Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Oracle Cloud The Almighty Buck The Courts Technology

Oracle Accused of Defrauding Investors On Cloud Sales Growth (bloomberg.com) 65

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: Oracle is named in a lawsuit alleging the company's executives lied to shareholders when they explained why cloud sales were growing. The investor leading the case, the City of Sunrise Firefighters' Pension Fund, claimed Oracle engaged in coercion and threats to sell its cloud-computing products, creating an unsustainable model that fell apart, according to the suit seeking class-action status and filed Friday in San Jose, California. The Florida-based firefighter pension fund and other investors lost money when Oracle's stock plummeted in March after reporting a disappointing earnings report and outlook, according to the lawsuit.

The suit claimed that Oracle's executives lied in forward-looking statements, which are never guaranteed, during earnings calls and at investor conferences in 2017 when they said customers were rapidly adopting their cloud-based products and cloud sales would accelerate. The firefighter pension, which manages about $143 million for 235 participants, alleged that Oracle used software license audits and weakened existing maintenance programs to compel customers to buy the cloud products.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Oracle Accused of Defrauding Investors On Cloud Sales Growth

Comments Filter:
  • Guess they weren't oracles after all, at least regarding their stock performance.

  • by imidan ( 559239 ) on Sunday August 12, 2018 @04:34PM (#57113144)

    alleged that Oracle used software license audits and weakened existing maintenance programs to compel customers to buy the cloud products

    I mean... isn't that just Oracle's usual business practice? Not just for cloud products, but for whatever product they're trying to push when they perform an "audit"?

    • It is. It's unethical as FUCK and now it's starting to bite them in the ass. Fuck Larry Ellison sideways with a bandsaw.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      40 years of continuously dickish anti-customer behavior. It doesn't seem they will ever run out of dumb sucker customers, so I am sure they will be OK.

      • by Cederic ( 9623 )

        It's distressingly hard to avoid being an Oracle customer.

        Ok, these days only a quarter of off the shelf business systems require Oracle, but lets say you use a different vendor for your HR system, for recruitment, in your call centre, for managing your IT service desk.. Next thing you know, Oracle have bought them, they're changing the licence terms and you're fucked.

        About the only way to avoid them with any certainty is to stick with IBM and SAP, and lets face it, those aren't exactly cost effective alter

    • by bungo ( 50628 ) on Monday August 13, 2018 @05:32AM (#57115210)

      No, this is worse than their normal business practices.

      What they are doing is cannibalising their traditional on-premisis installations, where the customer runs everything on their on servers and have their own local staff, and forcing their customers to be locked into their cloud offerings, using Oracle's servers and Oracle's staff.

      Oracle are giving huge discounts to customers to migrate to their cloud, and they are also giving huge commissions to their VARs and partners to sell cloud licenses. The customer initially has a lower cost, as they have a discount for a specific period, but after that, they are hit with the full cost forever.

      This kills off all on-premisis servers, operations. Companies no longer need their skilled technical staff, and trust Oracle to do everything for them. No different from normal complete IT outsourcing, except they are trusting a corporation that has been proven in court to lie, cheat and deceive. Oracle will screw over anyone, from it's own staff, to it's VARs and customers to make a buck.

      What is going to happen in the longer term is that they will run out of customers using on-premisis systems, so their cloud growth will stop. The Oracle technical staff will migrate to other technologies as their Oracle related careers disappear. When new database related projects come up, there will be no internal staff recommending Oracle, but other alternatives, such as postgresql, etc. Oracle's market share will continue to decline.

      All for chasing the short term growth in the cloud services, playing catch up with the big boys like Amazon.

  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Sunday August 12, 2018 @04:55PM (#57113200)

    We have an Oracle DB for our ERP and our CRM, and we're currently actively investing in a fast-track program to switch database provider for that exact reason: Oracle have been auditing the living daylight out of us lately, asking for tons of extra cash, threatening to drag us to court, and being generally extremely aggressive over features and number of seats they seemed okay to provide as part of our original contract up to about a year ago.

