Jonathan Schwartz: “[L]ater this week, we’re going to use our defensive portfolio to respond to Network Appliance, filing a comprehensive reciprocal suit. As a part of this suit, we are requesting a permanent injunction to remove all of their filer products from the marketplace, and are examining the original NFS license – on which Network Appliance was started. By opting to litigate vs. innovate, they are disrupting their customers and employees across the world.
“In addition to seeking the removal of their products from the marketplace, we will be going after sizable monetary damages. And I am committing that Sun will donate half of those proceeds to the leading institutions promoting free software and patent reform (in specific, The Software Freedom Law Center and the Peer to Patent initiative), and to the legal defense of free software innovators. We will continue to fund the aggressive reexamination of spurious patents used against the community (which we’ve been doing behind the scenes on behalf of several open source innovators). Whatever’s left over will fuel a venture fund fostering innovation in the free software community.”
Bravo.
Okay, now that’s interesting. I wasn’t even aware this was in the works. Maybe I should read the paper more..
I wonder what options Sun really has with NFS?
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Dustin Puryear
Author, “Best Practices for Managing Linux and UNIX Servers”
http://www.puryear-it.com/pubs/linux-unix-best-practices
You were supposed to deliver ‘Sun Indiana’ yesterday, hmm???
Latest Indiana release date I saw was midnight Oct 31, in the Goa timezone! I don’t think they were joking…
Here it comes: http://dlc.sun.com/osol/indiana/downloads/current/in-preview.iso