Failure to Give Credit to the Origins of SuSE GNU/Linux
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2007-03-26 05:27:17 UTC
- Modified: 2007-03-26 05:29:03 UTC
Last week, Justin Steinman made a very embarrassing mistake. He made unsubstantiated claims about Novell's relationship with the Free Software Foundation. He
later apologised, having been 'caught'. Some people wondered whether he was simply uninformed at the time, or perhaps he thought he could get away with a little
PR spin. He is, after all, in marketing, but his position requires that he should double-check facts, which he should be intimately familiar with anyway.
Novell and the
FSF are not friends anymore. The
SFLC has made it its objective to isolate Novell from the Free Software community. In another recent piece, Bruce Perens' Web site gives Novell
another little punch under the belly. Remember
Novell's "I'm Linux" spoofs?
This advertising is for "Linux", "Novell" and "SUSE" and has nothing to say about GNU or the FSF. For that, you'll still have to head over to the engineering department for a brochure and a lecture.
This is part of a recurring pattern. Attribution is a very important thing, particularly when those attributed are volunteers. Novell is one among several distributors who have perhaps crossed the line between the Open Source world and the proprietary world, which honours and thrives in trademarks, selfishness, and secrecy. Let us hope that Novell does not end up corrupting the meaning of "Open Source". It is something that
its new 'partner' does deliberately in order to dilute the term, as shown below.
This is typical trend riding fluff. If you go the Aras website you read about "Microsoft Enterprise Open Source Solutions", which is comical in and of itself.