New ‘Kraken’ GSM-cracking software is released

The (Global System for Mobile Communications) technology used by the majority of the world’s mobile phones will get some scrutiny at next week’s Black Hat security conference, and what the security researchers there have to say isn’t pretty.

On Friday, an open source effort to develop GSM-cracking software released software that cracks the A5/1 encryption algorithm used by some GSM networks. Called Kraken, this software uses new, very efficient, encryption cracking tables that allow it to break A5/1 encryption much faster than before.

The software is key step toward eavesdropping on mobile phone conversations over GSM networks. Since GSM networks are the backbone of 3G, they also provide attackers with an avenue into the new generation of handsets.

In December, the group released a set of encryption tables designed to speed up the arduous process of breaking A5/1 encryption, but the software component was incomplete. Now the software is done, and the tables are much more efficient than they were seven months ago. “The speed of how fast you could crack a call is probably orders of magnitude better than anything previously,” said Frank Stevenson, a developer with the A5/1 Security Project. “We know we can do it in minutes; the question is, can we do it in seconds?”

As the software becomes more polished it will make GSM call eavesdropping practical. “Our attack is so easy to carry out, and the cost of attack is lowered so significantly, that there is now a real danger of widespread intercepting of calls,” Stevenson said.

Stevenson and his co-developers haven’t put together all the components someone would need to listen in on a call — that would be illegal in some countries. Someone must still develop the radio listening equipment needed to gain access to the GSM signal, but that type of technology is within reach. Stevenson believes that this could be done using an inexpensive mobile phone and a modified version of open-source software called OsmocomBB. Hackers could also use a more-expensive Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP) device in conjunction with another program, called Airprobe.

A5/1 Security Project leader Karsten Nohl will discuss the hardware and software setup for his project’s GSM cracking tools at next week’s conference.

Last year there were about 3.5 billion GSM phones in use, according to data from the GSM Association. Not all of these phones are on networks that use A5/1 encryption — some use the more-secure A5/3 algorithm; others use no encryption — but a sizeable percentage are.

In the U.S., both AT&T and T-Mobile operate GSM networks.

The trade group that represents GSM network operators and equipment manufacturers, the GSM Association, has said in the past that A5/1 cracking efforts such as this are interesting, but attacks are extremely difficult to pull off in the real world. Intercepting mobile phone calls is illegal in many countries, including the U.S. The GSM Association did not respond to messages seeking comment for this story.

Project developers say the point of their work is to show how easy it really would be to crack A/51 — something they say that grey market commercial products are already doing. According to Stevenson many of these security problems are solved in next-generation mobile network technologies such as 3G and LTE (Long Term Evolution).

However, even 3G phones can be compromised because they can roll back to GSM mode when a 3G network is not available. “You can choose to operate in 3G mode only, but then you will have very limited coverage,” Stevenson said. “GSM has become the Achilles Heel of 3G security.”

Meanwhile, another Black Hat presenter, Chris Paget plans to demonstrate a completely different way to intercept GSM calls. He’s setting up a fake cellular tower that masquerades as a legitimate GSM network.

According to Paget, using open-source tools and a US$1,500 USRP radio, he can assemble his fake tower, called an IMSI (International Mobile Subscriber Identity) catcher. In a controlled experiment, he’s going to set one up at Black Hat and invite audience members to connect their mobile phones. Once a phone has connected, Paget’s tower tells it to drop encryption, giving him a way of listening in on calls.

“I think there’s been too much focus on the cryptographic weaknesses in GSM,” he said. “People need to recognize that the cryptographic weaknesses are not the worst weaknesses in GSM. ”

Robert McMillan covers computer security and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Follow Robert on Twitter at @bobmcmillan. Robert’s e-mail address is robert_mcmillan@idg.com

Rackspace Open Sources Cloud Platform; Announces Plans to Collaborate with NASA and Other Industry Leaders on OpenStack Project

More Than 25 Companies, Including Citrix and Dell, Support Open Source Cloud
Platform to Accelerate Industry Standards
SAN ANTONIO–(Business Wire)–
Rackspace Hosting (NYSE:RAX) today announced the launch of OpenStack, an
open-source cloud platform designed to foster the emergence of technology
standards and cloud interoperability. Rackspace, the leading specialist in the
hosting and cloud computing industry, is donating the code that powers its Cloud
Files and Cloud Servers public-cloud offerings to the OpenStack project. The
project will also incorporate technology that powers the NASA Nebula Cloud
Platform. Rackspace and NASA plan to actively collaborate on joint technology
development and leverage the efforts of open-source software developers
worldwide.

