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9.21.2004
 Secret Ingredients in the Recipe for Linux! 
The Wall Street Journal and others report recently that HP, IBM, Intel and other big players have joined in support of the Free Standards Group and Linux Standard Base 2.0 to strengthen their market position against Microsoft by warding off the fragmentation of Linux. I read this with interest because at one time some commentators believed that the very nature of the GPL coupled with network effects would prevent Linux from fragmenting. That is, they thought that because the GPL allowed companies to adopt a standard format, that therefore they would. But to survive in a competitive market, many companies will seek a unique niche and find themselves wanting to differentiate their own product, to be better than others even if it means less compatibility. To maintain standardization, some kind of special institution (like the IEEE) or cultural factors (like the focus on Linus Torvalds) must come into play. The GPL and network effects unaided won’t do it.

This should sound a cautionary note for those who want the GPL to be adopted for everything under the sun, perhaps with a nudge from a governmental toe. Not every group of developers will be as amenable to working towards common standards as has the Linux crowd thus far. The fate of Unix--doomed to non-user-friendliness when it fragmented after being wrested from the Bell System by antitrust decree--awaits the unwary.


posted by Solveig Singleton : 9/21/2004 10:10:35 AM

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Home Page
9.21.2004
 Secret Ingredients in the Recipe for Linux! 
The Wall Street Journal and others report recently that HP, IBM, Intel and other big players have joined in support of the Free Standards Group and Linux Standard Base 2.0 to strengthen their market position against Microsoft by warding off the fragmentation of Linux. I read this with interest because at one time some commentators believed that the very nature of the GPL coupled with network effects would prevent Linux from fragmenting. That is, they thought that because the GPL allowed companies to adopt a standard format, that therefore they would. But to survive in a competitive market, many companies will seek a unique niche and find themselves wanting to differentiate their own product, to be better than others even if it means less compatibility. To maintain standardization, some kind of special institution (like the IEEE) or cultural factors (like the focus on Linus Torvalds) must come into play. The GPL and network effects unaided won’t do it.

This should sound a cautionary note for those who want the GPL to be adopted for everything under the sun, perhaps with a nudge from a governmental toe. Not every group of developers will be as amenable to working towards common standards as has the Linux crowd thus far. The fate of Unix--doomed to non-user-friendliness when it fragmented after being wrested from the Bell System by antitrust decree--awaits the unwary.


posted by Solveig Singleton : 9/21/2004 10:10:35 AM

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

 

IPcentral WebLog
Blog Main
Recent Posts
  Is Digital Rights Management The Devil?
Tortured rationalizations
Why IP is a Hard Problem
Default Rules and IP Protection
Lessig v. PFF (cont.)
More Conferences & News
Reading
Events
With a new baby in the Singleton household it's on...
The Mysterious Grid Explained
Archives by Month
  December 2003
January 2004
February 2004
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
Links
  PFF Blog
Atom.xml Site Feed
   
 
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