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U.K. government backs open source

The open-source movement gets a boost as the U.K. embraces its software as a secure way for government agencies to avoid getting locked into proprietary products and technologies.

3 min read
The U.K. government confirmed on Monday that it will consider open-source software as a way to avoid getting locked into proprietary information technology products.

Not only central government will be affected by the policy: so too will local governments and the wider public sector, including non-departmental public bodies and the National Health Service. Contracts will be awarded on a value-for-money basis.

The move is likely to be seen as a major boost to open-source software. Open source has been increasingly adopted by big software vendors since 1998, when companies such as IBM, Oracle and Computer Associates started to take it seriously. IBM has since said it has devoted $1 billion to the marketing and development of open-source software.

What marks open-source software out as different from proprietary code is the licence under which it is distributed. Open-source licenses--of which the GNU General Public Licence is the best-known example--allow organizations and individuals to use and modify code free of charge, as long as any modifications are released back to the programming community.

In the final draft of the U.K. government's policy on open-source software, published on Monday by the Office of Government Commerce (OGC), the government says that in all future IT developments where interoperability is an issue, it will only use products that support open standards and specifications. Furthermore, it will follow a recent European Commission policy document that suggested exploring the open-source route for all government-funded software research and development.

"OSS (open-source software) is indeed the start of a fundamental change in the software infrastructure marketplace, but it is not a hype bubble that will burst and U.K. government must take cognizance of that fact," said the OGC in the policy document.

The government is already pushing adoption of open standards through its e-Government Interoperability Framework (e-GIF) but, said the OGC, it is now considered necessary to have a more explicit policy on the use of OSS within the U.K. government and this document details that policy.

The OGC said it was satisfied that open-source software could provide good enough security for government systems. "Properly configured open-source software can be at least as secure as proprietary systems, and is currently subject to fewer Internet attacks," it said, adding that in some cases mainstream proprietary products may be significantly less secure than open-source alternatives.

The decision comes one week before Microsoft's deadline for customers to sign up to its controversial Software Assurance licensing scheme, which analysts say will substantially hike fees for large customers. Instead to being able to buy software upgrades when it suits them, as is common practice, companies will have to either pay Microsoft the full price when they upgrade, or pay an annual fee under the Software Assurance program for the right to upgrade.

Microsoft, which remains the only big software company not to port its applications to open source platforms such as Linux, is keen for governments to ignore the platform too.

In a speech delivered to the Government Leaders' Conference in Seattle earlier this year, Microsoft chairman Bill Gates likened the concept of software based on the General Public License--which much open-source software uses--to anti-capitalism, adding that those governments who put development time into it are denying themselves the benefits of essential taxes. "The so-called (Free Software Foundation)...says that these other countries other than the U.S. should devote R&D dollars in the so-called open approach, that means you can never commercialize that software," said Gates at the time.

ZDNet U.K.'s Matthew Broersma reported from London.

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