Archive for the ‘the451group’ Category

Is MySQL open core?

Ноябрь 11th, 2010

Or, how we evaluate a company’s open source-related business strategy.

Godwin’s law states: “As an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches”.

An online discussion about open source-related business strategies is no exception. However, long before the Nazi comparison it is inevitable that someone will ask “is MySQL open core?”.

I updated our 2009 post “what is open core, and what isn’t” recently, and received some criticism of my statement that the MySQL strategy was not open core.

Since we have recently published a report including the results of our analysis of the open source-related business strategies of 300 vendors and subsidiaries it seems appropriate that we use this opportunity to explain how we evaluate a company’s open source-related business strategy, and specifically how our analysis led us to conclude at the time of our analysis (August/September) that the open core licensing strategy did not apply to MySQL.

Given the recent changes to MySQL pricing and licensing we have also revisited our analysis, see below.

Looking at MySQL Enterprise it is easy to see why so many people conclude that the product licensing strategy being applied to MySQL is open core, since MySQL Enterprise contains extensions for which source code is not available that are not available with MySQL Community.

However, it is important to remember that products are not open core – and companies are not open core – but that open core is a product licensing strategy applied by companies to products. Therefore the question “is MySQL open core?” is inappropriate. A more appropriate question would be, “is the product licensing being used with MySQL open core?”

It is also worth noting that a product licensing strategy is just one of five elements that we at The 451 Group use to evaluate an open source-related business strategy.

The five elements we consider are: the software license for the open source software; the development model for the open source software; copyright ownership for the open source software code; the product licensing strategy; and the revenue generator. Specifically, with regards to MySQL, our evaluation went as follows:

Software license/development model/copyright ownership:
This was a relatively straightforward process for the MySQL business. The MySQL Database software is available under the GNU GPLv2, a strong copyleft license, and although the code is available at Launchpad, clearly the software continues to be developed in the cathedral model by a core group of developers, mostly employees of a vendor: Oracle. The same vendor also owns the copyright.

Product licensing strategy:
This is where things started to get a little bit difficult. Historically MySQL AB used the dual licensing strategy, making a version of MySQL Server available under a closed source license (aka selling exceptions) for enterprises. That strategy remains in use today to enable the use of MySQL embedded in closed source software. However, the version of MySQL Server in MySQL Enterprise was not closed source, and was the same GNU GPL version as MySQL Community. This provides a good example of why it is important to assess the licensing strategy, rather than the product: the open core licensing strategy uses dual licensing and adds closed source extensions to create a closed source version that is a superset of open source software (or from another perspective, an open source version that is a subset of closed source software). Since this description did not apply to MySQL Enterprise, which saw the open source MySQL Server delivered along with closed source extensions, we concluded that Oracle did not use an open core licensing strategy with regards to MySQL.

Revenue generator
The description of MySQL Enterprise, used above (open source software with additionally capabilities delivered via subscription) is exactly what we consider a value-added subscription revenue generator. There are often many ways in which a vendor generates revenue from open source software. MySQL is just such a case: Oracle generates revenue from closed source licenses embedded in closed source software, but the largest generator is the MySQL Enterprise value-added subscription.

Conclusion:
The MySQL strategy includes a strong copyleft software license, vendor-developed software using the cathedral model, and vendor-owned copyright. That much was easy. It was also easy to identify the dominant revenue generator, which was value-added subscription. That left the product licensing strategy, for which the choices were single open source (in MySQL Enterprise) and dual licensing (for embedded usage). To select single open source would be inaccurate since we could not ignore the fact that the MySQL business uses a dual licensing strategy.

MySQL Reconsidered:
In the light of the recent licensing and pricing changes for MySQL we took the opportunity to talk to Oracle about the licensing of MySQL. What we discovered was that whereas the MySQL Database previously accompanied by the MySQL Enterprise subscription was licensed using the GNU GPL, Oracle now prefers that Standard Edition and Enterprise Edition customers enter into a commercial license agreement with the company (although they will apparently be able to negotiate subscription usage with MySQL Community). This is a licensing agreement that does not impact the functionality or code of the MySQL Database itself, although clearly there continues to be additional functionality delivered with the MySQL Standard and Enterprise subscriptions, such as MySQL Enterprise Monitor and MySQL Enterprise Backup.

This changes our perspective of the MySQL-related strategy on two levels, Firstly, with regard to the revenue generator, we can now conclude that going forward the biggest revenue generator for Oracle from MySQL will be closed source licenses. While this closed source software will still be delivered via a subscription agreement, our support subscription and value-added subscription categories are reserved for products that use an open source license. It also changes our perspective on the product licensing strategy. Specifically in that our description of open core used above, (dual licensing + closed source extensions to create a closed source version that is a superset of open source software) does now apply to MySQL Standard and MySQL Enterprise.


