CA brings more patents to the open source party

08 Sep 2005 08:52


Announcing a technology-sharing agreement with IBM, CA promised to offer 14 of its patents for free use to open source coders

Computer Associates (CA) will give open source projects access to 14 of its patents, the company said Wednesday as it also announced a technology cross-licensing deal with IBM.

The US patents, which include their equivalents in other countries, address a range of technologies, covering application development, data analytics and systems management. CA said it will provide royalty-free access to the patents and not assert claims against people who make use of them.

CA said it is following IBM's lead, which earlier this year pledged 500 patents to open source communities. CA also urged other technology companies to help create a "patent commons".

The agreement with IBM calls for an exchange of licence rights between the companies, which will make it easier for customers to access free intellectual property, said Mark Barrenechea, CA's executive vice-president of technology strategy and chief technology architect.

CA uses a traditional business model for the majority of its products. Last year, however, it dipped its toe into open source by making its Ingres database an open source project and selling support services.

A few months after former IBM executive John Swainson was named CA's chief executive in 2004, the company voiced its intention to donate some of its patents to help promote open source development.

The patents it has donated to open source communities cover development tools to automate translation between programming languages; visualisation techniques for analyzing data; tools to maximise performance in systems and storage management; and visualisation tools for network management.

Story URL: http://news.zdnet.co.uk/software/0,1000000121,39216952,00.htm

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