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Does Open Source Need Quality Standards?

underpar writes "This Techworld.com article reports that a UK group called the Open Source Consortium is being officially launched today. The article further states that the goal of the group is to respond to claims that switching to open source is more expensive than using Microsoft products and to help smaller companies compete with Sun and IBM for open source contracts. They say they will not compete with other open source groups and they intend to eventually come to the US. The hype-filled about us section of their site says their Quality Standard Certification provides a "simple framework for self-assessment and performance improvement." The question of whether this is useful or even wanted in the US still remains to be answered."

2 of 223 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Dumb overgeneralization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Another dumb overgenralization is that this organization think that their " Quality Standard Certification" is appropriate for a wide range of products.

    Linux in medical devices should have follow FDA standards

    Linux in automotive systems shouldd follow DOT standards.

    Linux in voting machines should follow Diebold/MS-Access quality standards..

    (sorry for the US-centric examples - for your own country pick your favorite certification organizations)

  2. And a redundant idea to boot by passthecrackpipe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not only an overgenralisation, it is a redundant idea to boot. OSDL already provides a lot of the stuff they publicly talk about - code quality etc. The real purpose of the organisation comes to light when you read deeper into the site.

    You need to be skilled in their "consulting framework" and you need to conform to some "financial framework" as well. Their membership criteria are mysterious (hint, you probably need to be a member of their club of buddies) and some of the organisations that are members (and knowing those organisations intimately, they probably are the drivers behind this thing as well) are decidedly dodgy - Open Forum Europe has publicly spoken as "Open Source Representatives" and as such, have signed a declaration supporting software patents. Looks to me like just another group of people trying to corner a market. Anyone remember the Open Group, and the "good" they did for UNIX? (another hint - a lot of the same people are involved)

    This is so much the wrong crowd to hang out with....

    --
    People who think they know everything are a great annoyance to those of us who do.