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From: | Ralph Janke |
Subject: | Re: [discuss] Re: [Fsfe-uk] Re: [discuss] Open source software News |
Date: | Sat, 22 May 2004 15:08:15 +0100 |
User-agent: | Mozilla Thunderbird 0.5 (Windows/20040207) |
Sander Vesik wrote:
I agree with Chris. Governments should not dictate private businesses waht to do and what not to do.Chris Sherlock wrote:I suppose this seems like a fair enough answer... I guess you see software more as an infrastructure that the govt should maintain and develop. I'm still not so sure...What I *do* think, however, is that governments should make it compulsory for software companies (and peripheral companies, in particular!) to open their code. Do you know the number of times I've had to scrap or make do with 2nd-best because I couldn't see the source code of some crappy product???? :) I guess that's why I only run Linux now (especially now I've worked out CUPS and Samba).I don't agree with this - governemnts dictating things about software and hardware have so far only given lots of negative results. The goverment should require that things it buys have open interfaces (and this applies to both hardware and software). This gives you a good balance and keeps most of the lobbyists from paying attention and screewing things royaly up.Chris
However, what governments should do since they are the stewarts of the taxpayers money, is to require that wherever public spending is involved, the need for the use of non-open source software should be explained and approved, not the other way around. There can be very good reasons not to use open source software, however, the default should be the lowest cost solution for the benefit of the taxpayers.
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