News

Microsoft Extends 'Community Promise' to Windows PowerShell

A recent licensing change makes it easier for developers on non-Windows platforms to adapt Microsoft's Windows PowerShell for their use.

Microsoft announced last Friday that it has extended the Microsoft Community Promise agreement to include the licensing for the Windows PowerShell 2.0 language. The Community Promise agreement does not require that developers enter into a formal agreement with Microsoft. According the agreement's FAQ, this arrangement makes available some Microsoft-patented technologies for use in software produced by other vendors in perpetuity.

Microsoft's move clears the way for software developers to adapt PowerShell for use on operating systems such as Apple's Mac or various Linux OSes, if they have the time and means to do so (at least, the licensing is cleared for that kind of use). A Linux implementation called PASH already exists.

Microsoft also produced documentation to help make that possible. The language is now described in the "Windows PowerShell Language Specification Version 2.0" document, which Microsoft made available on Monday at its Download Center page.

Jeffrey Snover, the inventor of PowerShell and lead architect at the Windows Server Division, made the announcement, which was captured in a YouTube snippet, as noted by Microsoft MVP Don Jones in his WindowsITPro blog post. Snover said that while people have toyed with moving PowerShell to other platforms, Microsoft hadn't yet provided all of the tools in the past to get that done.

Jones noted that Microsoft won't be the one creating PowerShell for the Mac, but it has opened the door for others to make such an implementation happen. Still, he suggested that the prospects of seeing PowerShell for the Mac were "doubtful."

The text-based PowerShell language is typically used by IT pros for server management tasks, and it sometimes provides access to features unavailable through Microsoft's graphical user interfaces. Microsoft describes PowerShell as an "object-based distributed automation engine, scripting language, and command line shell."

About the Author

Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.

Featured

  • Microsoft Dismantles RedVDS Cybercrime Marketplace Linked to $40M in Phishing Fraud

    In a coordinated action spanning the United States and the United Kingdom, Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit (DCU) and international law enforcement collaborators have taken down RedVDS, a subscription based cybercrime platform tied to an estimated $40 million in fraud losses in the U.S. since March 2025.

  • Sound Wave Illustration

    CrowdStrike's Acquisition of SGNL Aims to Strengthen Identity Security

    CrowdStrike signs definitive agreement to purchase SGNL, an identity security specialist, in a deal valued at about $740 million.

  • Microsoft Acquires Osmos, Automating Data Engineering inside Fabric

    In a strategic move to reduce time-consuming manual data preparation, Microsoft has acquired Seattle-based startup Osmos, specializing in agentic AI for data engineering.

  • Linux Foundation Unites Major Tech Firms to Launch Agentic AI Foundation

    The Linux Foundation today announced the creation of a new collaborative initiative — the Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF) — bringing together major AI and cloud players such as Microsoft, OpenAI, Anthropic and other major tech companies.