Alvaro Herrera <alvherre@commandprompt.com> writes:
> I would be worried if I were you (or Joshua Drake for that matter): does
> the agreement apply to commercial companies deriving products from
> PostgreSQL as well?
Interesting point. It's doubtless unwise to take this press release as
being an accurate guide to the terms of the license, but what it says
is
: According to the terms of the OIN license, the components covered by
: the agreement include not only the Linux kernel and associated GNU
: applications, but also other open source projects included in Linux
: distributions.
which to me says you're covered as long as your code is commonly
included in Linux distributions. Hence, proprietary derivatives
would *not* be covered. I'd guess that Oracle would have a hard
time suing for any patent violation embedded in the freely
distributed Postgres code, but any technique appearing only in
the proprietary extension would still be at risk.
IANAL, etc. I assume that EDB and Greenplum will have their
lawyers scrutinizing this deal on Monday morning ;-) ... I'd
be interested to hear what the experts' conclusion is.
regards, tom lane