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posted by CoolHand on Tuesday April 21 2015, @05:12PM   Printer-friendly
from the dr-jekyll-or-mr-hyde dept.

Under Steve Ballmer's reign, Microsoft Open Technologies was founded as a subsidiary of Microsoft. It is now being shut down and folded into Microsoft under Satya Nadella. The subsidiary, staffed with an interoperability strategy team tasked with extending Redmond's open source initiatives, will be embraced back into into the mainstream of the company.

MS Open Tech's president Jean Paoli said "It's now time for MS Open Tech to rejoin Microsoft Corp., and help the company take its next steps in deepening its engagement with open source and open standards." Some claim that a separate subsidiary is no longer needed. Microsoft could easily be the world's biggest vendor of open source software, which is probably one reason some people don't like the term...

Paoli goes on to say:

Team members will play a broader role in the open advocacy mission with teams across the company," he said. "The Programs Office will scale the learnings and practices in working with open source and open standards that have been developed in MS Open Tech across the whole company. Additionally, the Microsoft Open Technology Programs Office will provide tools and services to help Microsoft teams and engineers engage directly with open source communities, create successful Microsoft open source projects, and streamline the process of accepting community contributions into Microsoft open source projects."

Roy Schestowitz at TechRights has a different view of MSFT's recent actions:

"Not much as changed except pretense (face change).

Microsoft dumps its proxy (misleadingly named 'Open Tech') and other attacks on Free software persist from the inside, often through so-called 'experts' whose agenda is to sell proprietary software

Microsoft's long-term assault on GNU/Linux is in some ways worse than ever before. Changing Ballmer's face with another is about as effective as swapping Bush for Obama. Things are only getting worse, even if it's branded differently. The attacks on users' rights (DRM, blobs, spying) have exacerbated. It's just not as visible as before (like the infamous "Get the Facts" marketing campaign), it's more subtle or altogether covert.

There are concrete sign of Microsoft's strategy to destroy FOSS from the inside (entryism) not quite succeeding, which leads to a Plan B, like infecting Android with proprietary spyware, controlling GNU/Linux through Azure, etc.

"For Microsoft, "Open Tech" shutting down is somewhat symbolic, even poetic.""So," some people ask, "what's new at the 'new' Microsoft?"

There's nothing new except worsening levels of aggression.

So how should this new move be viewed?

Is Microsoft bringing the subsidiary in-house to more fully integrate open source in view of a challenging market landscape, or are they surreptitiously trying to take down the open source world from within, using their old tactics?

 
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  • (Score: -1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 21 2015, @10:37PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 21 2015, @10:37PM (#173723)

    First: That would be really embarrassing for them.

    MICROS~1 got caught re-using GPL'd code for their Hyper-V thing and they were required to hand over their GPL-derived stuff.

    MICROS~1's effort was such a complete mess, before folding it into the kernel[1], the 1st thing gregkh needed to do was strip out 60 percent of the code done by Redmond's clueless amateurs.
    It was simply bloat. [googleusercontent.com] (orig)[ [unixwiz.net]

    .
    Second: No, M$ absolutely could NOT make one of their cash cows open.
    It would be the end of M$.
    Their entire business model is based on closed code, undocumented protocols, patents, NDAs--aka SECRECY.

    [1] ...and shortly thereafter, M$ stopped supporting their junk (which had made it into the Linux kernel).
    ...and, because M$ wouldn't maintain it, Hyper-V was dumped entirely by OpenStack in 2012. [google.com]

    -- gewg_

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