South
Africa considers open source
http://news.com.com/2100-1001-983315.html?tag=fd_top
By Paul Festa
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
February 5, 2003, 3:50 PM PT
The recommended policy for Africa's wealthiest nation expresses
a preference for open-source applications when proprietary alternatives
don't offer a compelling advantage. Other nations have taken
more extreme positions, mandating the use of open-source software
unless no other practical alternatives exist.
"The primary criteria for selecting software solutions
will remain the improvement of efficiency, effectiveness and
economy of service delivery by (the) government to its citizens,"
reads the policy, which was drafted last month and published
Monday in a final version. "OSS (open-source software)
offers significant indirect advantages. Where the direct advantages
and disadvantages of OSS and PS (proprietary software) are equally
strong, and where circumstances in the specific situation do
not render it inappropriate, opting for OSS will be preferable."
The policy is the work of Government Information Technology
Officers Council (GITOC) working group on Open Source in Government.
The working group, composed primarily of government agency representatives,
holds the primary responsibility for formulating the government's
open source policy, said one of its members.
The recommended policy would pledge the government to promote
"fair and impartial treatment" of open-source software
in procurement, create "opportunities for trial use,"
and take advantage of "the opportunities presented by the
OSS movement to promote access to information for citizens."
Behind the comparatively moderate policy lie serious grievances
with the way the proprietary software development and marketing
model has treated South Africa and countries like it.
By and large, South Africa imports its proprietary software
and finds itself with comparatively little influence on how
that software develops. The government expects that open-source
software, by contrast, will provide more flexibility.
"In the case of many open-source solutions, it may still
be a case that the original development was not done specifically
with the South African environment in mind, but in this paradigm
we are in a position to take action...further by adapting/extending
it to our unique needs," said Sibusiso Sibisi, chief executive
of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research. CSIR
is a South African science and technology group that claims
credit for 10 percent of all research and development work done
on the African continent, and has the only non-government on
the GITOC working group.
"It is when a country or community is at the mercy of a
technology provider, and powerless to determine or shape its
own fate, that the situation becomes problematic and an intervention
is required," Sibisi added.
The government is the largest single buyer of computer technology
in South Africa, so its actions are watched closely by both
open-source advocates and proprietary software venders, particularly
Microsoft.
Government policies favoring or mandating the use of open-source
software have become one of the most important open-source fires
Microsoft has strived to put out over the past few years. Such
policies have proliferated in the developing world, where state
budgets are particularly limited. But the legislative movement
in favor of open source has also made inroads within the United
States. Microsoft has lobbied strenuously against the trend.
"All customers--including government customers--should
make decisions about which type of software to implement based
upon a careful analysis of the long-term value that the software
provides," said Alex Mercer, a Microsoft spokeswoman. "We
agree with this view and do work with industry partners and
organizations...to encourage governments to keep their software
options open by adhering to policies that do not favor one software
development model over another."
Mercer cited the United Kingdom's open-source policy, which
reads in part, "There is a need to always procure a solution
that gives value for money. This may be an OSS solution, or
proprietary one, or a mixture of both. Decisions should be made
on a case-by-case basis."
Microsoft has taken a keen interest in the developing African
information technology market, but the open-source movement
has already stymied its efforts there.
In November, SchoolNet Namibia, an organization providing computing
resources to the million-person nation, publicly rejected Microsoft's
offer to put the Windows operating system in its schools and
decided to keep its existing open-source Linux systems.
Microsoft's recent donation to South African schools of more
than 30,000 software licenses, by contrast, was better-received.
"This was generally welcomed, because the donation did
not force any exclusivity and allows open-source solutions to
be developed and deployed on the computing infrastructure rollout
that might have been accelerated by the Microsoft donation,"
Sibisi said. "When choices are limited, it becomes problematic."
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