“Modern scientific computation requires ever increasing storage and processing
power delivered on-demand,” said Chris C. Kemp, NASA`s Chief Technology Officer
for IT. “To serve this demand, we built Nebula, an infrastructure cloud platform
designed to meet the needs of our scientific and engineering community. NASA and
Rackspace are uniquely positioned to drive this initiative based on our
experience in building large scale cloud platforms and our desire to embrace
open source.”

OpenStack will feature several cloud infrastructure components including a fully
distributed object store based on Rackspace Cloud Files, available today at
OpenStack.org. The next component planned for release is a scalable
compute-provisioning engine based on the NASA Nebula cloud technology and
Rackspace Cloud Servers technology. It is expected to be available later this
year. Using these components, organizations would be able to turn physical
hardware into scalable and extensible cloud environments using the same code
currently in production serving tens of thousands of customers and large
government projects.

“We are founding the OpenStack initiative to help drive industry standards,
prevent vendor lock-in and generally increase the velocity of innovation in
cloud technologies,” said Lew Moorman, President, Cloud and CSO at Rackspace.
“We are proud to have NASA`s support in this effort. Its Nebula Cloud Platform
is a tremendous boost to the OpenStack community. We expect ongoing
collaboration with NASA and the rest of the community to drive more-rapid cloud
adoption and innovation, in the private and public spheres.”

Rackspace and NASA have committed to use OpenStack to power their cloud
platforms, and Rackspace will dedicate open-source developers and resources to
support adoption of OpenStack among enterprises and service providers. An
OpenStack Design Summit hosted by Rackspace was held July 13-16 in Austin, where
more than 100 technical advisors, developers and founding members joined to
validate the code and ratify the project roadmap. More than 25 companies were
represented at the Design Summit including AMD, Autonomic Resources, Citrix,
Cloud.com, Cloudkick, Cloudscaling, CloudSwitch, Dell, enStratus, FathomDB,
Intel, iomart Group, Limelight, Nicira, NTT DATA, Opscode, PEER 1, Puppet Labs,
RightScale, Riptano, Scalr, SoftLayer, Sonian, Spiceworks, Zenoss and Zuora.

“OpenStack provides a solid foundation for promoting the emergence of cloud
standards and interoperability,” said Peter Levine, SVP and GM, Datacenter and
Cloud Division, Citrix Systems. “As a longtime technology partner with
Rackspace, Citrix will collaborate closely with the community to provide full
support for the XenServer platform and our other cloud-enabling products.”

“We believe in offering customers choice in cloud computing that helps them
improve efficiency,” says Forrest Norrod, Vice President and General Manager of
Server Platforms, Dell. “OpenStack on Dell is a great option to create open
source enterprise cloud solutions.”

To download or contribute code and get involved, visit OpenStack.org. Follow
OpenStack on Twitter @OpenStack.

About Rackspace Hosting

Rackspace Hosting is the world’s leading specialist in the hosting and cloud
computing industry. The San Antonio-based company provides Fanatical Support to
its customers, across a portfolio of IT services, including Managed Hosting and
Cloud Computing. For more information, visit www.rackspace.com.

About the NASA Nebula Cloud Program

NASA Nebula is a Cloud Computing service based at NASA Ames Research Center that
provides high performance compute, network, and data storage services to NASA
scientists and researchers. Nebula allows NASA to share and process large
scientific data sets and was one of three flagship projects highlighted in
NASA`s Open Government Plan. For more information, visit http://nebula.nasa.gov.

