In a major turnaround for Microsoft,
the company Thursday promised "greater transparency" in its development
and business practices, outlining a new strategy to provide more access to APIs
and previously proprietary protocols for some of its major software products,
including Windows and Office.
The move, inspired by the ongoing antitrust case against Microsoft in the European
Union, shows the company finally acknowledging the significant impact open source
and open standards have had on the industry and the company's own business.
It also should mean the end of Microsoft's patent threats against Linux and
interoperability concerns surrounding Office 2007 file formats.
During a news conference with top executives Thursday, Microsoft said it is
implementing four new interoperability principles and actions across its business
products to ensure open connections, promote data portability, enhance support
for industry standards, and foster more open engagement with customers and the
industry, including open-source communities.
These steps are "important" and represent "significant change
in how we share information about our products and technologies," Microsoft
CEO Steve Ballmer said in a statement. "For the past 33 years, we have
shared a lot of information with hundreds of thousands of partners around the
world and helped build the industry, but today's announcement represents a significant
expansion toward even greater transparency."
Under increased global pressure, Microsoft has limped toward a more open development
policy for some time with strategies like the Open Specification Promise, which
it published in September 2006 as a pledge that it would not take any patent-enforcement
action against those who use certain technology APIs (application programming
interfaces). The company launched
an open-source Web site last year, a move that was notable for one of the
first official uses of the term "open source" by the company. Microsoft
previously would release APIs and code to developers and other companies through
something it called the Shared
Source Initiative rather than specifically calling its policy open source.
However, at the same time as it appeared to be more open, Microsoft continued
to make bold claims and threats against technologies like Linux that it said
violated many patents the company holds. While the open-source community mostly
scoffed at Microsoft's claims, some companies -- including Novell -- signed
specific deals with the vendor to protect customers from indemnification and
promote interoperability with Microsoft software.
Microsoft also continued to promote proprietary file formats it designed as
the default for Office 2007 -- Office Open XML (OOXML) -- in favor of another
file format, ODF (Open Document Format for XML), which already has been approved
as a global technology standard by the International Organization for Standardization
(ISO).
Microsoft submitted the OOXML specification to another standards body, Ecma
International, in November 2005 in an effort to have it fast-tracked through
the ISO. However, approval by the ISO has been stalled and the process riddled
with complaints that Microsoft is not acting in the transparent way typical
of an international standards process.
The announcements on Thursday don't affect the company's continued efforts to standardize OOXML, Ballmer said during the press conference.
Thursday's news includes broad, royalty-free publishing of APIs and the establishment
of an Open Source Interoperability Initiative to provide ongoing resources and
documentation to the community, and marks more commitment than the notoriously
proprietary software maker has ever shown toward embracing open standards and
open source.
Microsoft plans to publish on its Web site documentation for APIs and communications
protocols that are used by what it calls its "high-volume products."
Microsoft includes Windows Vista (including the .NET Framework), Windows Server
2008, SQL Server 2008, Office 2007, Exchange Server 2007 and Office SharePoint
Server 2007 -- as well as their future versions -- under this umbrella. Microsoft
will not require developers to license or pay royalties for this information,
the company said.
To get this ball rolling, Microsoft Thursday will publish on its Microsoft
Developer Network Web site more than 30,000 pages of documentation for Windows
client and server protocols that were previously available only under a trade-secret
license through the Microsoft Work Group Server Protocol Program and the Microsoft
Communication Protocol Program. Microsoft will publish protocol documentation
for the other high-volume products in upcoming months, the company said.
Microsoft also is providing a covenant not to sue open-source developers for
development or non-commercial distribution of implementations of these protocols
-- a huge move for any Linux or open-source developers that may have feared
litigation from Microsoft. The company said Thursday that developers will be
able to use the documentation for free to develop products. However, companies
that want to commercially distribute implementations of the protocols still
must obtain a patent license from Microsoft, it said.
On the OOXML front, Microsoft promised Thursday to design new APIs for its
Word, Excel and PowerPoint applications so developers can plug in additional
document formats and enable users to set these formats as their default for
saving documents. While there are add-on technologies that can translate between
OOXML -- the default file format in Office 2007 -- and other file formats, Microsoft
has not included the ability to set other file formats as default in the product
suite.
Microsoft said Thursday it will use a new Open Source Interoperability Initiative
to provide resources, facilities and events to the community, including labs,
technical content and opportunities for ongoing cooperative development. Microsoft
also is seeking an ongoing dialogue with customers, developers and open-source
communities through an online Interoperability Forum. And Microsoft will launch
a Document Interoperability Initiative to address the issue of data exchange
between widely deployed formats, the company said
The announcement reflects a change in the market in the past couple of decades,
said Ray Ozzie, Microsoft's chief software architect, during a question and
answer session at the press conference. "When Microsoft entered the game
in the mid-80s, people focused on using the PC. They tended to use a small number
of programs," he said. Today, people use many more applications and they
expect data from one program to be available in other products, he said. The
changes Microsoft is making adapt to that change in the market, he said.
Still, Ballmer cautioned that end-users shouldn't expect to see much change
for some time. "Any opening up doesn't happen overnight," he said
during the Q&A session. "I think it will be more like years than days"
before end-users notice the effects of Thursday's announcements, he said.
Microsoft finds it hard to predict what kinds of new products might become
available to users because of this change. "One thing the Net has shown
is that sometimes, constraints around standards can be quite liberating to developers,"
said Ozzie. "Many times, new services pop out of nowhere once a standard
is there and once interoperability principles are established, because we can't
think of the different potential uses of customer data and how to interface
with products."
Ballmer said he doesn't expect the licensing changes to affect Microsoft's
bottom line. "The amount of trade secrets licensing fees we forgo will
be minimal," he said. The licensing changes are risky, he acknowledged,
but the potential benefit for third parties to add value around Microsoft offerings
balances the risk, he said.
While Thursday's announcements are related to Microsoft's legal problems in
Europe, Ballmer argued that the changes were more driven by the market. "The
announcement today is driven by what we're hearing from industry participants,"
he said.
Microsoft's Interoperability Executive Customer (IEC) Council will oversee
the new principles and initiatives to help keep the company honest. The IEC
is an advisory board established in 2006 and comprised mainly of chief information
and technology officers from more than 40 companies and government institutions
worldwide.
More information about the news can be found on Microsoft interoperability
Web site.