JBoss Offers Lawsuit Indemnification 112
prostoalex writes "JBoss Group offered its customers indemnification from potential legal problems related to patent violations and copyright lawsuits. According to Bob Bickel, JBoss VP, the move is intended to give customers more peace of mind when deciding whether to go with open-source software." The article also mentions Jboss' legal challenge to Apache Geronimo, of which Bickel said "...the letter to the Apache Software Foundation was never intended to be made public and said the conflict has been blown out of proportion."
Empty offers.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Empty offers.. (Score:5, Funny)
Sure, you say that, but I'll be laughing all the way to the bank the next time our sun explodes.
Re:Empty offers.. (Score:2)
Re:Empty offers.. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Empty offers.. (Score:4, Funny)
I'd laugh but my great grandfather had a place out where the crab nebula is now. It had some lovely blue siding. It blew all over the fricken place.
Re:Empty offers.. (Score:1, Informative)
Maybe in the past (Score:2)
I think that the fact that JBoss felt the need to announce such a decision just shows that the OS movement is indeed feeling the heat from SCO's lawsuits/FUD/etc, and that action definately needs to be taken against them. Class-action comes to mind, is JBoss in with those standing off against SCO, the more the merrier.
Re:Maybe in the past (Score:1)
And I'd say, let them. The more, the better. Get SCO so tied up in several different court cases, their lawyers will drain their funds long before a settlement is reached.
Re:Maybe in the past (Score:2)
But with current worries over the legality of Linux and validity of Open-Source licensing, it's not an empty off, at least from a PR perspective.
I hope you don't mean the current issue with SCO. To date, they haven't even alleged specific infringements in Linux. All that's happened is a bunch bunch of hot air. Also, OS licensing is quite a bit simpler and more equitable than the licneses I've seen from the likes of Microsoft and Adobe.
Re:Maybe in the past (Score:2)
Smoke and mirrors, but even smoke can scare some people into thinking there's a fire. In this case, SCO has nothing, but their posturing is scaring some companies into believing they do.
Just like SCO! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Just like SCO! (Score:3, Informative)
Slow down and read it again.
They aren't charging anything for idemnification. Even if they did, it wouldn't be anything remotely like SCO. SCO is the one doing the suing. Companies like IBM and HP are protecting their customers from SCO. A more apt analogy would compare JBoss to IBM or HP in this case.
Re:Just like SCO! (Score:1, Insightful)
I think it's about time for them to say something silly again
Re:Just like SCO! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Just like SCO! (Score:1)
Do they ever?
So, it's a trend... (Score:2, Insightful)
It mollifies fears about switching to open-source software, but it does leave projects without a financial backing out in the cold.
Re:So, it's a trend... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:So, it's a trend... (Score:1)
not copied? (Score:2, Redundant)
I'
Plagiarism is bad, mmkay? (Score:2)
Re:Plagiarism is bad, mmkay? (Score:2)
Perception (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Perception (Score:1)
In a way (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:In a way (Score:1, Funny)
RTFA bois (Score:3, Informative)
IOW, if you want to be 'indemnified' then you have to buy JBoss, which is kinda dumb since it's supposed to be 'free'. Heh. Yay open source!
Re:RTFA bois (Score:5, Insightful)
JBoss is 'free', and if you choose to use in the 'free beer' sense then you take on the risk of dealing with lawsuits. That's pefectly in keeping with the ideology of open source.. with freedom comes responsibility, and by taking advantage of something that is free you assume the risk of whatever comes out of that.
If you choose to use JBoss the group, then they will guarantee you that it won't end up costing you lawsuit money if the lawyers come knocking. The code is free, the project is free, but the group that is using the project as a business is not. They charge money because this is how they make their living. Indemnification is just one more value-add that the JBoss commercial entity provides, and it's a good one in my opinion.
Re:RTFA bois (Score:2)
Why should you get something for nothing? Microsoft will now indemnify you in certain cases, but the maximum amount they will pay is the purchase price. So, no matter how much liability you are subject to, all you can get is a full refund.
