Free Newsletters:
DatabaseDaily  
Database Journal
Search Database Journal:
 
MS SQL Oracle DB2 Access MySQL PostgreSQL Sybase PHP SQL Etc SQL Scripts & Samples Links Database Forum

» Database Journal Home
» Database Articles
» Database Tutorials
MS SQL
Oracle
DB2
MS Access
MySQL
» RESOURCES
Database Tools
SQL Scripts & Samples
Links
» Database Forum
» DBA Jobs
» Sitemap

News Via RSS Feed


follow us on Twitter





New Security Features Planned for Firefox 4

Another Laptop Theft Exposes 21K Patients' Data

Oracle Hits to Road to Pitch Data Center Plans
Database Journal |DBA Support |SQLCourse |SQLCourse2









Systems Programmer / Software Engineer - C, Unix-Linux, Multi-threading, IPC
WSI Nationwide, Inc.
US-NY-New York

Justtechjobs.com Post A Job | Post A Resume

Dec 31, 2009

Can Michael Widenius block the Oracle Sun deal

By DatabaseJournal.com Staff

Michael Widenius, co-creator of MySQL which is currently owned by Sun Microsystems has started a campaign to “keep the internet free”—purposely trying to prevent Oracle from buying Sun and arguing that the purchase would hurt consumers and small businesses.

Mr Widenius states that “It's not in the internet user's interest that one key piece of the net would be owned by an entity that has more to gain by severely limiting and in the long run even killing it as an open source product than by keeping it alive,” AND “If Oracle were allowed to acquire MySQL, we would be looking at less competition among databases, which will mean higher license and support prices.”

Additionally Mr Widenius has launched a SaveMySQL petition in an attempt to sway the European Commission as US regulators have already approved but not yet so in Europe. With less than a month before the European Commission decides (01/27/2010) it seems a bit too lofty of a task with very little time.

View Article

Tools:
Add databasejournal.com to your favorites
Add databasejournal.com to your browser search box
IE 7 | Firefox 2.0 | Firefox 1.5.x
Receive news via our XML/RSS feed

Daily News Archives

Comment and Contribute

 


(Maximum characters: 1200). You have characters left.