Forward Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements that involve risks,
uncertainties and assumptions. If such risks or uncertainties materialize or
such assumptions prove incorrect, the results of Rackspace Hosting could differ
materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements
and assumptions. All statements other than statements of historical fact are
statements that could be deemed forward-looking statements, including any
statements concerning expected development of the OpenStack project; the
acceptance of OpenStack technology as an industry standard; anticipated
operational and financial benefits from any development of the OpenStack
project; the participation of other companies or individuals in the OpenStack
project; any statements of expectation or belief; and any statements of
assumptions underlying any of the foregoing. Risks, uncertainties and
assumptions include the possibility that expected benefits from the OpenStack
project may not materialize because the underlying technology is not reliable or
generally compatible with industry standards; there are changes in technology
that adversely affect the adoption of the standards, and other risks that are
described in Rackspace Hosting`s Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2010,
filed with the SEC on May 6, 2010. Except as required by law, Rackspace Hosting
assumes no obligation to update these forward-looking statements publicly, or to
update the reasons actual results could differ materially from those anticipated
in these forward-looking statements, even if new information becomes available
in the future.

Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available:

http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=6363595〈=en

Rackspace Hosting
Lauren Sell, 713-398-8700
lauren.sell@rackspace.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Former Yahoo! and BEA Executive Joins Cloudera Board of Directors

SAN FRANCISCO, CA, Jun 02 (MARKET WIRE) —
Cloudera, the commercial Apache Hadoop company, today announced that
software industry veteran Scott Dietzen is joining its Board of
Directors. A former senior executive at Yahoo!, Zimbra and BEA Systems,
Dietzen brings a wealth of experience and leadership to Cloudera.

“Dietzen had a hand in establishing the web application platform category
with WebLogic and in the open source and Web 2.0 waves with Zimbra,” said
Mike Olson, CEO of Cloudera. “His experience growing innovative tech
startups into wildly successful software businesses will be a tremendous
asset to Cloudera.”

Dietzen has extensive leadership experience, having helped build, sell,
and transition three major Internet technology companies. Most recently,
he was SVP, Applications at Yahoo!, where his responsibilities included
Yahoo! Mail, Messenger, Flickr, Answers, Groups, and Zimbra. He came to
Yahoo! via the acquisition of open source email startup Zimbra, where he
served as President and CTO. Before that Dietzen was CTO of BEA Systems
– acquired by Oracle in 2008 — which he came to with the acquisition of
Java and web application server pioneer WebLogic. Dietzen holds a Ph.D.
in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon.

“I have been very lucky in getting to work with hugely talented teams on
transformative technologies that address essential and growing business
needs,” said Dietzen. “Cloudera is in precisely this sweet spot — the
Hadoop technology family has the chance to redefine how enterprises deal
with exponentially growing data, and thereby deliver substantially more
compelling and more customized products and services.”

Cloudera provides products, professional services, technical support and
training that complement the popular Apache Hadoop open-source software
package, enabling enterprises to lower their data-processing costs and
get more value from the information they collect and generate. Hadoop is
widely used in finance, government, telecom, media and entertainment,
technology, research institutions and other markets.

About Cloudera
Cloudera (www.cloudera.com), the commercial Hadoop
company, delivers the scalable platform for a new generation of
data-intensive applications. Founded by leading experts on big data from
Facebook, Google, Oracle and Yahoo!, Cloudera helps traditional
enterprises tap into the power of Hadoop. Headquartered in Silicon
Valley, Cloudera has financial backing from Accel Partners, Greylock
Partners and angel investors who include Diane Greene (former CEO of
VMware), Marten Mickos (former CEO of MySQL), and Jeff Weiner (CEO of
LinkedIn).

Media Contact
Ray George
Page One PR
Phone: 650-922-3825
Email: ray@pageonepr.com

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

Former Yahoo! and BEA Executive Joins Cloudera Board of Directors

SAN FRANCISCO, CA, Jun 02 (MARKET WIRE) —
Cloudera, the commercial Apache Hadoop company, today announced that
software industry veteran Scott Dietzen is joining its Board of
Directors. A former senior executive at Yahoo!, Zimbra and BEA Systems,
Dietzen brings a wealth of experience and leadership to Cloudera.

“Dietzen had a hand in establishing the web application platform category
with WebLogic and in the open source and Web 2.0 waves with Zimbra,” said
Mike Olson, CEO of Cloudera. “His experience growing innovative tech
startups into wildly successful software businesses will be a tremendous
asset to Cloudera.”

Dietzen has extensive leadership experience, having helped build, sell,
and transition three major Internet technology companies. Most recently,
he was SVP, Applications at Yahoo!, where his responsibilities included
Yahoo! Mail, Messenger, Flickr, Answers, Groups, and Zimbra. He came to
Yahoo! via the acquisition of open source email startup Zimbra, where he
served as President and CTO. Before that Dietzen was CTO of BEA Systems
– acquired by Oracle in 2008 — which he came to with the acquisition of
Java and web application server pioneer WebLogic. Dietzen holds a Ph.D.
in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon.

