Open specification promise is true: Microsoft

Microsoft has struck out at the Software Freedom Law Centre's (SFLC) claims that its Open Specification Promise is not as open as it should be.

The SFLC published a legal analysis of Microsoft's Open Specification Promise (OSP), a document written to give developers the green light to make open source products based on specifications written by Microsoft.

One of the SFLC's conclusions was that Microsoft's patent protections only apply to current versions of the specifications and doesn't guarantee the protections will apply to future releases.

Microsoft said, however, its new interoperability principles operate across its high-volume products: Windows Vista (including the .NET Framework), Windows Server 2008, SQL Server 2008, Office 2007, Exchange Server 2007 and Office SharePoint Server "as well as future versions".

"Under this announcement, Microsoft is committing to make available ALL of the APIs in all of its high-volume products that are used by other Microsoft products, and to make them available for free on the Web through MSDN [Microsoft's developer network]," the spokesperson said.

"This means that developers will be assured that they have the same APIs available to them that Microsoft's other products use. Microsoft will follow this principle on an ongoing basis by incorporating this requirement into its product release cycles," the spokesperson continued.

Another problem with the Open Specification Promise, according to the SLFC, is that it is not consistent with the General Public License (GPL), which requires that any derived works also be open.

Microsoft product manager Gray Knowlton responded to the allegations in his blog.

"As far as we are concerned we are happy to extend the OSP to implementers who distribute their code under any copyright license including the GPL. The [Open Specification Promise] FAQ just states what everyone knows and acknowledges, the GPL is a copyright licence that is drafted in a way that leaves many issues (not just those related to patent rights) open to many interpretations. Any particular user or implementer should read the GPL carefully and make their own judegment about what it means and requires in accordance with their own circumstances. The FAQ states that Microsoft is not in a position to give blanket advice about the GPL to others," he writes.

The last concern raised by the Centre was that code based on a Microsoft specification is only covered by the promise for some specific uses.

Knowlton says this is false. "The OSP is a promise to not assert patents that are necessarily infringed by implementations of covered specifications. Like all similar patent non-asserts (including the Sun and IBM versions for ODF) the promise covers that part of a product that implements that specification (and not other parts that have nothing to do with the specification).

"While the Sun covenant is silent about conformance to the specification, the OSP allows implementers the freedom to implement any (or all) parts of a covered specification and to the extent they do implement those portions (also known as conform to those parts) they are covered by the promise for those parts. Contrast that to the IBM pledge that requires total conformance and so programming errors or absence of something required by the spec (but not by an implementer's product) means that the promise is totally void for that product."

Microsoft is being over-cautious according to IBRS advisor Joseph Sweeney, trying to get its tools out to developers so it can benefit from their work, but making sure it doesn't give its patents away as a result. Meanwhile, Sweeney said, no matter how much the firm clarifies the promise, there will always be someone in the open source community saying "but what about ... ?"

The IBRS advisor said the only situation where a conflict could arise would be between Microsoft and a major open source company -- not likely in itself, Sweeney said, unless a significant event occurred, such as major market share loss.

"If you're developing within that space, there's not really much risk," he said, adding: "In the short term [Microsoft] doesn't feel as if it's threatened by the open source community."

Talkback

Add your opinion

In order to post a comment, you need to be registered. (Sign In or register below)

Post your comment

Terms of Service - As a ZDNet registrant, and by using this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understand our Privacy Policy.

ZDNet Australia Live

and why is this such a super idea? http://www.itnews.com.au/News/301778,thousands-affected-in-billing-cloud-breach.aspx oh, yeah, right...

