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Russian Police Raid NGINX Moscow Office Slashdot
https://news.slashdot.org/story/19/12/12/175245/russian-police-raid-nginx-moscow-office
>Russian police have raided today the Moscow offices of NGINX, Inc., a subsidiary of F5 Networks and the company behind the internet's most popular web server technology. From a report:
>Equipment was seized and employees were detained for questioning. Moscow police executed the raid after last week the Rambler Group filed a copyright violation against NGINX Inc., claiming full ownership of the NGINX web server code. The Rambler Group is the parent company of rambler.ru, one of Russia's biggest search engines and internet portals. According to copies of the search warrant posted on Twitter today, Rambler claims that Igor Sysoev developed NGINX while he was working as a system administrator for the company, hence they are the rightful owner of the project. Sysoev created NGINX in the early 2000s and open-sourced the NGINX code in 2004. In 2009, he founded NGINX, Inc., a US company, to provide adjacent tools and support services for NGINX deployments. The company is based in San Francisco, but has offices all over the world, including Moscow. The NGINX server's source code is still free and managed through an open-source model, although a large chunk of the project's primary contributors are NGINX, Inc. employees, who have a firm grip on the project's stewardship.
Related Link: https://www.zdnet.com/article/russian-police-raid-nginx-moscow-office/
- LinuxWalt (@lnxw48a1) {3EB165E0-5BB1-45D2-9E7D-93B31821F864} repeated this.
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@geniusmusing This sounds like Rambler is filing "IP" claims for things a former employee did apart from his employment, which is very scummy. Back when I worked for Radio Shack, the district manager told us that if we invent something new, quit the job, wait a few months, and then we could suddenly discover the invention in a way that made it much more difficult to enforce their "we own all that you create while you work here" clause.
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@geniusmusing Perhaps F5 is getting some big contracts with their proprietary server. (I presume it is built atop the FOSS version of #Nginx.) Or maybe Rambler plans to mirror the SCO "stolen IP" argument in an attempt to close source the product.