“I have been very lucky in getting to work with hugely talented teams on
transformative technologies that address essential and growing business
needs,” said Dietzen. “Cloudera is in precisely this sweet spot — the
Hadoop technology family has the chance to redefine how enterprises deal
with exponentially growing data, and thereby deliver substantially more
compelling and more customized products and services.”

Cloudera provides products, professional services, technical support and
training that complement the popular Apache Hadoop open-source software
package, enabling enterprises to lower their data-processing costs and
get more value from the information they collect and generate. Hadoop is
widely used in finance, government, telecom, media and entertainment,
technology, research institutions and other markets.

About Cloudera
Cloudera (www.cloudera.com), the commercial Hadoop
company, delivers the scalable platform for a new generation of
data-intensive applications. Founded by leading experts on big data from
Facebook, Google, Oracle and Yahoo!, Cloudera helps traditional
enterprises tap into the power of Hadoop. Headquartered in Silicon
Valley, Cloudera has financial backing from Accel Partners, Greylock
Partners and angel investors who include Diane Greene (former CEO of
VMware), Marten Mickos (former CEO of MySQL), and Jeff Weiner (CEO of
LinkedIn).

Media Contact
Ray George
Page One PR
Phone: 650-922-3825
Email: ray@pageonepr.com

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

Cloudera Co-Founder Presenting New Analytical Platform at SIGMOD

SAN FRANCISCO, CA, Jun 02 (MARKET WIRE) —

What: ACM SIGMOD/PODS Conference

When: June 6-11, 2010

Where: Hyatt Regency
Indianapolis, IN

Jeff Hammerbacher, Co-founder and Vice President of Products at
Cloudera, is presenting a session entitled “Experiences Evolving a New
Analytical Platform: What Works and What’s Missing” at SIGMOD on Tuesday,
June 8th.

Named a 2010 Best Young Tech Entrepreneur by Bloomberg BusinessWeek,
Hammerbacher has extensive experience working in the field of data
analytics. Prior to his work as an executive at Cloudera, while at
Facebook, Hammerbacher’s team produced the Apache projects Hive, a data
warehouse infrastructure built on top of Apache Hadoop, and Cassandra, a
distributed storage system designed to scale across commodity servers.

According to the conference program, “The annual ACM SIGMOD/PODS
conference is a leading international forum for database researchers,
practitioners, developers, and users to explore cutting-edge ideas and
results, and to exchange techniques, tools, and experiences.”

Apache Hadoop is a new analytical data processing platform that crunches
structured and complex data. It was designed to run on clusters of
inexpensive commodity servers that can grow and shrink on demand to meet
the storage and processing needs of the enterprise. Hadoop is widely used
in finance, government, telecom, media and entertainment, technology,
research institutions and other markets by companies such as JP Morgan,
Visa, Samsung, Netflix, the Apollo Group, and Nokia.

Cloudera enhances the Hadoop platform through its suite of products,
professional services, technical support and training, enabling
enterprises to lower their data-processing costs and get more value from
the information they collect and generate.

About Cloudera
Cloudera (www.cloudera.com), the commercial Hadoop
company, develops and distributes Hadoop, the open source software that
powers the data processing engines of the world’s largest and most
popular web sites. Founded by leading experts on big data from Facebook,
Google, Oracle and Yahoo, Cloudera’s mission is to bring the power of
Hadoop, MapReduce, and distributed storage to companies of all sizes in
the enterprise, Internet and government sectors. Headquartered in Silicon
Valley, Cloudera has financial backing from Accel Partners, Greylock
Partners and angel investors who include Diane Greene (former CEO of
VMware), Marten Mickos (former CEO of MySQL), and Jeff Weiner (CEO of
LinkedIn).

Contact:
Ray George
Page One PR
Phone: 650-922-3825
Email: ray@pageonepr.com

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

How sharing is different from gift giving and exchanging marketplace commodities

Washington, August 25 (ANI): A new research article has shed light on how sharing is different from gift giving or exchanging marketplace commodities, and how cultural changes affect people’s tendency to share.

