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Showing content from https://www.zdnet.com/article/good-bye-jee-hello-jakarta-ee/ below:

Good-bye JEE, hello Jakarta EE

Video: Is open-source software really free?

Remember when Oracle bought Sun? The one thing that seemed to make sense about this deal was Oracle's acquisition of Java. Almost 10 years later, Oracle gave up on Java Enterprise Edition (JEE), aka J2EE, and started spinning Java's still-popular enterprise middleware platform to the Eclipse Foundation. Now, under the aegis of the Eclipse Foundation, JEE has been renamed to Jakarta EE.

Why? Because Oracle was never successful in monetizing Java. In large part, this was because of Sun and then Oracle's failed attempts to steer the Java Community.

As Oracle's server-side Java evangelist, David Delabassee, admitted in August 2017: "We believe that moving Java EE technologies including reference implementations and test compatibility kit to an open source foundation may be the right next step, in order to adopt more agile processes, implement more flexible licensing, and change the governance process."

The open-source model had proven more successful than a corporate-directed community model. This doesn't surprise anyone who's been following Java enterprise servers.

As Plumbr, a Java server performance analytic company observed, the open-source Apache Tomcat JavaServer Pages (JSP) engine has been easily the most popular JSP server for the past five years. Oracle WebLogic? It came in toward the bottom in the 2017 survey, with 4.5 percent of users.

If Jakarta sounds familiar, it's because it is not the first time that name has been applied to a JEE server. From 1999 to 2011, the Apache Software Foundation ran Apache Jakarta, which covered all of Apache's open-source Java efforts.

So, why all this name jumping around? Because Oracle -- even as it gave the JEE intellectual property to the Eclipse Foundation -- refused to give the trademarked Java name to Eclipse. Don't ask me why.

The Java EE Guardians, a group of top Java experts including Java's creator James Gosling, asked Oracle to at least let the Foundation use "Java EE" and javax JEE packages. After all, they reasoned:

Will Lyons, Oracle WebLogic's senior director of product management, replied that "we must continue to reserve use of such names using the Java trademark to serving that fundamental source identifying function." Lyons also reemphasized that Oracle was giving Eclipse the "GlassFish Java EE 8 Reference Implementation sources."

Still, Oracle remained deaf to the Guardians' pleas. So, while JEE soldiers on, it will do so under the burden of a new name. This can't help but further confuse the Java EE -- excuse me, Jakarta EE -- customers.

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