News
        
        Microsoft Joins Open Source Census Group
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- June 16, 2008
        Microsoft has joined the 
Open Source Census as a sponsor,  according to an announcement issued by 
OpenLogic, which founded the  group. The Open Source Census project tracks the use of open source software by  the business community. Survey results are updated on an ongoing basis at the  group's Web site. 
The group today reported that "more than 220,000 open  source package/project installations" are being used by Open Source Census  survey participants. In addition, about half of the Linux users surveyed chose  the Ubuntu distribution. The top five open source packages were "Firefox,  Xerces, Zlib, Xalan and Prototype," respectively.
Joining the group at the "Friends" level are  "ActiveState, EnterpriseDB and OSAlt.com." A new sponsor, in addition  to Microsoft, is the Oregon State University Open Source Lab.
The Microsoft name stands out as a new sponsor mainly  because the company has been involved with open source for only a few years,  and hasn't always been friendly to it. Sam Ramji, Microsoft's senior director  of platform strategy cites  a history extending back just four years, when Microsoft first established  its Linux Lab. 
More recently, in February of this year, Microsoft announced  a broad program, backed by Chief Architect Ray Ozzie, that would support  developers working with Microsoft's software, including open source developers.  Back then, the company announced that it would provide open application  programming interfaces to its core software products, and publish software  protocol documentation. 
Some of that documentation, about 14,000 pages, was released a few months ago. The documentation describes protocols used in Microsoft  Office 2007, Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 and Microsoft Exchange  Server 2007. 
Still, skeptics such as the Software Freedom   Law Center had declared back in  March that Microsoft's interoperability principles were essentially contrary to  GNU General Public Licensing, an agreement that permits code sharing and future  software improvements without triggering patent violations.
The Open Source Census project's work is public and  supported by a number of open source solution providers and organizations,  including CollabNet and the Open Solutions Alliance. Sponsors like Microsoft do  not get much more from the survey information than what is publicly disclosed.
"If you sponsor The Open Source Census, you receive a  quarterly extract of the data," explained Kim Weins, senior vice president  of products and marketing for OpenLogic, in an e-mailed response. "Data is  still anonymous (no names, emails, IP addresses or companies). The benefit is  that you can slice and dice the data in additional ways beyond what is provided  on the public website."
Participants submitting data to the Open Source Census will  be able to compare their company with similar companies, with all of the identifying  information removed, Weins explained. They get access to an area on the group's  Web site to do the comparisons.
Weins said that the Open Source Census uses OSS Discovery, which is "an open  source scanning tool available under the AGPL license." It finds open  source packages on a single machine and creates an inventory, Weins added.
"There is no personally identifying information  submitted so we do not capture or store participant names, company names, email  addresses or IP addresses," Weins wrote. 
In addition, the tool doesn't track the various open source  licenses used, nor does it track alleged breaches of those licenses, Weins said.  That may come as a relief for those fearing Microsoft's involvement in the  project. For instance, Microsoft has alleged that open source software  infringes on 235 of its  software patents.
Microsoft of late has worked with the open Eclipse project  and has its Codeplex open source portal for developers. It has also recently  teamed with Zend Technologies to help PHP code run better on Windows operating  systems. Microsoft even stepped in to remove its Sandcastle application from  an open source project when it was found that the source code wasn't supplied.
Ramji cited the mixed computing environment at the  enterprise level to explain Microsoft's participation in the Open Source  Census.
"Our customers, partners and developers are working in  increasingly heterogeneous environments, and our participation in industry  projects like The Open Source Census are relevant for the ecosystem in which we  participate," Ramji wrote in a prepared statement.
Veteran Microsoft watcher, Mary Jo Foley, opined in her All About Microsoft blog that competition with open  source might also be a motivation for Microsoft.
"I'm sure that Microsoft also wants a better  understanding of where/how open-source software is gaining traction in  enterprises in order to better fight it."   
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.