Who Opposes Open Source Software In Government?
Skapare writes "Linux Journal is doing a story with a roundup of who the players are that are opposing open source in governments. The one I find interesting is the Gates connection to BSA. But I think we all need to become familiar with this round-up of special interest groups not operating in our interests (as taxpayers)."
The ISC supports four principles: software should be procured on its merits, the promotion of government funded research, the promotion of interoperability through platform-neutral standards and the maintenance of strong intellectual property protections.
Whew they really had me going 'huh?' until that last part.
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Jedimom.com, that "not-so-fresh" feeling.
StrategyTalk.com, PC Game Forums
It's why open source is a grass roots movement. We aim to capture hearts and minds on a fundamental and righteous level. We target the wallet second.
Open source saves the government money. Open source would create more governemnt jobs, by not only keeping existing support personnel, but also by creating openings for developers that would tailor systems to the ever-evolving government technology base and needs. It makes complete sense to switch to open source. Why we don't switch is easy to see: Microsoft gives military politicians plenty of incentive not too.
Britian, France, Japan, Peru, China and Germany are all moving to Linux and open source. Hell, some are even writing up legislation that gives incentives to businesses that do so as well. Why aren't we (the United States)?
> Who Opposes Open Source Software In Government?
To a first approximation I'd guess it as "those who've been paid to do so by companies who view FOSS as competition".
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
This is seriously an A#1 example of government at its worst. Decisions about which software to use are being made by politicans instead of by Software Architects ACTUALLY ON THE PROJECT. You know, the people who actually know best! Maybe the best tool should win instead of the tool that has the most political power---whether it be open source or Microsoft.
Yep. None other than Bill Gates' daddy is one of the founders of PG&E (the law firm, not the utility ;).
Is anyone surprised by this?
My journal has hot
... is open standard "document" formats. I don't care if Uncle Sam or anyone else chooses to use Microsoft (or any other) software. However, anything and everything that The People have access to must be stored in an open format that The People can read with the software of my choice. PDF, XML, plain text, latex, postscript/ghostscript, PNG images out of a scanner, dead trees, who cares.
And what part of "shall not be infringed" don't they understand?
Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
I think that this was said above that its not that people oppose open source, I mean, its kinda a hard thing to oppose, I dont think that there are people (other than those who have something financially or politically to lose) who are gonna come out saying that there should be no open source, thats just dumb. However, I do think that there will always be politicians opposing it because they do get campaign funding from companies such as Microsoft and are in a position to lose it if open source becomes too widely used.
wtfsig?!11
I think people greatly underestimate the amount of effort, blood, sweat, and tears it would take to "switch" (so to speak) a government agency (let alone a whole government) to Linux.
The old adage applies: if it ain't broke, don't fix it. While some would no doubt argue that Windows-based systems are "broke", the fact is that government agencies somehow manage to make their computers crunch numbers and store data on Windows machines.
In general, taking down a running, working system in order to replace it with something else is always a risky move. It is never something to be taken lightly.
Hopefully, Linux can work its way into US government agencies, because it has a lot to offer. But acceptance will be necessarily slow, and we should not expect otherwise.
We can praise the nations that throw caution to the wind and roll out Linux rapidly. But we should not be so negative to those that take a more cautious stance. Linux is NOT a perfect beast, and it should surprise no rational person that it is, at this time, treated as "the devil you don't know".
The decision of which software to use should not be made by legislators, it should be made by people experienced with the technology. Mandating the use of open source only limits choice. Bills that mandate that open source be considered are less damaging, but pointless, since if an open solution exists that is viable, a smart engineer will consider it. I work with government clients all the time, and as much as I like open source software, some of it just doesn't meet the needs of my client, for open source software that does, I am more than happy to recommend its use. It's about finding the best tool for the job, not the one that best fits my political views.
Go away, or I will replace you with a very small shell script.
Seems reasonable yes? Anything that does the job should be allowed to compete. Certainly. But in the case of government the question is "what exactly is 'the job'?". The government (ostensibly) exists to service the public interest. The public interest demands that our government be independant from corporate influence. Commitment of government to a closed source solution provided by a single vendor gives this vendor undue influence over governmental process. The public interest also demands that our data be accessible now and into the future. Clearly closed data formats cannot provide this. Finally, the public interest demands that government computers be secure. Without access to the source code it cannot be proven that there are not back doors providing access to sensitive government data.
So the question when evaluating a piece of software, say, a database, for governmental use is not just "Is this the best database" but "Is this the best database that ensures data accessability and security without tying us to a single corporation." Only open source software can provide these important considerations.
Note that this is not "discrimination" against closed source vendors. Any company can provide software to the government, as long as it satisfys these requirements.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
word.
I think the answer is to provide a dummy option on all ballots designed such that people that don't know better would be more likely to pick it.
take the slashdot polls for example:
"Whats your favorite breakfeast?"
a) cold pizza
b) cold cereal
c) cowboy neil's underpants
lots of people dont understand what cold pizza or cold cereal even are and would rather vote cowboy neil's underpants as their favorite breakfeast because they think its funny.
when using the results to determine which infact is the most popular breakfeast cowboy neil's underpants is discarded and the stupid-vote eliminated.
bite my glorious golden ass.
No Microsoft has been built on the strength of its Marketing. Its products are derivative, poorly coded and at best can be said to be vaguely user friendly.
Please do not confuse good marketing with product quality.
Gates and Microsoft have more influence than I do because they pay/round_up more taxes than I do.
You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
Each opponent asserted the playing field was level and open-source legislation would introduce unfairness into the procurement process.
Why should free software and commercial software be treated equally? What does this have to do with "fairness"?
I give my government lots of money. I have a right to expect that they don't buy commerical stuff if there are reasonable free alternatives. If they do go out and buy something commercial, they should be required to document carefully the reasons for their choices.
Even if the free software were to require larger IT staffs (which it doesn't), I'd much rather see my tax dollars go into salaries for local government employees than disappear somewhere in Microsoft's bank account up in Washington state soemwhere.
If everyone would simply get on the same page and interpret FREEDOM the way I tell you to, then advocacy of freedom will be so much more effective.
When will people realize that truly secure software is not compromised in the least when people see the code? In other words, if seeing the source gives a hacker a leg up, that code is either buggy or poorly designed. Period. It's that simple.
Is Linux perfect? No. Is any reasonably complex software perfect? No. But open source does at least as much to help the people trying to secure the code as it does for the people trying to break it.
On a separate note, the government is the last place I want to see closed-source software used. I feel that as a citizen of a democracy, I have the inherent right to see what's being done and how.
Just for the record, I also work professionally with computers. I make shrink-wrapped software for a living.
This is not about politics. This is about ensuring that tax payer money is used as efficiently as possible by requiring that all options have been evaluated. Legislation like this does not force a particular choice. It merely forces that all options have been considered before making a decision.
Commercial software has marketing, sales teams, and slews of paid people backing it up. Open source software has none of this (outside of your local OSS zealot). Open source is often very viable for many situations, but it goes unnoticed because it has no marketing or sales teams. In my mind, legislation like this levels the playing field. It at least gives open source a chance of being noticed.
I don't agree that software costs are "in the noise". This is definitely not the case for public schools. A school district can easily have 1000+ computers. If one piece of software costs $50 per seat, thats nearly two teacher salaries just for that single piece of software. Imagine the cost savings between a full installation of MS Office vs OpenOffice for a school system.
I fully support legislation like this. I don't want my tax money going to a commercial software company just because their sales boy is charismatic. As a tax payer I want the most for my money.
Yes, that's what they say and that's why they are wrong. They ARE afraid of bills that favor open source solutions because they would then be out of sales. The problem they are trying to avoid is that open source is a legitimate criteria of selection. Trying to say that it's not is dishonest. The government, like anyone else, should take advantage of free software and all the benifits it brings.
Of course, these groups are lying about all those benifits too. They claim their software is superior and cheaper than free software. Those using free software know better. That's why these bills are floating up from the technocrats and why the opposition uses lobiests, adverts and lies. They are trying to use ignorant opinion to prop up their sales that much longer while they despiratly look for ways to kill off free software.
