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The only reasonable response to last week's Microsoft/Novell embrace is to abandon the Suse operating system and stop all voluntary work on Suse and OpenSuse projects. Why? Because Novell have signed their own death warrant. And the danger is they just might take Linux down with them.

The deal was announced last Thursday when Microsoft revealed plans to make Windows compatible with Suse Linux produced by Novell. The two companies are supposed to help market both Windows and Suse, according to Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer. (Yes, this is same Steve Ballmer who, a couple of years ago, was calling Linux a cancer and communism.)

Writing on Groklaw the redoubtable Pamela Jones said;
Those of you who think the most important goal is market share will be happy. Those of you who think freedom matters will want to throw up. Excuse me while I go throw up.

As for Novell, if history means anything, it will end up Microsoft roadkill. It's so funny to me that nobody ever remembers what comes *after* the Embrace.

The main thrust of the deal is once again about infringement of unspecified patents. The SCO case – apparently Microsoft-funded to the tune of $100 million – is collapsing with Linux being clearly exonerated. So this deal is Microsoft's second Linux FUD attack. They're suggesting that if you use Linux, we'll sue you. Unless you use Suse Linux.


Bruce Perens:
Even if everyone were to be protected regarding software that Novell distributes, there's the tremendous collection of Free Software that they don't distribute. A logical next move for Microsoft could be to crack down on "unlicensed Linux", and "unlicensed Free Software", now that it can tell the courts that there is a Microsoft-licensed path. Or they can just passively let that threat stay there as a deterrent to anyone who would use Open Source without going through the Microsoft-approved Novell path. With this agreement, Microsoft also secures Novell's assistance in pushing a pro-Software-patenting agenda in Europe and elsewhere.


A point Andrew Orlowski took in up The Register
Microsoft wanted this agreement so badly it's agreed to pay an unspecified sum to Novell for the Covenant. This might strike you as odd - and you'd be right. Companies that license intellectual property do so in the expectation that they receive a royalty, rather than dish one out. But the downstream benefits to Redmond are enormous. Novell has handed it a priceless legal filip, and as it begins to collect royalties from other businesses that use Linux, it'll doubtless see it as a worthwhile down payment.


PJ again on Groklaw:
I think Microsoft doesn't care what you run if it's entertainment you are after, as long as it's DRM'd so they control access that way, and so long as there's a "Microsoft tax", so to speak, on Linux, which encourages the continued use of Office in the workplace as the de facto standard. It does intend to kill ODF, I gather, and Novell is apparently going to help them try.


Mary Jo Foley on ZDNet:
The crux of the deal revolves around patents and IP licensing. It sounds like Microsoft had been discussing the feasibility of forging some kind of agreement with other Linux vendors, too, but Novell was the first to bite.

Tim Patterson, one of the commenters on her site:
...it was clear that the patent agreement was a defacto acknowledgement by Novell that Linux violates MS patents.

So MS has found the big Linux vendor foolish enough to "legitimize" a patent claim on Linux by Microsoft. This makes it easier for MS to claim that Linux infringes their "IP" and claim that Novell recognized this "fact" and struck a deal.

Now it's only a matter of asserting claims against all distributors except Novell thereby thinning the herd and finally, deal with Novell SuSE last.


Mitch Ratcliffe:
I'm not saying Microsoft is evil, only that is makes these interoperability deals to defeat its partner, not to help them....Linux may win someday, but Novell will be found dead one morning with mysterious bite marks on its neck.


Warren Togami
I hope I'm wrong. I hope that in the next few weeks, I'm not writing about Microsoft suing Red Hat. That Linux company has had more than enough trouble recently with Oracle. Or, maybe it won't be Red Hat. Maybe Ubuntu would be the target.

Why do I fear Microsoft might try this? I fear it because Microsoft's proxy war on Linux via SCO is finally coming to its endgame. And no one, probably not even in SCO's own offices, believes that SCO will win.

So, what can Microsoft do? It can bend, ever so slowly, to the simple fact that Linux is here to stay -- but at the same time, it can free itself to attack individual Linux companies in the court room.

Cynical? Yes. But after covering Microsoft for almost two-decades, I trust Microsoft the least when it looks like they're co-operating with others the most.

Comments

They can never bring linux down. Not while I'm using it anyway.

Remember the song "Never Smile at a Crocodile"?

Particularly the lines "Don't be taken in by his welcome grin, he's imagining how well you'd fit within his skin"

How do Microsoft even find any staff? Working for them would have the same job cred as being a tax inspector. I wonder if the lower level staff at Microsoft are embarrased at what their head office does..

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