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March 18th, 2008

Google playing politics with open source

Posted by Dana Blankenhorn @ 12:23 pm

Categories: General, Google, Infrastructure, Internet, Microsoft, mass market, publishing, values

Tags: Google Inc., Microsoft Corp., Business Competition, Internet, Open Source, Dana Blankenhorn

Eric Schmidt from news.comFor open source, a choice between Google and Microsoft is a false choice.

Yet that’s what Google CEO Eric Schmidt is offering, as when he claims a Microsoft-Yahoo combination might “break the Internet” or that the two might act against the openness of the Internet.

It’s a false choice, in part, because neither Google nor Microsoft can come to the argument with clean hands. Google’s open source efforts are mainly done under Apache licenses, which don’t require they be shared. It does not support the AGPL.

Its catchphrase to “do no evil” is like the Declaration’s statement that “all men are created equal.” It is an aspiration. Reality is different.

Schmidt is playing with open source here much as politicians have been playing with race, religion and gender. By creating a phony “either-or” choice they create majorities and minorities.

But open source is about consensus.

Consensus is when we all agree to agree, then build from there. Even Microsoft has been forced, lately, to bow to consensus. Its Open Specifications Promise may be pie crust, but that’s more than we’ve had before, and that’s progress.

Microsoft’s machinations around Office Open XML, which continue, are all aimed at offering reassurances that a proprietary standard need not be treated as one.  True or not, they are at least trying to appear less evil.

They are doing so because the Internet consensus has power. That power is more important than any single vendor’s commitment to it.

Business competition is inevitable. Neither the Internet nor open source are guarantees against it. Both offer a level playing field in which everyone’s evil becomes relative, and no one has the power to make it absolute.

Not Microsoft. Not Google. And that’s not a pie crust promise. It’s a promise we can build on.

Dana BlankenhornDana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for 30 years, a tech freelancer since 1983. You can follow Dana on Twitter. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 8 Talkback(s)
Schmidt hasn't lost his mind
...contrary to the assertion in the linked article.

Whatever valid criticisms there may be against Google (or anyone else in the broader OSS community, for that matter), it doesn't negate the f... (Read the rest)
Posted by: dumptux Posted on: 03/19/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Well Said  daMan25 | 03/18/08
Poison pie crust  Sysadm1n | 03/18/08
And how much has Google given back?  GuidingLight | 03/18/08
And how much has Microsoft given back?  Sysadm1n | 03/18/08
RE: Google playing politics with open source  storm14k | 03/18/08
I also don't support the AGPL  russell@... | 03/19/08
Google Summer of Code  russell@... | 03/19/08
Schmidt hasn't lost his mind  dumptux | 03/19/08

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