SugarCRM gives GPLv3 thumbs up

Software vendor SugarCRM has given General Public License version 3 the thumbs up and will use it in a forthcoming update of its open-source applications.

Sugar Community Edition 5.0, scheduled to go into beta in a few weeks and be released in September of this year, will use GPLv3, the company said on Wednesday. Its current products use either the Mozilla Public License (MPL) or the very similar Microsoft Community License (Ms-CL), according to SugarCRM CEO John Roberts.

One of the advantages of the GPLv3 is it makes it easier for people to share code from different GPL-controlled open-source projects, Roberts said. At the same time, SugarCRM is able to offer customers of its Professional edition a typical commercial license, where people can see the product's source code but cannot distribute it, he added.

"My hope is that it becomes a global standard," Roberts said.

The company's decision to use the GPLv3 is an endorsement for the latest edition of the most commonly used open-source and free software license.

Finalised in late June, GPLv3 places tougher restrictions on software patents and a provision to prevent "patent protection" deals like the one between Microsoft and Novell. During its development, it drew criticisms from high-profile open-source participants, including developers of the Linux kernel.

But since its release, open-source projects have started to voice plans to adopt it.

Sun Chief Executive Jonathan Schwartz has said he hopes GPLv3 can be Sun's unifying open-source software license, but so far the company hasn't released its two highest-profile open-source sofware projects, Java and OpenSolaris, under GPLv3.

Open-source database company MySQL has said it will wait to see how the license is received before deciding whether to move its open-source database of the same name from GPLv2 to GPLv3.

Some important projects are moving to GPLv3 with their next versions. Among them are Samba, used to share files over Windows networks, and the GCC (GNU Compiler Collection), a widely used programming tool, according to a project leader on the GCC mailing list.

But the change hasn't been universal. The closely related Joomla and Mambo projects for managing content publishing tasks, such as chat forums or online catalogs, won't be moving to GPLv3, and neither will the Compiere business software package, said Theresa Bui Friday, vice president of marketing at Palamida, a start-up that helps customers ensure they're not letting open-source and proprietary projects improperly intermingle.

CNET News.com's Stephen Shankland contributed to this report.

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