Comments on: Rebuttal to Rob Weir on a So-called ‘OpenDocument Format Civil War’ http://techrights.org/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/ Free Software Sentry – watching and reporting maneuvers of those threatened by software freedom Thu, 05 Jan 2017 01:24:31 +0000 hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.9.14 By: Bruce http://techrights.org/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/comment-page-2/#comment-2330 Thu, 11 Oct 2007 15:53:43 +0000 http://boycottnovell.com/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/#comment-2330 I wouldn’t take what anyone says as unbiased. Sun would like to reduce critiques of OOo to a problem of corporate rivalries. But I don’t think that’s the whole story, and that the calls for reform are bigger than that.

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By: JP http://techrights.org/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/comment-page-2/#comment-2311 Wed, 10 Oct 2007 07:29:34 +0000 http://boycottnovell.com/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/#comment-2311 I am more concerned about The OpenDocument Foundation having been bought out by Microsoft. It is a obvious target for Microsoft’s machinations. Why is is being allowed to use the OpenDocument trade mark?

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By: chemicalscum http://techrights.org/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/comment-page-2/#comment-2307 Wed, 10 Oct 2007 01:59:42 +0000 http://boycottnovell.com/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/#comment-2307 Moonlight Packages can mounted on servers outside the US to avoid legal threats the same way as for DeCSS and ffmpeg. It stinks but it is a work around and distributions can find ways of pointing to the repositories.

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By: Robuka Kenderle http://techrights.org/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/comment-page-1/#comment-2306 Wed, 10 Oct 2007 01:46:57 +0000 http://boycottnovell.com/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/#comment-2306 Good stuff as always.

>Microsoft is throwing its money all over the place to >protect OOXML,

I was reading up on the european court case and the involvement of my new heroes Allison and Trigdell, the two guys from FSF europe and the italians lawyer and found out that Microsoft paid 3.8 BILLION dollars to buy out Sun, Real Networks and other companies so they would drop the case until all that was left was the Samba crew and european Free Software foudation. Instead of running roughshod over them, the Microsoft lawyers got their butts handed to them by developers in court.

Microsoft has money to burn and there are always people willing to be bought (hi Novell), so it is no surprise that they are throwing money at OOXML problem.

The Grateful Dead singer wrote:
> I think Novell has taken the uneasy, ideologically impure > route of working with the beast to extract as much
> technical info on MS file formats as they can.

THAT is the VERY reason why I am extremely wary of a trojan horse unless Novell developers are planning to gouge their own eyes afterwards.
I dont think I have to explain the concept of cleanroom implementations when applied to software development and the dangers this collaboration entails not for Novell but for all of us who Novell could care less about (Im one of those hobbyist referred to in the extortion deal they signed)

BTW, interoperability is a red herring used by Microsoft to promote their deals. We all know that interoperability problems are mainly a one way street. Open source code is,.. well,.. open. The other code isnt.
I hate when we parrot the line about making interoperability work as if the problem is from our side.

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By: Roy Schestowitz http://techrights.org/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/comment-page-1/#comment-2283 Mon, 08 Oct 2007 19:13:14 +0000 http://boycottnovell.com/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/#comment-2283 These packages need to be downloaded via Novell, which is death to the idea of decentralisation (there are proprietary bits too, whose dissemination Microsoft can track via Novell).

Additionally, Novell would probably claim that only its own customers have ‘protection’ for Mono — however meaningful that may actually be.

http://boycottnovell.com/2007/10/01/novell-mono-patent/

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By: Serenitude http://techrights.org/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/comment-page-1/#comment-2282 Mon, 08 Oct 2007 18:29:00 +0000 http://boycottnovell.com/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/#comment-2282 In an interesting aside to another piece linked to in the article, I initially trusted Open Source, and then found Linux, through my positive experience with Open Office for Windows. I wonder how many others this is true for?

On OOo and Moonlight, hasn’t Novell also said that any user of any distro will be free to download and use them? Although it’s a packaging lockout (and therefore anti-open-source by nature), individual users will still be able to use these packages, if I read the announcements correctly.

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By: Roy Schestowitz http://techrights.org/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/comment-page-1/#comment-2281 Mon, 08 Oct 2007 18:04:21 +0000 http://boycottnovell.com/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/#comment-2281

Time will tell whether Microsoft has taken advantage of Novell,or whether Novell has taken advantage of Microsoft in this matter. Maybe a bit of both?

I believe that the imbalance in payments speaks volumes, not just in Novell’s case. To Microsoft — this is slush funds. It achieved a lot by pulling Novell into this deal. See http://boycottnovell.com/2007/08/20/proxy-map/ .

Certainly you are correct in scrutinizing the patent side of the conversion work. If this just becomes a back door way to push Microsoft IP into OpenOffice and Linux via Mono then I will not be pleased.

I also fear that Novell’s forking of OOo is related to this, Simon Phipps said that it was more of a competitive issue, not a community issue. I suggest that you read:

http://boycottnovell.com/2007/03/14/novell-openoffice/

I firmly believe that Novell will build a version OOo which only Novell can use. Moonlight is a similar story because it cannot be packaged with anything other than SUSE.

http://boycottnovell.com/2007/09/10/moonlight-only-novell/

There is a lot more information that we could share, but hopefully these pointers, along with the cross references therein, serve a need.

Thank you for your time, Rob.

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By: Rob Weir http://techrights.org/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/comment-page-1/#comment-2280 Mon, 08 Oct 2007 17:08:46 +0000 http://boycottnovell.com/2007/10/07/odf-rebuttal-racketeering/#comment-2280 Hi Roy, Thanks for the rebuttal. I could always use a new butt.

(Just kidding)

From what I can tell, Novell is not simple. There are certainly elements within that seem to lust after Microsoft’s approval, but there are others who appear to be genuinely interested in creating a competitive, open source alternative to MS Office. I think there is room to both criticize the wisdom of some of the deals that have been made, while also encouraging those whose actions and statements are more enlightened.

As with any company of non-trivial size, there are going to be different factions inside, pulling in different directions. What may appear as a uniform voice and long-term strategy may actually be the result of a clash of ideas, reaction to short term conditions and financial constraints. This is how I look at any company, whether Novell, Microsoft, Adobe or IBM for that matter. Is the public voice a consensus, or an uneasy, unstable balance of power that will change tomorrow? It is often hard to tell.

So, although I think that Microsoft’s motivations in the interoperability space are less than genuine, I think Novell has taken the uneasy, ideologically impure route of working with the beast to extract as much technical info on MS file formats as they can. Time will tell whether Microsoft has taken advantage of Novell,or whether Novell has taken advantage of Microsoft in this matter. Maybe a bit of both?

Certainly you are correct in scrutinizing the patent side of the conversion work. If this just becomes a back door way to push Microsoft IP into OpenOffice and Linux via Mono then I will not be pleased.

In any case, Novell is engaged in interoperability and getting their hands dirty, working on both the standards side of it as well, both in the OASIS ODF TC as well as the ODF Adoption TC. Compare this to the OpenDocument Foundation, which has taken an openly hostile stance on ODF, and has promised to fight against adoption of ODF 1.2 in ISO. So, for today at least, Novell is not my foremost worry.

Thanks,

-Rob

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