Google extends its investment in Mozilla, restores MPL license

By Tim Conneally | Published August 29, 2008, 12:21 PM

Mozilla has renewed its agreement with Google that was set to expire in November, extending it into 2011. The deal carries with it the reinstatement of the Mozilla and Eclipse Public Licenses that were recently cast aside.

Though the terms of the existing agreement between Mozilla and Google are confidential, its value to Mozilla has already been made apparent. In Mozilla Chairman Mitchell Baker's blog earlier this year, she said that the vast majority of his company's 2005 revenue was associated with search functionality in Mozilla Firefox, "and the vast majority of that is from Google."

The default front page in Firefox is indeed from Google, and the browser does have a branded Google search box in its upper right hand corner. It is believed that every Google search done in Firefox earns Mozilla a share of money, and if an advertisement is clicked, it ups Mozilla's commission. Google also provides anti-phishing services with the "Ask Google" protection feature.

In 2006, over 85% of Mozilla's revenue came from its partnership with Google. Because it is a non-profit group, Google's interest helps the Mozilla Foundation remain "sustainable," or able to meet its expenses and reinvest the remainder.

In May, Greg Stein of Google's Open Source team posted a blog discussing the popularity of open source licenses among the hosted Google Code projects. While GPLv2 and v3 constituted 42.6% of projects at the time, only 2.7% were under the Mozilla Public License (MPL).

"Based on the low popularity, and in an attempt to limit this artificial segregation of code, we plan to remove the MPL from the set of licenses on our project hosting service (for new projects; existing projects will not have to relicense)."

It should be no surprise that with the pending expiration of Mozilla's and Google's agreement, that the MPL -- which is largely only used by Mozilla anyway, according to Google -- would be canceled.

However, with the renewed agreement, Chris DiBona of Google's Open Source team said late Wednesday night, "Our removal of the MPL from the site seemed a little absurd. So, our bad. We're putting that option back up for new projects. The groups that want to use the MPL to enable their additions, extensions and more for Firefox and other Mozilla projects are legion and considering their recent summit, represent a very healthy global collection of developers."

Comments

Great news. Google plays an imporant part in the F/OSS-community.

I would also like to see Google allocate even more resources to the Wine and ReactOS-project. With those two projects combined we would have a free implementation of Windows Kernel, Windows Runtime Environment + Windows API that could be extremely useful in a virtualized environment.

Score: 0

|

Mitchell Baker is a lady, jesus.

Score: 0

|

Yes, that really shows the writer knows what she's writing about.

Score: 0

|

Hey, hey, maybe she's a man trapped in a woman's body, did you ever think of that?!

Score: 0

|

Who, Tim Conneally?

Score: 0

|

Can Linux do BitLocker better than Windows 7?

Betanews kicks off a new series with a look at how the Linux operating system's FDE stacks up against BitLocker, the Windows feature that today commands a $120 premium.

Firefox 3.5: The need for speed

This has been the big payoff week for Mozilla's developers, who worked overtime to squeeze out the last drop of performance from their new JavaScript engine.

'GeoHot' gets a shower, cleans up nice, reveals new iPhone 3G S jailbreak

Either puberty has been very kind to the author of the new 'Purple Ra1n' jailbreak tool, or George Hotz may also have some adequate Photoshop skills.

What's Next: Obama gives 'Einstein' the go-ahead, while China gives 'Green Dam' a thumbs-down

Plus: If you put up a Web site and name it after you and you're a federal judge, you might not want a bunch of weird nudity hanging around on it.

Why would Windows 7 customers spend $120 more for BitLocker?

For pre-orders from now until July 11, Microsoft is offering the Windows 7 Professional SKU for a very steep discount. So why invest in Ultimate?

Geeks vs. journalists: A tale of two worldviews

Recovery with Angela Gunn Why geeks think most mainstream journalism is flaky, and why the mainstream thinks geeks are trying to kill them. (They're both right.)

Fire in downtown Seattle data center knocks out businesses, online services

Small fire has global impact with payment centers, city services down.

Hybrid satellite cell phones aren't far off

The first satellite in Terrestar's hybrid cellular/satellite phone network has been launched.

SMS could be a critical iPhone vulnerability, says white-hat hacker

Mac hacker Charlie Miller knows how to get into your iPhone.

Will Oracle's Java-based Fusion middleware 'fuse' with Java?

Now that Oracle has acquired Sun Microsystems, Java developers and supporters are wondering when Oracle will formally welcome Java into the family.

All together now: iPhone and Palm Pre, likely to both grace O2's UK portfolio

European wireless network operator O2 has reportedly reached a deal to exclusively carry the Palm Pre in the UK. O2,...

Vista's dead: Microsoft kills an OS and no one cares

Carmi Levy: Wide Angle Zoom Can you kill an operating system? Microsoft is about to find out.

Kantaris Media Player 0.5.7

July 3 - 5:34 PM ET

Wine 1.1.25

July 3 - 5:30 PM ET

ChrisTV Online! Free 4.00

July 3 - 5:22 PM ET

glu 1.0.19 RC1

July 3 - 5:11 PM ET

Website-Watcher 5.1.0 Beta 10

July 3 - 1:20 PM ET