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Webinar: navigating the changing landscape of open source databases

Ноябрь 1st, 2010

When we published our 2008 report on the impact of open source on the database market the overall conclusion was that adoption had been widespread but shallow.

Since then we’ve seen increased adoption of open source software, as well as the acquisition of MySQL by Oracle. Perhaps the most significant shift in the market since early 2008 has been the explosion in the number of open source database and data management projects, including the various NoSQL data stores, and of course Hadoop and its associated projects.

On Tuesday, November 9, 2010 at 11:00 am EST I’ll be joining Robin Schumacher, Director of Product Strategy from EnterpriseDB to present a webinar on navigating the changing landscape of open source databases.

Among the topics to be discussed are:

· the needs of organizations with hybrid mixed-workload environments

· how to choose the right tool for the job

· the involvement of user corporations (for better or for worse) in open source projects today.

You can find further details about the event and register here.


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Fear and loathing and open core

Октябрь 18th, 2010

Bradley M Kuhn published an interest blog post at the weekend explaining why he believes Canonical is about to go down the open core licensing route and heavily criticising the company for doing so.

My take on the post is that it is the worst kind of Daily Mail-esque fear mongering and innuendo. Not only does Bradley lack any evidence for his claim, the evidence he presents completely undermines his argument and distracts attention from what could be a very important point about copyright assignment.

The premise? Mark Shuttleworth has admitted that he plans to follow the open core licensing strategy with Canonical.

The evidence? Mark praises the strategy Trolltech took of selling proprietary licenses.

The problem? Trolltech did not follow the open core licensing strategy. Neither did MySQL, which Bradley suggests inspired Trollech’s strategy.

Both MySQL and Trolltech utilised a dual licensing strategy, which means that the same code base is available under on open source license or a closed source license (also known as “selling exceptions”. This is not open core licensing, although it is related since open core sees vendors dual licensing and offering extensions only available in the closed license version.

A significant difference between dual licensing and open core is that Richard Stallman has explained why, in his opinion, it is okay to sell exceptions to GPL code via a dual licensing strategy. In fact one of the examples he uses is… Trolltech.

So Trolltech is not open core. Or is it? Perhaps it depends on how you define it. Bradley has claimed, at least twice, that there is no agreed definition of open core.

If that were true you could forgive his confusion, but it clearly not. In fact the term open core was delivered fully packaged with a specific definition, courtesy of Andrew Lampitt. As I previously noted, you have to wonder whether many of the people that use the term open core regularly have even read Andrew’s post.

Since Mark’s comments about Trolltech are the only evidence put forward that Canonical is going open core I’m not going to debate that any further.

It is worth considering a couple of other claims Bradley makes, however – such as the idea that Nokia abandoned Trolltech’s business model. It is pretty clear that a company like Nokia has very different motivations and business drivers compared to a company like Trolltech. A strategy that works for Nokia does not mean the strategy that worked for Trolltech was wrong.

However, it is worth noting that in fact Qt business continues to operate the dual licensing strategy. What has happened is that the company has added a new LGPL option and launched a public repository for the software and abandoned the previous requirement for copyright assignment.

This is not a change in business strategy – this is a change in the licensing, development and copyright strategies. Just because Nokia is in a position to open up the development project to encourage more collaborative development (which I agree is a beneficial arrangement for everyone) does not mean that Trolltech’s closed development strategy wasn’t successful.

Undoubtedly Trolltech’s insistence on copyright assignment limited its outside contributions, but copyright assignment does not equal open core, despite Bradley’s insistence that there is “no other plausible & logical conclusion”.

We saw a similar reaction last month in reaction to Diaspora’s copyright assignment policy. However, open core is by no means the only possibility. Dual licensing is another. And as we have seen that comes with RMS’s own seal of approval… except where it results in a version of the code that is only available as closed source (such as open core).

Richard Stallman’s advice on that issue is to “insist that the contribution agreement require that software versions including your contributions be available to the public under a free software license. This will allow the developer to sell exceptions, but prevent it from using your contributions in software that is only available under a proprietary license.”

This is good advice for any developer concerned about open core, and this is the message that gets lost amid Bradley’s anti-open core agenda.

It is absolutely fair to ask why Canonical demands copyright assignment, but to insists that the only reason that they do so is because they are going open core, especially on such flimsy and misleading evidence, is scaremongering and distracts attention from the real issue – which is copyright assignment.

It should be noted, incidentally, that Bradley and Mark have some previous when it comes to copyright assignment, which was also, I believe, caused by confusion rather than malice.

See also this poston the difference between copyright assignment and participation agreements.


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If you fork it, will they come?

Сентябрь 29th, 2010

There is much excitement this week (understandably) about the formation of the Document Foundation and the LibreOffice fork of Openoffice.org.

