City
Epaper

Microsoft delays policy to ban commercial open source apps

By IANS | Updated: July 17, 2022 11:25 IST

New Delhi, July 17 Microsoft has delayed the enforcement of its policy that was set to go into ...

Open in App

New Delhi, July 17 Microsoft has delayed the enforcement of its policy that was set to go into effect from July 16, to ban commercial open source apps which had left developers worried.

In its new Microsoft Store policy, the company had said that developers must not attempt to profit from open-source or other software that is otherwise generally available for free, nor be priced irrationally high relative to the features and functionality provided by your product.

The announcement irked the developer community as it would hamper their efforts to monetise open source software.

Now, Giorgio Sardo who is General Manager Apps, Partners and Store at Microsoft has said that the company is delaying this particular policy.

"In listening to the dev community, we got feedback that it could be perceived differently than intended. We'll delay enforcement of that policy until we clarify the intent," Sardo said in a tweet.

The policy change was first announced on June 16.

Hayden Barnes, a senior engineering manager at open source software giant Suse, tweeted that he was disappointed with the proposed policy change.

"I am disappointed by the @MicrosoftStore policy change that prohibits selling open source software. The Store provides independent open source developers an opportunity to create sustainable projects by charging a reasonable amount there," he had posted.

There are several examples of open source software sold in Microsoft's app store such as video editing software Shotcut and FTP clients such as WinSCP.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Microsoft CorporationGiorgio sardoHayden barnesmicrosoft
Open in App

Related Stories

Business‘Microsoft Is a Digital Weapons Manufacturer’: Indian-American Engineer Calls Out Gates, Ballmer, Nadella Over AI Ties to Gaza War (Watch Video)

TechnologyMicrosoft to Bid for TikTok: Will the App Make a Comeback in India?

TechnologyMicrosoft Layoffs: Company Plans Workforce Reduction in 2025, Targets Low-Performing Employees

TechnologyMicrosoft To Train 10 Million People in India on AI Skills by 2030, Says Satya Nadella

NationalPM Narendra Modi Meets Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, Says Discussion on Tech, Innovation and AI

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyPSA launches landmark report on evaluation of public funded R&D institutions

TechnologyIndia on track to become Viksit Bharat under PM Modi's leadership: Academicians

TechnologyPralhad Joshi launches Green Hydrogen Certification scheme

TechnologyIndia Post joins SBI Mutual Fund to simplify on-boarding of MF investors

TechnologyIndian astrophysicists unravel Sun’s subsurface weather linked to 11-year activity cycle