VMware Suit Concludes in Germany
Software Freedom Conservancy reportsthat the Hamburg Higher Regional Court affirmed the lower court's decision,which dismissed Christoph Hellwig's case against VMWare inGermany. Hellwig will not pursue the case further in German courts.Conservancy's staff also spent a significant amount of time and resourcesat each stage of the proceedings - most recently, analyzing what thisruling could mean for future enforcement actions. The German court made afinal decision in this case on procedure and standing, not onsubstance. While we are disappointed that the courts did not take theopportunity to deliver a clear pro-software-freedom ruling, this rulingdoes not set precedent and the implications of the decision arelimited. This matter certainly would proceed differently with differentpresentation of plaintiffs or in another jurisdiction.
In addition to VMware committing to removing vmklinux from their kernel, this case also succeeded in sparking significant discussion about the community-wide implications for free software when some companies playing by the rules while others continually break them. Our collective insistence, that licensing terms are not optional, has now spurred other companies to take copyleft compliance more seriously. The increased focus on respecting licenses post-lawsuit and providing source code for derivative works - when coupled with VMware's reluctant but eventual compliance - is a victory, even if we must now look to other jurisdictions and other last-resort legal actions to adjudicate the question of the GPL and derivative works of Linux.