Alan Bell sees correlation with the previous fork of Joomla from Mambo and has illustrated the potential impact that forking a project can have with a Google Trends chart, where Mambo is the blue line, and Joomla is the red line:

A similar chart for Debian (blue) and Ubuntu (red) is also instructive:

Or what about Nagios (blue) and Icinga (red):

Hmm. Maybe not the best example. After all, as we reported, the Icinga fork had some commercial motivations attached to it, and it’s not exactly the highest profile fork.

What about something a bit more comparable, like MySQL (blue) and MariaDB (red):

Oh.

Which is not to say that LibreOffice will not be a success, but when it comes to forking, creating the fork is clearly just the start. It takes time, and a lot of effort, to generate the momentum for a fork to be truly successful. There is bound to be an initial spike in developer and user interest. Turning that into a meaningful and productive community will be the hard part.


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Open source and Windows 8: spotlight on Microsoft’s open source interop strategy

Август 18th, 2010

It seems safe to say that Oracle is currently ahead of Microsoft when it comes to the company with the most contentious relationship with open source. To some extent that is due Oracle’s questionable approach to community, but it must also be noted that Microsoft has managed not to put its foot in it for a while.

In Microsoft 2009 published its first companywide perspective on open source, made its first contributions to the Linux kernel, and created the CodePlex Foundation, an independent entity designed to encourage its developers and other companies to contribute more to open source software projects.

Doubts have remained about Microsoft’s ongoing commitment, however, with the company being labeled opportunistic in its approach to open source, and skepticism persists – particularly in relation to software patents. We have recently published a new Open Source Strategy Spotlight report, which updates our perspective on Microsoft’s relationship with open source in the light of recent organizational changes.

One of the interesting aspects highlighted by our research for this report is the role of the Open Source Technology Center (OSTC), which consists of the Open Source Software Lab in Redmond, Washington, and the Microsoft/Novell Interoperability Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Once a part of the Windows server marketing group, the OSTC has been shifted to Windows server engineering, and now contributes directly to interoperability efforts in the development and testing of Microsoft’s platform products, including Windows and Azure.

As such, OSTC is part of the planning team for the next version of Windows Server, ensuring that interoperability principles are embedded into the next generation of the company’s operating system before a single line of code is written.

While this is not the commitment to wider open source development that I know some people would like to see from Microsoft it does signal a significant shift in Microsoft’s development effort that interoperability with open source is front and center of the development of Windows 8.

The report puts the organisational changes around interoperability in context, as well as assessing the drivers behind Microsoft’s engagement with open source (business, technological and government-mandated) and the participation in and contribution to open source projects.

The report is available here to existing 451 Group clients, while non-clients can also apply for trial access.


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Hybrid licensing strategies for open source monetization

Июль 28th, 2010

One of the issues that has arisen from the ongoing debate about the open core licensing strategy is the continuing confusion about open core compared to the use of open source components in a larger proprietary product – such as IBM’s use of Apache within WebSphere.

To some people there is no difference between the two (since they both result in products that make use of open source but are not open source), however it is clear to me that while the end result might be the same these are very different strategies that involve different approaches to engaging with open source communities/projects.

While open core has a clear definition there is no agreed term or definition for the latter category.

Over the years we have used a variety of terms to describe it, including “open and closed”, “embedded open source”, “open inside” and “open complement”, while Jack Repenning has referred to it as “open infrastructure”.

Our next categorization of open source-related business strategies is still a work in progress but the current thinking is as follows:

  • There are a variety of complementary strategies employed by vendors to generate revenue from open source software indirectly.
  • The simplest of these is open complement which is selling other products and services that are related to but separate from, and not reliant upon, the open source project.
  • Then there is encouraging open source development on top of proprietary products to retain develop interest in that product. This is known as open edge.
  • Then there is using open source software to create a platform for the provision of SaaS or cloud or social networking services (for example), which I am referring to as open platform.
  • Then there is using open source components as building blocks for a larger proprietary software product, which I am calling an open foundation licensing strategy.

(This categorization is a work in progress, we welcome and encourage any feedback)

Open core and open foundation have different evolutionary lineages: open core is a variation on dual licensing as practiced by the likes of MySQL and Sleepycat that also borrows heavily on the value-added subscription model as practiced by Red Hat and JBoss. Meanwhile open foundation has its roots in the commercialization of BSD, which pre-dates the concepts of open source and free software, as well as Apache.

From a practical perspective, the easiest way to think of the distinction between open core and open foundation is via an example:

PostgreSQL is an independent, community-developed open source project. EnterpriseDB offers extensions to the PostgreSQL core, such as Oracle-compatibility, in the form of Postgres Plus Advanced Server.

PostgreSQL has also been used by many other vendors to create commercial products. For example Greenplum used PostgreSQL as the foundation of its Greenplum Database (for other examples see this post). This allowed the company to build on proven database technology and avoid reinventing the wheel, but it also involved the creation of an entirely new product, rather than extensions to an open source project (the company initially actually started a new project, Bizgres, and created extensions to that but Bizgres was last seen in August 2008).

