Here is the official link: http://www.sco.com/products/openserver6/mysql.html

SCO states that they will distribute MySQL with a commercial license.
According to this they do not plan to stick with GPL...

Bye
Bgs

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
__________________



Mirza <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on 05/09/2005 14:31:12:


<pissed>
I would like someone from MySQL AB to clarify issue with SCO asap. I wouldn't like to use technologies for my business that later could be used against me (in legal sense). Does MySQL AB understand that it helps


funding their legal cases against us (GPL users) ? If someone feels OK with SCO partnership, good luck, but (being long time MySQL user and alpha bug reporter) I would switch to Embedded PostgreSQL myself and encourage other people to do the same. I use _tons_ of GPL software so should I help funding of my own annoyance (albeit poorly supported with facts) ?
</pissed>


All the press releases I have seen appear to originate from SCO. There is not, in any of them, any suggestion that money has passed or will pass from MySQL to SCO. SCO has for a long time been one of the many varieties of Unix that MySQL supports. MySQL cannot stop SCO from distributing their product (hypocritically) under the GPL. On the other hand, if they allow SCO to include "offical" releases of MySQL, they may get some support customers - which is where they earn their real income. The press blurbs are essentially saying that SCO resellers will market MySQL Network - to the benefit of MySQL. If there is any money flow, I would have thought it would be more likely to be the other way: SCO paying MySQL to ensure that one of the premier Unix applications remains supported on their platform.

Of course, MySQL may say otherwise, but I think this is a piece of SCO hype intended to imply MySQL support of SCO when all they are really doing is supporting their own product on whatever platform their customers may choose - even when that platform is marketed by a company who many of us find totally repulsive. If you let yourself be hyped into dropping MySQL, you will be harming a company that is, in my opinion, a model of how to provide full commercial quality software (or better) with an Open Source licence, while not (I think) harming SCO in any way.

        Alec Cawley



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