The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA) today commended the Free Software Foundation and the Software Freedom Law Center for their significant work in introducing Version 3 of the General Public License (GPL).
Read more »Tomorrow [Friday] GPLv3 is Released
Tomorrow at noon GPLv3 will be released. I was on one of the committees, so it's a relief it's finally done. I just wanted to say out loud how hard it was to try to get everyone's wants included. But the effort was real. And not everybody on the committees were fanbois either, from what I saw on the committee I was on. Lots of give and take.
Read more »Red Hat tight lipped on Microsoft talks
The debate over who in the Linux camp will next get into bed with Microsoft is back on, after Red Hat's chief executive admitted to holding patent talks.
The only question is over what terms and at what point.
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ComputerWorld - Free Software Foundation to unveil new GPL Version 3
This begins as a reasonable recap of the new provisions in GPLv3, then as they run out of material (or think so), it degrades into a parade of filler. Hence, "It concerns me a little bit that we're kind of getting politics into the legal documentation". The FSF getting political? That's unpossible!
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Transcript from Jan. 23, 2007 Novell Hearing
We finally have the transcript from the court for the January 23, 2007 hearing in SCO v. Novell. This is the hearing on Novell's motion about the money, on the question of whether SCO owes Novell for the money it took in from Sun and Microsoft in 2003, or as I call it Novell's "give us our money before it's all gone" motion. SCO also filed a Cross Motion, also heard that day
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Linux Camp Divided on Microsoft Deals
The Linux community is splitting — right down the middle, at this point — over Microsoft Corp.’s controversial claimsthat the open-source operating system infringes on patents it holds.
Last Tuesday, Paris-based Mandriva became the third Linux vendor within five days to say it isn’t interested in signing a licensing deal with Microsoft to avoid possible infringement claims.
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What Netflix Needs is Linux
In the past, I have always found it comical when companies have found themselves buying into the need to protect their content with DRM because of the pressure from the music and movie industries. Well, it seems that Netflix is no different, but I have to ask: is the DRM protection really needed in their case for online movie viewing?
Read more »Appeal judge moots 'middle ground' in Vonage patent flap
The black clouds that for the last three months have been hanging over VOIP service provider Vonage parted ever so slightly today, allowing through the tiniest sliver of sunshine as a federal appeals judge raised the possibility of a compromise in its patent war with Verizon.
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Open sourcers rattle EU sabre at BBC on demand player
The BBC is being threatened with an anti-trust challenge in Europe over its use of the Windows Media format in its on demand service, iPlayer, which is in the final stages of testing.
Read more »LANKA BUSINESS ONLINE
"Sri Lanka's open source software community is promoting free programs that can be used on operating systems like Microsoft Windows, without breaking anyone's copyright."
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Linux movie codecs and DVD experience
You’ve downloaded and installed Linux, but now you realize that you can’t play movies on it! In some countries playing DVD files through DEcss is illegal, so in many cases Linux distributions choose not to let you watch DVD’s right out of the box.
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Patent threats bad for Microsoft business - Red Hat
Microsoft going around threatening customers with patent litigation does not make good business sense, says Red Hat's David Postel, who was speaking in Johannesburg last week.
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June 4 Novell Summary Judgment Hearing Transcript
"Here, thanks to Steve Martin, is the June 4th summary judgment hearing transcript in SCO v. Novell. This was the hearing on the dueling slander of title claims. So each side gets to reply to the other, so that is why it's not the usual three-part arrangement."
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GPLv2 or GPLv3?: Inside the Debate
The third version of the GNU General Public License (GPL) won't be released until the end of June. Yet, already, it is proving one of the most controversial developments ever in the free and open source software (FOSS) communities.
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