So while open core involves offering proprietary extensions targeted at a segment of the open source project user base, open foundation involves using open source software to create entirely new products, targeted at a different user base.

The example used above highlights three important points to consider when comparing open core and open foundation strategies:

1/ While open core is most readily associated with vendor-controlled projects it can also be used as a strategy to monetize community-controlled projects.

2/ Open core strategies can be used in conjunction with complementary strategies. In the Greenplum example the company’s relationship with Bizgres was open core, while the relationship with PostgreSQL was open foundation. Similarly there is an open core relationship between Actuate’s BIRT products and the Eclipse BIRT project, and an open complement relationship between Actuate 10 and the Eclipse BIRT project. Meanwhile there is an open core relationship between Day Software’s CRX content repository and the Apache Jackrabbit and Sling projects, and a open foundation relationship between CQ5 and Jackrabbit, Felix and Sling – as well as the numerous other Apache projects that Day contributes to.

3/ Open core and open foundation are licensing strategies used as part of a larger business strategy for engaging with and commercializing open source software, which highlights the futility in trying to pigeon-hole companies as “open core vendors” or “open source vendors”.

Finally it is worth thinking about the different tensions that the open core and open foundation strategies create with their respective communities.

As Jorg Janke notes, “looking for an income stream as an open source vendor always results in some sort of conflict with the community. So, you have to pick the community you want to ‘offend’.”

With a vendor-controlled open core strategy the community is a user community, and as we have previously discussed the conflict is in deciding what features belong in the core and what features don’t.

With an open foundation strategy the community is the open source project developer community, and the conflict lies in deciding what features and resources to contribute to that project.

A community-controlled open core strategy arguable results in conflict with both the user and developer communities, although since the vendor does not own or control the project the relationship is much more comparable to the open foundation strategy.

We will be writing more about other strategies for generating revenue from open source software, in a follow-up to our Open Source is Not a Business Model report, which is due to be published latter this year. It will provide more context for the economic motivators and issues involved in the various models, as well as updated research on which vendors are following which strategies, and why, as well as a survey to uncover what software users make of it all. The report will be freely available to CAOS subscribers. For more details of the CAOS research practice, and to apply for trial access, click here.


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The open core issue (part two)

Июль 22nd, 2010

In the first part of this post I discussed the underlying division that drives the debate about open core, and the futility of arguing about what constitutes an “open source company” without any relevant definition.

Since then Monty Widenius has proposed a definition that would exclude any company that does not produce open source software (including open source support providers) and any company that does not provide access to 100% of its code (which would often exclude Red Hat as it moves to open source acquired code).

In the meantime others have declared that there is no such thing as an open source company and decided instead to discourage use of the term altogether. This is the logical conclusion of the argument that Open Source is Not a Business Model, and while this seems like a nuclear option, it does at least mean that we can hopefully avoid repeated arguments about whether company X is an open source company or not.

Since we seem to be able to move on from the theoretical argument about whether open core vendors are open source or not, it is an opportune moment to turn the debate towards a more practical assessment of the open core strategy and its strengths and weaknesses.

This second blog post turns attention to the open core strategy itself and examines some of the common criticisms. Some of them are valid, some exaggerated, and some are misunderstandings. If the debate is to progress it is important to stop fixating on issues that fit in the latter two categories and focus on those that fit in the first.

There are plenty of criticisms to choose from, and this is a complicated subject, so this is a long post. I have tried to cover all the major issues in one go in order to give a thorough representation of my views on the subject.

For an overview of the open core model itself and how it compares to other strategies for generating revenue see this post. With that in mind (deep breath) here goes:

Crippleware
Since open core relies on generating revenue from proprietary extensions to an open source core it is often asserted that the open source core will be crippled in some way to ensure that users opt for the proprietary version.

That is like claiming that open source support providers deliberately make open source projects difficult to work with in order to sell more support contracts.

Any strategy that worked like that would be flawed. That is why the open core strategy does not work that way.

Like the open source support strategy, open core relies on having a ubiquitous, fully functional, open source project.

Instead of selling support, open core vendors sell value-added features that are designed to be of value to paying customers. Of course the strategy relies on segmenting the audience for the product and delivering features that would be appropriate to each.

As Simon Phipps wrote:

“The community edition is used by a group of people who have the time and skills to deploy by themselves and who have no need of the many differences of the commercial versions. The commercial versions are feature-rich and effectively lock their users into a traditional commercial ISV relationship with the vendor.”

I’m sure open core vendors would dispute the reference to lock-in, but Simon’s comment makes it clear that there are two audiences for two separate products.

This distinction is important in understanding how Likewise Software can claim that customers drive open core: “The added functionality in Enterprise benefits a very specific segment of our community, and we work closely with our enterprise customers to ensure we provide value here.”

