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June 10th, 2002
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  U.S. allies pushing Open Source  
Friday June 07, 2002 - [ 03:39 PM GMT ]
Topic - Open Source
-  - By Jack Bryar -
It was one thing when small, undeveloped countries began to promote Linux use. However, this week the governments of several key allies of the United States have begun to promote Linux and even place it at the heart of their most sensitive applications. The motives driving these governmental announcements are complex, to say the least, but they represent an accelerating trend by government institutions to embrace an Open Source alternative. Will the United States join its allies?

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Over the last year or two, my NewsForge colleagues and I have documented the surge in popularity Linux has enjoyed among many developing nations. Cash-strapped government agencies in New Delhi, Bangalore, Kuala Lumpur, Brasilia, Lima, and Mexico City have flirted with the idea of sponsoring Linux as an alternative to proprietary software. In some cases, this was because the government in question was broke. It really didn't have any choice except to try Open Source. Others flirted with adoption of Linux as a way of declaring at least some level of independence from the West and its corporations.

This week, three wealthy U.S. allies began to adopt Open Source to a greater or lesser extent. Motives were mixed. In some cases governments were trying to maintain some level of technical independence from the United States. In other cases, popular concerns about Microsoft's monopoly and marketing tactics have forced government agencies to consider Linux and Open Source as an alternative. In still other cases, security was the main issue.

One U.S. ally concerned with both security and independence is Taiwan. The current Taiwanese government of President Chen Shui-bian is interested in consolidating its de-facto independence from China, even while growing its economic relations with the mainland. It is also committed to resisting Western pressures to integrate with the mainland except on its own terms.

It is that complexity which is driving the Taiwanese administration's recent commitment to Linux. This week, Taiwan's government announced it would sponsor a series of Open Source development and training projects in the next couple of years. By 2005, the government hopes to train as many as 120,000 users on Open Source systems. The project will involve the Taiwanese National Science Council and the island's Ministries of Education and Economic Affairs, as well as several government-affiliated research and development organizations. The first projects will be focused on developing office applications, educational software, and custom programs for the various ministries.

Within Taiwan, the only criticism of the initiative in parliament or in the press was that it was too late and, with a first-year budget of only NT$60 million, far too small to achieve its objectives.

The official reason for the initiative had to do with cost. According to government estimates, the island collectively pays as much as NT$10 billion to Microsoft for software. There's also a more intriguing unofficial reason. The mainland's sponsorship of its own national brand of Red Flag Linux has set off yet another arena for the two governments to contest for influence within the larger Chinese community. By adopting a Linux program of its own, the Taiwanese leadership looks to compete more effectively with its rival across the Straits of Taiwan. It also serves the complementary purpose of ensuring technical interoperability between systems on both sides of the Straits. In the complex calculus of the Taiwanese government, a viable Linux program also ensures that the island can maintain a measure of technical independence, all the better to resist any pressure by Western governments to accommodate its neighbor if it chooses not to.

In Germany, a different sort of calculus was behind a government announcement concerning Linux. The Interior Ministry announced that Germany had signed an agreement with IBM to dramatically increase use of Open Source software. Sources claimed that the federal government had quietly conducted its own cost of ownership analysis and concluded that the government would save money and better secure the government's IT resources against intrusion or disaster. Spokespeople for Interior Minister Otto Schily also admitted that the agreement gave the German government a way to help out SuSE, the German Linux developer.

What else did it mean? That depends on who you spoke to. Minister Schily, once a committed member of Germany's Green Party, who is frequently pictured wearing a gardener's hat, has defended Linux in almost agricultural terms. He once spoke of Linux and all its non-standard iterations as a force for ensuring a "more diverse and vibrant IT environment." Others have suggested that Schily has had a long history of making dramatic and highly controversial announcements without necessarily consulting the rest of the government. They suggest that the agreement was unlikely to carry much weight outside of Schily's ministry.

Others have suggested that Germany is concerned about Microsoft's evolving software license strategy. Although Redmond has been at great pains to emphasize the immediate benefits of its new "Software Assurance" licensing program, the tradeoff (a long-term commitment to Microsoft for very little in return) has been hard for many government and non-government organizations to swallow. Critics point out that, although the Software Assurance program allegedly guarantees users the rights to the latest and best version of its software products, the company has inserted language in the contract that says, "Microsoft does not guarantee that a new version of any particular product will be released within any specific period of time. While Microsoft always widely publicizes upgrades, it does not proactively notify all users of a product of an upgrade for a particular product."

In other words, a client may buy a contract guaranteeing his government unit or institution will have the right to the newest version of a software package without any assurance that there will be any new versions during the period of his contract, or that he will be able to find out about it. Apparently it also doesn't commit Microsoft to tell users about other programs they may be qualified for. For example, the South African Educational License site makes no mention of the company's program to provide free software to South African schools. The one thing the Software Assurance program does do is close down Microsoft's long standing policy of providing steep price discounts for existing clients who choose to upgrade their systems.