    All the other Oracle customers I know are in the same position: they got so tired of Oracle's shenanigans they're all leaving in droves despite the cost.

    • Same story with 2 of my former clients - Oracle's tactics worked before because they had a pretty solid monopoly and customers were willing to pay. Now customers are looking at cutting costs and attracted towards cloud competitors that charge fractions of what Oracle charges and aren't anywhere near as aggressive with audits and sales. Oracle can still succeed but it really needs to throw away its current playbook - otherwise it'll be repeating IBM's mistakes when the mainframe era was coming to an end.
    • Unfortunately there are no other choices besides Microsoft and Amazon's cloud DynoDB. Actually Amazon's Cloud DB might not be solid for conservatives enterprises yet. Microsoft while not as evil or aggressive as Oracle is not cheap nor always friendly either. Oracle has soo much financial reporting garbage tied to their products that Microsoft doesn't even have that will require new software rewrites.

      What an ugly mess.

      No geeks Mysql is not the same thing nor close so don't bother bringing that up as these l

      • by StormReaver ( 59959 ) on Sunday August 12, 2018 @07:22PM (#57113680)

        Unfortunately there are no other choices besides Microsoft and Amazon's cloud DynoDB.

        There's your first mistake.

        No geeks Mysql is not the same thing nor close...

        The thought of using MySQL for anything even remotely important should be enough to get someone fired and/or prosecuted.

        ...so don't bother bringing that up as these large customers use financial and AI reporting tools and APIs and not just simple SQL statements.

        What do you think these reporting tools are sending to the database, if not SQL?

        • Most people here say just use MySQL and are dead serious without realizing what enterprise needs are. This is slashdot after all and free software is somehow always superior over proprietary. Anyway Oracles tools tie heavily into generated code all proprietary PSQL and PeopleSoft APIs and other Java code using again more proprietary Oracle calls. It really would be a complete rewrite to leave them which they took out of Microsoft's playbook.

          There is a reason companies love their Microsoft Surface books whil

          • by Anonymous Coward

            So other than arrogance what exactly is wrong with MySQL in your opinion?

            • ...what exactly is wrong with MySQL in your opinion?

              MySQL's critical deficiencies are legion. The least of MySQL's major brain-damage revolves around silently accepting invalid data, then moving up to modifying data to fit column constraints (when the data should cause an error condition to be generated). The list goes on, but you can look those up yourself.

              It didn't really surprise me that Oracle bought MySQL. Their thought process was something like, "We need a cheap, shitty database to complement our expensive, shitty database."

            • by BranMan ( 29917 )

              No ACID compliance for one.

          • This is slashdot after all and free software is somehow always superior over proprietary.

            I know I didn't say so in my original posting, but PostgreSQL is massively superior to Oracle. MySQL, specifically, it even worse than Oracle, though.

        • by BLToday ( 1777712 ) on Sunday August 12, 2018 @08:07PM (#57113818)

          Unfortunately there are no other choices besides Microsoft and Amazon's cloud DynoDB.

          There's your first mistake.

          No geeks Mysql is not the same thing nor close...

          The thought of using MySQL for anything even remotely important should be enough to get someone fired and/or prosecuted.

          ...so don't bother bringing that up as these large customers use financial and AI reporting tools and APIs and not just simple SQL statements.

          What do you think these reporting tools are sending to the database, if not SQL?

          You’re bringing back nightmares. I remember dealing with MySQL back 1999 when the company I worked for tried to migrate to MySQL to save money. The horrors. Plus, MySQL is own by Oracle now. So it’s like going from the Oracle’s left pocket to Oracle’s smelly feet.

      • by Cederic ( 9623 )

        The database is an irrelevance. Yes, it's fucking expensive, but it's not where Oracle are making their money.

        It's the apps tier, and that's a fuck of a lot harder to migrate from. On the plus side, when you do migrate you can shift out of the Oracle database at the same time.

