Microsoft and open-source backers: best 'frenemies' forever?

Licence approvals, patent claims characterise complicated relationship between two sides

There's a scene in the 2004 movie Mean Girls in which the most popular girl in the film's fictional high school finds out that a friend who now is a fast-rising social rival plans to throw a party without inviting her.

"Who does she think she is?" sniffs the suddenly-threatened clique leader - or "Queen Bee," in the movie's parlance. "I, like, 'invented' her, you know what I mean?"

Take away the American slang and substitute "open-source" for "she," and you have an approximation of Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer's declaration almost exactly one year ago that Linux (playing the role of the movie's "Wannabe") "uses our intellectual property."

Ballmer's statement - along with follow-up claims by Microsoft executives that they had found violations of 235 patents in Linux and other open-source software - caused a sudden refrosting of what had been a slowly thawing relationship between the company and the open-source community.

Over the past several years, Microsoft - whose combative CEO once called Linux a "cancer" from an intellectual property standpoint - has set up its own open-source testing lab, begun hosting open-source projects for free on its CodePlex website and signed partnership deals with open-source vendors such as Red Hat's JBoss division, MySQL AB, SugarCRM, XenSource and Zend Technologies.

But by dangling the threat of patent-infringement lawsuits over the heads of users and vendors alike, "Microsoft opened up a can of worms with the open-source community that they have been attempting to close since then," said Charles King, an analyst at Pund-IT.

So the two sides remain wary "frenemies." And their friend-or-foe relationship has continued to evolve in both directions this month.

Microsoft did finally get an invitation of sorts to the open-source party on 10 October, when the Open Source Initiative (OSI) approved two of its software licences as valid means of distributing open-source technologies.

The company also continues to try to ingratiate itself with open-source backers. At the Web 2.0 Summit several days after the approval of the licences by the OSI, Ballmer promised an audience composed primarily of executives from high-tech start-ups that Microsoft would "do some buying of companies that are built around open-source products." That is something the software vendor has never done before, despite its long track record of acquiring technologies and swallowing start-ups.

Early in the week, Microsoft agreed to give developers of open-source workgroup server products access to Windows interoperability information and to slash the royalties that it will charge for using the information from 5.95 percent of a product's revenue to 0.4 percent. But that agreement was a grudging one, made to finally comply with a 2004 anti-trust ruling by the European Commission.

Microsoft also announced a collaboration and "intellectual property assurance" deal with TurboLinux on Monday - the latest in a series of controversial licensing agreements that has split the Linux camp between vendors that have agreed to the terms and others that have said they aren't interested in doing so.

Nobody believes that Microsoft has suddenly displaced IBM as the BFF - best friend forever - of open-source vendors.


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