On Tuesday 07 May 2013 19:12, Wade Jenkins conveyed the following to
alt.os.linux.suse...
> Aragorn wrote:
>
>> On Tuesday 07 May 2013 00:12, Wade Jenkins conveyed the following to
>> alt.os.linux.suse...
>>
>>> ...] I believe that since suse got sponsored by microsoft in the
>>> past (an now?), [...]
>>
>> SuSE has never been sponsored by Microsoft, but what happened was
>> that Novell and Microsoft signed an "interoperability and
>> non-litigation agreement", which Microsoft took as an admission of
>> the presence of Microsoft intellectual property in GNU/Linux.
>
> What/Where is the MS IP in OpenSUSE? We might have it and dont know.
I'm sure that if there really were any Microsoft intellectual property
in GNU/Linux, Microsoft would - being the patent trolls they are -
already long have sued several GNU/Linux distributions or even Linus
Torvalds himself, or the FSF. Yet, the only thing they actually did on
the subject was launch the FUD that "they believe that there is
Microsoft intellectual property in GNU/Linux", by word of Steve Ballmer.
FUD tactics. Nothing else.
> Why should Novell feel forced to sign something like this?
That is a good question, and only the former Novell brass know the
reasons why they entered into such an agreement with Microsoft.
I mean, even the moniker "interoperability" alone doesn't cover anything
that any GNU/Linux distribution should concern themselves about, given
that GNU/Linux is and has always been far more "interoperable" than
Microsoft has ever been with anything other than its own products.
Hell, a GNU/Linux machine with Samba actually does a better job at
mimicking a Windows NT server than Windows NT itself.
>> Novell itself has always insisted that the deal had no such meaning,
>> but many other GNU/Linux distributions did also see it that way and
>> were quickly lining up to sign similar agreements with Microsoft.
>> The FUD machine was working.
>
> This is not true. I believe Novell was the first to sign that
> "agreement", then came Redhat I suppose.
No, RedHat have never signed such an agreement with Microsoft. However,
Linspire, TurboLinux, Xandros and a bunch of other (and smaller)
distributions did.
That's what I meant when I said that the FUD machine was working.
Novell signed the agreement, which Microsoft then alluded to in the
mainstream media as being an admission of guilt on the part of having
Microsoft intellectual property in GNU/Linux - even though Novell has
always denied both this and the fact that the deal was about this
subject - and with Novell as the example, the other, smaller
distributions followed suit and mindlessly allowed Microsoft to reel
them into non-litigation deals.
> However, Ubuntu is still free from Microsoft.
In essence, all distributions are "free from Microsoft", because there
isn't any Microsoft intellectual property in GNU/Linux. But indeed,
Ubuntu has not signed any interoperability deals with Microsoft, if that
is what you mean.
>> Novell has in the meantime been acquired by Attachmate, and its
>> patent portfolio - which may or may not include the copyrights to the
>> original AT&T Unix - was sold to CPTN Holdings LLC, a consortium led
>> by Microsoft.
>
> So Microsoft owns Linux you say.
No, that is not what I'm saying at all. What I am saying is that
Microsoft /may/ now have found a mechanism for obtaining ownership of
the _AT&T Unix_ copyright, because Novell was found to be the legitimate
owner of those copyrights in the litigation between Novell and the SCO
Group; a litigation during which the SCO Group received substantial
amounts of money from Microsoft in unclear transactions - once from
Microsoft directly and twice via a Microsoft sock puppet company.
The ownership of AT&T's intellectual property was the subject of the SCO
Group's litigation against Novell, and with the presumptuous and
expected outcome of this litigation in favor of the SCO Group in mind,
the SCO Group then also sued IBM over alleged inclusion of "their"
intellectual property - namely copyrighted AT&T Unix code - in IBM's
contributions to the Linux kernel.
Although it took a lot of time and a lot of money, the court ruled
_against_ the SCO Group in both litigations. These litigations did
however take their toll - in terms of time and money - from both Novell
and IBM, and presumably that was the intent all along, or at least, on
account of Microsoft's covert sponsorship of these litigations. SCO's
own motivations were simply to make themselves look good in the eyes of
their shareholders, as they were headed towards bankruptcy and they were
hoping that either Novell or IBM would make a bid to acquire SCO.
>> Microsoft is continuing to fight GNU/Linux all the way - the Secure
>> Boot requirement for Windows 8 certification is yet another such
>> strategy -
>
> UEFI again?
Well, UEFI in and of itself is something which GNU/Linux has supported
for way longer than Windows, but the extension of UEFI with the Secure
Boot module is a clear Microsoft anti-competitive strategy, yes.
They couldn't legally prevent the proliferation of GNU/Linux in the x86
market, so they're now seizing ownership of the (consumer-grade) x86
platform by way of market strategy: any computer vendor who wishes to
boast the "designed for Microsoft ® Windows ™ 8" sticker on their
hardware must now supply that computer/motherboard with a UEFI chip
which has Secure Boot. And on ARM - given the success of Android, which
is Linux-based - Secure Boot cannot even be disabled anymore.
>> but the unspoken truth about it all is that they're grasping at
>> straws, because they have no foot to stand on. Even if they were to
>> receive ownership of the Unix patents and copyrights through CPTN
>> Holdings LLC, it wouldn't mean anything on account of GNU/Linux,
>> since nothing in either GNU nor Linux uses any patents or copyrighted
>> code from AT&T Unix.
>>
>> That all said, Ubuntu is indeed clearly aiming at the cellphone and
>> tablet market - at the cost of a decent user interface for the
>> desktop workstations - and Shuttleworth really /is/ identifying with
>> Jobs and Gates. Ubuntu now even officially contains spyware and
>> adware, and for that reason alone, it should be shunned and
>> chastised.
>
> As root you may remove everything including spy/adware. This was my
> point. In Android is a bitch, even the directory structure is changed,
> you need rooting, busybox etc
Yeah... Google's motto is "Don't be evil", but I think that should more
properly read as "Don't be evil while anyone's looking." <grin>