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Date: Thu, 16 Sep 2004 23:05:59 +0200
Microsoft Corp. on Wednesday said that it is looking for ways to work more closely with
developers of the Open Office open source project, while at the same time, apparently
reserving the right to sue them, according to a legal agreement between Microsoft and Open
Office's major sponsor, Sun Microsystems Inc., made public this week.
The agreement in question was signed in April of this year as part of Sun and
Microsoft's landmark multibillion dollar settlement. It was released as part of
Sun's annual U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (news - web sites) filings
Monday.
The April agreement says that Microsoft can seek damages from Open Office users or
distributors for any copy of Open Office installed after April 1, 2004. However, users of
Sun's commercial distribution of Open Office, called StarOffice are protected from
legal liabilities under the agreement, said Russ Castronovo, a spokesman for Sun.
Open Office includes a word processor, spreadsheet and presentation software based on
technology Sun acquired in its 1999 purchase of Germany's Star Division Corp. Sun
released the code under an open-source license in 2000.
While the agreement effectively safeguards a large group of Open Office users from
Microsoft, it leaves new users vulnerable to potential legal action, said Richard Donovan,
head of the antitrust practice at Kelley Drye and Warren LLP in New York City, who has
followed the agreement. "From now on, you're on notice that if you're still
putting Open Office out there, Microsoft is reserving the right to go after you," he
said.
The fact that Sun has granted Microsoft the right to seek damages for Open Office after
the April 1 date may indicate a weakening in Sun's support for the open source
project, Donovan said. Agreeing to the clause would "only make sense if Sun had
decided as a corporate strategy that they did not intend to pursue Open Office very
vigorously afterwards," he said.
Sun's Castronovo disagreed with Donovan's assessment, saying that Sun's
support for Open Office was "as strong as ever" and adding that Microsoft has
always had the right to sue Open Office users. "That existed before, so nothing
changed in that respect, he said. "Open source software is typically provided without
warranty and liability coverage. Open Office is no different."
Open Office developers were somewhat confused by the "legalese" language in the
clause, said Louis Suárez-Potts, a senior community development manager with CollabNet
Inc., who works on the Open Office project. But Sun's level of support for the
project has not changed since the April announcement, he said. "I don't see this
special chumminess (between Sun and Microsoft) as affecting our work," he said.
But one open source advocate was troubled by the clause.
"It's ominous, because it means that Microsoft is holding open their right to
sue end users of Open Office for patent infringement. And Sun is protecting itself by
exempting StarOffice from exposure," said Pamela Jones, editor of the
Groklaw.net Web
site, which covers legal issues relating to Linux (news - web sites) and open source
software.
"It raises questions about Sun's motives in agreeing to such a deal, but it
really shines the spotlight on what Microsoft thought was important to exempt from the
Sun-Microsoft patent truce," she wrote in an e-mail interview.
The contract clause may have been necessary because of Sun's intimate relationship
with the Open Office project, analysts say. Sun engineers are the major contributors to
Open Office and the Santa Clara, California, company retains the copyright to all software
that is contributed to the project.
Because of this tight relationship, Microsoft may have felt it necessary to remove any
ambiguity about whether or not Open Office users are indemnified by the Sun-Microsoft
agreement, said Matt Rosoff, analyst with Directions on Microsoft Inc. "They wanted
to make it clear that ... just because Sun and Microsoft have a cross-licensing agreement,
that doesn't mean that Sun has the right to turn that indemnification over to an open
source organization," he said.
Ironically, the contract clause has come to light just as Microsoft is beginning to make
overtures toward the Open Office development community. Microsoft's German
subsidiary, Microsoft Germany GmbH, plans to exhibit at the Open Office Conference 2004
being held in Berlin next week.
Though Microsoft offers XML (Extensible Markup Language) support with its Microsoft Office
2003 productivity software, the company has been criticized by Open Office developers for
its refusal to participate in an OASIS-led (Organization for the Advancement of Structured
Information Standards) effort to develop a standard file format for productivity
applications.
Microsoft decided to participate in the conference to learn about Open Office and
"take an active part in the dialogue and to discuss important topics related to open
standards," said Sandra Schwan, a Microsoft spokeswoman, via e-mail. "This
conference is not about selling products," she said.
The Open Office Conference 2004 charges exhibitors 500 (US$613) to participate in the
conference. It attracted 300 attendees during its inaugural event last year.
Microsoft declined to comment on specifics of its April agreement with Sun.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&u=/mc/20040916/tc_mc/sunmi…
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Serge Marelli, Luxembourg
E-mail : serge.marelli(a)lilux.lu
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