MESSAGE
DATE | 2003-09-11 |
FROM | Ruben Safir Secretary NYLXS
|
SUBJECT | Subject: [hangout] [html@ssc.com: SuitWatch - September 11]
|
SuitWatch--September 11
Views on Linux in Business
--by Doc Searls, Senior Editor of Linux Journal _________________________________________________________________
This Week's Sponsor: Adaptec
Turbocharge Your Network Applications
Enhance the performance capabilities of your network applications. Download our free application briefs, "Unleashing File Server Performance" and "Enhancing Linux Cluster Performance", to learn how you can improve file-serving performance by over 100% and reduce Linux cluster latency by 40% with Adaptec's TCP/IP Offload NICs. Visit our Web site: http://www.adaptecconnect.com/go/nac2 for details. _________________________________________________________________
"911"
Thursday, September 11, 2003--The numbers 911 had a different meaning before two years ago today. When suicide hijackers attacked and destroyed the World Trade Center in New York City on September 11, 2001, those three numbers came to mean the first "day which will live in infamy" since December 7, 1941, when the attack on Pearl Harbor was given that five-word label by Franklin D. Roosevelt.
What made 9/11 infamous was not only that something terrible happened that day, but that we were changed by it. And by "we" I mean everybody in the civilized world.
Andy Grove says an "inflection point" is "an event that changes the way we think and act". History changes course as it passes inflection points, which are accompanied, Grove says, by "a troubling sense that everything is different".
Some things, however, are more different than others. The biggest difference after 9/11 was in our tolerance for terrorism. Since 9/11 we have been engaged in a "war on terrorism", in which the US has led military invasions and (what we politely call) "regime changes" in Afghanistan and Iraq. That kind of thing would have been unthinkable--or at least politically impossible--before the 9/11 attack.
And the smallest difference?
Well, Linux comes to mind--not because it hasn't changed, but because it has grown relentlessly. That kind of growth brings to mind a different kind of inflection point: what Malcolm Gladwell calls "the Tipping Point" (in his book by the same name). Gladwell borrows the term from epidemiology, where it means "that moment in an epidemic when a virus reaches critical mass". In technology, tipping points are reached when contagions of popularity start surging toward ubiquity.
It's right to expect some kind of Newtonian response to a growth surge like the one Linux is experiencing right now: an action/reaction kind of thing. That, I believe, is why history called forth SCO, its lawsuit against IBM and its relentless FUD campaign against Linux and open source. Linux use is growing so rapidly--and calls into question so many default assumptions--that backlash is inevitable.
Today, as I'm writing this (on Tuesday, 9/9, before I leave on a trip), we're experiencing a round of volleys between SCO's Darl McBride and leaders of the Open Source movement. Early in the day, McBride issued a "Letter to the Open Source Community" that, among other things, accused Eric S. Raymond of concealing the identity of the perpetrator of a denial of service (DoS) attack on SCO:
There is no question about the affiliation of the attacker -- Open Source leader Eric Raymond was quoted as saying that he was contacted by the perpetrator and that "he's one of us." To Mr. Raymond's partial credit, he asked the attacker to stop. However, he has yet to disclose the identity of the perpetrator so that justice can be done.
Later in the day, Eric Raymond and Bruce Perens published a response: http://newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=03/09/09/2355214&mode=thread&tid=1 1 that said (among other things):
Your statement that Eric Raymond was "contacted by the perpetrator" of the DoS attack on SCO begins the falsehoods. Mr. Raymond made very clear when volunteering his information and calling for the attack to cease that he was contacted by a third-party associate of the perpetrator and does not have the perpetrators identity to reveal. The DoS attack ceased, and has not resumed. Mr. Raymond subsequently received emailed thanks for his action from Blake Stowell of SCO.
Eric also wrote a longer and more emotional open letter: http://www.armedndangerous.blogspot.com/2003_08_17_armedndangerous_arc hive.html on his own web log. Here's how it ends:
Show us the overlaps. If your code has been inserted in our work, we'll remove it--not because you've threatened us but because that's the right thing to do, whether the patches came from IBM or anywhere else. Then you can call off your lawyers and everyone will get to go home happy.
Take that offer while you still can, Mr. McBride. So far your so-called 'evidence' is crap ; you'd better climb down off your high horse before we shoot that sucker entirely out from under you. How you finish the contract fight you picked with IBM is your problem. As the president of OSI, [the role of] defending the community of open-source hackers against predators and carpetbaggers is mine--and if you don't stop trying to destroy Linux and everything else we've worked for I guarantee you won't like what our alliance is cooking up next.
