Jeff Gould

July 1, 2009

Oracle, do the right thing, set Java free

To nearly everyone’s surprise, the Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division has thrown a last-minute banana peel in front of Larry Ellison’s bid to buy Sun and Java.
Oracle is about to acquire Sun’s monumental collection of Java intellectual property rights. This includes the patents and copyrights to the code embodied in the Java platform editions (EE, SE and ME) and in dozens of critical Java standards (JSRs) associated with the platforms, as well as the all-important test suites (JCKs and TCKs) that determine what software can claim compatibility with these standards and thus receive these IP rights.
This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for the Java community to wrest some concessions from the new owner of Java before the deal is set in stone.

Click to read more...


Analysis & Commentary

The Open Enterprise - All Titles

The Open Enterprise by Month

Email Jeff Gould

 

Search

ADVERTISERS


« SaaS and the renewal question | Main | Handicapping cloud computing: The big picture »
Monday
15Dec

Open source And SaaS shake up ECM

By Andrew Conry-Murray (InformationWeek)
Collaboration and interoperability are shaking up enterprise content management from the outside, but forces are also emerging from within that have the potential to reshape the market. Two companies in particular, Alfresco and SpringCM, challenge the dominant deployment model of proprietary, premises-based software.

Click to read more...

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend