I'm curious what it means to end-users. How does this change the game for me - 
RedHat customer?

I'm under assumption, this also explains why latest RHEL release notes disclose 
the bug numbers with slight description of what was discovered but when you try 
to open the BZ id, it tells you that you dont have permissions - essentially 
hiding all the details. This is probably a way of showing a middle finger to 
Oracle but unintentianlly also to everyone else.

I think they could have addressed this issue with new licensing clause that 
would forbid Oracle like usage and possible permit community release - like 
CentOS. Come to think about it - CentOS also steals a large piece of "would be 
financial gain" pie - there are countless commercial CentOS users outthere.

This may be a good business decision which is understandable - but its bad for 
open source community in general that relies on RHEL.

________________________________
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of solarflow99
Sent: Friday, March 04, 2011 1:14 PM
To: Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 (Santiago) discussion mailing-list
Subject: Re: [rhelv6-list] RHEL6 kernel 2.6.32-71.14.1.el6.x86_64 panic...

It makes sense to me, I wouldn't want to see Oracle keep stealing away and 
profiting from FOSS, they've got almost everything cornered already.




On Fri, Mar 4, 2011 at 1:01 PM, Matthias Saou 
<th...@spam.spam.spam.spam.spam.spam.spam.egg.and.spam.freshrpms.net<mailto:th...@spam.spam.spam.spam.spam.spam.spam.egg.and.spam.freshrpms.net>>
 wrote:
Hi,

I guess this is also related :
http://linux.slashdot.org/story/11/03/04/1550231/Red-Hat-Stops-Shipping-Kernel-Changes-as-Patches

So they want to bother Oracle? I can understand that. But right now
what I see is that it also bothers me, a faithful customer. So this is
a slippery slope...

Matthias

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