“Sharing is a fundamental consumer behaviour that we have either tended to overlook or to confuse with commodity exchange and gift giving,” writes author Russell Belk, of York University, Toronto.

“Rather than absolute distinctions, I see these as categories that share fuzzy boundaries,” he adds.

The author further points out: “Although both sharing and gift-giving have some elements that often (but not always) make them more communal, loving, and caring than marketplace exchange, sharing differs from gift-giving in that it is non-reciprocal. The infant who receives his or her mother’s nurturing care and sustenance does not incur a debt. Nor does the child who receives food, shelter, and love from parents receive an itemized bill upon leaving the nuclear family home.”

Published in the Journal of Consumer Research, Belk’s article states that societal changes can affect the nature of sharing.

It says that examples of threats to sharing may be the individualization of family phones and meals, the decline of free public education, and the shrinking of public broadcasting.

On the other hand, adds the write-up, the Internet provides many healthy models for increased sharing.

Belk writes that forums, bulletin boards, blogs, social networking sites, wikis, open-source software development projects, and websites where people share expertise, advice, and opinions all contribute to a sharing community.

He has even provided some suggestions for promoting sharing in today’s world.

“I suggest that two keys to promoting contemporary sharing are an expanded sense of self that embraces other people more than other things and a greater sense of ‘sharing in,’ where possessions are seen as ours rather than mine and yours,” he concludes. (ANI)

IGNOU inks MoU with IBM India to reform IT education

Kochi, July 12 (ANI): The Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU), The Advanced Center for Informatics and Innovative Learning (ACIIL) and IBM India have signed an MoU that would re-invent IT education in the country.

As a part of the MoU, IGNOU and IBM India would partner each other skills to students on IT standards in emerging verticals like healthcare, financial services and retail that have a significant growth potential, in addition to providing open source software skills and open standards, with live projects.

The three programs that will be offered in the first phase under this MoU would include: A Certificate in Open Source Software, Diploma in Open Source Software and Industry Vertical Domain Open Standards and Advanced Diploma in Industry Vertical Domain Open Standards (Healthcare/ Retail/ Insurance).

The Innovation Centre for Open Standards (iCos), an online platform, will be the underlying framework for the engagement between the IBM and the IGNOU for the execution of the courses.

The IBM iCos platform links students’ project based learning with IT industry and mentors. This will be seamlessly integrated to IGNOU’s in house developed Unified Learning Platform in due course.

This effort will fill up the finishing school efforts of the IT Industry today, enabling the day one deployment.

The students will immensely benefit from the flexibility of learning at their own pace, anytime, anywhere and make the students future-ready.

Speaking on this, Professor Srivathsan, Pro-Vice Chancellor, IGNOU said, “The MoU aptly fits into IGNOU’s vision of democratizing the education and offering quality education to all. It opens up the modernization of IT and Computer Science education as well as their applications in different verticals. Students stand to benefit immensely from this initiative as it provides them a platform to help them transition from academia to industry while they are still on campus”.

The IBM will work with universities and colleges that support open standards and seek to use open source and IBM technologies for teaching purposes both directly and virtually via the web. By Juhan Samuel (ANI)

Donate your computer’s idle time to find cure for HIV, Parkinson’s, breast cancer

Washington, June 21 (ANI): Your computer can be put to good use even when its not in use, for now it’s possible to donate the idle time to cutting-edge biomedical research aimed at finding a cure for HIV, Parkinson’s, arthritis, and breast cancer.

University of Delaware’s “Docking@Home” project, led by Michela Taufer, assistant professor of computer and information sciences, allows people to donate their computer’s idle time to perform scientific calculations that will aid in creating new and improved medicines to thwart these major diseases.

Taufer explained that researchers should create molecular models and simulate their interactions to reveal possible candidates for effective drugs, which could then be put under laboratory testing. And such a simulation is called “docking”.

As there are infinite combinations of molecules and their binding orientations, simulating them requires tremendous computing power.

Supercomputers often have a long waiting line or are too expensive to use for extended periods, said Taufer.

Thus, researchers have turned to citizen volunteers for help, which enables them to distribute the hundreds of thousands of computing tasks across a large number of computers.

Although the research is still in the validation stage, the process is aimed at studying new drugs.

