Someone posted the original on this topic, which I sort of stayed away from, I
too often on those types of topics put my foot into the mouth.  Anyway, the
following came across the wires this morning from Information Week.  Some of you
may be interested, me I'm off to do some more with PostGres & MySql!!

Dick Goulet
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** Oracle's Pricing Dispute

Oracle just can't get away from pricing controversies. The 
software vendor is reportedly seeking extra license fees from 
customers in a dispute over just what constitutes a "user" in a 
batched multiplex computing environment. The consulting firm Meta 
Group, saying it has received a "flurry of calls (from) angry 
Oracle customers," is urging customers to refuse to pay the fees.

Industry observers say Oracle is aggressively enforcing its 
software license contracts. "I hear Oracle is being mean to its 
customers," Wells Fargo Securities analyst Rob Tholemeier said 
last week before Oracle reported its third-quarter results. "They 
are reviewing database agreements, being very tough, and trying 
to get more dollars out of them." Oracle CFO Jeff Henley, when 
asked about the issue during a conference call with Wall Street 
analysts, said the company has an "ongoing license-compliance 
program," but that there's no new enforcement initiative under 
way.

Multiplexing involves a shared pool of connections to a back-end 
database that makes it difficult to determine the actual number 
of users accessing the database. Under such circumstances, 
companies generally purchase database licenses on a per-CPU model 
or pay for all users at the front of the system. But Oracle, 
according to Meta Group, is trying to expand the definition of 
multiplexing to include batch feeds from non-Oracle applications 
into Oracle databases, and that user licenses must be purchased 
for all users of those source systems. One Meta Group client was 
told that it would have to pay $2.2 million in additional license 
fees to remain in compliance.

"It appears pretty clear to us that they have redefined what 
multiplexing is to an absurd degree," says Meta Group analyst 
Charlie Garry. Oracle says this definition has always been its 
policy. But Meta Group questions Oracle's move on both legal and 
ethical grounds. - Rick Whiting

More on Oracle
Oracle 3Q Earnings Drop 
http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eGTT0BdFGA0V20BaCt0Ae

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