And in case it's not pellucidly clear by now, not one single solitary damn thing I have said or published since 6 March (or at any time previously for that matter) has been at IBM's behest. I'm very much afraid it's all been me, acting to serve my people the best way I know how. IBM doesn't have what it would take to buy me away from that job and neither do you. I'm not saying I don't have a price--but it ain't counted in money, so I won't even bother being insulted by your suggestion.
You have a choice. Peel off that dark helmet and deal with us like a reasonable human being, or continue down a path that could be bad trouble for us but will be utter ruin--quite possibly including jail time on fraud, intellectual-property theft, barratry and stock-manipulation charges--for you and the rest of SCO's top management. You have my email, you can have my phone if you want it, and you have my word of honor that you'll get a fair hearing for any truths you have to offer.
That evening, on "The Linux Show" (a weekly Tuesday night radio show where I'm a regular), Eric offered an explanation:
At SCO forum, Jeff (Gerhardt) read out a message from me basically extending an olive branch to Darl McBride. And the following day Darl McBride came out with an interview: http://www.nwfusion.com/news/2003/0825scoatta.html, where he said, "It's all a huge conspiracy! IBM is pulling everybody's strings!. Eric is on IBM's payroll! Everything he says is being dictated by little green men from Armonk! ...
So I wrote back my little peroration to Darl.... It was kind of heated, because I thought that was appropriate.
To get some clarification about what exactly happened, I said to Eric, "He basically accused you of illegally harboring...".
Eric continued: "After that happens, the DoS attack starts. I put out a statement that said "Look, if this is one of us, it's got to stop." And I got a phone call from a person who said, "I know who is doing this...I'm not going to tell you his name, but I'm going to tell you that he has agreed to stop, because you asked."
"Was this phone call from somebody you knew?" I asked.
Eric responded:
The person who actually perpetrated the attack was using his friend, somebody I did not know, as a proxy, so that he could disclose the information that he was shutting down the attack and that he had basically seen the light and thought my ethical argument was a good one. So I put out a statement that said, "Yeah, it really was one of us, and I'm ashamed about that, but instead of burying this under the rug, we need to face and process as a community the fact that this type of behavior is not acceptable and never do it again."
Consider the alternate futures here. I think that if I hadn't spoken up, it would have come out anyway. And the community as a whole and I would have looked a lot worse if it came out and we didn't put our objections to this on record. Now the story we can tell is, "Look, it happened, Open Source community leaders said this is not acceptable, and it stopped."
For a more removed perspective on the conflict, I like "Clearing the Chaos from SCO": http://governmentforge.org/archives/000064.html, by Tom Adelstein at GovernmentForge.org. Here's an excerpt:
The organizing principles of American thought have little to do with individual eminence and everything to do with the common good. Over two hundred years ago, the 13 colonies articulated the basis for a life void of dominion by others. We do not view ownership of property as the primary prerequisite of human rights. (Feudalism views property ownership as the prerequisite for human rights.) We view the common good as the reason for having a country, a government and the rule of law. Consider this a doctrine for the common good.
The American experience provides us with the basis for our world view and unless seen through our eyes, others can only speculate as to our motives. Also, the doctrine of common good extends no further than our own borders. These organizing principles exist for citizens of the United States.
A prime example came to mind today when Adam Differed of the New Zealand Times said, "Lawyer Craig Horrocks sees a need to defend the intellectual property issues around Linux, particularly in areas where the upstart operating system threatens Microsoft domination".
Only in America would someone understand that the existence of "intellectual property" has no meaning. To take that a step further, the idea of anyone having domination has little to do with intellectual property. Microsoft's and SCO's fate became sealed once they began to threaten the common good of their countrymen.
The argument people must understand involves provisions established to allow Microsoft and SCO time to collect tolls on their works. In both cases, evidence exists to establish abuse by each of those companies. If that evidence appears articulate to a judge and/or jury, the companies will lose their legal status to collect tolls.
The existence of Linux under any circumstances cannot be threatened in the United States of America. No matter what SCO's lawyers, Boies, Schiller & Flexner say, the US Copyright Act does not take priority over the GPL license. The context of the Copyright Act and the GPL exists as the Public Domain. Every other consideration exists as content within the context of the common good.
Mr. Darl McBride apparently sees the world differently. The Economist says that at "a more general level (and surprisingly for a Linux distributor), he [McBride] found the entire free-software trend 'communistic'."
I suppose the United Kingdom-based Economist sees Mr. McBride's views as possibly valid. From London, perhaps the idea of property still forms the basis of their worldview. Contrary to my friend's belief that England populated our shores and built our infrastructure, they did no such thing. To confuse the doctrine of common good with the Communist Manifesto indicates how wide of the mark Mr. McBride took aim.