The point is that paying customers, as opposed to open source users, see value in the proprietary features and are prepared to buy the product. The strategy will fail if open source users also see value in those features but are denied them, or are forced to pay to adopt them.

The phrase “bait and switch” is often used to criticize the open core approach (indeed the term open core was promoted specifically to provide an alternative vocabulary to bait and switch) and suggests that users are either tricked or forced into taking the proprietary features. Clearly any strategy that relies on misleading potential customers is going to be short-lived.

It is true that some vendors are not great at communicating the differences between the open source core and the proprietary version in the past, but our previous transparency test indicated that they have got a lot better in that regard.

To some extent this is as a result of pressure from open source advocates. More than that though, I believe, it is the result of vendors realizing that a successfully executed open core strategy relies on transparency and in not attempting to sell anything to community users (and vastly improving the quality of their marketing communication).

While open core vendors have in the past been guilty of treating the community a sales pipeline, we have observed that the next generation of start-ups has learned that the best way to encourage a frictionless relationship between a vendor and its community is not to attempt to “convert” users at all.

It goes without saying that forcing users to use the proprietary extensions is going to be flawed – the open core strategy depends on keeping both users and paying customers happy, independently.

Managing that is not easy, as our research has confirmed. As previously noted, our CAOS report into how open source changes approaches to sales and marketing included a few choice quotes from open core vendors on its challenge:

“Number one [challenge] is differentiation between core and commercial.”

Clearly, the difficulty with open core is in deciding what features to put in which version, and what proportion of a company’s engineering effort should be focused on the open source project.

“We can compete with ourselves; i.e., our commercial product may not be purchased because our open source/core product contains sufficient functionality to solve customer problems.”

It is a significant challenge and some vendors have been better at it than others but it does not follow that because this challenge exists then the core must be crippleware. Indeed the success of the strategy depends on it not being crippleware.

“Continuing to maintain the right balance of functionality between the freely downloadable open core and the commercial extensions is both art and science. It’s critical to get that right so the model continues to grow and advance.”

Are there some open core open source projects that are lacking in quality? Of course, but that doesn’t mean that all open core open source projects are crippleware. There are some pretty crappy “fully functional” community-developed open source projects – that does not mean the community development model is flawed.

Half a product

In response to Larry Augustin’s statement that “Well over half of our engineering effort produces code that is released under an OSI approved license”, Tarus Balog commented:

“Well over half? Well, that’s pretty good, but is open source code something that can be divided? Can I say “here is the product, but you only get to use half of it under an open source license”. Who decides which half? If I look at it in binary, do I just get to use the ones or just the zeroes?”

I am assuming Tarus is deliberately misunderstanding Larry’s statement in order to be facetious/mischievous (the last line certainly suggests so) but the statement highlights another misconception of the open core strategy – that the vendor starts with a fully-featured product and then divides it into the basic core (open source) functionality and the value-added (proprietary) extensions.

As we have already stated, however, in order for the strategy to work the core project must be widely adopted. For that to happen it needs to be a complete project. As Jack Repenning notes:

“if the open parts accomplish their goal fully and well… then the open-source product deserves to be assessed on its own terms. If there are also commercially licensed, or even proprietary/closed things associated with it that together accomplish some larger goal, that’s a different product, not a betrayal of the open one.”

The biggest issue that open core has, in my opinion, is that it attempts to bypass Clayton Christensen’s law of Conservation of Attractive Profits, which states that “When attractive profits disappear at one stage in the value chain because a product becomes modular and commoditized, the opportunity to earn attractive profits with proprietary products will usually emerge at an adjacent stage.”

It is this law that explains why it is difficult for open source support vendors to generate significant profits (since they have commoditized their own stage of the value chain). The same is true of open core vendors, except that that are attempting to commoditize only a portion of their value chain – the core functionality offered by the open source version, while betting that their value added extensions are sufficiently differentiated to retain the ability to generate profits.

Christensen’s law dictates that it will always be easier to generate profit at an adjacent stage. Or, as Matt Asay explains in the context of the OpenStacks project: “The reason OpenStack may be a big winner is that Rackspace doesn’t need OpenStack to make money. At least, not directly.”

Community matters
Cloudera recently told The 451 Group that 50% of its engineering effort is focused on open source projects (specifically Hadoop and its related projects) with the other half focused on the proprietary capabilities that are delivered in Cloudera Enterprise.

No one would suggest that Apache Hadoop is a limited or crippled project, simply because Cloudera (and IBM, Karmasphere and others) are offering closed-source complementary products.

Of course the difference between Hadoop and SugarCRM community (or many other open source core projects) is that Hadoop is a community-developed project, while in vendor-led open core projects are dominated by a single vendor.

