Home Blog Page 9352

Chinese threat to GPL, and no action likely

Author: JT Smith

by Jack Bryar
Open Source Business

Is the GNU General Public License, which guides Free Software and much of the Open Source movement, a gentleman’s agreement — or is it an enforceable contract? We may soon find out. There has been a quiet but growing concern among some in the Open Source and Free Software communities that Chinese
Linux developers may be violating the GPL
, but there’s little consensus
about what can be done about it.Red Hat v.p. and managing director Mark White brought the issue to the surface
last week when he complained about the lack of cooperation he and others
in the Open Source movement were receiving from Chinese Linux
developers, and the developers of Red Flag Linux in particular. White
complained that Red Flag and to a lesser extent, TurboLinux and Bluepoint, were happy
“to take … [open] code … but are less welcoming to distribute their
changes.”

Sun Wah Linux, a part owner of the distribution, which has
been sponsored by and many believe is controlled by the Chinese People’s
Army, defended Red Flag’s actions. Albert Chung, chief marketing evangelist at Sun Wah Linux, suggesting that Red Flag’s changes, which include localizing programs to Chinese, allegedly fiddling with the kernel, and investigating various security “enhancements,” amounted to developing “applications.” He added, “People build applications [on Linux] … but the applications can be closed source. People may start on open source but might not continue to be 100 percent open.”

To date, White and others have reacted mildly to this apparent violation
of GPL, but have warned that Red Flag might have difficulty
integrating its products with software developed by the broader community if
it effectively forked the platform.

But Red Flag isn’t some Linux operation that forgot about the
rules. And the degree to which Open Source complaints matter to Red
Flag’s sponsors is not clear. As a commercial venture, Red Flag may
not even be a viable platform. According to several observers it ranks dead
last
among Linux distros. But the Chinese military and security apparatus
may not particularly care about commercial sales and may have little
incentive to share their alterations of the source code and expose them to
public scrutiny.

What can be done? Is there an issue here? Does the Open Source/Free Software
community have any effective leverage over Red Flag beyond complaining in
public? Supposedly, GPL licenses restrict the distribution of code unless changes are
open and credit is given. But is the GPL license, under which thousands of
developers have labored to improve the code base a legal, enforceable license?
And who can enforce it against a government-controlled corporation?

The World Trade Organization might be one avenue, but the WTO
Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS)

is over seven years old and technically out of date. Besides, many
would argue that it is toothless as an enforcement mechanism. TRIPS
contains language that specifically forbids many of the anti-competitive
practices Microsoft stands accused of, but it’s not enforced. Besides, the GPL
represents a different type of intellectual property case that WTO negotiators
probably never considered. There are general provisos concerning the
theft of intellectual property, but it’s hard to find anything in these
trade agreements that cover the types of issues brought about by Open
Source and violations of its licensing agreements.

Besides, who would complain? The WTO envisioned governments complaining about commercial interests of native companies being harmed,
but Linux is truly an international platform and there is no single
owner who is harmed. Is this a U.S. issue? A Finnish issue? The U.S.
government is unlikely to be a particularly forceful advocate on behalf of the
Open Source community. The Bush
trade and economic team
is largely populated by
Heritage Foundation conservatives
. Many of these activists have
long been suspicious of Linux and the Open Source and Free Software movements generally. In any case, there is no one at a senior level with the technical
chops needed to explain the issue and make it a top priority.

There is also the issue of demonstrable harm. According
to a top U.S. intellectual property law practice
, “Economics plays a large
role in determining whether to protect intellectual property … There are
no hard and fast rules… [outside of] obvious factors, including the potential
value of exclusive rights … and as collateral for securing
financing.” None of those considerations really address the impact of
violations of the GPL.

