Things do change. Microsoft, once the perceived enemy of open source, has been moving into open source over the last two decades. The first infamous Halloween document requested by Jim Allchin was leaked to Eric Raymond in October 1998. This and other internal documents recognized that that open software products such as Linux were technologically competitive with Microsoft's products and set out a strategy to combat them. But there were folks within Microsoft that disagreed with this strategy. Microsoft began partnering with open source companies back in 2006. It announced support for Git in 2013. It now has over 2,000 open-source projects on Github and claims to be the largest open-source project supporter in the world. As further evidence that It is now a fully fledged open source company, Microsoft has joined the Open Invention Network (OIN), an open-source patent consortium that includes the Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGEO), Google, IBM, Red Hat, Oracle and over 2600 other organizations as members or licencees. Microsoft is bringing something on the order of 60,000 patents to OIN, effectively granting royalty-free and unrestricted license to its patent portfolio to all other OIN members. Since in the past Microsoft has derived significant royalty revenue from protecting these patents including many used in Android, this really is a case of putting its money where its mouth is.
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