Microsoft licensing switch pleases Becta

Summary: The government body that oversees schools' IT has welcomed Microsoft's interoperability intentions, but some members of the open-source community say the software giant is trying to lock schools into licences

Becta, the government body in charge of IT in education, has welcomed a pilot Microsoft licensing programme for schools and has said it is "pleased" about the company's progress on making its products more interoperable.

Microsoft has announced it will begin a new licensing programme, initially as a pilot available to all schools, in approximately six months, Becta said in a statement on Tuesday. The company's educational volume-licensing arrangements usually cover all machines in an educational institution, regardless of which operating system is installed on them.

The new scheme will enable schools to run competitor software, such as Apple and Linux operating systems, without having to pay Microsoft licence-fees for those systems. In addition, schools can decline to pay for Vista licences for systems technically incapable of running it.

"We have been reviewing our school licensing arrangements in the light of educational policy developments and the issues that have been raised by Becta," Michel van der Bel, a vice president in Microsoft's public sector international division, was quoted as saying in Becta's statement:

Becta on Tuesday also acknowledged "substantial progress" by Microsoft on interoperability. The schools' IT body had been concerned about interoperability between the open-source Open Document Format (ODF) and Microsoft's Office 2007 formats. It lodged a complaint about Microsoft with the Office of Fair Trading (OFT) over anti-competitive practices in October 2007, and in May took that complaint to the European Commission.

"In Becta's view, Microsoft's clear commitment to effective interoperability and to the introduction of a pilot licensing programme is excellent news for schools," Becta said.

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At the time of writing, Becta was not able to tell ZDNet.co.uk how it intended to judge whether Microsoft Office 2007 had been made completely interoperable with ODF, given that Microsoft code is proprietary and therefore difficult to scrutinise. However, a Becta spokesperson said the organisation was "pleased about Microsoft's intentions".

Some members of the open-source community had a less positive reaction to Becta's statement. Mark Taylor, chief executive of Sirius Corporation and founder of the Open Source Consortium, said: "[Sirius's view] is that Microsoft has been forced to this position, and that the term 'clear commitment' should be read 'dragged kicking and screaming'." He asked: "If not for the stance of Neelie Kroes and the European Commission, if not for the OOXML roadshow and the ISO controversy, if not for Becta's OFT complaint, does anyone believe this would happen?"

Taylor said that schools "should not be fooled" by Microsoft's moves towards interoperability and reformed licensing, and that the end result would be that schools would still be locked into using Microsoft products.

Topics: Apps, Software Development

About

Tom is a technology reporter for ZDNet.com. He covers the security beat, writing about everything from hacking and cybercrime to threats and mitigation. He also focuses on open source and emerging technologies, all the while trying to cut through greenwash.

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3 comments
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  • Translated - Arrogant monopoly makes tiny, tiny concession... maybe

    So, Microsoft will finally reduce the *TAX* on cash-strapped schools and 'allow' them to run Linux and MacOS on a few computers?

    That's really big of them...

    Please tell me in what other industry would this kind of thing be *allowed*, let alone be something that a government agency would actually make a fawning press release over? Look at BAA for instance, which has nowhere near the market power of Microsoft...

    It is a scandal that an abusive monopoly has been allowed to take root in UK Schools, and the real question is how much tax payers money has been wasted on propping up this monopoly over the years. Just imagine what our education system could look like if the hundreds of millions had not been poured into paying the monopoly rent for so long.

    Oh, and anyone here believe that this is anything other than the Microsoft spin machine trying to prevent wholesale adoption of Open Source in UK Education? Just like it is being adopted in schools throughout the rest of Europe?

    Finally - a *pilot*? and *six months* into the future? sounds like someone is desperate for some positive press no matter how flimsy the vapourware they are peddling...
    Sothis-a86f1
  • Scandalous

    How can Becta and our government allow such an abuse!

    Alternative systems in schools would raise the quality and expectations for IT education in schools and ultimately benefit the country. Presumably that is also something that MS that desirous to suppress and limit our skills to learning Word etc.

    Why on earth are our establishments so weak kneed in supporting, or providing for, our genuine interests, here and elsewhere!
    The Former Moley
  • "pleased about Microsoft's intentions".

    Microsoft is going to tell you what you want to hear. They are just like politicians. Anyone who believes they will change their ways might be interested in a bridge I have for sale in Brooklyn. Their goal is still the same, to be the only game in town.
    ator1940