http://www.idg.se/ArticlePages/idgnet.asp?id=4635

Software licenses don't work


2003-07-04 01:18
SAN FRANCISCO - IDG News Service\San Francisco Bureau - Robert McMillan

PeopleSoft Inc. may be spending its nights tossing and turning about a
hostile takeover by Oracle Corp, but maybe Oracle should be the one
losing sleep. At least that's what O'Reilly & Associates Inc. Chief
Executive Officer Tim O'Reilly believes.

EBay Inc. will someday buy Oracle, open source licenses don't work, and
the software market is about to change forever. These are three of the
predictions that O'Reilly, a well-known publisher of technical books and
an open source advocate, had to offer in an interview conducted the week
before his company's annual Open Source Convention. The conference, which
attracts a who's who of the open source community, will be held in
Portland, Oregon, next week.

IDGNS: You're keynoting at the Open Source Convention next week. What
will you be talking about?

Tim O'Reilly: I think there's a paradigm shift going on right now, and
it's really around both open source and the Internet, and it's not
entirely clear which one is the driver and which one is the passenger,
but at least they are fellow travellers. 

Let me give you an example of what I would consider a paradigm failure
that happens all the time in the open source community. The critic of
open source says, "Open source is just not very good at building
easy-to-use software." And the open source defender says, "Oh, you
haven't seen the latest version of Gnome (GNU Object Model Environment).
It's really getting pretty good." 

Nobody is pointing out something that I think is way more significant:
all of the killer apps of the Internet era: Amazon (.com, Inc), Google
(Inc.), and Maps.yahoo.com. They run on Linux or FreeBSD, but they're not
apps in the way that people have traditionally thought of applications,
so they just don't get considered. Amazon is built with Perl on top of
Linux. It's basically a bunch of open source hackers, but they're working
for a company that's as fiercely proprietary as any proprietary software
company. 

What's wrong with this picture? Well, one thing is that one of the
fundamental premises of open source is that the licenses are all
conditioned on the act of software distribution, and once you're no
longer distributing an application, none of the licenses mean squat. 

I would go further than the fact that the licenses don't work. I would
also point out that these applications are fundamentally different in
that their interfaces are composed much more of data than they are of
just software. My basic premise is, "Let's stop thinking about licenses
for a little bit. Let's stop thinking that that's the core of what
matters about open source. And that's not to say that they're completely
unimportant, it's just that they can blind (us) to other things that are
perhaps more important.

IDGNS: Like what?

O'Reilly: The commoditization of software. Open source is a contributor
to the commoditization of software, but it's not the only contributor.
Open standards lead to commoditization. The Web browser is proprietary,
but it's a commodity. 

Basically, we're really seeing the development of something that's
analogous to hardware with the IBM (Corp.) PC. If you look at what
happened to the hardware business, there was a transitional period where
everybody tried to play by the old rules. It wasn't until Dell (Computer
Corp.) figured out that, no, the rules really are different, and the
business levers are different, that we saw somebody figure out how to
really leverage commodity hardware.

Ian Murdock, the guy who started Debian, and now runs a company called
Progeny (Linux Systems Inc.) is right on track with this. Instead of
seeing Linux as a product, he sees Linux as a set of commodity software
components he can put together for different purposes.

IDGNS: Isn't that how IBM sees Linux?

O'Reilly: Absolutely, but I would say that IBM's current strategy with
open source is very close to the Compaq (Computer Corp.) strategy in the
early days of the PC. There were a whole bunch of vendors who took this
commodity thing and tried to tweak it and improve it and add value in
some way, and differentiate themselves that way. And so (with) WebSphere,
for example, (IBM says) "OK, we'll put together a bunch of open source
components with a bunch of proprietary components and we'll bundle it up
in some way that everybody will say, "OK, I guess I've got to pay for
it." That's a lot like Compaq's strategy. 

Somebody will come along eventually and put together the complete open
source stack. If you look at the history of the PC, the Compaq strategy
didn't fail. It's just that the Dell strategy was marginally better. The
whole essence of the Dell approach was build to order, and I think we're
going to see the emergence of that business model for Linux.

IDGNS: Is the open source software stack mature enough for there to be an
open source Dell? 

O'Reilly: Probably not yet. There's this great quote from (optical
character recognition and speech technology pioneer) Ray Kurzweil. He
said, "I'm an inventor, and I started looking at long-term trends because
an invention has to make sense in the world in which it was finished, not
the world in which it started." A lot of people are doing plans for the
world that's rapidly ending, and you have to do your business plan for
the world that's coming.

No, it's not mature enough yet, but that's why there's opportunity there.

IDGNS: Where else do you see opportunities created by these changes?

O'Reilly: The value will be driven up the stack to data. For this I go
back to my Amazon and Google examples. Google may have less of a lock.
They probably have more of a traditional software lock in that they're
just better at what they do. But there's not much difference between
Barnesandnoble.com (LLC) and Amazon.com in the software they have. What
are different are the customers they have, and the amount of customer
contribution to their data.

With eBay it's even clearer. The fact is, it's the critical mass of
marketplace buyers and sellers and all the information that people have
put in that marketplace as a repository.

So I think we're going to find more and more places where that happens,
where somebody gets a critical mass of customers and data and that
becomes their source of value. On that basis, I will predict that -- this
is an outrageous prediction -- but eBay will buy Oracle someday. The
value will have moved so much to people who are not now seen as software
suppliers. 

Amazon is the furthest along this path, in a lot of ways. Amazon really
understands that they are becoming a platform. They are becoming the
e-commerce engine of an awful lot more of the Internet than people
realize. It's not just a site, but they're running e-commerce for other
people, they've built Web services, so people are building applications
that (Amazon doesn't) control that use some of their back-end services.
They're really moving down that path, and I think other people like that
will emerge, and we'll suddenly go, "Oh my God, how did they become such
important players?" It will be just the way that IBM thought that
Microsoft was not really a competitor until one day they went, "Oh my
God, these guys are in the driver's seat." 

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