Dear Australia: Software Knows No Borders
from the yeah,-that'll-work dept
Ross Lazarus points us to the rather surprising news that an increasing number of Sun MySQL employees have been barred from entering Australia on short-term business visas, due to the worry that they'll somehow "compete" with local businesses. There certainly may be more to this story, but on the face of it, it seems pretty ridiculous. Preventing employees of a certain company from entering your country may (barely) have made sense in the past and in some specific industries, but with software on today's internet, it's positively laughable. Somehow I doubt that the "local" Australian database developer community is resting easier thanks to their country's border patrol safely keeping MySQL employees abroad.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: australia, customs, mysql, open source software
Companies: sun
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Non-story
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Once I got sent back (not refused) by an overzealous border guard.
Don't laugh at Australia when the US does much the same.
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Re: Non-story
I'm sure you wouldn't mind it if I lied at immigration next time I visit the US, maybe overstay my visa and/or negotiate contracts away from local companies while I'm there... After all, everyone does it according to you.
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Re: Non-story
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hahaha
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good ideea, wrong application
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Australian Border Patrol Is Crazy
An American Football team traveling on the same plan as me had to unload all of their luggage at customs and wash off the bottom of their cleats so as not to bring any foreign soil or seeds onto Australian turf.
That seems reasonable to me, not barring entry of newer laptops or database dudes.
I definitely agree with Simon that resources should be better sent supporting local software development.
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Re: Australian Border Patrol Is Crazy
Then they should make a better product, or have better service. That way, they won't need gov't protection. With gov't protection, every Bruce in Australia will be stuck with products that can't compete on the world market.
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Another good phrase
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Issue is some thing differrent
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Check the link
http://blogs.mysql.com/kaj/2009/01/12/on-open-source-and-open-competition-in-a-not-so-open- world/
The claim that the visas were denied for competition reasons looks to me like pure speculation. All the guys knows is one person was denied a visa for unknown reasons, and the other decided not to go because he thought he might be denied entry.
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This sounds like a case of a visa being rejected due to belief that the holder will violate the visa conditions, which Australian immigration does quite regularly. This can be as stupid as coming in on a vacation visa but bringing a hardcopy of your resume
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Dear Techdirt
Nice job. You just lost a loyal and long-time reader.
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