OpenOffice.org
wants Sun Microsystems to give
up control over the OpenOffice productivity suite, and donate the intellectual
property to an independent not-for-profit foundation if that would help attract
additional developers.
"In an ideal world open source should not be dependent on the capriciousness
of any one corporation," OpenOffice.org project leader Louis Suarez-Potts told
vnunet.com.
"A foundation does not isolate a project from any one corporation, it
provides some distance. But the reality is that it requires Sun to give up the
intellectual property to a foundation. That's a fairly large obstacle."
Suarez-Potts said that OpenOffice is currently suffering from the corporate
politics between Sun and
IBM, which is causing IBM
to refrain from contributing to the project.
An IBM contribution could further speed up development and provide OpenOffice
with additional features that increase the software's appeal.
OpenOffice is a suite of productivity tools for text editing, spreadsheets
and drawing. Sun acquired the product in 1999 and released the source code in
2000 under an open source licence.
Sun uses the OpenOffice code as the foundation of
StarOffice,
a commercial version of the suite, and still owns the intellectual property.
OpenOffice.org acts as the project's technological and marketing steward and
operates independently from Sun.
IBM used the OpenOffice source code last year to create a separate version of
the suite as part of its
Workplace
offering, which is allowed under the application's licence.
The move amounted to a 'fork', where the project is split up and each group
continues to develop their own version.
A fork is considered inappropriate for open source projects, as it forces the
developer community to spread its attention over multiple, yet similar,
projects.
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