[ Comment asking what we can do to protect ourselves.] We can't do much, actually. The trademark thing can be secured, but other than that, I see no other defenses we could use. We can't prevent people from being hired, and we can't guard against patent attacks.
Seems you could argue that if the success of the postgresql project is in the hands of so few then we've got issues regardless of Oracle. Those people could (heaven forbid) get hit by the proverbial bus. It would have the same effect on postgresql itself. Anyway, just something to keep in mind...
I am willing to write up something for our web site if people think that would be helpful.
I think it it might be worth mentioning (in response to the mysql/innodb/oracle issue) that there's nothing for Oracle to purchase that would limit postgresql in the future -- that postgresql doesn't rely on any commercially licensed code the removal of which would adversely affect postgresql itself.
Anyway, that's my little 2 cents... :) -philip ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 1: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly