Red Hat Still Not Interested in 'Interoperability Tax'
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2007-06-17 01:55:19 UTC
- Modified: 2007-06-17 15:48:18 UTC
Earlier today,
Shane pointed out that Ubuntu is
not about to fall victim to Microsoft's pressure. I fact, this was just one among several clarifications that Mark Shuttleworth had made recently. At one point he even went further and
accused Microsoft of 'racketeering', which is illegal. It is worth re-emphasising that the most popular (as in "widely used") desktop distribution, just like that in the server space, refuses and will continue to refuse to sell out. A couple of days ago, Red Hat repeated
its stance on this issue.
"We continue to believe that open source and the innovation it represents should not be subject to an unsubstantiated tax that lacks transparency," she said in an e-mail.
This echoes the argument that Red Hat made quite some time ago.
Open standards are the only way forward. Not even a 'portfolio' of sellouts can change this. It will only make those who stand stubborn more popular and attractive. I moved to Ubuntu two days ago.