that life-changing stuff.

Coop's Corner by Charles Cooper Charles Cooper weighs in on Silicon Valley hijinks, and he doesn't suffer fools gladly.

Defense in Depth by Robert Vamosi Covering the latest in computer viruses and computer crime.

Geek Gestalt by Daniel Terdiman At the tech culture nexus of video games, fire art, and virtual worlds.

Green Tech Fresh green tech news and commentary.

One More Thing by Tom Krazit Tom Krazit takes on the tech phenomenon that is Apple, and keeps a close watch on the chip industry.

Outside the Lines by Dan Farber When business and technology meet, that's when things get interesting.

The Iconoclast by Declan McCullagh Exploring the intersection of politics and technology.

The Social by Caroline McCarthy Exploring all facets of social media and tech culture.

Underexposed by Stephen Shankland Coverage of digital photography, science, and open-source software.

advertisement
Click Here
On GameFAQs: Call of Duty 4 FAQs, guides, & more!
Advanced
search
Advanced
search
Visit other CNET Networks sites: