The problem is customer privacy. There are customer company names,
people names, phone numbers, email addresses (i.e. contact info) as well
as details about what the customer is trying to do in those bug texts.
Of course, there is plenty of text that is "hidden" from view without
that justification. But, when there is legal liability involving
privacy and the competitive advantage of customers, one naturally tends
to paint with a broad brush, just in case. I'm sure that the rule
within Oracle is "if in doubt, hide the text".
I'm sure that Oracle Legal goes ape on a regular basis on having *any*
bug text exposed on MetaLink. They don't give a darn about the
advantages to customers trying to diagnose problems -- they are
concerned only with the liabilities involved and the resulting potential
financial exposure, and that exposure is considerable. Think about it.
I've worked for companies that host systems for bitter competitors in
the same industry -- these competitors actually stipulated in their
hosting contracts that their data would not reside on the same storage
devices as their competitors. Of course, they would not share the same
servers. They even mandated that they would not share network or
network components. Can you imagine how these people would react if
they found their competitor reading one of their bug texts, with some
bit of identifying information exposed? "Ballistic" doesn't begin to
illustrate what would happen...
For that matter, think of the existing exposure the bug texts in
MetaLink could represent for medical companies in the US covered by the
HIPAA regulations. I hate to say it, but Oracle could already very well
be in violation of federal law on that. It's bad enough I just said
that on an open forum, and it is purely hypothetical and speculative,
but what if it is true?
Think about that, and just be grateful that *any* of the bug texts are
exposed. Personally, I work each day with the expectation that they
will disappear altogether.
Charles Schultz wrote,on my timestamp of 3/10/2006 11:58 PM:
Or am I barking up the wrong tree?
I think to a certain extent you are. Feature-wise, I don't expect to ever see Oracle disclose the details of how they do the new fast sorting in 10g, for example. Or RAC cache. Or a number of many other "competitive advantages". They are not under the GNU license, so that's fair.
However, I do object very strongly to not being able to check all bugs and their text in Metalink or even be able to see a short description of them. After all I'm paying for Metalink access as a service that is supposed, among other things, to help me find solutions to problems I might be experiencing or expect to encounter.
Or at least a note on if it is a known problem or a new one. It used to be that way. But it appears Oracle have lapsed back into "we're the only ones who can see the bugs" mode, in recent years. And that's as annoying as can be! Certainly not worth my moolah...
-- Tim Gorman consultant - Evergreen Database Technologies, Inc.
website = http://www.evdbt.com email = tim@xxxxxxxxx mobile = +1-303-885-4526 fax = +1-303-484-3608
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