H S on Sat, 3 Aug 2002 22:45:11 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> Open Source from EU (headstar) |
SECTION TWO: OPINION - OPEN SOURCE. THE REVOLUTION WILL NOT BE WEBCAST. by William Mead wfmead@hotmail.com The European Commission is shooting for too broad an outcome with its proposals for a Pooling Open Source Software (POSS) scheme (http://fastlink.headstar.com/poss) - a Europe-wide network of users, developers and policy makers who would share software resources (see E-Government Bulletin, 22 July 2002). A better way might be to follow Lenin and Trotsky (minus the element of armed insurrection) who proposed that Marxism could be 'jump started' by fomenting a revolution headed by a vanguard of monomaniacal ideologues proselytising Marxist principles. A POSS Vanguard would consist of a cadre of open source monomaniacs stalwartly dedicated to creating a replicable, fully interoperable, open source small enterprise web portal 'kernel' that would use the internet as its operating system. A prototype system of this kind would be designed to meet the core technology systems requirements of any small to medium sized government agency anywhere in the world. It would be developed through collaborative, federated working, beginning with the identification of universal e-government processes, with a focus on e-democracy, e-learning and delivery of revenue-driven e-government services. The prototype would be built based on international web standards from the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). Government entities using a variety of operating systems and information system infrastructures would need to be selected to create a core community of participants prepared to share systems functions. A single governmental entity with an internet service provider level infrastructure would need to provide web services to the core community. Once the prototype completes beta testing, governments from around the world could deploy the POSS Web Portal and grow it to suit their own particular user needs. If the POSS Vanguard can come up with a rapid-deployment prototype version of a replicable, revenue-driven small government enterprise web portal, everyone would throw money at it. They might even be able to get the United Nations involved in the research and development. Essentially, an enterprise web portal kernel needs to be created that uses the internet as its platform, which would allow small governments to establish open source software development communities. Ironically, this model would be similar to Microsoft's new .NET strategy (http://fastlink.headstar.com/ms), under which Microsoft will provide the systems infrastructure to deliver web services via the XML standard using the internet as the operating system. The success of the deployment is based on Bill Gates' notion of federation, which he described as: "The idea that all these different systems can be connected together without there being any unique root. A group of companies . . . can federate without having to be connected to a Microsoft namespace or anything else in particular." A fundamental paradox of the open source movement is its lack of direction, and this could be a barrier to the success of the POSS project. But highly successful open source development models do exist, such as the APACHE Project (http://www.apache.org). The APACHE Software Foundation has been successful because open source programmers had a specific focus, but were empowered by widespread collaboration. Without a similar focus, POSS could end up becoming a mere software dumping ground. The potentially useful stuff would have to be gleaned from the chaff, yet it would still be deployed ad hoc. With a defined project outcome, on the other hand, open source components already in circulation would be strategically pooled and missing project components would be identified for development. The problem POSS will continue to run into will be continuous pressure from software giants on government to withhold resources for the project. It is certainly not in their best interest to encourage the development of a free, replicable, interoperable and fully-customisable small enterprise web portal. If you look at their web sites its easy to tell that they've developed these portals already. They just want local governments to sell their souls to use their infrastructure to support them. It has always been my personal conviction that large enterprise governments should be legislatively mandated to act as internet service providers and application service providers for local governments within their given jurisdictions. WorldComs may come and go, but governments are perpetual entities. Imagine. POSS Project participants would receive the personal gratification of having their names identified with local eGovernance deployments from Brighton to Botswana, from Beijing to Biloxi. Bill Gates would be wetting his bloomers. NOTE: William Mead is a web developer and e-government columnist for the American Society for Public Administration (http://www.aspanet.org). # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net