MESSAGE
DATE | 2002-03-21 |
FROM | Seth Johnson
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SUBJECT | Subject: [hangout] Free Software in Federal Government
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(Forwarded from dotGNU Developers list, developers-at-dotgnu.org)
-------- Original Message -------- Date: Wed, 20 Mar 2002 19:38:00 -0500 From: "Tony Stanco"
We (Cyberspace Policy Institute) had our monthly Open Source in e-Government session with GSA and NSF yesterday. Grant from NewsForge covered our working group and has a story up [http://newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/03/20/0344221&tid=11]. The interesting things that came out yesterday is that Census built an award winning site all on Open Source with only volunteers, because it had no budget for the project. People were amazed that if work gets recognized and awarded that it wouldn't be funded. Well, the presenters said they purposefully don't quantify the savings because otherwise they lose the money for their group in the next budget.
The other thing said which is totally absurd came from a couple of NOAA IT people in the audience. Their CTO came to them with a project on a napkin and said, "implement this." A couple of days later they had done it on MySQL and gave it to the CTO. He said "great, let's implement it." They said, "you don't understand, it's done." Well, he didn't accept that and brought in a major consulting firm which brought in a well know database company. A year and millions of dollars later, it is still not working. When the CTO came back to them and asked what was going on, they said they looked at each other and just shrugged :-). Another person there who by coincidence is connected with a high level NOAA person said the official story given to the executive people on that incident was that MySQL was not robust enough and that is why they had to go proprietary. The NOAA IT people said that was just plain BS.
I was at FOSE today and went to the CIO Council Keynote and the smaller session with the CIO Council and asked them about the use of Open Source in Government at both, citing the examples from NSA's SELinux, Census and NOAA from yesterday. Long story short - they are looking at it at the highest levels, though they still have some issues to overcome to get comfortable like support and implications of the license. I didn't push it to say those are no longer issues, because you don't make friends in this town by embarassing important people in front of large audiences. However, I will be seeing these same people in April in Florida with IBM to address their support issues. On the legal issues, I am working with Eben Moglen, general counsel of the Free Software Foundation, who enforces the GPL, to have legal panels to the practicing government lawyers next year. The NSA lawyers who got themselves comfortable with the GPL on NSA's SELinux project will be on the panel. Agency lawyers to agency lawyers is how we will overcome their second issue.
So, the good news from FOSE is that Open Source is on the radar screen at the highest levels in government and they would like to see it happen. The bad news is that there is still some work to do to get them completely on side. So the struggle goes on...
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