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Crystal Reports EULA causing training headaches

Crystal Reports EULA causing training headaches

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 20 May 2009 For: IT World Canada Creator

Independent trainers and courseware providers argue licensing changes are putting them out of business. Why enterprises should read user licences carefully

End User Licensing Agreements (EULAs) have always been “sketchy,” according to Info-Tech Research Group Inc. lead analyst Darin Stahl. “If people read the EULA in every piece of software they install, it would scare them to death.”

Early editions of Microsoft Corp.’s Studio Visual Basic development tools, for example, suggested that anything end users created became the property of Microsoft because it was a derivative of their tools.

“If I’m an enterprise and I’m developing something that’s new, unique and startling in the hydrogen fuel space, all of a sudden I have Microsoft as an (intellectual property) party,” he said.

Past licences from strong niche players in the financial services industry that control large administration systems have also made Stahl “choke.” Changes to screens, source code used to run in compile code, any derivative works used internally became their property, he said. The licence agreements also stipulated backing up all code to tape and sending it to them on an annual basis.

Enterprises must spend more time reading EULAs and understanding their restrictions, suggested Stahl, especially in the development space. “It’s important to know what they’re buying,” he said.

“There are things that I do from a coding and building technique where I might need to actually firewall off pieces or code objects from what’s being called or run in the application that I’m assembling to protect myself from the EULA,” he said.

EULA headaches are currently reported by independent trainers and courseware providers for report management software Crystal Reports , who argue the licenses are putting them out of business and end-users may experience higher costs as a result.

Crystal Reports licensing has been a “never-ending source of entertainment” since 2005, said Stahl. “They’ve been doing some strange things with their licensing that is fairly restrictive and something I haven’t seen in other dealings or software licensing in a long, long time.”

The reporting software has seen several owners over the past decade, but was recently acquired by Business Objects S.A. in 2003, which was subsequently acquired by SAP AG in 2007.

In 2005, Business Objects issued cease and desist letters to independent courseware providers for including screen shots in their materials, which the company argued was a violation of copyright. Independent trainers also received letters of warning indicating their need to purchase a licence in order to continue conducting their training programs.

“All the little training companies around the country got cease-and-desist letters saying if they wanted to continue training Crystal Reports, they needed to pay for a licence. It was thousands of dollars and included a bunch of restrictions,’” said independent consultant, trainer and courseware maker Howard Hammerman.


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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.

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