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Open Sources | Rodrigues & Urlocker » Novell responds: 'Stop fixating on the patent deal'

March 22, 2007 | Comments: (0)

Novell responds: 'Stop fixating on the patent deal'

In case it's not abundantly clear, I despise Novell's patent pact with Microsoft. But, as Bruce Lowry wrote me today (because comments are turned off on the blog, due to a massive spike in comment spam), there may be some bright spots on the Novell horizon that I have not reported. I'm willing to "concede" that, and am happy to hear about it. (I was there in the early days of Novell's Linux movement, after all.)

I just wish Novell wouldn't stifle its positive movement with a massive step in the wrong direction. The patent deal represents this. Do you think Microsoft offered this (as well as the interoperability work) to Novell first? Read between the lines of Bill Hilf's earlier comments on the topic. Of course Microsoft tried Red Hat first. Red Hat almost certainly went along with interoperability, but wouldn't swallow the patent pill, because it's hugely negative for Linux and open source generally.

I wish Novell saw this.

In the meantime, Bruce wishes I saw a few other things. His words, with his permission:

Your opposition to the Novell-Microsoft patent deal is pretty clear. But I'd challenge you on a number of statements you're making, as well as some of the assumptions you seem to be working under. First, you suggest we're getting nowhere in our Linux business in the absence of the deal. That's just not true. Numbers from the leading market research firm who counts these things (whom I won't name because I haven't gone thru the formal process of getting approvals) show us picking up almost 10 percentage points in their most recent report. This has not been at the expense of Red Hat as much as at the expense of other distros. But we are picking up share. This is showing in our financials as well - we had 46 percent year on year recognized revenue growth in Linux last quarter, which had very little to do with the Microsoft deal. Invoicing for Linux last quarter, even absent the Microsoft deal, was up 50 percent, as we said on our earnings call. So we have been growing our Linux business. The Microsoft deal will help grow it faster, but we were growing it before.

Second, I'd take issue with your claim we aren't doing much to protect Linux. You mention SCO, and I appreciate that. By the way, that case is ongoing, and we continue to spend money fighting that. We were founding members of the Open Invention Network, spending millions of dollars to buy the CommerceOne patents and put them out to the community. We made a patent pledge several years ago that said we'd use our patent portfolio to defend a patent attack on open source. We see the Microsoft patent agreement as just another level of protection for those customers who want it.

Third, you seem to suggest we're waving the IP flag to get customers to buy our stuff. This is just flat wrong. Our approach to this deal has been focused on interoperability. That's what the customers care the most about. As Ron has said before, Microsoft introduced the patent proposal. We felt that the overall package was important enough for customers that we worked with them to come up with the patent agreement. You seem to suggest we've been inconsistent on this issue. We haven't. We've said from the get-go that this was about interoperability for customers. Some may care about the patent issues. Others may not. What our agreement does is remove the issue from the table for them.

I'm sincerely glad to hear things are going better than they appear, Bruce. I truly am. Please continue to pass along good news. Except when it's Microsoft delivering Novell's good news. Because I just can't believe that Microsoft has your best interests at heart, or Linux's. It has a fiduciary duty that cuts firmly in the opposite direction.

Posted by Matt Asay on March 22, 2007 02:00 PM


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Bruce seems content to discount that Microsoft is using Novell in the deal as a welcome mat on which Novell's customers tread en-route to a good dozen blind-siding lock-ins.

Microsoft lock-ins; not Novell lock-ins, I'm afraid.

Posted by: Sam Hiser at March 22, 2007 04:30 PM

So let me get this straight- you attack Novell with NO facts at all, all speculation, and you blame it on you not having access to the facts. Everything Bruce sent to you today is comnmon knowledge. Everything you have attacked Novell on is pure speculation.

I'm amazed Bruce even gave your rants acknowledgement and for someone who apparently makes a living off of open source to claim that this is new info to them is absurd.

You're lucky they don't send their lawyers after you ....

Posted by: dcperspective at March 22, 2007 07:02 PM

You don't have to believe me. You can listen to what the market thinks: http://finance.google.com/finance?q=NOVL. Take a look at the 5-year results. The only time the market has believed Novell's Linux story is when we started it. Since then, quarter after quarter, Novell has failed to impress.

Bruce's thoughtful response notwithstanding, I'm still not convinced. I guess I talk to too many Novellites. I'm not convinced that all the Linux revenues is direct Linux revenue. And what "other distributions" would Novell be taking paid Linux revenues from? Caldera? Or...Netware? Or what? I respect your defense of Novell. I used to have to do that, too. Did it for three years.

But, again, you need not believe me. You can look at what the market thinks. Not very much.

Posted by: Matt Asay at March 22, 2007 08:41 PM

Sam has a good point. OOXML may be only the beginning. Need we mention that Novell's OpenOffice for Windows offers features that the Linux version is not allowed to have?

Posted by: Roy Schestowitz at March 23, 2007 04:35 AM

First of all, I would like to state that I am a huge Novell fan. I hate to bring this up Novell, but MS is going to eat you for lunch. They practice evil things, remember?

Posted by: /dave at March 24, 2007 01:21 PM

Novell people need to wake up a smell the coffee. When you sign the type of deal they signed, the world will not let it "blow by", and if it did, shame on the world.
Interoperability for open source software does not need a special deal. The code and API's are open and available.
So to ask people not to fixate on it, is ridiculous. To ask people to "forget, accept, and move on" is what Microsoft is hoping and expecting to happen.
This screwup is the worst of Novell's history, in terms of enabling a monopolistic player to continue spreading FUD to keep raking in $2 Billion + in "profit" per quarter. I say it is the worst since it not only portends an ugly future for Novell (operating with the MS "hand on their head", and hoping when the 5 year deal runs out that their new master is kind to them), but it sets that precedent that screw a bunch of others.
These highly paid Novell guys running the place are clearly in it for the 1-4 year pay package plan...
Scary, scary stuff...

Posted by: John Dumal at March 24, 2007 07:35 PM

@Roy Schestowitz

There's really nothing in the Novell edition of OpenOffice that is not allowed to be in the OpenOffice.org version. All's posted to the community. They're (Sun/openoffice.org) just slow in adopting enhancements and that's the only reason Novell releases it own branded builds. Regarding the openXLM, that's just a plugin which you can install if you like, if you feel you do not ned it, don't download and install the plugin. Simple as that.

Posted by: Sebastiaan Veld at March 26, 2007 06:36 AM

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