Venezuela Moves Further Toward Open Source
baquiano writes "Today the Venezuelan press reports that the government has formally issued a decree (English translation) which prioritizes the use of free/open source software over proprietary systems in government entities. This follows a year of pilot deployments in Venezuela's Info Centros (Internet public access points) and some ministries. (Past attempts, reported by Slashdot, by former Minister of Science and Technology Felipe Perez Marti to push ahead this initiative were allegedly foiled by Microsoft.) The decree calls for plans to actively deploy FOSS during a 24-month period."
>I know for damn sure that the US government wastes tens, perhaps hundreds, of billions of tax dollars paying giant companies for closed, proprietary systems that never work as advertised.
Waste is waste. It doesn't matter if its Open or Closed Source, it will still cost a huge amount and still barely work because it is the government.
The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
A country of 25,000,000+ people? That's major enough progress to make the daily news for me!
If even a fraction of the Venezualan programming population get involved in open source that will mean significant improvements for open source software producers, packagers and consumers world wide. Remember, one of the most valuable attributes of software is that it can be copied at minimal cost. All it takes is a single person to program it and a hundred million people can use it, something the commercial pay-an-arm-and-a-leg-per-copy advocates like to ignore.
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Don't be a programmer-bureaucrat; someone who substitutes marketing buzzwords and software bloat for verifiable improvements.
In effect, the Chavez government is providing A LEVEL PLAYING FIELD, something the bourgeois hate because they got ahead because of a playingfield blatantly lopsided in their favour.
I suppose you're part of the minority elite that would have been satisfied that the coup had succeeded.
Why should Chavez be grateful towards people who wants to suck his country dry and leave the majority of the population in abject poverty and ignorance?
As Buddha said, "When someone points at the moon, the imbecile looks at the finger."
How about Human Rights Watch. Is this unbiased enough for you?
I'll grant you that I haven't heard of Chavez cracking down on his nation's own media as badly as, say, Putin, but that statement's almost laughable. How much air time does Chavez demand from broadcasters for his longwinded speeches? How many stations really want to broadcast every pronouncement, every staged episode of Halo Presidente (a Sunday morning call-in show that somehow manages to only get calls from people who adore el presidente)?
I was in Caracas in the summer of 2001, and while I was there, Chavez threatened to deport any foreign journalist that wrote unfavorably of his administration. Maybe he has only threatened foreigners and you think that's alright. I don't.
Maybe not, but Chavez has threatened to imprison high-ranking Venezuelan military officials for criticizing his regime. And his ability to demand/seize airtime on Venezuelan broadcast media doesn't exactly creat a "level playing field". This is the most laughable part of your Chavez apology. Most Americans and "westerners" think of "constitutions" as old, revered documents that protect individual rights. In the United States, we have a tradition of altering the constitution infrequently, in ways that expand personal liberties and restrict state power. It's the opposite in Venezuela. Chavez sees the constitution as a piece of legislation ripe for amending, and his changes usually expand the power of the Venezuelan execuive branch (i.e., his individual power). The current Venezuelan constitution was written by Chavez all of five years ago. "All their civil rights" -- what does that mean? Intimidation, torture, police turning a blind eye to mob lynchings?I hope you're right about your second and third points -- this could turn out well for FOSS if Venezuela becomes a viable, convincing case study for the "open source" merits of FOSS. But I fear it's more likely to be (or at least be seen as) a political anti-US, anti-capitalist "free software" ploy by a socialism-spouting power-hungry tyrant (just 'cos Hugo won the election doesn't mean he's not a tyrant).