UK Takes Huge Step Forward On Open Standards
jrepin sends this news from the FSF Europe site:
"The UK government is certainly taking a long and winding road towards Free Software and Open Standards. The UK's public sector doesn't use a lot of Free Software, and many smaller Free Software companies have found it comparatively hard to get public sector buyers for their products and services. The main reason is that government agencies at all levels are locked into proprietary, vendor-specific file formats. ... The UK government has released a new Open Standards policy. With this policy (PDF), and in particular with its strong definition of Open Standards, the UK government sets an example that governments elsewhere should aspire to,' says Karsten Gerloff, President of the Free Software Foundation Europe. Under the new policy, effective immediately, patents that are essential to implementing a standard must be licensed without royalties or restrictions that would prevent their implementation in Free Software."
...when companies do not wish to give up their proprietary information. After all, they went with a proprietary format specifically give them the advantage with vendor-lockin in the first place.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
Take a look at I.T.I.L. another very good example of the UK Gov doing it right.
And then they will back down once the posturing is over and they were given cheaper licenses from their current vendors.
I predict that a probable line of attack on this measure is to complain about this being an anticompetitive measure that throws out otherwise perfectly valid tenders/bids/proposals "unfairly."
Never underestimate private sector willingness to abuse public policy in its own interest.
Sorry, I don't know Stallman well enough to know what that sort of thing with him sounds like...
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
and many smaller Free Software companies have found it comparatively hard to get public sector buyers for their products and services.
Maybe because some of them have a terrible product and services? Just because your a FOSS company doesn't mean your owed the business of the government. Not everything is a "M$" conspiracy.
I've worked in local government in London since the early 90s and its been basically Microsoft and proprietary software or nothing. In the pre-NT days, when network file servers were mainly Netware and there was a smattering of big iron Unix for green screen type applications you might have got away with a BSD based firewall or DNS server but that was about it. I've recently left and there was one Linux server in the data center - a lone NTP server.
The people that run these kinds of IT departments are very much of the school of thought that Microsoft = computing. They don't even trust Firefox and Chrome and are more than happy to keep running IE6 if outsourcing companies tell them that terminal server environment upgrades to support newer versions of IE are too expensive.
Hi,
The main UK Government Website is built in the open, using open-source tools where possible:
Code: https://github.com/alphagov
Blog Post: http://digital.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/govuk-launch-colophon/
Disclaimer: I work for them ;o)
--
ZG-Rules
Just wondering if this includes the BBC in its mandate?
I, for one, would LOVE all BBC offerings to be using patent-unencumbered codecs, etc. Of course, this could have a negative impact on license deals between the BBC and private media, but the BBC is big enough that I think it would win after the first few skirmishes.
(Hey fellow TWer!)
Sparql and RDF are awesome. For some demos:
http://wiki.musicontology.com/index.php/SPARQL_Examples
http://data.gov.uk/blog/using-sparql-our-education-datasets
It's a very powerful way to answer questions in a generic way.
Would this have any effect on the mp3 and h.264 situations? Both are considered standards but patented and licensed out.
when you feel like your "cause" deserves improper capitalization, you're probably an overly smug asshole.
So I guess this means they will drop H264/Silverlight?
Considering they released the policy document in a proprietary postscript-esque format... it uses PDF version 1.5 with Adobe-specific extensions.
Source: the linked PDF, Acrobat X Reader 10.1.4 Document Properties page
Operation Guillotine is in effect.
The UK made that decision after it turned out that one of the "independent experts" recommending against freely licenseable patents had been conveniently supported by Microsoft.
Looks like the Brits have their own sense of humor, and this sort of shenanigan counts as "not funny" and elicits an "if you want to have it that way" kind of response.
Given the current balance of power, sort of a reverse Boston Tea Party. But then the perpetrators of the original party were not that long removed from Britain. It was named "New England" for a reason.