The whole issue would be new territory for U.S. trade officials. Recent
U.S. trade initiatives concerning intellectual property have
been limited in large part to actions protecting the patent claims of pharmaceutical companies. U.S. Trade representative Robert Zoellick has involved himself with allegations concerning
software piracy
, but has spent much of that time pressuring
economically vulnerable states such as the Ukraine and Paraguay that have large
organized crime factions operating outside of government control. As for
China, where very little operates outside of government control, the United States has largely taken government “campaigns” against piracy there at face value.

Meanwhile, complaints about hijacking of code and piracy of
software by both unofficial and semi-official China continue to circulate, just as
they have for at least six years.

Category:

  • Open Source

Sistina releases Global File System 4.1.1 with Linux 2.4.x support

Author: JT Smith

It’s at LinuxPR: Sistina, a developer of software that simplifies complex data storage and
drastically reduces storage costs, today announced the release of version 4.1.1 of
the Global File System (GFS) that includes new file locking features (fcntl),
performance improvements, and updated volume management tools.

XINIT Systems unveils high density blade-based Linux server

Author: JT Smith

From LinuxPR: XINIT Systems, the UKs’ only
exclusively-Linux server vendor and a leading provider of Linux and Open
Source solutions today unveiled the WL 3100 server. The 3100 series breaks the
server density limitation set by highly popular 1U solutions – with up to 10
independent server blades in a 3U-high chassis. Each server blade, a complete
computing system in its own right, can be configured with either an Intel Pentium
III or Intel Celeron processor, up to 3GB of DDR SDRAM and 20GB of system
storage. Embedded in each blade are two 10/100 Intel EtherExpress network
interfaces which can be configured as independent interfaces or set up for
adapter teaming – effectively doubling network bandwidth.

Midgard Weekly Summary released

Author: JT Smith

It’s posted at LWN.net and includes this: “Stuttgart is the place to be this weekend. Linuxtag is up and running and
Midgard is part of the excitement. A number of Midgard authors and users
will be at the Midgard booth running demos and meeting users new and old.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Redmond Linux declares independence from per-seat licensing trend

Author: JT Smith

From LinuxPR: Redmond Linux Corp. has a firm stand
against the practices of pay-per-download and per-seat licensing. Redmond
Linux users will always be able to download the ISO images of Redmond Linux
and get free support from the mailing lists.

The raw packet panic

Author: JT Smith

J. Lasser writes, “Column about Linux and Windows XP’s raw sockets capability is
here
on SecurityFocus.
” From the story: “Linux and Unix already offer raw sockets. Only the root user has the
ability to generate these packets, and if Windows XP does not
similarly restrict the ability to use raw sockets, then Gibson can
properly complain that Windows is not doing its job. But the feature
itself simply brings Windows in line with what Linux and Unix have
been doing for years.”

Category:

  • Linux

Motion to dismiss filed in Fordsucks case is now posted online

Author: JT Smith

2600.com: “We have filed a motion to dismiss in the Ford lawsuit, which has been in the judge’s hands since May 18. It’s now available here.”

Caldera: ‘openssh’ cookie file problem

Author: JT Smith

LinuxSecurity: “Due to unsafe temporary directory usage an local attacker
could remove any file called ‘cookies’ on the system.”

Category:

  • Linux

Open-source casts its own .Net

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET: “Ximian, a Boston company that works on the Gnome user interface for Linux, is scheduled to
announce Monday a software project called “Mono” intended to compete against Microsoft.Net,
according to sources familiar with the plan.

The move, if successful, could increase the importance and popularity of the Microsoft.Net
software-as-a-service strategy while undermining Microsoft’s control over the software itself.
But analysts caution that .Net itself is a nascent technology, and any attempts to clone it are
likely to be even more immature.”

Category:

  • Open Source

IBM exec: MS ‘arrogant’ on open source

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET: “Microsoft is trying to shore up its defenses as the tide is coming in,” Adam Jollans, marketing
manager for IBM Software for Linux in the European region. “They’re trying to stop the tide, but
the tide comes in whether you want it to or not.”

Category:

  • Open Source