01st Apr 2010
Fusion of XMPP, .NET Messenger Service (MSN) and Gadu-Gadu
Edit afterwards: this was an old April joke. If ever you come by and read this article, don’t think there is anything true about it. Fortunately!
Great news everyone! After lengthy secret discussions between the XMPP Standards Foundation, Microsoft and Gadu-Gadu (leader of Instant Messaging in Poland), an agreement has been born today. There should be soon an official communique by the XSF but I thought important to relay this wonderful news as soon as I got it. So here it is: the three networks are to be melted into a single one on the following bases:
- The protocol will stay open, hence freely and without any charge implementable by anyone. The technical base is still XMPP’s, yet as some features are being imported from our — from now on — partner-protocols, protected under many software patents, it is now asked that developpers sign a « Non Disclosure Agreement » therefore protecting them from being sued by our partners, providing that these technologies are not disclosed in any publication without the agreement of the XSF, and that they are not used outside of an XMPP related development. Details of this « Non Disclosure Agreement » will be revealed later when the — newly created — XSF’s juridical service will have finished writing it.
- XSF keeps control and decision power over the protocol. But each partner will have from now on a member in the XMPP Council and in the Board of Directors (with no more nor less power than any other member).
- A new XEP has been written, enabling native targeted advertisements through the protocol (thanks to automatic analysis of your discussions — yet remaining of course respectful of your privacy) by hosting servers. We are this way finally creating a sustainable economical environment for XMPP services. Of course as for any XEP, it is not mandatory to implement it but a XMPP client not featuring the advertisement XEP will not be considered fully compliant (note that this XEP has been submitted to IETF to become a RFC) and won’t be anymore displayed on the clients’ official list.
- Jingle, deceptful, will be dropped in favor of the — so more reliable — Microsoft’s VOIP technology.
These changes are planned to be effective as of end of 2010 if anything goes according to the plan. Similar negociations are ongoing with other currently private networks owners, as for instance Yahoo! and AIM (Skype seems to refuse any discussion until now though we would have liked to use their secret VOIP technology instead). So stay tuned for news! This all is such a great step towards our big dream of an open messaging network, without any barrier and border, usable and used by anyone. Of course it implied a few concessions, but this is the price of liberty. Isn’t it?
Edit afterwards: this was an old April joke. If ever you come by and read this article, don’t think there is anything true about it. Fortunately!
Great news everyone! After lengthy secret discussions between the XMPP Standards Foundation, Microsoft and Gadu-Gadu (leader of Instant Messaging in Poland), an agreement has been born today. There should be soon an official communique by the XSF but I thought important to relay this wonderful news as soon as I got it. So here it is: the three networks are to be melted into a single one on the following bases:
- The protocol will stay open, hence freely and without any charge implementable by anyone. The technical base is still XMPP’s, yet as some features are being imported from our — from now on — partner-protocols, protected under many software patents, it is now asked that developpers sign a « Non Disclosure Agreement » therefore protecting them from being sued by our partners, providing that these technologies are not disclosed in any publication without the agreement of the XSF, and that they are not used outside of an XMPP related development. Details of this « Non Disclosure Agreement » will be revealed later when the — newly created — XSF’s juridical service will have finished writing it.
- XSF keeps control and decision power over the protocol. But each partner will have from now on a member in the XMPP Council and in the Board of Directors (with no more nor less power than any other member).
- A new XEP has been written, enabling native targeted advertisements through the protocol (thanks to automatic analysis of your discussions — yet remaining of course respectful of your privacy) by hosting servers. We are this way finally creating a sustainable economical environment for XMPP services. Of course as for any XEP, it is not mandatory to implement it but a XMPP client not featuring the advertisement XEP will not be considered fully compliant (note that this XEP has been submitted to IETF to become a RFC) and won’t be anymore displayed on the clients’ official list.
- Jingle, deceptful, will be dropped in favor of the — so more reliable — Microsoft’s VOIP technology.
These changes are planned to be effective as of end of 2010 if anything goes according to the plan. Similar negociations are ongoing with other currently private networks owners, as for instance Yahoo! and AIM (Skype seems to refuse any discussion until now though we would have liked to use their secret VOIP technology instead). So stay tuned for news! This all is such a great step towards our big dream of an open messaging network, without any barrier and border, usable and used by anyone. Of course it implied a few concessions, but this is the price of liberty. Isn’t it?
Posted in Jabber/XMPP en français, Jabber/XMPP in English | 4 Comments »