10 minutes ago by btone on Fed Govt steps up on shared cloud plan

SAP eyes cloud super network with Ariba buy: By Rachel King, ZDNet US on May 23rd, 2012 (5 mins ago) SAP America... http://t.co/gHVI2Q1x

BYOD too immature for us: Human Services http://t.co/d5bL19GZ via @zdnetaustralia

Kaspersky's antivirus denied on iOS: Kaspersky Lab is the latest company to be denied the chance to develop an o... http://t.co/ik2mlpZR

Dell profits plunge in spending lull - Hardware - News - ZDNet Australia | @scoopit http://t.co/iqiQnzox

Automation key for time-poor security boffins http://t.co/qyCXzOwl via @zdnetaustralia

Dell is suffering falling profits as companies hold off on their spending. http://t.co/iK5YBTSN ^ST

Kaspersky's antivirus denied on iOS: Kaspersky Lab is the latest company to be denied the chance to develop an o... http://t.co/0UnTxMKq

Fed Gov unveils draft strategy for "community clouds" http://t.co/9vQcu2AG via @zdnetaustralia #cloud <- specialised availability zones

Wow, seems like a fantastic initiative that helps to save the environment. It must have taken a lot of convincing to get the Board to mov...

50 minutes ago by Wow on Westpac board goes paperless with iPads

What happens when you have 'too many cooks' while creating software: http://t.co/8ITO4zZs

SAP buys Ariba http://t.co/cQy8nVWp ^ST

Google closes Motorola Mobility deal - ZDNet Australia: http://t.co/njPFGeOB.auGoogle closes Motorola Mobility de... http://t.co/V6ygypla

by http://t.co/vmlLt4bh: SAP eyes cloud super network with Ariba buy: SAP America is looking to develop "the busi... http://t.co/9OhJ6p9V

SAP eyes cloud super network with Ariba buy http://t.co/7NL5eFce

BYOD too immature for us: Human Services http://t.co/s3x2cthG via @zdnetaustralia

Google closes Motorola Mobility deal: Google has finally closed its acquisition of Motorola Mobility, installed ... http://t.co/U2G7DO7D

The federal government has released guidelines for a community cloud to be shared by agencies http://t.co/57skHLug ^ST

Fed Govt steps up on shared cloud plan - Communications - News - ZDNet Australia | @scoopit http://t.co/s0x8e1hr

Now that Google has closed its acquisition of Motorola Mobility, what's next on the company's to do list? http://t.co/5aWbp9qe ^ML

Fed Govt steps up on shared cloud plan http://t.co/dY5uxJuh

I'm a payed up lib member who has voted Labor in the last 2 federal elections. I had the previlege of speaking to Mr Turnball 3 months ag...

1 hour ago by spazmanaught on NBN contracts may be left alone: Turnbull

Good to see Westpac's concentrating on the real IT issues !

1 hour ago by jeff_syd on Westpac board goes paperless with iPads

Fed Govt steps up on shared cloud plan - ZDNet Australia: The Australian Government Information... http://t.co/lIRepJnI #cloud #news #AU

by http://t.co/vmlLt4bh: Fed Govt steps up on shared cloud plan: The Federal Government has proposed advancing it... http://t.co/YO4h9UI8

Google closes Motorola Mobility deal http://t.co/BkGBmagB

Fed Govt steps up on shared cloud plan: The Federal Government has proposed advancing its shared cloud strategy ... http://t.co/Yc2QBYPx

Fed Govt steps up on shared cloud plan - ZDNet Australia: Fed Govt steps up on shared cloud planZDNet AustraliaT... http://t.co/5bb7Wz1G

BYOD: What the people think | ZDNet http://t.co/0EMHmiCg

Anonymous hacks Bureau of Justice, leaks 1.7GB of data - http://t.co/HFqI12Q9 #InfoSec

Fed Govt steps up on shared cloud plan: The Federal Government has proposed advancing its shared cloud strategy ... http://t.co/dq95elts

Fed Govt steps up on shared cloud plan: The Federal Government has proposed advancing its shared cloud strategy ... http://t.co/ReA93WL9

Consumer Reports recommends Nokia Lumia 900 for dads and grads http://t.co/LsWkcsU0

#Spotify finally goes Live in Australia http://t.co/VFP8Xq8U

"@ZDNet: SAP gets huge cloud and extended business process boost with Ariba acquisition http://t.co/Ro04GlP4" ->#SAP strengthening its cloud

