Novell CEO Ron Hovsepian
Novell CEO Ron Hovsepian resists Microsoft patent claims

Patent sparks fly between Novell and Microsoft

Microsoft's intellectual property claim against Linux still standing

Written by Tom Sanders in California

Novell and Microsoft have exchanged punches over Microsoft's claim that Linux infringes its intellectual property. 

In an open letter to the open source community published on 20 November, Novell chief executive Ron Hovsepian denied an IP-ownership claim by Microsoft. 

Advertisement

"Our agreement with Microsoft is in no way an acknowledgment that Linux infringes upon any Microsoft intellectual property," Hovsepian wrote.

"When we entered the patent cooperation agreement with Microsoft, Novell did not agree or admit that Linux or any other Novell offering violates Microsoft patents."

The disagreement revolves around the Microsoft Novell partnership signed earlier this month.

In addition to distribution and interoperability agreements for the companies' software products, the two also created a patent covenant in which Microsoft promises not to enforce its intellectual property against users of Novell Linux, as well as individual software developers.

Novell's open letter prompted Microsoft to send out a press release on Monday stating that the two companies "have agreed to disagree" on the intellectual property issue.

"The agreement between our two companies puts in place a workable solution for customers for these issues, without requiring an agreement between our two companies on infringement," Microsoft said.

Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer ignited the row last Thursday when he said that the partnership was in part inspired by "the fact that [Linux] uses our patented intellectual property [which] is a problem for our shareholders".

Some observers initially considered the partnership as a major step towards a patent truce between Microsoft and Linux.

Microsoft enforcing its intellectual property portfolio against Linux users, developers or distributors is generally considered the greatest potential threat against the operating system.

Ballmer's comments reignited those fears, and underscored the notion that the software behemoth is looking to use its patent portfolio to levy an innovation tax on open source.

Tags:

Further reading

Related whitepapers

Related jobs

Do you agree?

IT white papers

Search vnunet IThound

Top categories

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Watch

Shaun Nichols and Iain Thomson

03 Oct 2008

6.49 MBPodcast Special: Views from the Valley More...

Podcast image

02 Oct 2008

14.35 MBComputing podcast - Next-generation broadband Britain; and we report from Gartner's IT security summit More...

Shaun Nichols and Iain Thomson

26 Sep 2008

3.43 MBPodcast Special: Views from the Valley More...

Poll

Google Android

Google Android

Are you intending to try out a Google Android mobile phone?

Previous poll results

Spotlight

HP iPaq 514

Rumours hint at HP iPhone rival

Vendor's iPaq line may gain touch model   More...

Ask.com

Ask.com bullish about the future

Search firm outlines plans for market share gains   More...

National Identity Fraud Prevention Week

Nine out of 10 firms put customer data at risk

National ID fraud event reveals lax corporate attitudes   More...

Virtualisation

Virtualisation set to drive SaaS adoption

Software-as-a-service delivery model was too costly before virtualisation   More...

Primary Navigation