How often people forget what distinguishes Microsoft from virtually any other large company. To Microsoft, GNU/Linux is not just a low-cost option for maintaining its operations [1, 2, 3]; it is a major threat to its very few cash cows. It's only natural for Microsoft -- particularly its investors -- to worry about what Microsoft's CEO calls the company's biggest competitor. This competitor is not a company. It's code that is being shared and constantly improved.
--Richard Stallman
Open source patents: Four companies offer green tech to public domain
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So it turns out that the Eco-Patent Commons, which I wrote about back in January, isn’t just another empty-handed cooperative industry effort.
Three new companies, Bosch, DuPont and Xerox, have joined the effort and another, Sony, has contributed an additional patent to the community.
“IBM does not need to antagonise the inevitable, unlike Microsoft.”IBM is very much focused on solutions which include services, hardware and systems architecture. Software is just one component among many, so IBM can afford to embrace GNU/Linux with patent concessions. IBM does not need to antagonise the inevitable, unlike Microsoft.
There is an ongoing argument over at LXer. It's about whether Microsoft is just barking forever and will therefore never bite Free software with lawsuits. In reality, Microsoft can use a Sisvel-like proxy [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] and we already saw Acacia assaulting Red Hat and Novell just 8 days after had hired a Microsoft general manager (of intellectual monopolies) to join its top ranks [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11]. We don't know if it was just a coincidence, but it also coincided with threats from Steve Ballmer.
This post is not about creating a scare. It's about analysing reality before (or in case) it strikes. If a company threatens GNU/Linux and someone reports the impact of it, that's not intimidation. It's an understanding of a threat, which can then be squashed. Knowledge is power. Ignorance is bliss, but only in the short term.
Under financial pressure [1, 2, 3, 4], Microsoft is more likely to act irrationally. Just watch this one from yesterday's news:
In one of the most extraordinary days in Wall Street’s history, Merrill Lynch is near an 11th-hour deal with Bank of America to avert a deepening financial crisis while another storied securities firm, Lehman Brothers, hurtled toward liquidation, according to people briefed on the deal.