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Changes in open-source licensing hot topic at LinuxWorld
By Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols and Peter Galli
May 26, 2005, 19:00 GMT

(UPI) -- The move away from one-size-fits-all licensing is a hot topic at 
the LinuxWorld show. However, analysts say that the real changes in 
open-source software development may be coming from the enterprise 
businesses that support it.

NEW YORK - Open-source licenses are changing, causing ripples in the Linux 
community. However, analysts here at the LinuxWorld Summit conference 
predict that greater change is due for open-source development and its 
business models.

Before his Wednesday session on licensing issues, Steven Henry, an IP 
(intellectual property) attorney with the Boston-based IP specialist law 
firm Wolf Greenfield & Sachs PC, spoke with Ziff Davis Internet News. He 
said that open-source software licensing is like ice-cream: many different 
flavors and types.

While \"one-size licensing doesn`t fit all,\" he pointed to market forces 
that are pushing open-source licenses and their development models to change 
and consolidate. 

Enterprise Linux users say their switch to the open-source operating system 
brought big cost savings and reliable security. Click here to read more.

Henry observed that the GNU GPL (General Public License) is now being 
rewritten by Eben Moglen, the legal counsel for the FSF (Free Software 
Foundation) and others. No date has been set for this Version 3 of the 
license.

Rewriting the GPL, however, will not be a quick process, and the process may 
be complicated. According to Moglen, the minimum time for such a process is 
a year and the closure date is undetermined.

In particular, Henry said that dealing with patent issues will be critical 
for the new GPL. Unfortunately, patent and the \"proprietary rights [that go 
with them] are the elephant in the room,\" he said. \"Proprietary right 
issues must be dealt with if open source is to survive.\" For example, he 
said Sun Microsystems Inc.`s CDDL (Common Development and Distribution 
License) is open only to the point where developers start trying to take 
advantage of it being open-source. \"The CDDL is clearly completely 
incompatible with GPL,\" Henry said.

This was an understandable business decision, Henry continued. \"Companies 
aren`t going to throw away their patent rights. They want to gain 
something.\"

Meanwhile, the Open Source Initiative recently acknowledged that there are 
simply too many open-source licenses. And a number of developers confirmed 
to Ziff Davis Internet News that it`s simply beyond them to keep track of 
the various requirements placed on them when using software that`s covered 
by two or more open-source licenses.

While some companies, Henry said, make an effort for the legal department to 
oversee the use of any outside code, he`s not sure how well that policy is 
being followed in practice.

Some developers in businesses, however, said they weren`t especially worried 
about being sued for their use of open-source code.

Josh Levine, the chief technology and operations officer for E-Trade 
Financial Corp., said that while there had been some risk of lawsuits 
(because of The SCO Group Inc.`s threats) around Linux for a while, \"it`s 
no longer high on the legal department`s radar.\"

At the Retail Linux Solutions conference in Chicago this week, Harry 
Roberts, CIO and senior vice president for Boscov`s Department Store LLC, 
told the handful of attendees that the legal issues that SCO had raised with 
regard to Linux \"is now less of a concern than it was a year ago as SCO is 
unlikely to still be around,\" he said.

While there was speculation that there could be additional patent and 
copyright suites against Linux, \"we see this as a minor risk,\" Roberts 
said.In <http://said.In> addition, open-source software companies that check 
code for licensing violations such as Black Duck Software Inc. are helping 
to settle the minds of worried CIOs.

There is a far more significant \"risk\" to open-source developers, 
according to Henry. With the embrace of open-source by big business, 
cultural changes are coming along with the adoption. \"Open-source is no 
longer a grass-roots movement. It has been co-opted,\" he said.

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Because of this change, open-source software is no longer developed by 
communities using Eric Raymond`s bazaar model of development.

\"The idea that a software community is there for all open-source projects 
is no longer true,\" said Henry. Instead, companies now employ developers to 
write open-source programs.

In these cases, \"if a company that makes an open-source package abandons 
it, it`s abandoned.\"

In five years, Henry predicted that open-source revenue will overcome the 
free software religion. \"Linux might be the first, biggest and perhaps only 
major bazaar-style open-source development project to get traction in the 
commercial sector,\" he said.

In the future, open-source and proprietary programs will be competing on an 
even playing field and there will be little difference between how they will 
be developed, he said.

As a result of the enterprise`s penetration of open source, the open-source 
licenses will change as well. Exactly how this change will play out isn`t 
clear, but Henry expects \"economics to prevail over doctrine.\" 

One shape this might take, according to Steve Garone, vice president and 
senior analyst for the research house Ideas International Ltd., is Sun`s 
CDDL. \"Sun just might be on the right path,\" he said.

Copyright 2005 by Ziff Davis Media, Distributed by United Press 
International 


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