英国高校或将斥资1000万英镑购买Java,以避免与甲骨文公司发生冲突。
UK unis to cough up to £10M on Java to keep Oracle off their backs

原始链接: https://www.theregister.com/2025/06/13/jisc_java_oracle/

英国高校和学院通过Jisc与甲骨文公司签订了一份价值986万英镑的框架协议,内容涉及备受争议的Java SE通用订阅服务。该服务采用按员工而非按用户付费的许可模式。协议包括为自2023年以来一直使用甲骨文Java的机构免除历史欠费。 2023年推出的这种新的许可模式因可能大幅增加成本而受到批评,Gartner估计成本将比旧模式增加两到五倍。专家建议各机构迁移到开源Java替代方案,以应对更高的成本和增加的甲骨文审计。一项调查显示,只有一小部分用户计划继续使用甲骨文Java,促使许多机构寻求替代方案。尽管有开源方案可用,并且顾问也发出了警告,Jisc仍表示,该协议简化了许可流程,并为高校和甲骨文带来了效率提升。关于决策过程的细节,包括其是否受到潜在审计的影响,仍未公开。

这篇 Hacker News 的帖子讨论了英国大学可能因 Java 授权问题而向甲骨文支付高达 1000 万英镑的费用。原发帖人回忆起大学曾大力推广 Java 的采用,而这如今却导致了这些授权问题。评论者们就 Java 是否适合课程设置展开了辩论,并提出了 Python、Go 甚至 C++ 等替代方案。一些人对在教育中使用像 Go 这样由企业控制的语言表示担忧,主张使用开放标准的自由软件语言。 许多用户指出了甲骨文咄咄逼人的授权策略,将其比作诈骗和掠夺行为。他们强调,使用 OpenJDK 发行版通常是甲骨文 Java 的可行替代方案,但承认大学网络或捆绑软件中意外或不知情地使用甲骨文版本的风险。用户警告不要依赖甲骨文产品,因为它们的授权非常复杂,并建议屏蔽甲骨文域名以防止意外下载。讨论还涉及 Google 过去对 Sun Microsystems(以及 Java)的兴趣以及随后与甲骨文的法律纠纷。
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原文

UK universities and colleges have signed a framework worth up to £9.86 million ($13.33 million) with Oracle to use its controversial Java SE Universal Subscription model, in exchange for a "waiver of historic fees due for any institutions who have used Oracle Java since 2023."

Jisc, a membership organization that runs procurement for higher and further education establishments in the UK, said it had signed an agreement to purchase the new subscription licenses after consultation with members.

In a procurement notice, it said institutions that use Oracle Java SE are required to purchase subscriptions. "The agreement includes the waiver of historic fees due for any institutions who have used Oracle Java since 2023," the notice said.

The Java SE Universal Subscription was introduced in January 2023 to an outcry from licensing experts and analysts. It moved licensing of Java from a per-user basis to a per-employee basis. At the time, Oracle said it was "a simple, low-cost monthly subscription that includes Java SE Licensing and Support for use on Desktops, Servers or Cloud deployments."

However, licensing advisors said early calculations to help some clients showed that the revamp might increase costs by up to ten times.

Later, analysis from Gartner found the per-employee subscription model to be two to five times more expensive than the legacy model.

"For large organizations, we expect the increase to be two to five times, depending on the number of employees an organization has," Nitish Tyagi, principal Gartner analyst, said in July 2024. "Please remember, Oracle defines employees as part-time, full-time, temporary, agents, contractors, as in whosoever supports internal business operations has to be licensed as per the new Java Universal SE Subscription model."

Since the introduction of the new Oracle Java licensing model, user organizations have been strongly advised to move off Oracle Java and find open source alternatives for their software development and runtime environments.

A survey of Oracle users found that only one in ten was likely to continue to stay with Oracle Java, in part as a result of the licensing changes.

Users continue to be advised to review their use of Oracle Java after an increase in vendor software audits.

In May, Scott Sellers, CEO of Java advisory and services company Azul, said: "We're definitely seeing an uptick. One of the things that seems to be happening is we're seeing more presence in more and more countries."

He told The Register that Oracle is "putting specific Java sales teams in country, and then identifying those companies that appear to be downloading and... then going in and requesting to [do] audits. That recipe appears to be playing out truly globally at this point."

Eric Guyer, founding partner at Oracle and SAP advisory and consulting firm Remend, said that few of his clients license Oracle Java, as his company recommends users move off it onto open source alternatives.

The Register asked Jisc why universities and colleges have not moved off Oracle Java and whether the £10 million framework followed an Oracle audit, or a suggestion that Oracle might audit Jisc member organizations.

Caren Milloy, director of licensing, told us via an emailed statement:

"Jisc, working in collaboration with [higher education associations] UCISA, has negotiated an agreement with Oracle Java that provides a tailored offering to UK higher and further education institutions, simplifying licensing and achieving efficiencies for institutions and Oracle. We look forward to sharing more details on this shortly." ®

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