Protecode extends IP management to life cycle



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August 30, 2009 —  Protecode hopes to head off open-source license and organizational policy issues during the software development life cycle by offering the Forward Open Source Adoption (FOSA) workflow, which enforces IP policies throughout the application life cycle.

Mahshad Koohgoli, CEO and cofounder of Protecode, said that the FOSA workflow suite includes monitoring tools designed to funnel code to the company's core analysis platform. These monitoring tools cover developer desktops, build systems and repositories. As code is written, checked in and compiled, the analysis engine is called in to check over every line of code in an application.

The analysis engine sits in the server at an organization and has the ability to analyze a file to detect its license and copyright information, said Koohgoli. “We have a huge database of code we've put together over the last two years,” he said, adding that this database is used to compare code to that of the numerous open-source projects cataloged by Protecode.

FOSA is priced based on the amount of analysis done, and Koohgoli said that an average small business should expect to pay around US$5,000 per year for the suite of scanning software.

At the heart of FOSA is a user-defined policy that specifies what can or cannot be brought in to the code base, and the Protecode software enforces the policy.

“You could define specific licenses that are or are not acceptable. You can define well-known open-source licenses or proprietary licenses that you may not wish to use,” said Koohgoli.

Koohgoli said that policies can be built around various factors. Managers can forbid the use of specific licenses, or block code based on the copyright holder, or create policies for code used internally versus widely distributed code.

FOSA is available today.




Related Search Term(s): open source, Protecode


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