Up Next: FtC at OSCON in Portland, Oregon on July 19th 2012

 

Free the Code: The Case for the US Federal Government to Open Source Software as a Default Position

Community, E146

The US federal government spent about 80 billion dollars in 2011 on information technology. Many of those dollars will keep legacy systems in place, a fool’s errand to debate. But what about new investments in Information Technology? IT expenditures are considered inherently in the public interest because they support the deliver of government services. But those public funds might more directly benefit the public if all investments in custom development were done under an open source license.

When our government pays contractors or their own employees to develop custom software, why shouldn’t the code be made available for reuse? Why not take a fresh Best-Practices-in-Innovation page from the our own software industry and make the code available for reuse by a range of interests, from entrepreneurs to academics?

This is certainly not a new idea, but one whose time has finally come. A number of conditions exists which suggest that it is the right time to raise a national debate on opens source and technology investments; ever-increasing economic pressure on the US federal government; an increase in adoption of open source by federal agencies including the adoption of the development model itself; exemplary federal IT projects which have either started or moved to open source as a strategy to flank their program mission and increase the efficacy of the project; an open increase in government- created events and expressions of policy in support of open source as a strategy, thus providing cover for new agencies to wade in to open source; continued maturity in the open source IT ecosystem which is raising the comfort level of the government IT decision-makers.

In this talk, long-time open source advocate in government and OSI director Deb Bryant will take off the gloves and talk about legislators and lobbyists, policy wonks and pundits, bureaucrats and and advocates. She’ll deliver the intellectual and practical fodder you’ll need to get behind what should be a national technology imperative; recycle US federal investments in software into the innovation economy while taking control of their own software destiny.

The talk will cover:

  • Prior efforts to insert open source software mandates in to state and federal legislation
  • The state of open source adoption in federal agencies (operations and policy)
  • Budgetary incentives to making open source the default position for the federal government
  • Open Source in government and the innovation economy
  • Localization
  • How to get involved
  • Free the Code Stickers!