Comment by traceroute66
1 day ago
> People bringing this whole license topic up can't be taken seriously
So you mean all those universities and other places that have been forced to spend $$$ on licenses under the new regime also can't be taken seriously ? Are you saying none of them took advice and had nobody on staff to tell them OpenJDK exists ?
Regarding your Linux comment, some of us are old enough to remember the SCO saga.
Sadly Oracle have deeper pockets to pay more lawyers than SCO ever did ....
> So you mean all those universities and other places that have been forced to spend $$$ on licenses under the new regime also can't be taken seriously ? Are you saying none of them took advice and had nobody on staff to tell them OpenJDK exists ?
This info is actually quite surprising to me, never heard of it since everywhere I know switched to OpenJDK-based alternatives from the get-go. There was no reason to keep on the Oracle one after the licencing shenanigans they tried to play.
Why do these places kept the Oracle JDK and ended up paying for it? OpenJDK was a drop-in replacement, nothing of value is lost by switching...
TL;DR: Its impossible to know if anyone on campus has downloaded Oracle Java....Oracle monitors downloads and sends in the auditors...
See link/quote in my earlier reply above.
The licensing thing is such FUD man. Oracle being a terrible company is in no way a decent argument that Java should not be used.
2 replies →
I have made a bunch of claims, that are objectively true. From there, basic logical inference says that you can completely freely use Java. Anything else is irrelevant.
I don't know what/which university you talk about, but I'm sure they were also "forced to pay $$$" for their water bills and whatnot. If they decided to go with paid support, then.. you have to pay for it. In exchange you can a) point your finger at a third-party if something goes wrong (which governments love doing/often legally necessary) b) get actual live support on Christmas Eve if needed.
TL;DR: Its impossible to know if anyone on campus has downloaded Oracle Java....
Quote from this article:[1]
[1] https://www.theregister.com/2025/06/13/jisc_java_oracle/
That's also true of torrented PhotoShop, Microsoft Office, etc..
Also, as another topic, Oracle is doing audits specifically because their software doesn't phone home to check licenses and stuff like that - which is a crucial requirement for their intended target demographics, big government organizations, safety critical systems, etc. A whole country's healthcare system, or a nuclear power base can't just stop because someone forgot to pay the bill.
So instead Oracle just visits companies that have a license with them, and checks what is being used to determine if it's in accord with the existing contract. And yeah, from this respect I also heard of a couple of stories where a company was not using the software as the letter of the contract, e.g. accidentally enabling this or that, and at the audit the Oracle salesman said that they will ignore the mistake if they subscribe to this larger package, which most manager will gladly accept as they can avoid the blame, which is questionable business practice, but still doesn't have anything to do with OpenJDK..
> Quote from this article:[1]
The article tries very hard to draw a connection between the licensing costs for the universities and Oracle auditing random java downloads, but nobody actually says that this is what happened.
The waiver of historic fees goes back to the last licensing change where Oracle changed how licensing fees would be calculated. So it seems reasonable that Oracle went after them because they were paying customers that failed to pay the inflated fees.