What is an Open Source Company Really Worth? 82
CNet has an interesting profile of MySQL, JBoss, and Zimbra, exploring what an open source company is actually worth. "Given how slowly revenue accumulates in an open-source company--assuming it is recognizing subscriptions over 12 months--bookings is probably the valuation metric being used or at least strongly considered. It surely is the metric by which the start-up wishes to be measured. So while Savio suggests we open-source entrepreneurs may be "sleeping with dollar signs in (our) eyes," there's clearly a lot of work to do before most open-source companies are worth selling. It's not worth selling out for $100 million. Not for the venture-backed companies, anyway."
Well this is a new low... (Score:5, Funny)
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Like these guys (Score:2)
http://www.surgicalassistant.org/html/TermsofUse.html [surgicalassistant.org]
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Link to article (Score:4, Informative)
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Link to TFA (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Link to TFA (Part 2) (Score:2)
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Linky (Score:2)
I can't RTFA! (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re:Most recent example (Score:4, Interesting)
What's missing from the article is the usual valuation of a closed source company. Anyone know the answer to that?
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TFA (Score:2)
OSS does not eliminate old rules. (Score:5, Insightful)
They own stuff (buildings), they have staff and they have current revenue.
It really shouldn't be that hard.
I wouldn't evaluate the worth of Oracle based on what I thought the
value of the Oracle RDBMS sourcecode was worth. I would look at what
they are selling to people.
With enterprise software, frontend licensing is just the tip of the iceberg.
MySql corp really isn't that much different than Sun, IBM or Oracle in this respect.
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For that you do what the parent suggested: You examine the revenue, costs, compare to the risk-free interest rate (among other metrics), estimate the value of their physical holdings, estimate realistic growth or subsidence of the revenue stream, and button that up in a nice package you call, "what I'm willing to pay."
Works for billion dollar businesses down to corner stor
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But it's not really that easy, either. If you really believe you should measure Google, Microsoft, Intel, GE, P&G, Citibank, and Caterpillar using the same method, then I *guarantee* your formula isn't simple or isn't accurate.
Revenue as measured in GAAP is an accounting construct, not necessarily a great measurement of the prospects of a company. This becomes particularly apparent in cases
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If it were that simple, Warren Buffett [wikipedia.org] wouldn't be worth $55B.
A company's value is the discounted sum of its future cash flows, which are determined by revenues, costs, and anticipated changes in both over time.
The last part is the kicker. Today's costs and revenues tell you something, but they don't always provide great indicators of costs and revenues 1, 2, 5, 10 years down the line.
That's one reason why Buffett has historically avoided new technologies- it's too hard to predict what's going to happen.
Ta
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Try this [yahoo.com]
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You forgot about intellectual property, growth potential, etc.
Using your formula, YouTube would probably have warranted a negative valuation, what with their negligible revenue, huge operational costs, and quarter after quarter of huge losses.
And yet google bought them for a billion dollars.
They had a few things that your formula omits: a uniquely scalable, proven, video sharing/delivery application, mill
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There are useful formulations available by example (Score:5, Interesting)
A private company like Digium, who does Asterisk, has a NIBT and may have additional potential for digital PBX widgets (look at their recent deal with 3Com for an example). They'd probably bring in 7 years run rate as a buy price.
Hyperic, while smaller, has great community development and might bring in more, because of a wider breadth of products touched. I'd value them at 10x annual run rate.
MySQL AB did a great job. Hurray for those guys; they deserve what they got. I hope that Sun can integrate MySQL well without butchering the company and product. Professional results can pay off.
Re:There are useful formulations available by exam (Score:3, Interesting)
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Don't underestimate the power of the one-stop-shop. Most people really don't care whether their solution is or not proprietary - they only care how much it costs and how well it works.
I don't know TrixBox, but if the proprietary solution they are considering costs significantly less to maintain than the alternatives, I see their users flocking to it.
One of the key selling points of FOSS is the misinterpretation of the "free" part.
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But this is about the companies, and the added value they provide in a public/private context, too. MySQL has traction as one of the most popular open source projects going. It's strong but not unique in its pro
Wrong Question (Score:3, Insightful)
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JBoss has already pulled a fast one anyway. What used to be free, circa JBoss 4.0.2, (embedding the app server in a shrink-wrapped application) is now for a fee. I used to work for a company that bet the farm on JBoss 4.0.2. And you know what they're doing now? PAYING JBoss. They have no choice.
Not sure what you mean by that... I can download the latest JBoss app server for free at: http://labs.jboss.com/jbossas/downloads/ [jboss.com] I'm currently using JBoss 4.2.1 in production without paying a cent (well, I don't have support either, but that's ok for me). What do you mean they have no choice?
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2 seconds of googling brought this up:
http://www.jboss.org/opensource/lgpl/faq#bundle [jboss.org]
Hrm... seems like you are spreading misinformation.
GPLv3's Poison Pill and Open Source buyouts... (Score:4, Interesting)
You see, when Apple buys out CUPS, or Sun buys out MySQL, they can distribute the code under whatever liscence they want as copyright holders.
Which means, for THEM, its non GPL. But for everyone else, it is GPLv2 or later.
Thus you can still get community support with copyright transfer, but you have a competitive advantage in selling/using it commmercially.
I wonder if the FSF realized that this is a side consequence of GPLv3 and the "or later" clause?
Re:GPLv3's Poison Pill and Open Source buyouts... (Score:5, Insightful)
The copyright-owner can _ALWAYS_ choose whichever damn license catches his fancy, including some evil, sign-to-sell-your-soul-style EULA.
It is working as intended.