The result of these tactics has been stiff resistance by corporate and government buyers. Two thirds of corporate IT buyers recently surveyed by Gartner Group have yet to commit to the new program. This, despite the fact that early adopters are being awarded significant price discounts and despite the fact that the discount program will only run another month. Government agencies have been even more reluctant. Given a choice between a long-term commitment to a program with few or no guarantees for the customer, many government agencies such as the German Interior Ministry are setting up Linux programs, if only as a lever to get a better deal.

Flexibility and security are important to government officials. Governments want to ensure they can rely on the technologies they use. They also have to watch their expenditures. For IT, most governments want to use both standard and customized system platforms. Whenever possible, they would like to be able to port applications across platform boundaries.

These were among the reasons given by the Danish Royal Navy when it selected LynuxWorks this week. LynuxWorks will supply a Linux-based real-time operating platform as the heart of the Navy's Command and Control Center. The contract is significant in a couple of ways. It is one of a growing set of cases in military circles where specific, binary-level interoperability with Linux applications was written into a set of military requirements. In this case, the Linux application was a battlefield simulation environment developed by MAK Technologies.

The requisition was also significant for a couple of other reasons. One is that Denmark is a NATO country. Interoperability between systems is an absolute requirement. This is particularly true of any of the allies' Command, Control and Communication Informatics (C3I) systems. LynuxWorks' LynxOS 4.0 met tough performance specifications and is reportedly being evaluated by military contractors and their customers elsewhere in Europe. In addition, the company is working with a number of military contractors and defense related institutions in the United States. These include Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, TRW, and the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Does this mean that the U.S. military may be ready to look more closely at Open Source? It might. As I mentioned in last week's column, the Department of Defense sponsored a MITRE Study that recommended Linux for a variety of cost and security reasons. John Stenbit, the DoD's chief information officer, has advocated a decentralized 'Net-centric structure that would be hard to create without Linux. Reportedly, he was less than amused by a disinformation campaign, which may have been sponsored by Microsoft, suggesting Linux would compromise national security. Other departments in the government are reportedly suggesting that Linux clusters might be the fastest and most cost effective way to do much of the number crunching and data mining that U.S. security agencies need to do if the War Against Terrorism is to be more than a PR campaign.

So it is conceivable the U.S. government could join its allies and become a force that helps promote Open Source solutions.

 

U.S. allies pushing Open Source | Login/Create an Account | Top | 24 comments | Search Discussion
The Fine Print: obscene, vulgar or off-topic posts may be deleted by Linux.com/NewsForge editors.

I wrote my reps did you?      (#15133)
by Anonymous Reader on 2002.06.07 12:54


I wrote to my senators and house people. Both at federal and state levels.

Did you?
[ Reply to This | Parent ]

we need SE-Linux in there      (#15138)
by Anonymous Reader on 2002.06.07 13:51


the NSA's SE Linux project needs to be taken more seriously if we are to get any military contracts. I see a great piece of technology that's not being fully utilized.
[ Reply to This | Parent ]

NSA      (#15147)
by Anonymous Reader on 2002.06.07 15:32


The NSA already uses a Security-enhanced version of linux...
[ Reply to This | Parent ]

Linux in my country      (#15148)
by Anonymous Reader on 2002.06.07 15:47


Hi ,
        I am from India & govt is taking some initivative to promote linux & there is a chapter of GNU in bangalore , but still little development in my own city Calcutta
[ Reply to This | Parent ]

Hmmm....      (#15157)
by Anonymous Reader on 2002.06.07 16:44


Since most countries are more or less in a crisis and the IT-industry specifically I would rather see that the governments supports industries that generates REAL JOBS!
[ Reply to This | Parent ]

Open Source      (#15180)
by DiogoR on 2002.06.07 22:04   | User Info |


I dont see how linux will ever develop in the united states, free is not a word that goes with your system. Microsoft is not only well adjusted but it's probably an example of success. Why would your government support it? As we all know linux is free, that means the people contributing with linux around the world are not working for one company owned by americans. Therefore money will not be pumped to your banks. Unless of course you believe capitalism is not about the money... In fact if small undeveloped nations continue to use linux(and paying for support to their own distros) chances are they'll be added to the axis of evil.
PS. the senate is the wrong place to search for friends, try cuba.

[ Reply to This | Parent ]

Hmm...      (#15217)
by Anonymous Reader on 2002.06.08 10:39


Considering that most of the US' allies don't have the death penalty, I can see the conservatives in Washington ignoring a good idea.
[ Reply to This | Parent ]

US allies?      (#15294)
by mazza.br on 2002.06.08 23:52   | User Info | Home Page |


    Will the United States join its allies?

US don't allie to anyone. Other countries allies to US.

--------
No, I don't have anything else to do.
[ Reply to This | Parent ]


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