Bonum Certa Men Certa

Request for Mono Licence from Microsoft: Ascending to Nicos Tsilas

Microsoft Licensing seems to be refusing to respond to our previous polite requests for a Mono licence [1, 2], so we are left with no choice but to contact individual people. See the previous requests for context. Here is the latest.

From: Roy Schestowitz To: ntsilas at microsoft.com Date: Wed, Nov 7, 2008 Subject: Request for a written license for ECMA 334 implementation

Dear Nicos Tsilas,

I tried contacting iplg@microsoft.com a couple of times over the past month, but was unable to receive a reply. I am therefore expressing my determination to receive a licence for commercial distribution of Mono, in accordance with your terms presented by Bob Muglia: http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,2060750,00.asp

"There is a substantive effort in open source to bring such an implementation of .Net to market, known as Mono and being driven by Novell, and one of the attributes of the agreement we made with Novell is that the intellectual property associated with that is available to Novell customers."

According to several legal analyses, Mono is not safe for those who are not Novell customers to use. I would therefore like to purchase a licence.

Best regards,

Roy Schestowitz


Funnily enough, the man who interviewed Bob Muglia in the article above became a Microsoft employee. Incestuous press, eh?

Let's hope for a prompt reply. We advise other people who are concerned about Mono (i.e. people who use Mono and are not Novell customers) to do likewise. Here are the contact details.

Nicos L. Tsilas
Senior Director IP & Interoperability Policy
Government and Industry Affairs



ntsilas at microsoft.com Tel (425) 705-8476 Fax (425) 708-5204

Microsoft Corp One Microsoft Way Redmond, WA 98052-6399


This is the person with whom you get in touch for 'permission' to make programs play nice with each other, for a fee (paid to Microsoft).

As a side note, the author of the OSP will come to the workshop on patents on in the middle of this month. It takes place in Europe where software patents are not legal (but Microsoft is breaking the rules anyway, using loopholes).

“[The EPO] can’t distinguish between hardware and software so the patents get issued anyway”."

--Marshall Phelps, Microsoft

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