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Bulgaria Got a Law Requiring Open Source (medium.com)

All software written for the government in Bulgaria are now required to be open-source. The amendments to put such laws in motion were voted in domestic parliament and are now in effect, announced software engineer Bozhidar Bozhanov, who is also an adviser to the Deputy Prime Minister at Council of Ministers of the Republic of Bulgaria. All such software will also be required by law to be developed in a public repository. Bozhanov writes in a blog post:That does not mean that the whole country is moving to Linux and LibreOffice, neither does it mean the government demands Microsoft and Oracle to give the source to their products. Existing solutions are purchased on licensing terms and they remain unaffected (although we strongly encourage the use of open source solutions for that as well). It means that whatever custom software the government procures will be visible and accessible to everyone. After all, it's paid by tax-payers money and they should both be able to see it and benefit from it. As for security -- in the past "security through obscurity" was the main approach, and it didn't quite work -- numerous vulnerabilities were found in government websites that went unpatched for years, simply because a contract had expired. With opening the source we hope to reduce those incidents, and to detect bad information security practices in the development process, rather than when it's too late.

2 of 62 comments (clear)

  1. Re: MS Swoops-In... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Microsoft O365's SharePoint Online is broken as fuck. It's so buggy and under constant changes that it's impossoble to build anything reliable on top of it. I've losst my faith in MS on that part as they don't even fix reported issues known to be globally affecting its customers.

  2. the US should have a law like this. by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 3, Interesting

    seriously, having the government locked into proprietary standards does not help anyone but the makers of the proprietary software and the congress critter that made it happen.

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