They are doomed to fail. Though the technocrats may not be as well organized, they are armed with the truth and can back it up with test cases and numbers. So long as Paladium is not made manditory, the number of cases proving the viability of free software will only continue to become more numerous and obvious. The disparity between free software and propriatory code continues to grow.
Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.
What you don't seem to realize is that before the OSI came around, nobody took Free Software seriously. RMS may be a great coder, but he's an awful advocate for his own stuff.
ESR took that same Free Software, slapped the name "Open Source" on it, and started marketing it. If it weren't for that, so called "Free/Open Source Software" wouldn't be anywhere near as prevalent as it currently is.
It's simple, really. RMS appeals to your idealism, and not many businessmen/politicians are idealistic, so they don't buy into it. ESR advertises the advantages and the reduced costs, which is what people are really interested in.
In short, shut up and show them the code.
They're probably just paying someone who knows what they're doing to host it.
First, Microsoft said it believed this was a national secruity risk. Their sale is therefore willful treason, regardless of the facts.
Second, the fact that our enemies have access to information our own government does not have compete access to really is detrimental to US security. China can and will give that code to all the people they think they have to in order to find weaknesses to exploit. The NSA can only go so far in protecting against those attacks because Microscrew continues with their "fork" and new sofware is being deployed on government desks all day long with windoze updater. It's doubtuf that the NSA or anyone besides Microsoft can keep up with all the different versions of software that gets put on those computers, so any weakenss the Chinese find will have a high probability of sucess. Windoze is fragile enough without help from professionals representing one of the world's most repressive regiems having the source code to understand exactly how random expoits found work.
It should be obvious that free software levels the playing field and alows everyone to help fix the problems. The results are already in because we know that IIS gets broken all the time, but free software is not.
Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.
One of the groups opposing the use of OSS/FS in government is Initiative for Software Choice & CompTIA of which Microsoft is a member. The guiding principles of this organisation are (from the article):
Firstly: 'the promotion of interoperability through platform-neutral standards'??? I am confused. Microsoft has become the member of a group that advocates 'platform-neutral standards'???
Secondly: Isn't the idea to check out open-source too, a way of adding more 'Software Choice', so, why would they be opposed to government adding open-source to their candidates for purchase/use???
Am I reading this wrong, or did someone start the Infinte Improbability Drive (sorry Doug)...
Thank you.
GrimReality
The technocrats are the ones pushing the bills, legislators are the ones with doubts.
Mandating the use of open source only limits choice.
No, it does not. Software companies are free to open their code at any time.
Bills that mandate that open source be considered are less damaging, but pointless, since if an open solution exists that is viable, a smart engineer will consider it.
That does not mean that he can use it. Vendors must be aproved in order for state employees to purchase things. The process of aproval is Byzantine at best and one that does not work well for free software that may not have a vendor at all. Bills that free state employees to use software they want to use would be a Godsend.
I work with government clients all the time, and as much as I like open source software, some of it just doesn't meet the needs of my client.
That's hollow. Name one thing that propriatory software does that free software does not besides interoperate with propriatory software. In those rare instances, a purchasing agency can claim "sole source vendor" and make the purchase and those are looked on with susupecion.
It's about finding the best tool for the job, not the one that best fits my political views.
This IS about finding the best tool for the job . Free software is almost always better than it's closed source counterparts. Free software, in part, helps to avoid vendor lock in, a very real goal of state purchasing laws. Legislators have already decided they don't like getting raped by vendors. Vendor lock in always results in a lack of legitimate competition and inferior goods in the end.
The only political view that you need to have is a belief in full disclosure in state afairs. From honest discource, function and trust flow. Indeed, it's the closed source view of the world that requires the most radical assumptions. It requires you to believe that you don't own your computers, that you should be so very greatful that your computer does a few things and you agree to limitations on your use of that computer, that you pay absorbedent fees instead of developing your own solution, even that you will never even attempt to understand how the program works. That kind of nonsense is not accepted in most government purchasing, where complete honesty and accountability through inspection is required. The closed source software companies, which have only existed in their current form since the early 1980s, has a lot of nerve to try to impose these conditions on the public and call it IP rights.
Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.
I think that he did mention that not only military, but also peace/ameri-corps could vote also. Personally I would extend it so that anyone with a Bachelors degree from an accredited institution could vote.
So we've established two points: the parent poster wants the country run by "veterans" of the military or peace/ameri-corps , and you now want to add anyone with an accredited degree. To go out on a limb here, I'd venture that the parent has served in either the peace or ameri-corps, and you have a degree. Luckily, you two just happen to be in the proposed ruling class.
Anyone who proposes the ruling class should be made out of people just like them isn't fit to rule. In fact, your narrow vision of how a country should be run makes me suspect your own abilities to decide any political matter. When you grow up, you just might realize the system is built as it is largely to protect the general populace from narrow-minded egoists like yourselves.
"God is a comedian playing to an audience too afraid to laugh." -Voltaire
So you're arguing for "security through obscurity?" Get real.
...and they don't find any in OSS?! Wow...
Where did you get that from? Please understand arguments before you comment on them.
Take the nice and sturdy security of a Unix platform, modify it heavily to your own custom needs, and KEEP THE SOURCE CLOSED and don't allow anyone not from the government (and of course the creators of the code) to access it. Just have a team of testers from the company that wrote the code working on finding vulnerabilities.
What do you get? Something a lot more secure than letting everyone look for buffer overflows throughout your code...
People find plenty of exploits and vunerabilities for Windows and commercial Unix, without the source code, now don't they?
The benefit of OSS and Free Software, is that the exploits and vunerabilities tend to get fixed MUCH faster, than they would for commercial operating systems.
We're not talking about commercial operating systems here... did you not notice? This is for the Government. I'm sure as hell that any bug found in software written by a company contracted by the government would be fixed before they could even understand how the hell to pull the exploit off.
OK, I don't oppose it totally, but I got your attention, didn't I? I oppose an ideological bent in either direction.
When the government decides what software to purchase, I want them purchasing what's best for the job. In a rapidly evolving field where improvements are still being made and maximum performance is critical, I don't want them installing OSS that's half the speed, purchasing twice the hardware, and training twice the staff just because "OSS is good".
OTOH, I don't want them mandating a "Windows only in department X" policy either; especially if department X is comprised of technicly literate people who "know how to handle their computers, thank-you very much".
I certainly don't want them installing $500 worth of MS server software when LAMP would have done just fine.
In other words, we don't need no stinkin' "you must consider OSS software" policy any more than we need a "you must use Windows" policy. They both suck equally.
And last but not least, I don't want the government developing software under GPL, EULA, or anything other than Public Domain, which is where all government works are supposed to be placed (of course, if they hired a contractor, then the contractor still gets to negotiate terms).
Actually, this is just another expression of a theme that runs through a lot of the stuff I write here: Ideological purity is always bad... except when it's good.
For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
Opening the source for inspection by the public is a minimum standard of accessibility. So long as a company is willing to do that, they can sell as much software to the government as they want.
When there is a choise between proprietary programmers and Open Source programmers; it is in the macro economic intrest of a government to have the programmers within its realm. Given the profit margins on software, there is a lot that can be spent on programmers without affecting the economic balance and the taxpayers.. Thanks, Gerard
Yes, especially when the monopoly has more money and more employees than a large number of governments around the world do.
Shoot Pixels, Not People!
You fool. Its the Stonecutters!!!!
-- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
"If it ain't broke, don't fix it"
That would be fine and dandy if a Microsoft product was like a physical widget, but it's not.
Can you get support from Microsoft for MS-DOS? Windows 3.1? Win 95? If you want to buy 300 more licences for Windows NT, or for Word 97, can you get it? If you want Win98 but with that pesky security hole patched, can it be had for ANY price?
The Microsoft forced upgrade cycle means that the stuff "self-breaks" every few years ANYWAY. So which is worse - converting entire agencies to Windows Whatever from Win95, or converting the same agency from Win 95 to Linux?
You're going to have to do *A* conversion eventually; you might as well get onto the one that doesn't require you to pay licences and which can be upgraded or bugfixed piecemeal.
DG
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