EC Gives Blessing To Oracle Takeover Of Sun

It was good news for Larry Ellison after Oracle finally gained approval from the European Commission over its acquisition of Sun Microsystems

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“Oracle still needs clearance from the Chinese and Russian antitrust authorities, and it’s a matter of respect not to consider this process finished until those major jurisdictions have also taken and announced their decisions,” Florian Mueller, a longtime open source activist and representative of Michael “Monty” Widenius, the Finnish-born creator and lead developer of MySQL, told eWEEK.

“The EC’s reasoning has to be reviewed when all the details of the decision are known, but it seems to be a decision based on wishful thinking for the future more so than anything else. PostgreSQL has been around for decades without having had its mainstream breakthrough, so the EC can’t seriously claim that PostgreSQL could replace MySQL as a competitive force,” Mueller said.

“Forks (derived works based on an existing open source project) are a legal possibility but there’s no reason to assume that any MySQL fork, or even a number of such forks collectively, could threaten Oracle to the extent that MySQL could.”

During its discussions with the EC, Oracle set down a 10-point list of promises regarding the stewardship of MySQL on 14 December, 2009. While the open source code remains available to anyone under the GPL license, Oracle will own the copyrights to any commercial version or feature of the database.

Mueller isn’t sure about the legal viability of those promises.

“Oracle’s promises are not legally binding per se, and even if they were, they wouldn’t have any noteworthy pro-competitive effect. I can’t think of a single bad thing, short of discontinuing the product immediately, that Oracle couldn’t do while still complying fully with those promises in a legal sense,” Mueller said.