Working as intended?! (Score:2)
It is working as intended.
Well, apart from the whole "commercial entity duping people who were sharing their code under GPL into allowing arbitrary commercial, closed-source uses" part, anyway.
I don't understand why anyone who has chosen to use the GPL after considering what it implies (rather than just because of hype or fashion) would ever sign away their copyright to some commercial entity like this. If you're OK with anyone using your code however they like, just release it to the public domain or pick some BSD-style licence
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OTOH, we have the BSD license... (Score:2)
It's curious that the number of big BSD-licensed software (and I'll attach the "BSD-like in spirit" licenses like the Apache license to the bunch) owned by big successful companies is disproportionally small. The OSes (Free|Net|Open)BSD, PostgreSQL and Apache are examples of successful software that's not being supported by a single company - they're practically totally consumer-supported. The only counter-example I know of is PHP, but despite that it's more widespread than both MySQL and PostgreSQL togethe
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That would mean that straight GPLv[23] software doesn't work that way. The copyright belongs to all of the contributors, not just the author. They'd also have to agree that contributions added by the acquiring company can be kept secret (if distributed) because they contribut
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Example, Program X has some buy that annoys the hell out of me. So I go in, fix it, and submit a patch. Since I wrote the patch, I own the copyright to that portion of the code if they accept my patch.
But this limits what the project can do. If they want to change so some sort of different license, they would have to start either contacting everyone that submitted a patch, or take out the code. So before
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Isn't this issue the other major blocker for the Linux kernel going to GPLv3 (besides Linus)?
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The codebase? Java.
Back in the old days, Java was licensed with a scary EULA. This was fine for the end user because it was free as in beer. But it was trapped [gnu.org]. OpenJDK [java.net] is the cure. This is fine for end users and end developers. Now if a developer sees a bug (s)he'd like to fix, the license [java.net] allows that.
Before Sun Microsystems released their code through O
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Open-source Money License (Score:1)
You may distribute copies of this money as long as you provide copies of the printing plates or provide a way to get the printing plates for no more than the costs of copying.
You may include copies of this money in derivative works for internal use.
You may include copies of this money in derivative works you distribute as long as you provide copies of the printing plates or provide a way to get them for no more than the costs of copying.
Worth of a Company (Score:1)
Easy Answer (Score:4, Informative)
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Make something valuable to someone with lots of money and they'll pay lots of money for it.
Doesn't that require one to quantify "value"? And isn't that determination the whole point of TFA??
I imagine such simplistic cliches aren't of much use to real accountants.
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I'm willing to pay $100 for a Dodge Ram. But does my wish define the price? Of course not. Even if I was willing to pay $100,000, the price of the $40,000 truck will not change. This isn't a wishing game.
What someone is willing to pay is a price that resulted from another's work to determine the value of the company. Don't kid yourself into thinking it's determined by someone playing with rand()
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Actually, you've got it wrong. The eBay Theorem states that everything is worth what two people are willing to pay for it.
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The point... (Score:5, Interesting)
What is to keep another company, say NySQL Inc. from taking the source code to MySQL, compiling their own product, and then reselling it? Nothing. You might say "It's illegal!", but that's ONLY in the USA. I'd bet there are at least 3 companies in China reselling MySQL right now. Since they keep their source code release up to date, this means NySQL's product will always be up to date. And since NySQL has a bigger presence in China, Chinese customers will always go to them first.
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Where do you get your information? It is legal to do that in the USA, as long as you adhere to the GPL. Though I suspect MySQL would have an extremely strong case for trademark infringement.
I proposed that a company would obtain the GPL source code for MySQL, compile it, and then SELL the resulting binaries. That clearly is illegal, both a violation of the GPL and MySQL's trademarks.
It's worth noting that this is technically illegal in China too, it's just that these laws are really only enforced in the US and (to a lesser extent) Europe.
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Yeah, you might want to mention that up front next time.
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That's exactly what redhat does. They sell linux binaries. They only have access to the source of the linux kernel thanks to the GPL.
There's a whole industry around selling open source binaries. It's called "software distribution", and the FSF condones it. Not everyone has a high bandwidth internet connection, so for many people, downloading a linux ISO is out of the question -- they'd much rathe
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There's no restriction in the GPL against that at all. Yes, you can SELL the binaries. As long as, obviously, you give the customer all the GPL rights, like an offer to give them the source. But it appears you're saying that selling it isn't legal, while it is.
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"Actually we encourage people who redistribute free software to charge as much as they wish or can. If this seems surprising to you, please read on."
Your NySql company would have to comply with this, of course. Maybe you meant they were just selling the binaries and not distributing the source to their customers
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I proposed that a company would obtain the GPL source code for MySQL, compile it, and then SELL the resulting binaries. That clearly is illegal, both a violation of the GPL and MySQL's trademarks.
No it's not. As long as the package they sell also contains the source and all files needed to build the application, they are still adhering to the GPL.
GPL doesn't preclude selling binaries. It just mandates that the user be able to easily obtain the source from the distributer.
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Better summary (Score:3)
Of course, if $100mil is the best offer, I'd still take it
It's not worth selling out for $100 million (Score:5, Funny)
Of course not! It's nothing! It's peanuts! What an insult! What do you take me for, some kind of fool? One day you'll all look up from the gutter, you will, and see King Zoidberg caressing your fancy box!
OSS is simply not traditional (Score:2)
There is also the issue of operating costs and how predictable they are.
One must also take into account intellectual property, but relatively few open source projects maintain intellectual property of thei
it's a non-sensical question (Score:1)
Open Source Support (Score:1)