“We are transforming a process in nature into computer steps-an algorithm,” explained Taufer.

To volunteer your computer’s idle time to do scientific calculations, it takes only a few simple steps highlighted on the project Web page (http://docking.cis.udel.edu/).

One can install a free, open-source software program called BOINC (Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing), developed at the University of California, and link up to the Docking Server at the University of Delaware to become part of the network.

The computer’s idle cycles are accessed automatically when it is not in use.

Currently, the 6,000 volunteers worldwide who currently are involved in UD’s Docking@Home project are contributing to the completion of some 30,000 docking tasks per day, said Taufer. (ANI)

Donate your computer’s idle time to find cure for HIV, Parkinson’s, breast cancer

Washington, June 21 (ANI): Your computer can be put to good use even when its not in use, for now it’s possible to donate the idle time to cutting-edge biomedical research aimed at finding a cure for HIV, Parkinson’s, arthritis, and breast cancer.

University of Delaware’s “Docking@Home” project, led by Michela Taufer, assistant professor of computer and information sciences, allows people to donate their computer’s idle time to perform scientific calculations that will aid in creating new and improved medicines to thwart these major diseases.

Taufer explained that researchers should create molecular models and simulate their interactions to reveal possible candidates for effective drugs, which could then be put under laboratory testing. And such a simulation is called “docking”.

As there are infinite combinations of molecules and their binding orientations, simulating them requires tremendous computing power.

Supercomputers often have a long waiting line or are too expensive to use for extended periods, said Taufer.

Thus, researchers have turned to citizen volunteers for help, which enables them to distribute the hundreds of thousands of computing tasks across a large number of computers.

Although the research is still in the validation stage, the process is aimed at studying new drugs.

“We are transforming a process in nature into computer steps-an algorithm,” explained Taufer.

To volunteer your computer’s idle time to do scientific calculations, it takes only a few simple steps highlighted on the project Web page (http://docking.cis.udel.edu/).

One can install a free, open-source software program called BOINC (Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing), developed at the University of California, and link up to the Docking Server at the University of Delaware to become part of the network.

The computer’s idle cycles are accessed automatically when it is not in use.

Currently, the 6,000 volunteers worldwide who currently are involved in UD’s Docking@Home project are contributing to the completion of some 30,000 docking tasks per day, said Taufer. (ANI)

Microsoft Slapped With $200 Million Patent Ruling

Microsoft often has been vilified for its “embrace-and-extend” approach to open standards, and the software giant now faces a hefty penalty for tinkering with extensible markup language (XML).

On Wednesday, a federal court in Texas slapped Microsoft with a $200 million patent infringement ruling for including a Canadian software firm’s technology in Microsoft Word.

Toronto-based i4i, a developer of XML-based collaborative content solutions, sued Microsoft in 2007 for customizing the XML in Word 2003 and Word 2007 in a way that violated i4i’s patent, charges that Microsoft has denied. According to Bloomberg News, i4i’s case centered on Microsoft’s method for processing Word files using embedded codes that provide instructions on how information appears.

As it has done in past rulings that haven’t gone its way, Microsoft insists it didn’t infringe i4i’s patent and that the patent is invalid. Microsoft will ask the court to overturn the verdict, Microsoft spokesman David Bowermaster told Bloomberg News.

Last month, a federal court in Rhode Island ordered Microsoft to pay $388 million in damages for infringing on an antipiracy patent owned by Uniloc, a Singapore-based developer of antipiracy software. Uniloc claims Microsoft’s Windows Product Activation (WPA) antipiracy mechanism infringes its patent, and Microsoft is appealing that ruling as well.

In 2004, Z4 Technologies, a Michigan-based patent holding firm, sued Microsoft for using its technology in WPA, and in April 2006 won a $115 million judgment against Microsoft in U.S. District Court in Eastern Texas.

Microsoft, of course, is far more accustomed to filing patent infringement lawsuits than it is to defending itself. Microsoft claims that free and/or open-source software violates 235 of its patents, and in February, the company sued in-car GPS device maker TomTom for infringing three of them in TomTom’s implementation of the Linux kernel.

However, that case has opened a can of worms for Microsoft, as The Open Invention Network, an industry organization that protects Linux by acquiring and licensing open-source patents, has urged the open-source community to review the three Microsoft patents with a goal of rendering them useless for further litigation.