This enables accusations of lock-in and a lack of community contributions to the development process. I’ll address the first issue shortly, but with reference to community development it is undoubtedly true that the majority of vendor-led open core projects do not enjoy the benefits of a collaborative development process.

Carlo Daffara explains how the strategy is a tradeoff between monetization and contributions, noting that “it is simply not possible to get something like Linux or Apache with open core”.

That is true, but then that is also not the aim of open core. Vendor-led open source projects are invariably more focused on creating ubiquitous platform and lowering barriers to adoption than they are on creating ubiquitous platforms for collaborative development.

Not all open source software projects are collaboratively developed. Whether this is a concern is very much a matter of personal opinion – is it enough that software is under and open source license, or does it also have to be developed collaboratively?

It is a problem, of course, if a company actively avoids contributions from elsewhere on the grounds that that doing so would impact their proprietary extensions. Simon Phipps notes that one of the reasons NASA involved itself in the OpenStacks cloud projects was due to frustration with Eucalyptus Systems’ reluctance to accept contributions that competed with its closed extensions.

Clearly this highlights a potential problem for open core vendors, but it is one that actually contradicts the accusation that open core users have no choice but to accept the proprietary extensions. While there is lock-in associated with any software choice, one of the weaknesses of the open core approach is users could decide to fork and/or develop open source versions of the proprietary features.

Similarly, Dana Blankenhorn reports that SplendidCRM has already replicated the user interface delivered in SugarCRM’s paid-for versions and made it available in its own community edition.

It is important to note, however, that while issues related to the community contributions are a symptom of the open core licensing strategy, they are by no means exclusive to open core.

The recent debate about open core was kicked off my this post by former Compiere CEO Jorg Janke about the apparent failure of Compiere’s strategy in putting too much emphasis on the closed extensions (as well as mistakes related to the partnership model).

In a follow-up post Jorg turned his attention to the project’s lack of external contribution. While it is clear that this was an issue that was exacerbated by the open core strategy it is important to note that the development model was dictated by a decision that was taken prior to the open core strategy being adopted.

Similarly the vast majority of the developers of the MySQL database have always been employees of its owner (first MySQL, then Sun and now Oracle). The shift towards open core (and it hasn’t got there yet) came much later than the decisions that prompted the development model.

Development costs
One area in which the lack of community does matter, of course, is in the R&D costs of open core vendors. The greater a proportion of employees that you have focused on development (of open source or proprietary code) the greater your development costs are going to be. This is undoubtedly a valid criticism of the open core model as the company is failing to benefit from R&D cost savings in terms of both the open source core and closed source extensions.

Arguably, the company is also impacted by higher development and testing costs since the closed source extensions do not benefit from exposure to the open source user community. How significant this additional cost might be depends on the significance of the extensions and the relative size of the community (since the vendor will still go through the traditional alpha/beta testing with its paying customers).

Another cost, arguably, is the loss of quality in the proprietary extensions resulting from the smaller testing group and the lack of open source code review. Again this is a valid criticism, but it is one that belongs in a much larger debate about the relative benefits of open source and proprietary development strategies.

Venture-capitalist tool
Jorg’s initial post also discussed how VC investors had pushed Compiere towards the open core approach, and another criticism is that it is the chosen OSS-related business strategy of VCs. Again this is a valid argument. There is no doubt that VCs are attracted to the open core strategy and have encouraged its wider adoption.

However, it is also worth noting that there are exceptions to the rule. OpenLogic is a VC-backed company that has been vocally critical of open core, while xTuple is a self-funded open core vendor (there are other examples).

I would also point out that VCs are also fully aware that for the strategy to be successful it depends on a ubiquitous, full-functional open source core, and that attempts at crippleware will fail.

Lock-in and other problems
Perhaps the most obvious criticism of open core, from an open source perspective, is that it perpetuates the use of proprietary software. Again this is valid, and I have previously covered why I think open core vendors are limiting their opportunities by focusing on product-led strategies and leaving themselves open to accusations of lock-in.

Again these are really issues for a larger debate about the relative merits of proprietary and open source licensing.

Finally (one hopes) the other major criticism of open core vendors is that they are misusing the term open source to describe themselves (or as Henrik Ingo put it “So if I don’t call myself ‘open source vendor’, then everything is fine? (yes)”

Assuming the decision to avoid using terms like “open source company” are maintained, this becomes less of an issue, but it is worth noting that the attempts at policing the term have been counter-productive.

The point is this: if you want open core vendors to refer to themselves as “open core companies” rather than “open source companies” then demonizing the open core strategy is not the way to go about it. Is it any wonder that Larry Augustin does not want SugarCRM to be seen as open core when accusations of crippleware are being thrown around?

Previously, Redmonk’s Stephen O’Grady noted that there is the potential for serious collateral damage in the way the debate about open core licensing is progressing.