Re:RTFA bois (Score:2)
This is unfortunately likely to be a viable business model for some companies - simply have people pay them to "indemify" pieces of software they use. The lawyers have created this environment, and I'm afraid we're stuck with it for the forseeable future.
Re:RTFA bois (Score:1)
Question (Score:4, Insightful)
I mean as I understand it, it would be like all of the people who own a Xboxs are suddenly told that they have to pay Sony and additional $200 or be sued because MS used some propritary hardware in their counsle. Why wouldn't just MS be stuck holding the bag? Are not the customers protected by a good faith purchase agreement or something? Or would the task of sueing MS to get your $200 dollars back be left up to you (or some class action lawsuit)?
I am sure I am oversimplifying the matter, but I'm hopping this be a starting point for an explination.
Thanks
Re:Question (Score:2)
If someone copied a Toyota Camry (or well, pick any other physical thing that is sold) and sold it to me, even if Toyota won a lawsuit againt the person who made it are you saying they could tell me to stop driving my Camry copy? I don't think so. IANAL, but I don't think that's how the law works. It's perverted it's been made to work that way in some IP cases.
Re:Question (Score:2)
If someone copied a Toyota Camry (or well, pick any other physical thing that is sold) and sold it to me, even if Toyota won a lawsuit againt the person who made it are you saying they could tell me to stop driving my Camry copy? I don't think so. IANAL, but I don't think that's how the law works. It's perverted it's been made to work that way in some IP cases.
Funny you should mention it...some of Henry Ford's competitors tried it back in the day.
Re:Question (Score:2)
Re:Question (Score:3)
> entity be worried about being sued if the comercial entity was using tech in
> violation of a patent?
To answer that, the question can actually be shortened to this:
# Why would I as someone who purchased or was even give a product from a comercial
# entity be worried about being sued
Someone can sue anyone for anything. Winning is up to the lawyers and judge.
Reasons for being sued dont play too much into things for
Won't really know until OSS licenses are tested (Score:1, Interesting)
Great (Score:1, Funny)
the SCO model (Score:2)
Two Obvious goals here... (Score:3, Interesting)
2) To give news outlets another opportunity to mention the friction between JBoss and Geronimo. Though they outwardly state that it's been blown out of proportion, the very mention of it in the same press release has the insidious implication that if you choose Geronimo instead of JBoss, you won't be indemnified, and JBoss could come calling in the near future.
Re:Two Obvious goals here... (Score:2)
And it's not a lie, of course. Most software, even proprietary software, comes w/o
Any conflict (Score:2)
The entire point of Open Source is to eliminate IP issues, not add to them! It's irrelevent as to whgat the dispute is, exactly, it's the fact that a dispute is even possible that is disturbing.
This is one reason I like clear-cut licenses such as the BSD or GPL. Any such lawsuit is, in and of itself, a violation of the license, in those cases. That is the sensible way of doing things. Either a person has intellectual freedom, or they don't.
There are also a few political consi
Confused... (Score:2, Redundant)
JBoss has a J2EE implementation that they have licensed out under the LGPL. The Apache foundation has another, competing J2EE implementation, Geronimo, licensed under the Apache license (which is very similar to the BSD license?).
JBoss is accusing Geronimo of taking their code and putting it into Geronimo. This would obviously be a violation because the Apache license isn't LGPL compatible.
So it sounds like Geronimo should be indemnifying their users from legal action, not JBoss. W
Re:Confused... (Score:1)
Possibly because JBoss may have shot itself in the foot.
At least some of the JBoss code that Geronimo allegedly copied (see next paragraph) seems to have been derived from code under the Apache license. See the comments [www.qos.ch] by Ceki Gulcu, the author of log4j.
One reason for Geronimo not offering protection is that Geronimo is an "incubator" project, so there proba
God Help me. (Score:1)
This is nuts. Are they from Utah by any chance?
