The success of Linux and other open source projects has depended heavily on the support and investment of major IT companies, Oracle CEO Larry Ellison said on Thursday.“Open source becomes successful when major industrial corporations invest heavily in that open source project,” Ellison said at a Tokyo news conference. “Every open source product that has become tremendously successful became successful because of huge dollar investments from commercial IT operations like IBM and Intel and Oracle and others,” he said.He highlighted his own company’s work in developing and promoting Linux, and said the operating system would not have enjoyed the success that it has without vendor backing.“There’s a lot of romantic notions about open source,” Ellison said. “That just from the air these developers contribute and don’t charge. Let me tell you the names of the companies that developed Linux: IBM, Intel, Oracle – not a community of people who think everything should be free. Open source is not a communist movement.” Ellison made his remarks at a meeting with reporters during Oracle’s OpenWorld conference in Japan, where the company unveiled a new enterprise search technology.Some analysts have credited Linux ‘s success to support from big vendors, notably IBM’s decision in 2000 to invest $1 billion in the operating system. Still, Ellison’s remarks are sure to rile the open-source community, which will point to open-source programs that became widely used on the Internet under their own steam, such as the Apache Web server. Oracle has more developers working on Linux than Red Hat, according to Ellison. It’s work has included developing a clustered file system for Linux, he noted. Oracle also holds a majority stake in Tokyo-based Miracle Linux, which created the Asianux Linux distribution with companies in South Korea and China.Oracle itself has been acquiring open source vendors in recent months. In February it bought database vendor Sleepycat Software, and last year it bought Finland’s Innobase. Both companies make transactional storage engines used with MySQL’s open source database, prompting speculation that Oracle is trying to undermine MySQL’s business.Ellison denied any such intentions Thursday and played down MySQL’s status as an Oracle rival. Oracle has talked to MySQL in the past about a possible acquisition but the company is no longer “near the top of our list,” he said.“We’ve spoken to them, in fact we’ve spoken to almost everyone,” he said, when asked if Oracle wants to buy MySQL. “Are we interested? It’s a tiny company. I think the revenue from MySQL is between $30 million and $40 million. Oracle’s revenue next year is $15 billion.”MySQL is privately held and does not report its financial results publicly.“I’ll think you’ll see us buy components that make business sense and add technology and do things that our software doesn’t do,” Ellison said. “[With regard to] MySQL, never say never, but it’s not near the top of our list.” Related content news Broadcom to lay off over 1,200 VMware employees as deal closes The closing of VMware’s $69 billion acquisition by Broadcom will lead to layoffs, with 1,267 VMware workers set to lose their jobs at the start of the new year. By Jon Gold Dec 01, 2023 3 mins Technology Industry Mergers and Acquisitions news analysis Cisco joins $10M funding round for Aviz Networks' enterprise SONiC drive Investment news follows a partnership between the vendors aimed at delivering an enterprise-grade SONiC offering for customers interested in the open-source network operating system. By Michael Cooney Dec 01, 2023 3 mins Network Management Software Network Management Software Network Management Software news Cisco CCNA and AWS cloud networking rank among highest paying IT certifications Cloud expertise and security know-how remain critical in building today’s networks, and these skills pay top dollar, according to Skillsoft’s annual ranking of the most valuable IT certifications. Demand for talent continues to outweigh s By Denise Dubie Nov 30, 2023 7 mins Certifications Certifications Certifications news Mainframe modernization gets a boost from Kyndryl, AWS collaboration Kyndryl and AWS have expanded their partnership to help enterprise customers simplify and accelerate their mainframe modernization initiatives. By Michael Cooney Nov 30, 2023 4 mins Mainframes Cloud Computing Data Center Podcasts Videos Resources Events NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe