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[News] Linux Becomes Big in Europe, Britain Still Suffers from Discriminative Procurement Policies

  • Subject: [News] Linux Becomes Big in Europe, Britain Still Suffers from Discriminative Procurement Policies
  • From: Roy Schestowitz <newsgroups@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 04 Jul 2007 03:27:31 +0100
  • Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.advocacy
  • Organization: Netscape / schestowitz.com
  • User-agent: KNode/0.10.4
Open-source evolves from 'nerdy' to notable

,----[ Quote ]
| Last January, Host Europe, a company that runs the Web sites for 120,000 
| businesses in Germany, Austria and Switzerland, secured an unlikely supplier 
| for the open-source software it uses to run almost all of its computer 
| servers.   
|
| [...]
|
| "I think that the adoption of open source has been much greater in some 
| of the Continental markets and in the United States," said Mark Brier, 
| an open-source technician at the National Computing Center in 
| Manchester, England, a nonprofit group that advises government 
| on computer purchases. "Here there is no large-scale adoption."
| 
| Scott Thompson, the executive director of OpenAdvantage, a 
| nonprofit group in Birmingham, England, that promotes open-source 
| software among businesses in the West Midlands region, said the 
| spread has been limited by outmoded government procurement rules 
| that favor larger, established proprietary vendors, government 
| outsourcing of technology operations to companies with relationships 
| to proprietary vendors, and the well-funded defense of proprietary 
| software makers.
`----

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/07/03/technology/source02.php


Related:

The [UK] politics of open source

,----[ Quote ]
| There's been a suggestion of a shift towards open source in the 
| houses of government in the UK recently, with the Conservative 
| Party promising to promote open source if elected and the incumbent 
| Labour Party releasing the code behind its new carbon footprint 
| calculator under the General Public License.
`----

http://www.businessreviewonline.com/os/archives/2007/07/the_politics_of.html


Lessig: Required Reading: the next 10 years

,----[ Quote ]
| Yet governments continue to push ahead with this idiot idea -- both Britain
| and Japan for example are considering extending existing terms. Why?
|
| The answer is a kind of corruption of the political process. Or better,
| a "corruption" of the political process. I don't mean corruption in the
| simple sense of bribery. I mean "corruption" in the sense that the
| system is so queered by the influence of money that it can't even get
| an issue as simple and clear as term extension right.
`----

http://www.lessig.org/blog/archives/003800.shtml#003800 


Governments slammed for anti-competitive software tendering practices     

,----[ Quote ]
| A leading Australian open source advocate has called for an end for to
| tender lock-outs of competitors to Microsoft, claiming the practice
| is costing Australian taxpayers tens of millions of dollars each
| year.
`----

http://www.itwire.com.au/content/view/11496/53/

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