Ask slashdot (Score:1)
So what risk exactly do you inherit for using open source code?
Can it be copyright? Shouldn't only those people posting the code to the public be held accountable? Also, if someone is violating a copyright, are they not required to tell the violaters to stop before they can take legal action?
If there is an issue with a patent I still don't understand how end users of the open source code can be held liable. Wouldn't that be similar to Amazon suing every B&N customer for using one click?
Bott
ASF vs JBOSS (Score:1)
Here are his findings about the code snippets in question. In short, he notes that the code is actually his IP (the second example from the PDF is actually a user-contributed piece to log4j that predates the jboss examples in jboss' own cvs repository), example code he wrote as part of the log4j distribution and donated directly to the ASF and hence part of AS
Look at the facts: (Score:1, Informative)
McFact #1: The coffee the lady bought was over 270 degrees. That is dangerous.
McFact #2: McDonald's had received about 17 complaints over the years about hot coffee. They ignored the complaints.
McFact #3: The woman who spilled the coffee initially tried to settle out of court for a reasonable 30 million. McDonald's ignored her.
McFact #4: The woman received 3rd degree burns over much of her body.
Re:Look at the facts: (Score:1, Offtopic)
McFact #1: The coffee was 180-190 degrees. It would have been quickly vaporized at 270.
McFact #3: She initially tried to settle for $20,000 -- her medical costs. McDonald's ignored her.
McFact #4: She received 3rd degree burns over 6% of her body. How did you think she would have spilled a cup of coffee over most of her body? Did she pour it over her head?
She was awarded $160,000 in actual damages. She was awarded $2.7 million in punitive damages, which equates to 2 days of McDonald's coff
mod parent up (Score:2)
Re:Greedy and clumsy (Score:2)
She was very greedy: it was her own mistake: McDonald's owed her nothing.
You purposefully cut out the part about the "medical bills". How can you be greedy for wanting to pay your own medical bills? In my town, $20,000 will pay for the ambulance ride, the emergency medical care, and just a couple days worth of hospitalization.
That is a bad thing. The coffee is too cold now: they get a lot of customer complaints about it.
Now, you're just full of
Re:Look at the facts: (Score:1)
Re:Look at the facts: (Score:1, Offtopic)
The link [water.com] answers the question "What is the best temperature to brew coffee?" Not "What is the best temperature to serve coffee?"
According to this study [confex.com] most of the subjects liked their coffee at ~140F.
This review [mensjournal.com] of coffee machines (scroll down to the end of the page and look at "2 Temperature") states "Also, to maintain your coffee at the ideal drinking temperature of 160 degrees, preheat your cup for about ten se
EAT A DICK, MODERATORS (Score:1, Offtopic)
You mods are on fucking crack. Besides, my comment was valid.
Re:Look at the facts: (Score:1, Offtopic)
270 degree water? Wow. McDonalds has magic coffee beans that raise the boiling point of water to 270 degrees?
You might want the actual facts next time. (Score:1, Offtopic)
McFact No. 2: McDonald's knew its coffee sometimes caused serious injuries - more than 700 incidents of scalding coffee burns in the past decade have been settled by the Corporation - and yet they never so much as consulted a burn expert regarding the issue.
McFact No. 3: The woman involved in this infa
Re:You might want the actual facts next time. (Score:2)
Trial lawyers are scum. If something is truly a public danger, make a law about it. It's insane to make multi-million dollar awards in court when the defendant didn't even violate the law. The disparity between criminal and civil cases is absurd. Wha
Re:What's in a name? More than you think. (Score:2)
Re:What's in a name? More than you think. (Score:1)
Taking from the American Heritage definition "... Apache tribes offered strong resistance to encroachment on their territory..." makes applying the name to server software a recognition of stalwart resolve against invasion. An attribution that could be viewed proudly as recognizing ancestors strengths becomes an affront to the closed-minded bigot who sees nothing but racism.
However, considering that that 'strong resistance,' was overcome makes the choice of the name less wise.