Michael Harvey wrote:
Alan Lord wrote:
Many of the other "commercial" Open Source vendors are now moving to an even more open strategy (such as going GPL) in a effort to attract customers and grow their business. I'm thinking of several companies here such as Alfresco, SugarCRM, OpenBravo, Zimbra, Sun... I would be very concerned if Concursive's strategy is to go in the opposite direction.
Hi, Alan, we will be posting some more polished explanations of our various editions shortly. In the meantime, I want to make a brief observation about some of the other open source vendors you mention. Each of the companies above takes a different approach to licensing. SugarCRM, for example, has a community edition newly re-licensed under the GPL. However, their Professional and Enterprise editions are licensed purely under a proprietary license. OpenBravo uses a "badgeware" style license based on the MPL that requires a "powered by OpenBravo" logo and is thus not OSI-certified. Zimbra, recently purchased by Yahoo, now licenses its open source edition under the Yahoo Public License which is also not OSI-certified. And Zimbra also maintains functional differences between its open source edition and its commercial editions. (More information here: http://www.zimbra.com/products/product_editions.html). MySQL's enterprise edition includes administration and installation tools not provided to open source users. Even Alfresco--which might be the purest open source play amongst the companies you mention--reserves, as I understand it, some "secret sauce" that they only provide to commercial customers.
My point is that all of the commercial open source vendors--including us--continue experimenting with various business models, including licensing schemes to strike the correct balance of, openness, community support and participation, and a viable economic engine.
Thanks,
Michael Harvey
EVP, Concursive
Hi Michael.
You experiment too much :D Btw, YPL for Zimbra is basically GPL with badgeware.
Very nice product. The more we use it internally, more I like it. It is just a bit too expensive for out market.
Now that you have VC, I am a bit concerned about no mention of OS (half) nature of your product. I do understand that VC has probably put some financial targets upon you guys, but I kind of fail to see how nobody recognizes that all of recent big OS buyouts were driven by number of users, not revenue (sometimes even 20+ times bigger buyout than yearly revenue)
GPL3.0 plus Affero clause gets my vote :D And I hope you haven't abandoned OSA.
Speaking of Alfresco (remember, was first to warn about them), they are killing recently. Phillips is moving whole company, kicking Domino out, Whirlpool also, kicking Documentum. Both were political decisions from top, driven by open Alfresco nature, and the money involved is surreal.
This "we are kind of open source" will hurt you in long run.
Btw, did I mention how great I find your product? :D