I think Tom is wrong to see feudalistic bases for what we read about the cited cases from New Zealand and the UK. I also don't think Microsoft's fate is sealed--not with $32+ billion in sales, a 13.5% sales growth rate and an income of nearly $10 billion that's growing at a rate of 27.6% per year. (SCO, on the other hand, seems to have an existence that consists increasingly of bellicose grandstanding--funded, in part, by license fees paid to the company by Microsoft. The gargantuan size of SCO's lawsuit against IBM alone reminds me of the old joke about the flea floating down the river on his back with a hard-on, yelling "Raise the bridge!")
But I love what Tom says about the common good. Because it applies not only to our government and the rule of law, but to the fundamental altruisms of market economics. Many markets--including some huge ones--are created and sustained by common goods that are free. Linux is about as far from "communistic" as infrastructure can get. It's something the free market has done with the freedom to make itself larger and more supportive of more businesses.
Linux is free infrastructure, created by participants in the open marketplace. As free market infrastructure, Linux creates many more opportunities than it destroys. That's why the problem for SCO and Microsoft is not that Linux and open source devalue their intellectual properties, but that both companies fail to see obvious opportunities in a marketplace that is open to countless participants and unwelcome to manipulative monopolists and litigious losers.
Let's look at that marketplace for a minute.
It is impossible to separate the growth of Linux and open source from the growth of the Internet. Look at the Netcraft Web server market share trends: http://news.netcraft.com/. Apache, which runs mostly on Linux and BSD (both open-source operating systems), now serves up pages for 67.45% of the Web's active sites, a surveyed total from 13,371,621 servers. Microsoft's IIS is second at 24.23% and has declined (while Apache has advanced) almost steadily since peaking near 35% in March 2002.
Nobody owns the Net, yet look at all the business the Net supports. I just checked out some statistics at ePayNews.com: http://www.epaynews.com/statistics/ , which gathers numbers by the truckload. They're amazing. For example, Gartner Group describes a staggering increase in B2B transactions on the Net. Between 1999 and 2004, it sees worldwide growth rising from $145 billion to $7.29 trillion. The only number that goes down is the US percentage of the total, dropping from 63% to 39%. Where transactions happen, markets exist. Just ask Amazon, Merrill-Lynch, Goldman Sachs, Orbitz, Burlington Coat Factory or any of the other companies whose computing infrastructure relies on Linux.
I don't know about the rest of you, but to me those numbers in the last paragraph seem a fine memorial to the late World Trade Center.
-- Doc Searls: mailto:doc-at-ssc.com is Senior Editor of Linux Journal. His monthly column in the magazine is Linux for Suits, and his biweekly newsletter is SuitWatch. _________________________________________________________________
Upcoming Events
Gain the Advantage at SD Best Practices
SD Best Practices Conference & Expo, coming to Boston September 15-18, offers practical training on how to incorporate best practices, quality design and proven management techniques into your development projects. SD Best Practices features industry renowned speakers, over 100 classes and tutorials, keynotes, the Expo, parties, special events and more. Register: http://www.sdexpo.com for a Conference Pass or a free Expo Pass today! Simply use the code 3EMAIL71 when registering.
17th Systems Administration Conference (LISA 2003)
Co-sponsored by USENIX, the Advanced Computing Systems Association and SAGE, the System Administrators Guild, October 26-31, San Diego, California. Guru and Birds-of-a-Feather sessions offer individual advice and discussion. The hallway track will be running for informal discussions with your peers and other experts in all areas of system administration. Visit the LISA web site: http://www.usenix.org/events/lisa03 for a complete agenda and to register. _________________________________________________________________
To remove yourself from this list, see www.ssc.com/mailing-lists: http://www.ssc.com/mailing-lists. _________________________________________________________________
----- End forwarded message -----
-- __________________________ Brooklyn Linux Solutions __________________________ DRM is THEFT - We are the STAKEHOLDERS http://fairuse.nylxs.com
http://www.mrbrklyn.com - Consulting http://www.inns.net <-- Happy Clients http://www.nylxs.com - Leadership Development in Free Software http://www2.mrbrklyn.com/resources - Unpublished Archive or stories and articles from around the net http://www2.mrbrklyn.com/downtown.html - See the New Downtown Brooklyn....
1-718-382-0585 ____________________________ NYLXS: New Yorker Free Software Users Scene Fair Use - because it's either fair use or useless.... NYLXS is a trademark of NYLXS, Inc
|
|