OpenDaylight and the Future of Enterprise Software
Earlier this week, the Linux Foundation made an announcement about the oddly-named OpenDaylight project:
open source, open genomics, open creation
Earlier this week, the Linux Foundation made an announcement about the oddly-named OpenDaylight project:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:46 pm 0 comments
Labels: jim zemlin, linux foundation, Microsoft, networking, open enterprise, open source
Last week I wrote a letter to the European Commission about theextraordinary failure of the IPRED consultation process. I certainly didn't expect a reply immediately, but I did hope that its arrival might have been acknowledged by now. It hasn't, so I've now emailed the following:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:45 pm 0 comments
Labels: copyright, email, european commission, ipred2, open enterprise
Last week, we wrote about an organization that was unhappy that a Wikipedia article no longer existed. Now we have the opposite problem: an organization unhappy because a Wikipedia article does exist. And not just any organization, but the "Direction Centrale du Renseignement Intéieur" (Central Directorate of Interior Intelligence, DCRI), a French intelligence agency, which suddenly decided that an article about a military base contained classified information, and wanted it deleted. As the English-language Wikipedia article on the subject explains:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:43 pm 0 comments
Labels: army, france, secrecy, streisand effect, techdirt, wikipedia
As I wrote last week, all the main browsers are jockeying for position in the world of mobile, which is generally recognised as the key future platform. One player that is struggling here is Microsoft: its mobile phone strategy has signally failed to take off, leaving it a minor player alongside the duopoly of Apple and Google. Its tie-up with Nokia is part of its attempt to make its products relevant here, but another important aspect of its counter-attack is through the legal system.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:42 pm 0 comments
Labels: antitrust, apple, eu, google, Microsoft, open enterprise
Techdirt has been following the fascinating saga of Iceland's crowdsourced constitution for nearly two years. Back in October 2012, we noted that Icelandic citizens gave it a pretty big thumbs up. Reflecting that, it really looked like Iceland's parliament might pass the associated bill, and go down in the history books for this bold re-invention of itself.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:41 pm 0 comments
Labels: constitution, crowdsourcing, iceland, politicians, techdirt
Even if you don't remember the birth of Mozilla 15 years ago, you are certainly benefitting from its consequences. For, back then, the company that invented the Web as a mass medium, Netscape, was in its death throes, and looked likely to take Web browser choice with it.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:40 pm 0 comments
Labels: browsers, Firefox, mobile, mozilla, open enterprise, open source, phoenix
As we've noted before, Amazon is beginning to wield considerable power over the entire publishing chain. The past teaches us that as successful companies gain near-monopoly powers, their arbitrary decisions become more problematic. Here's an unusual example of that, pointed out to us by @IndigenousTweet via @MLBrook:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:37 pm 0 comments
Labels: Amazon, cornish, publishing, techdirt
Following my post yesterday about the extraordinary failure of the IPRED consultation process, I enclose below my letter sent to the European Commission on the subject, calling for an extension to the consultation, and for alternative ways of making submissions:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:36 pm 0 comments
Labels: consultation, copyright, email, european commission, ipred2, open enterprise
After weathering earlier attacks on its reliability, Wikipedia is now an essential feature of our online and cultural landscapes. Indeed, it's hard now to imagine a world where you can't quickly check up some fact or other by going online to Wikipedia and typing in a few keywords. But that centrality brings with it its own problems, as a post from Benjamin Mako Hill about legal threats he received thanks to his work as a Wikipedia editor makes clear.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:34 pm 0 comments
Back in October last year, in the context of India showing itself increasingly sceptical about pharma patents that drive up drug prices beyond the reach of its citizens, we wrote about an important court battle over Novartis's drug Gleevec, sold as Glivec in India. The definitive judgement from India's Supreme Court was announced today, reported here by The Guardian:
Last week I made a couple of urgent pleas to readers to complete the major EU IPRED consultation, which was being conducted on the Web. Since I needed to be able to refer to my own answers, I saved these as a draft online so that I could go back to them, polish them, and then submit them.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:32 pm 0 comments
Labels: consultation, copyright, european commission, ipred2, open enterprise
Last year, Techdirt wrote about an interesting article suggesting that we should welcome "cyberwar" since it would be so much less painful than the ordinary kind. Of course, that begs the question what we actually mean by "cyberwar", since some forms are probably less humane than others. As we have pointed out, the use of the totally embarrassing "cyber" prefix is really just an excuse for more government controls and for security companies to get fat contracts implementing them.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:30 pm 0 comments
Labels: cyberattacks, fud, techdirt
As Mike noted a couple of days ago, international trade agreements often have the effect of constraining the power of national legislatures. Indeed, that's doubtless one of the reasons why they have become so popular in recent years: they allow backroom deals between politicians and lobbyists to set the agenda for law-making around the world, without the need for any of that pesky democratic oversight nonsense. In particular, the trade agreement between South Korea and the US is turning out to be a key limiting factor for both TPP and what US politicians might try to do about phone unlocking. This makes two recent moves to loosen South Korea's harsh copyright laws potentially important far beyond that country's borders.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:51 pm 0 comments