Henrik Ingo notes that companies like CollabNet (which is not open core) is “concerned about the negative image now attached to open core and worried that his company would then be suffering from the negative image too.“

There are many ways in which an open core strategy could fail, but that does not mean that all open core strategies will fail. Open core is just the strategy -how you execute that strategy determines whether you succeed or fail.

I agree with CollabNet’s Jack Repenning that the conversation needs to move “a bit towards how to do it right, and away from confrontation”.

That was my aim with these two posts. I am sure there are plenty of people who will disagree with plenty of the things that have been written above. My intention is not to be confrontational but to take a balanced view of the potential problems related to the open core strategy.

We will be writing more about other strategies for generating revenue from open source software, in a follow-up to our Open Source is Not a Business Model report, which is due to be published latter this year. It will provide more context for the economic motivators and issues involved in the various models, as well as updated research on which vendors are following which strategies, and why, as well as a survey to uncover what software users make of it all. The report will be freely available to CAOS subscribers. For more details of the CAOS research practice, and to apply for trial access, click here.


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Tilting at Windows. Why rejecting Microsoft’s OSS contributions is counter-productive

Май 5th, 2010

Or: “Don’t be a Cnut.”

Yesterday I had a look at the response of the Joomla! community to the news that Microsoft had signed the Joomla! Contributor Agreement and was contributing code to the content management project.

You probably won’t be surprised to find that some people don’t like the idea. The speed and vehemence of their rejection of Microsoft’s involvement in the project is entirely predictable, but none the less depressing for that.

The usual complaints were rolled out:

  • you can’t trust Microsoft
  • when Microsoft contributes a major product to open source, we’ll listen
  • Microsoft is only doing this to sell more proprietary software
  • .
    Taking those in reverse order: yes Microsoft is doing this to encourage Joomla developers to use Windows. Just as IBM supports Linux to sell more servers etc etc. As Linus Torvalds put it: “Of course they picked an area that helps them. That’s the point of open source – the ability to make the code better for your particular needs.”

    And no, Microsoft hasn’t released a major product as open source. Neither had IBM when it started supporting Apache. Holding Microsoft to a different set of expectations is being deliberately difficult – discriminatory in fact.

    But doesn’t Microsoft deserve to be discriminated against? Certainly there are good reasons to mistrust Microsoft, but in this instance Microsoft has signed the Joomla! Contributor Agreement, which means it is contributing directly to the Joomla! project using the project’s chosen license (the GPL) and procedures. It didn’t have to do this. The Microsoft of old would sooner have forked the project – or more likely created a competing product based on .NET.

    Perhaps we shouldn’t be too quick to praise Microsoft for simply playing by the rules – but equally we should not discriminate against the company for doing so either. There is talk in the comments to the Joomla! announcement of forking the project without Microsoft’s code. To me that attitude contradicts the spirit – although not the precise wording – of the Open Source Definition (No Discrimination Against Persons or Groups). Back to Linus Torvalds: “I believe in open development, and that very much involves not just making the source open, but also not shutting other people and companies out.”

    Last year in a speech at the Open World Forum in Paris I made reference to King Cnut, the Viking King who, legend has it, commanded the tide to halt in order to prove to his followers that the power of kings is worthless compared to those of God (or nature).

    I discussed the fact that over the years it has been easy to see Microsoft as King Cnut without the self-awareness – attempting to hold back the open source waves, while these days it is a description that more accurately applies to certain free and open source software advocates – attempting to hold back the waves of contributions from proprietary software vendors.

    That is their right of course, but it also seems to me that by doing so they are not only acting in a discriminatory manner but also in a counter-productive one.

    Those railing against Microsoft contributing code to open source projects, are tilting at windmills. The danger Microsoft poses to open source lies not in the code but in the patents. As I noted in my speech last year, the future battles will not be fought around open source licensing, but patents, open standards, open access and open government.

    Microsoft has been making regular appearances on our CAOS Links posts in recent weeks. On the positive side, the company has taken steps forward as it released the source code of the .NET Framework Client Libraries for OData under the Apache 2.0 license, released its StyleCop source code style and consistency tool as open source, using the MS-PL, signed the Joomla! Contributor Agreement, and participated at DrupalCon.

    On the negative side it also took a step backwards when it signed a patent agreement with HTC covering HTC’s mobile phones running Android.

    To be more specific it wasn’t necessarily the signing of the patent deal that was a negative step (we’ll leave the more general discussion of software patents to another post) but the fact that the company once again chose to highlight the fact that the patent agreement related to open source software without providing any details.

    Just as we saw in the announcement of a previous agreement with Amazon, open source software takes center stage, and yet we have no way of knowing if the focus placed on open source software in the announcement is proportionate to the focus placed on open source software in the agreement.

