Novell lays off AppArmor programmers

By Stephen Shankland, CNET News.com
Friday, October 12, 2007 10:25 AM

Two years after acquiring the company that developed the AppArmor security software for Linux, Novell has laid off team members behind the project, CNET News.com has learned.

AppArmor's founder and leader, Crispin Cowan, joined Novell in 2005 when it acquired his company, Immunix, which developed the software. But he and four others from the project lost their Novell jobs in Portland, Ore., on Sep. 28, Cowan confirmed.

However, he plans to continue AppArmor development. He and two other laid-off AppArmor programmers, Steve Beattie and Dominic Reynolds, launched an AppArmor consulting company on Wednesday called Mercenary Linux.

"I have lots of reputation capital. I can get another job. But I care about AppArmor as a project and I want it succeed," Cowan said in an interview Thursday. However, the change was a surprise: "I'm stunned. I was getting bonuses and raises and awards up until the time I was laid off."

AppArmor, which Novell said will still be hosted on its Web site, is software that grants software only the privileges and access it needs, an approach that reduces the powers a remote attacker can get from a compromised computer. Although leading Linux seller Red Hat is backing an earlier rival technology called SELinux, Canonical is building AppArmor into its next version of Ubuntu, Gutsy Gibbon, and Mandriva has included AppArmor in its new Mandriva Linux 2008.

Novell spokesman Bruce Lowry wouldn't comment on specifics of the layoff, but said job cuts are "part of our ongoing restructuring efforts we've been talking throughout the year." Part of that effort involves "improving our product development process."

Novell will continue updating AppArmor and using and it in its Suse Linux Enterprise Server software, but the development mechanism has changed since Novell released AppArmor as open-source software in 2006. Some companies outsource programming work to India, but with active open-source software projects, there's even lower-cost options.

"An open-source AppArmor community has developed. We'll continue to partner with this community," though the company will continue to develop aspects of AppArmor, Lowry said. Cowan was concerned that resources need to be focused directly on the project.

"Novell wants the community to pick up maintenance and development of AppArmor. But tossing it in the wind and hoping is not good enough assurance for me, so now it's my business to go find sponsors who are willing to pay for AppArmor development," Cowan said.

Mercenary Linux will write security profiles for software, though that's not a difficult task, as well as translate the software to new hardware, help to embed it in particular devices, and, potentially, revamp it for use on different operating systems, Cowan said.

But chiefly he expects Mercenary Linux to get by on smaller projects. "It's much easier to sell a small chunk of AppArmor development to somebody who needs something specific than it is to sell the whole concept," he said. "If somebody loves us and one day wants to acquire Mercenary, that's great."

This article was originally a blog post on ZDNet Asia sister site CNET News.com.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.


Tech Jobs Now!

Search for your ideal tech job:

Common ways IT wastes money on development

Web Development

Examples include using developers as support staff and failing to calculate a project's ROI before giving it the go-ahead.


Read more »



  • Enterprise 2.0

    Vince Casarez, vice president of product management at Oracle, explains how Web 2.0 technologies, such as tags, wikis, and mash-ups, can be applied within an organization.
    Play video


  • Nehalem Architecture

    What makes next-generation Intel® Microarchitecture (Nehalem) such a superior successor?
    Play video

 
Free the untapped potential of your IT infrastructure
Reduce bottlenecks to drive the efficiency and productivity of Business IT.
» Ultimate virtualization blade
» Scalable SAN solution
» Accelerate service delivery
On demand CRM goes strategic
CRM technology has come of age, and is now able to align with your customer strategy and grow in step with your business.

» Learn more about Oracle’s CRM Solutions




Could this be the most critical budget for India?

Blog thumbnail

For business journalists in India, budget time is excitement time. It's like sports journos covering the Olympics. As a newspaper correspondent, I too had my fill of budget-time excitement. But..... by Swati Prasad

Read more »

Tags

  1. antivirus
  2. apple ipod
  3. apple macintosh
  4. cnet networks inc.
  5. desktop
  6. e - mail
  7. hard drive
  8. intuit inc.
  9. microsoft corp.
  10. microsoft windows
  11. microsoft windows vista
  12. norton co.
  13. operating system
  14. pc
  15. performance
  16. security
  17. software
  18. tool
  19. web
  20. web site