Munich Reconsiders Linux Migration
Concerns about software patents cause the City of Munich to rethink its planned migration to Linux of 14,000 desktop computers.
The City of Munich has put its planned migration to Linux of 14,000 desktop PCs on hold due to concerns over software patents, the citys CIO said on Tuesday night. The call for bids in the LiMux Project, as it is known in Germany, was due to begin last week. But on Friday, Green Party Alderman Jens Muehlhaus called for the city to examine the impact patents might have on the decision, in light of software patents legislation currently under consideration in the European Union.
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The basis of last weeks warning by Alderman Muehlhaus was a cursory study by the Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure, one of the chief organizers against software patent legislation in Europe. The Green Party is the only major European party that consistently opposes software patents, according to activists. Both the FFII and the OSRM studies underestimate the problem of software patents, according to Mueller, because they dont take into consideration that companies such as Microsoft acquire thousands of new patents each year.
Software patents are disallowed in Europe by a 1974 decision of the European Patent Convention, but thousands of computer programs have nevertheless been allowed patents, in a gray area of European law. Anti-software patent activistsincluding economists, computer scientists, developers and small businessesargue that a proposed directive, "Patent law: patentability of computer-implemented inventions," would legitimize those software patents and open the floodgates to many others, as is already the situation in the United States.
Last year, members of the European Parliament added a series of amendments to the proposal, effectively limiting its scope. In May, however, the European Commission removed the amendments. It is this May version of the directive, headed for a vote by the EU Competitiveness Council in September, that the City of Munich believes may pose a threat to open-source software.
"Today, open-source software can do the job," said Mueller. "The question is if, three years down the road, companies like Microsoft will be able to limit what [open source] can do through software patents."
There are still opportunities for the European Parliament to alter the proposed directive. If it is approved by the Competitiveness Council this fall, it will pass to the parliament for a second reading, where alterations can be made. Any changes will, however, need a more substantial majority than there was at last years first reading, with any abstentions and absentees counting as "no" votes.
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