As we can read in recent news, VMware has become a gold member of the Linux foundation. That causes - to say the least - very mixed feelings to me.

One thing to keep in mind: The Linux Foundation is an industry association, it exists to act in the joint interest of it's paying members. It is not a charity, and it does not act for the public good. I know and respect that, while some people sometimes appear to be confused about its function.

However, allowing an entity like VMware to join, despite their many years long disrespect for the most basic principles of the FOSS Community (such as: Following the GPL and its copyleft principle), really is hard to understand and accept.

I wouldn't have any issue if VMware would (prior to joining LF) have said: Ok, we had some bad policies in the past, but now we fully comply with the license of the Linux kernel, and we release all derivative/collective works in source code. This would be a positive spin: Acknowledge past issues, resolve the issues, become clean and then publicly underlining your support of Linux by (among other things) joining the Linux Foundation. I'm not one to hold grudges against people who accept their past mistakes, fix the presence and then move on. But no, they haven't fixed any issues.

They are having one of the worst track records in terms of intentional GPL compliance issues for many years, showing outright disrespect for Linux, the GPL and ultimately the rights of the Linux developers, not resolving those issues and at the same time joining the Linux Foundation? What kind of message sends that?

It sends the following messages:

you can abuse Linux, the GPL and copyleft while still being accepted amidst the Linux Foundation Members

it means the Linux Foundations has no ethical concerns whatsoever about accepting such entities without previously asking them to become clean

it also means that VMware has still not understood that Linux and FOSS is about your actions, particularly the kind of choices you make how to technically work with the community, and not against it.

So all in all, I think this move has seriously damaged the image of both entities involved. I wouldn't have expected different of VMware, but I would have hoped the Linux Foundation had some form of standards as to which entities they permit amongst their ranks. I guess I was being overly naive :(

It's a slap in the face of every developer who writes code not because he gets paid, but because it is rewarding to know that copyleft will continue to ensure the freedom of related code.