  • gambling (Score:4, Insightful)

    by bigtreeman ( 565428 ) <treecolin@gDALImail.com minus painter> on Sunday August 12, 2018 @05:12PM (#57113256)

    Investing in the stock market is speculation
    AKA gambling
    don't complain when the house takes your money

    • by Anonymous Coward

      While I disagree with your sentiment (for long-term investors that is)...your analogy is also flawed:

      Even casinos have to abide by the law

      You'd be rightly pissed if the dealer was cheating against you

      • You'd be rightly pissed if the dealer was cheating against you[.]

        The casino IS cheating against you. The casino is allowed to collect and use analytics in their war against you; but you will get kicked out, banned, and even possibly arrested for doing the same thing.

        Always go to the casino with the intention of walking through the door, emptying your wallet/purse into the trashcan, and then immediately turning and leaving.

        While the store-your-data-on-someone-else's-servers craze hasn't yet gotten that bad, it's just a matter of time until it does.

  • I don't have a pension fund (401K like most Americans here) so I can't compare this to anything I know, but I did the math and based on the numbers above, they have $608510 allocated per retiree. I would think that's amazingly generous for a pension fund. I can tell you based on numbers I've seen that less than 10% of 401K holders will ever reach that number or higher. I would also think that based on having so much money that the pension managers should probably know more than to invest in Oracle as a
    • It is most likely the pension fund is for upper management, most of the bigger participants have a 1 to 2 million each, and a few peons having at less 100k.

      You don't have a fund for only 235 people unless they are a very influential and rich enough to afford special attention. Otherwise they would get rolled up with everyone else into a general fund.

  • I can see some company sticking with Oracle because they think that it would cost more to make the switch to something healthier. But it makes no sense for any company to do cloud with Oracle in that it would be new developing going on; why create neo-legacy crap when you don't have to.

    Maybe their strong arm tactics turned a few current customers over to cloud but in my world I where it is endless AWS this and Azure that, I never have heard a single peep about going Oracle.

    This is just like when nobody
  • Customers get the shaft regularly after all.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 13, 2018 @02:34AM (#57114804)

    Posting as an AC for obvious reasons.

    Long time ago someone at a company I worked for made a decision to use Oracle DB. That was the most expensive mistake in the history of the company. Here is the most recent episode of extortion.

    A couple of years ago one of our DB admins accidentally enabled Advanced Data Guard on all of our DB hosts. Oracle intentionally does not make it easy to discover when you enable features that you don't have licenses for. It was enabled for a few months and not used. We really did not use ADG and could prove it. We had to undergo an Oracle audit for an unrelated reason. The audit discovered these feature being enabled. In a reasonable world one would imagine that we would be asked to turn off the unnecessary feature and maybe pay something for it. But no. Oracle demanded that we licensed ADG for all our hosts. They did not care that we had no use for it. On top of that they forced us to buy they shitcloud. We ended up spending a lot of money buying useless ADG licenses and their good-for-nothing-cloud. And you know what, we never ever used it after we paid for it. We never even logged into their trashcloud. But the scumbags undoubtedly reported this racket as a legitimate sale.

    If you ever end up on an uninhabited island and need to use a database to get back home and Oracle being the only vendor there offers you its DB for free, use flat files instead. These people are despicable scum. Crooks. Never ever touch anything with Oracle label on it. Yes, it includes Java and MySQL.

    Don't take me wrong. Oracle DB, MySQL and Java are fine technologies. They are just owned by a company which is run by scum.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    We were audited by oracle and luckily escaped without any financial penalties (our DBA had gone through an oracle audit before at another company and was fanatical, almost to the point of hysterics, to stick 100% to what we had licensed, and even had kept a few ‘in reserve’). The auditor, according to the cto, made a comment that essentially boiled down to “we’ll be back until we find something” and after that it was, “Drop what you’re doing and get everything off o

No spitting on the Bus! Thank you, The Mgt.

Working...