    This is clearly potentially damaging for open source, but it is also potentially damaging for Microsoft as it tries to encourage more open source developers and users to move to its platforms. That is why we noted in July last year that “in order to convince those FOSS advocates that it is serious about co-existence, Microsoft needs to find a way to publicly communicate details about those 200+ patents in such a way that is not seen as a threat and would enable open source developers to license, work around, or challenge them.”

    We also stated that we believed that the company was aware of this. More accurately, perhaps, we should have stated that we believed a part of the company was aware of it. Another part is busy signing patent licensing deals and shouting about how they relate to open source.

    If Microsoft wants to be taken seriously by open source supporters it needs to find a way to rationalize these two parts of its business. At the same time however, if open source supporters want to defeat the biggest threat Microsoft poses to open source, they need to encourage, rather than attack, it when it does do the right thing.


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    Don’t fear the reaper. Why FOSS should not fear M&A by proprietary vendors

    Январь 8th, 2010

    A couple of posts have been published recently worrying about the impact of more open source specialist vendors being acquired by proprietary vendors.

    This is an issue that crops up occasionally. Usually when a major acquisition has been announced, and the current questioning seems to be driven by the ongoing saga of Oracle-Sun-MySQL, as well as the rumoured purchase of Zimbra by VMware.

    While fear of the unknown is understandable, to my mind the concern about open source specialists being acquired by proprietary vendors is driven by parochialism and misplaced assumptions about the rate of acquisitions and the acquiring company’s intentions.

    For a start the statistics suggest that acquisitions involving open source vendors have declined in recent years (contrary to our expectations to be honest). According to our preliminary figures there were 24 M&A deals involving open source vendors in 2009, compared to 29 in 2008 and 35 in 2007. Dave Rosenberg makes the case that we have seen less open source M&A than we might have expected.

    There is always the fear, however, that a proprietary vendor could acquire an open source rival in order to shut it down. This is a theory we at The 451 Group investigated last year via a TechDealMaker service report asking “Could an open source project survive a hostile acquisition?” (451 clients can access the report here).

    Looking at the history of M&A involving open source vendors we were unable to identify a single example of a proprietary vendor acquiring an open source project in order to kill it off.

    Another significant fear involving open source acquisitions is that the acquiring company will suddenly change the licensing and/or pricing in order to generate revenue from users open source of the open source project.

    To me this is a fear based on a false assumption that the only way to monetize open source is directly. If we look at the strategies used by proprietary vendors to generate revenue from open source (as we did oin our Market Insight Service report “How third parties generate revenue from open source“, which was itself adapted from our Open Source is Not a Business Model CAOS report) we find that they are more likely to do so indirectly via complementary products and services.

    In contrast open source specialist vendors have no choice but to attempt to monetize the open source software directly, either through support or proprietary licensed add-ons, and we have observed that this creates an inherent tension.

    There is also a false assumption that open source specialist vendors are more committed to an open source “philosophy”. Some are, to be sure, but some simply see open source as a means to an end - treating it as a license tactic that disrupts competitors and expends potential adoption. There is nothing inherently wrong with that, but it does mean that for a great many open source “projects” the idea of the development community is a myth.

    As previously discussed, Matt Asay noted last year that “vendors that have proprietary selling points elsewhere don’t need to control open-source code.”

    In fact, I would suggest that vendors with proprietary selling points elsewhere have more to gain from releasing control of an open source project. Dirk Reihle explained the financial benefits this week with his Economic Case for Open Source Foundations, including sharing development expenses, increasing profits per sale, increases sales, and expanding the addressable market.

    The fact that proprietary vendors have proprietary selling points elsewhere means that they are also in a better financial position to trade control for community via a foundational approach, in contrast to open source specialists.

    There may well be situations where the acquisition of open source specialists by proprietary vendors might give cause for concern, but I believe it is wrong to assume that the impact will be negative. While many open source specialists might have something to fear regarding increased M&A activity, in the broader context open source software has more potentially to gain from the increased involvement of proprietary vendors than it has to lose.


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    CAOS Theory’s most popular posts of 2009

    Декабрь 22nd, 2009

    Here are CAOS Theory’s top 20 posts of 2009, in terms of page views:

    • Looking for Linux, but sold out
    • January - Jay’s search for a Linux netbook - but was it a sign of their popularity or the lack of support from hardware vendors?

    • Marten Mickos is leaving Sun amid reorg
    • February - Breaking news on CAOS Theory, thanks to the fact that the news hit email boxes while those of us in the UK were awake. The beginning of the end, or the end of the beginning?

    • None leading Linux kernel development
    • September - The latest Linux kernel development statistics indicate that there is still is a significant role for individual developers working outside their corporate affiliations.

    • TomTom Linux impact light hit so far
    • March - Jay assesses the impact on device manufacturers and the Linux-centered software providers of Microsoft’s patent infringement suit against TomTom.

    • Define “open source vendor”
    • February - This one would run and run. Tarus Balog opened the floodgates by question our use of the term “open source vendor”.


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