Skip to main content

Microsoft Makes Open Source Accomodations

Microsoft Makes Open Source Accomodations

The secrets of Windows’ proprietary file-sharing protocols will be pried open for the Samba open-source project, thanks to an agreement between Microsoft and the Protocol Freedom Information Foundation made on Thursday. The information should allow stable, reliable file sharing between Windows and Linux and Unix computers without forcing programmers to jump through hoops to enable it.

Samba’s software has made it this inter-OS file-sharing possible since 1992 with clever workarounds, but like a nurse shark swimming alongside a great white, the project was subject to the whims of Microsoft. According to Dana Blankenhorn, Microsoft could disable compatibility by shifting protocols, and the company always faced the possibility of lawsuits from Microsoft for patent infringement. The new deal eliminates both threats.

The PFIF paid $15,000 for the necessary documentation, which it then passed along to Samba’s developers. While they are free to create open-source code that uses the information, they cannot directly share the documentation with others, under the agreement made with Microsoft.

For those wondering why Microsoft would choose to enhance interoperability with an operating system it sees as an imminent threat, the answer is exactly what you expected: it was legally compelled to. The software giant’s last antitrust suit with the European Union forced it to release interoperability information for a fee, which it was merely complying with by working with the PFIF.

Editors' Recommendations

Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Managing Editor, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team delivering definitive reviews, enlightening…
OpenAI strikes major deal with News Corp to boost ChatGPT
A laptop screen shows the home page for ChatGPT, OpenAI's artificial intelligence chatbot.

OpenAI has struck a major deal with News Corp to access content to train its AI models, the companies announced on Wednesday.

The multiyear agreement is reportedly worth as much as $250 million and gives OpenAI access to content from News Corp's large stable of titles across several countries that include The Wall Street Journal, MarketWatch, The New York Post, The Times, The Sunday Times, The Sun, The Australian, news.com.au, The Daily Telegraph, The Courier Mail, and the Herald Sun.

Read more
Microsoft just made Paint relevant again
Person using Windows 11 laptop on their lap by the window.

The controversial Recall feature has grabbed all the headlines from Microsoft’s Copilot+ announcements yesterday, but this new AI feature is also making Paint relevant again.

It’s called Cocreator, and it’s a new AI feature that can turn your quick sketch, augmented by text, into a much more realistic and impressive image. The exciting thing is that it does all this in real time. It might not get it right the first time, so you'll need patience, and the more details you give about what you want in the image, the better.

Read more
Real-time video translation comes to Microsoft Edge
Microsoft Edge browser on a computer screen.

Following up on the massive Copilot+ announcements from yesterday, Microsoft's AI toolset keeps getting bigger and bigger. As part of its annual Microsoft Build develop conference, Microsoft has announced an update to Edge that grants it the power to translate videos to different languages in real time.

Microsoft affirms that the upcoming AI feature will translate videos on the browser to multiple languages using subtitles and/or dubbing in real time. Microsoft has not said if the option will be set by default or where the user can go to turn this feature on or off, but it could be somewhere in Settings.

Read more