RT @zdnetaustralia: The Westpac board have gone paperless using iPads and a secure, home-grown app environment: http://t.co/F1d17bvF ^LH

BYOD: What the people think http://t.co/5Mh2x0u9 via @zite #byotchat #edtech

Interesting..Who uses Twitter for job search? http://t.co/KuWVItXK @zdnetcharlie

SAP gets huge cloud and extended business process boost with Ariba acquisition: SAP is focused on global cloud g... http://t.co/75ps1wG3

I am not sure how this issue becomes an attack on Mr Turnbull. But I guess he is fair game. In any event I would have thought a Ddos woul...

12 hours ago by Doubt on National Botnet Network coming: Earthwave

I still use 98SE. Windows ME was an abortion in a bucket and Vista was ME without the bucket. My screen may look boring, but I jumped str...

12 hours ago by Treknology on Microsoft admits Vista was 'cheesy'

This story has been voted 10 times in the last 24 hours!

12 hours ago, CeBIT 2012 opens: photos

This story has been voted 15 times in the last 24 hours!

12 hours ago, Lenovo ThinkPad 3G tablet (32GB)

Well I don't know what they have done with their EFTPOS machines, local one in WA Coles Express I used this morning and I normally do "ch...

13 hours ago by harryinthesoup on Coles ditches PINs in payment pilot

6.7 M last ditch attempt - interesting - The Auckland region (population 1.4 mil) has estimated to have spent less than this in total ...

16 hours ago by debsteele on Vic scraps HealthSMART system

Interesting - no mention of Win 98/ME/2000 ... which heralded Internet access for millions of users ? I thought Win 98/ME would be the mo...

17 hours ago by gouranga on Microsoft admits Vista was 'cheesy'

An Application like Good from Good Technologies does the same thing, working with the enterprise email server and is off the shelf.

17 hours ago by Helpdesk123 on Westpac board goes paperless with iPads

Never mind a "B+" version, go for "C" and put in a few extras. I'd like a high speed ADC (100Msps) but that's just me... Final size? Equ...

18 hours ago by sa_penguin on Raspberry Pi architect mulls design change

what a non-story. these thing happen all the time. is zdnet short on material?

19 hours ago by paulwrussell on Spotify launch suffers redirect bungle

4 months old phone died. Took 6 weeks, three visits to the authorised repairer (Fonebiz) to "fix it". 2nd hand untested parts used, I say...

19 hours ago by paracin on Sony Ericsson Xperia Arc S

It's easy to rubbish an old operating system long after the rest of the world has already passed judgement upon it. I would be far more i...

20 hours ago by ramnet on Microsoft admits Vista was 'cheesy'

If Vista is cheesy, Metro is an over-ripe Stilton.

20 hours ago by meski on Microsoft admits Vista was 'cheesy'

you are kidding right - what qualification do you have to make such wildy stupid statements - do you really have customers who pay you fo...

20 hours ago by rant rant rant on National Botnet Network coming: Earthwave

Exactly. There are two topics of discussion, that are co-mingled; 1) Unauthorized software was put on the company device, by an IT person...

1 day ago by lamont on ABC's Bitcoin miner tackled in minutes

First off, Bitcoin is not a virus. Second off, the only way to generate Bitcoins, is by using a Bitcoin miner. More information on this h...

1 day ago by rizowski on ABC's Bitcoin miner tackled in minutes

When an operating system is sold it should not launch until an approved security service is purchased online with a list of approved supp...

1 day ago by Kevin Cobley on National Botnet Network coming: Earthwave

Admits? Don't fall for their marketing. Vista was beautiful. Microsoft has a history of trashing their older OSes.

1 day ago by anonymuos on Microsoft admits Vista was 'cheesy'

Facebook Activity

Keep up with ZDNet Australia

ZDNet Events Calendar

ZDNet Events Calendar