Re: Oracle buying Sleepycat, JBoss, and - Mailing list pgsql-advocacy

From Jonah H. Harris
Subject Re: Oracle buying Sleepycat, JBoss, and
Date
Msg-id 36e682920602150555p2ed0551flfa385add45d5c2e0@mail.gmail.com
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In response to Re: Oracle buying Sleepycat, JBoss, and  (Christopher Browne <cbbrowne@acm.org>)
List pgsql-advocacy
On 2/15/06, Christopher Browne <cbbrowne@acm.org> wrote:
The world rejoiced as kaare@jasonic.dk (Kaare Rasmussen) wrote:
>> - Perl users usually depend on DBI; an "attack" on DBI could make
>>   PostgreSQL "less usable" for them.
>
> How do you see an attack on DBI could be possible? AFAIK DBI has the same
> license as Perl, is released on CPAN and i behaving like any other CPAN
> module.

If Oracle hired off all the people that have worked on the DBI
implementation, that would make it troublesome for a team to emerge to
continue to support it.  There would be a "learning curve" period, at
the very least...

It's nice that this was mentioned because it's true with all open source projects regardless of the license.  Sure, PostgreSQL's IP can't be bought and used for ransom (like GPL'd stuff), but a commercial company hiring ALL the developers would certainly put some control restrictions on the open source project.  Of course, anyone that wasn't hired and remained with the open source project could probably make a killing in support and contributions :)

The GPL, while nice in its intent, sucks for businesses.  This is especially true when companies like MySQL aren't responsible and base a majority of their product on a ton of IP they don't own.  Who gets screwed?  It's actually MySQL's customers.  MySQL could go out of business, oh well.  But the customers that wanted to ship an embedded MySQL now have to bow down to Oracle whether it's directly or indirectly.

-Jonah

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