Labels: copyright, fta, south korea, techdirt, three strikes, tpp, us
Yesterday I mentioned the important consultation on IPRED, how it was closing soon, and what a good idea it would be if you applied to take part immediately. I also noted there's a helpful guide to filling in the consultation, from EDRI, but I omitted to mention that there is an equally great one from the Pirate Party MEP Amelia Andersdotter, which I thoroughly recommend.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:50 pm 0 comments
Labels: consultation, copyright, enforcement, european commission, ipred2, open enterprise, pirate party
Although the European Union finally approved the continent-wide Unitary Patent in December 2012, after decades of discussions, the story is by no means at an end. Science describes the root of the problem:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:48 pm 0 comments
Labels: european commission, software patents, spain, techdirt
Today is Document Freedom Day:
It is a day for celebrating and raising awareness of Open Standards and formats which takes place on the last Wednesday in March each year. On this day people who believe in fair access to communications technology teach, perform, and demonstrate.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:47 pm 0 comments
Labels: document freedom day, drm nokia, odf, open enterprise, open standards, openness
IPRED is not that well known, even among the Net-savvy. And yet it's one of the most important EU directives that affects the online world, and a consultation on its future closes at the end of this week, on 30 March. Here's the background from EDRI:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:46 pm 0 comments
Labels: copyright, enforcement, ipred2, open enterprise
Hackers and hacking have been much in the news recently - for all the wrong reasons, unfortunately. The most dramatic case, perhaps, was the suicide of Aaron Swartz. He was threatened with 35 years in prison, partly for this:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:44 pm 0 comments
Labels: cyber-abuse, hackers, open enterprise, security
Techdirt has been following the rapid rise and current problems of the various Pirate Parties in Europe for some time. Both their success and difficulties flow in part from the fact that they do not fit neatly into the traditional political categories. This makes them attractive to those who are disenchanted with established parties, but also makes it hard for Pirate Parties to devise a coherent political program that they can seek to implement, for example through alliances with others.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:43 pm 0 comments
Labels: brazil, environment, greens, pirates, sustainability, techdirt
As you may have heard, there's been an election in Rome recently. These kind of events tend to bring out the crowds, and NBC had the clever idea of finding a couple of pictures showing roughly the same view, but eight years apart. They look very similar, except for one rather striking detail: in the first, from 2005, there are a few mobile phones visible; in the second, taken recently, tiny screens are visible everywhere in the crowd -- it seems as if practically everyone is using their phone to take a picture.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:42 pm 0 comments
Labels: copyright, mobile phones, rome, smartphones, techdirt
It would be something of an understatement to say that people have strong opinions about patents. But as Techdirt has reported, there's a growing consensus that software patents in particular aren't working -- James Bessen and Michael J. Meurer have written an entire book, "Patent Failure", about how bad things are there, and why it's happening in this area rather than elsewhere.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:40 pm 0 comments
Labels: mathematics, patent failure, patents, software patents, techdirt
Techdirt has been pointing out for years that more patents is not the same thing as more innovation, even though many around the world would have us believe otherwise. It seems the message is finally getting through: here's a remarkable statement from India on the subject of innovation and small- and medium-sized companies, made at a TRIPS Council meeting:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:39 pm 0 comments
Labels: india, innovation, patents, techdirt, trips
Although the use of open source by the UK government has an unhappy history (and one that certainly isn't finished), one ray of hope comes from Gov.uk, as I've noted before. The driving force behind that site is the Government Digital Service (GDS), and on its blog there's a particularly interesting post by Mike Bracken, who rejoices in the splendid title of "Executive Director of Digital in the Cabinet Office."
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:38 pm 0 comments
Labels: gov.uk, open data, open enterprise, open source, uk government
Regular readers of this column will know that I am not overly enamoured of the European Patent Office, since it has effectively introduced software patents by the back door, in direct contravention of the will of the European Parliament. No surprise, then, that the EPO's Annual Report has plenty to worry about. For example, in his foreword, the EPO's President writes:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:37 pm 0 comments
Labels: epo, european parliament, open enterprise, patents, software patents
Librarians can play an important role in any society that depends increasingly on access to information to function. One of their jobs is to help people find what they are looking for, in a neutral, objective way, without imposing their own ideas or values in the process. Sadly, it looks like that won't be possible in Canada any more, now that librarians are expected to sign up to a new Code of Conduct imposed on them by the Canadian government. Here's one problematic section:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:35 pm 0 comments
Labels: canada, censorship, librarians, scientists, techdirt
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