[Clo] RE : Microsoft's Patent Promise
Jean-Marc Vaillancourt
JMVaillancourt at scics.gc.ca
Ven 10 Nov 12:00:56 EST 2006
Ça confirme ce que je croyais avoir compris, mais en pire...
J-M
-----Message d'origine-----
De : clo-bounces at linux-gatineau.org [mailto:clo-bounces at linux-gatineau.org] De la part de Mathieu Brabant
Envoyé : 10 novembre 2006 11:52
À : clo at linux-gatineau.org
Objet : [Clo] Microsoft's Patent Promise
Je suis tombé sur cette lettre sur le site de Growlaw, elle intéressera
sûrement ceux qui suivent le déroulement de l'entente...
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Letter to the FOSS Development Community Regarding Microsoft's Patent Promise by Bradley M. Kuhn, Chief Technology Officer, Software Freedom Law Center
Last Thursday, Novell and Microsoft announced a new collaborative effort
involving both licensing and technology. The Software Freedom Law Center has
been following the situation, and as its CTO, I've held a particular interest
in how it will impact Free Software developers. One result of the agreement,
Microsoft's patent pledge to developers, has received significant interest
from the Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) development community.
A careful examination of Microsoft's Patent Pledge for Non-Compensated
Developers reveals that it has little value. The patent covenant only applies
to software that you develop at home and keep for yourself; the promises
don't extend to others when you distribute. You cannot pass the rights to
your downstream recipients, even to the maintainers of larger projects on
which your contribution is built.
Further, to qualify for the pledge, a developer must remain unpaid for her
work. Experience has shown that many FOSS developers eventually expand their
work into for-profit consulting. Others are hired by companies that allow or
encourage Free Software development on company time. In either situation,
Microsoft's patent pledge is voided for that developer.
Even if the patent pledge were to have some use aside from these problems, our
community simply could not rely on it, since Microsoft has explicitly
reserved the right to change its terms at any time in the future. A developer
relying on the pledge could wake up any day to find it revoked. She'd have to
cease development on her non-commercial and (mostly) non-distributable
modifications that were previously subject to the covenant.
In short, the pledge applies precariously to developers who work in a vacuum:
those who write original software in their spare time, receive no payment for
it, and do not distribute it to anyone under the GNU GPL. It's worse than
useless, as this empty promise can create a false sense of security. Don't be
confused by the illusion of a truce; developers are no safer from Microsoft
patents now than they were before. Instead, Microsoft has used this patent
pledge to indicate that, in their view, the only good Free Software developer
is an isolated, uncompensated, unimportant Free Software developer.
(http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20061109111321376)
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