On Wednesday 26 March 2008, David Krings wrote: > I think that the plain simple MySQL that we mainly use will remain > available at no cost with a favourable license for some time. One never > knows what a company will do, but I cannot recall anyone ver releasing a > product under GPL and then taking it proprietary.
Well, it has been attempted: http://linuxmafia.com/faq/Apps/sourceforge-forks.html The above is somewhat biased but largely accurate in its facts. VA Linux had a GPL software product and an Open Source-based business model. (I have a VA Linux t-shirt which says: "Open Source: it's the difference between trust and anti-trust.") The company then did a complete u-turn and decided to produce a proprietary product. (To my knowledge, they never produced a t-shirt extolling the virtues of proprietariness and anti-trust lawsuits.) They converted it to a proprietary product, however, by definition, the previous code remained free to use indefinitely under the GPL. The community, not entirely happy with this path, maintained and upgraded the product, working from the GPL'ed codebase. VA Software (renamed) then faced the interesting business model of selling a proprietary product that was competing against virtually the same product, GPL'ed and available for free. It's challenging to sell meatballs when someone is giving away the exact same meatballs next door for free. Despite pouring quite a lot of money into the effort, this did not work out well. And today, the open source fork remains: http://gforge.org/ Anyway, the upshot is this... there are a few questions to ask. 1) Is there a large community interested in the GPL version of this product? 2) Are there sufficient programmers who would work on it and keep it going if the primary company abandoned the product? If the answers to both these questions are "yes", it is essentially impossible for a company to successfully take an open source codebase and privatize it, no matter how stupid their management may be. For MySQL, I'd say the answers are clearly yes. So have no fear! MySQL, or some derivative of it, will remain available as long as people care about it. Michael Sims _______________________________________________ New York PHP Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk NYPHPCon 2006 Presentations Online http://www.nyphpcon.com Show Your Participation in New York PHP http://www.nyphp.org/show_participation.php
