| MS Offers to License Some Code for a Fee in Lieu of Documentation |
| Wednesday, January 25 2006 @ 11:35 AM EST |
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A leopard can't change its spots. So it is we find Microsoft announcing in a press release cunningly titled "Microsoft Goes Beyond EU Decision by Offering Windows Source Code" that they will license "some" of its code, specifically "all the Windows Server source code for the technologies covered by the European Commission’s Decision of March 2004", instead of complying with the EU Commission's requirement that it provide documentation. The Wall St. Journal [sub req'd] reports: Under the EU ruling, Mr. Smith said the company wasn't obliged to release the code, but Microsoft determined "that the source code is the ultimate documentation, it is the DNA." In addition, he said the company was offering 500 hours of "free technical support" to help software developers decipher the code. If Microsoft, in 12,000 pages, couldn't be comprehensible in describing its own code, will 500 hours of tech support and a pile of their code they can't describe themselves be clearer? In Europe, the Commission has ordered Microsoft to license its protocols -- rules of the road -- to help rivals' server software work with other servers and with its Windows operating system, because it competed unfairly in the late 1990s. Let me get this straight. The EU Commission orders Microsoft to hand over clear documentation. They hand over documentation, but it's incomprehensible, so no one can follow it. The EU Commission threatens to fine Microsoft $2.4 million every day until it complies, so instead of complying, Microsoft throws some code on the table and says, figure it out yourself. No documentation. For a fee. Have I got that right? You'll recall that when the EU Commission announced they had chosen Neil Barrett, from a list provided by Microsoft, to be the Monitoring Trustee, it said this is what Barrett was to monitor, in part: For example, as regards the interoperability remedy, where Microsoft is required to disclose complete and accurate interface documentation which would allow non-Microsoft work group servers to achieve full interoperability with Windows PCs and servers, his expertise might be used in assessing whether Microsoft’s protocol disclosures are complete and accurate, and whether the terms under which Microsoft makes the protocol specifications available are reasonable and non-discriminatory. Microsoft turned in 12,000 incomprehensible pages instead, and now, when it wasn't acceptable to the EU Commission, they propose offering the code itself and 500 hours of tech support. Nice "plea bargain". It will be interesting to see if the EU Commission accepts the offer. All I can think of is whether there will be SCO-like infringement lawsuits down the road against folks who looked at the code and then write code Microsoft might claim they copied from their licensed code. Please, someone else cover those lawsuits, if they happen. And if you write FOSS, talk to your lawyer before you so much as sniff at this code. [ UPDATE: The Free Software Foundation Europe is now warning about the code as well, reported by Heise: Joachim Jacobs, spokesperson for the Free Software Foundation Europe writes in his first reaction that the EUC has demanded that the protocols should be accessible. However, MS wants to license the code. Nobody has asked for that, and if it happens, developers can be vulnerable to infringing copyright because they might have had access to the source code. Heise also tells us this: The spokesperson for EU-commisioner Neelie Kroes said that Microsoft until now has insufficiently complied with the requirement to open the technical information for the server protocols and noted that wether Microsoft complies with the EU-requirements is decided by the Commission, not by Microsoft. Translation by a Groklaw's ruurd. Thank you.] Here's what Microsoft had to say for itself, in its press release: Today, Microsoft General Counsel Brad Smith announced Microsoft’s decision to license all the Windows Server source code for the technologies covered by the European Commission’s Decision of March 2004. The company is making this voluntary move in order to address categorically all of the issues raised by the Commission’s December 22, 2005 Statement of Objections. That document asserted that Microsoft’s prior technical documentation provided insufficient information to enable licensees to implement successfully certain Windows Server communications protocols.
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