Novell Boycotts Prove to Be Effective
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2007-03-04 06:57:30 UTC
- Modified: 2007-03-04 06:57:30 UTC
Among the sites which explicitly called for a Novell boycott (e.g. Blogspot's boycott-suse, OpenAddict),
BoycottNovell.com appears to be the only site which has remained active. Launched in November 2006, the site has served hundreds of thousands of pages, which got its message out. While
BoycottNovell.com can't take credit for anything -- as it is clearly a
community effort -- a
new ECT article validates the assumption that Novell is still being frowned upon in the Linux community. The headline states "Linux Community Still Outraged by Novell Pact".
Leaders of the open source movement are at work on a legal strategy that could let Novell retain the benefits of the deal, while preventing Microsoft from using it to attack other open source firms. They're drafting a new version of the General Public License or GPL, the Free Software Foundation's legal rulebook, which governs how Linux and other open source code can be used.
Comments
Doug Charles
2007-03-04 08:01:09
Nope, doesn't appear to be very effective. The FSF types continues to isolate themselves from open source.
Ian
2007-03-05 14:47:40
Draconishinobi
2007-03-06 05:40:58
Ian
2007-03-06 13:23:10
Those are some hefty differences or deficiencies depending on what you're looking at. The groupware part of it is the biggest thing which would push us to Microsoft.
Rich Morgan
2007-07-10 15:36:14
Anyway, just to reiterate, Open Addict is still firmly against any deal that could compromise the freedom established with the GPL.
Roy Schestowitz
2007-07-10 16:53:00