Oracle Issues 10-Point Commitment to EC, MySQL Community
Oracle Issues 10-Point Commitment to EC, MySQL Community
Oracle on Dec. 14 released its first public statement in weeks
regarding the pending acquisition of Sun Microsystems, attempting to
reassure the European Commission and Sun's MySQL development community
that it will maintain -- and even enhance -- Sun's successful
stewardship of the open source database.
In its statement to the press, Oracle said that it "has engaged in
constructive discussions with the European Commission regarding the
concerns expressed by the commission about the Oracle/Sun Microsystems
transaction, and in particular the maintenance of MySQL as a
competitive force in the database market."
Oracle then offered a 10-point list of commitments it says it will guarantee for five years if the acquisition is sanctioned.
Oracle met with EC regulators in a closed-door hearing on Dec. 10 to
outline its case. According to eWEEK sources, the Oracle
representatives' performance was persuasive enough to soften
regulators' fears that development of the open source MySQL database
will become diminished under Oracle's ownership. In fact, sources told
eWEEK that the commission was all but ready to sanction the deal.
However, open source activists dead set against the acquisition were
quick to respond, calling Oracle's statement "totally ineffectual."
"In an outpouring of support ... Europe's antitrust authority is now
getting many thousands of e-mails from MySQL users every day, asking
regulators to protect the open source database," Florian Mueller, a
former MySQL shareholder and adviser, told eWEEK. Mueller is working
for MySQL creator and founder Michael "Monty" Widenius in opposing the
deal.
Widenius wrote a scathing Dec. 12 blog post against the acquisition, saying that "a weak MySQL is worth about one billion dollars per year to Oracle, maybe more."
Widenius, open source software advocate Richard Stallman, and several software development industry groups
staunchly oppose the inclusion of MySQL into the Oracle product line
because they see it as a clear conflict of interest that would result
in the eventual phasing out of the popular open source resource.
MySQL is commonly used in the data centers of Web 2.0 companies such as
Google, Yahoo and Amazon.com, and it also has a loyal following in the
midrange and small and midsize business markets. Estimates of its
installed base range from 6 million to 20 million or more, former MYSQL CEO Marten Mickos told eWEEK.
Oracle's main product is its enterprise parallel database software and
the middleware that goes with it. Sun, which bought MySQL for $1
billion in January 2008, is an enterprise IT systems company that does
not primarily make database systems. MySQL, despite owning less than 10 percent
of the market revenue, has been Oracle's largest open-source competitor
for most of the last decade.
However, Oracle CEO Larry Ellison has said publicly several times that
he believes that MySQL has its own niche market and that owning its
trademark and codebase does not represent a conflict of interest to
compete with his own company's proprietary databases. The U.S.
Department of Justice agreed and approved the proposed $7.4 billion
acquisition last August.
The Brussels-based EC, which serves as the law enforcement body of the
27-nation European Union, is due to make a decision on Jan. 27, 2010,
about whether to sanction the acquisition, so Oracle can continue to do
business in Europe. Ellison has said that Sun is losing money at a $100
million-per-month clip, thanks to the uncertainty surrounding the deal.
Oracles list of commitments
Here is Oracle's 10-point list of commitments to MySQL and its
community that it says it will guarantee for five years if
the acquisition is sanctioned:
1. Continued availability of storage engine APIs. Oracle shall
maintain and periodically enhance MySQL's Pluggable Storage Engine
Architecture to allow users the flexibility to choose from a portfolio
of native and third-party supplied storage engines.
MySQL's Pluggable Storage Engine Architecture shall mean MySQL's
current practice of using, publicly-available, documented application
programming interfaces to allow storage engine vendors to "plug" into
the MySQL database server. Documentation shall be consistent with the
documentation currently provided by Sun.
2. Non-assertion. As copyright holder, Oracle will change Sun's
current policy and shall not assert or threaten to assert against
anyone that a third-party vendor's implementations of storage engines
must be released under the GPL because they have implemented the
application programming interfaces available as part of MySQL's
Pluggable Storage Engine Architecture.
A commercial license will not be required by Oracle from third-party
storage engine vendors in order to implement the application
programming interfaces available as part of MySQL's Pluggable Storage
Engine Architecture. Oracle shall reproduce this commitment in
contractual commitments to storage vendors who at present have a
commercial license with Sun.
3. License commitment. Upon termination of their current MySQL
OEM agreement, Oracle shall offer storage vendors who at present have a
commercial license with Sun an extension of their agreement on the same
terms and conditions for a term not exceeding Dec. 10, 2014. Oracle
shall reproduce this commitment in contractual commitments to storage
vendors who at present have a commercial license with Sun.
4. Commitment to enhance MySQL in the future under the GPL.
Oracle shall continue to enhance MySQL and make subsequent versions of
MySQL, including Version 6, available under the GPL. Oracle will not
release any new, enhanced version of MySQL Enterprise Edition without
contemporaneously releasing a new, also enhanced version of MySQL
Community Edition licensed under the GPL. Oracle shall continue to make
the source code of all versions of MySQL Community Edition publicly
available at no charge.
5. Support not mandatory. Customers will not be required to
purchase support services from Oracle as a condition to obtaining a
commercial license to MySQL.
6. Increase spending on MySQL research and development. Oracle
commits to make available appropriate funding for the MySQL continued
development (GPL version and commercial version). During each of the
next three years, Oracle will spend more on research and development
(R&D) for the MySQL Global Business Unit than Sun spent in its most
recent fiscal year (about $24 million) preceding the closing of the
transaction.
7. MySQL Customer Advisory Board. No later than six months after
the anniversary of the closing, Oracle will create and fund a customer
advisory board, including in particular end users and embedded
customers, to provide guidance and feedback on MySQL development
priorities and other issues of importance to MySQL customers.
8. MySQL Storage Engine Vendor Advisory Board. No later than six
months after the anniversary of the closing, Oracle will create and
fund a storage engine vendor advisory board, to provide guidance and
feedback on MySQL development priorities and other issues of importance
to MySQL storage engine vendors.
9. MySQL Reference Manual. Oracle will continue to maintain,
update and make available for download at no charge a MySQL Reference
Manual similar in quality to that currently made available by Sun.
10. Preserve Customer Choice for Support. Oracle will ensure
that end-user and embedded customers paying for MySQL support
subscriptions will be able to renew their subscriptions on an annual or
multi-year basis, according to the customer's preference.
"The geographic scope of these commitments shall be worldwide and these
commitments shall continue until the fifth anniversary of the closing
of the transaction," Oracle concluded.
