Hello there,
this was on the front page of economic times - 15th july 2001. the article is long. I 
spent a lot of time typing it. So PLEASE DO READ IT::

<b>A microsoft corp. effort to vilify Linux and other "open source"  software appears 
to be backfiring, with the campaign drawing criticism from legal experts as well as 
unifying the movements' often fractitious group af leaders.</b>
The initiative had included speeched and statements in recent weeks by Microsoft 
officials, and reached a crescendo of sorts in a recent chicago sun-times interview 
with microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer, in which he called Linux "a cancer that 
attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches."
<b>The Redmond, Wash, Company appeared to be fighting an uphill battle, since 
open-source code has become importand for a growing number of companies.
one of them, in fact, has been Microsoft itself. The company's Hotmail free e-mail 
service for years used the FreeBSD operating sysytem and the apache web server, both 
leading open-source programs. After buying Hotmai in 1997, Microsoft tried to replace 
the FeeBSD with its own Windows software. Hotmail insiders said that the company found 
that windows couldn't handle the heavy load, something Microsoft at that time declined 
to discuss. Yesterday, Misrosoft said that since last summer, hotmail had been running 
on both Windows 2000 and Sun Solaris operating system from Sun Microsystems inc.</B>
Craig Mundie, a Microsoft senior vice president, said that the company's main 
objection is with the General Public License(GPL), under which Linux is distributed. 
That license requires companies that incorporate GPL software in their own programs 
to, in turn make those programs freely available. The GPL is usually considered the 
most restrictive of the several open-source licenses now in use; Microsoft says that 
it threatens all intellectual property at companies using it.
<b>But in its statements, Microsoft tends not to draw attention to the fact that GPL 
also allows companies to write their own proprietary programs that work in connection 
with a GPL program, as long as those programs themselves dont contain any GPL 
code."You can write a proprietary word-processing program that runs on Linux - that's 
fine." said Jorge L Contreras, who deals with opensource issues at Hale and Dorr, 
boston's largest law firm. "microsoft is spinning this the way they feel the need 
to."</b>
Indeed, many large software companies, including Oracle Corp., sell proprietary 
programs that work with linux, and Tivo inc. uses Linux in its proprietary digital 
vieo recorded product. Other companies, like IBM corp. have massive inhouse Linux 
projects underway. What's more, other opensource software, such as FreeBSD, is 
distributed under licenses that contain virtually no restrictions at all.



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