Carsten Agger on Wed, 13 Sep 2017 11:27:03 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Fwd: Public Money? Public Code! - Sign our Open Letter! |
Digital services offered and used by our public administrations are part of the critical infrastructure of 21st century democratic nations. Due to restrictive software licences, however, many public bodies do not have full control over its digital infrastructure. And although sharing publicly funded software under a free licence generates great benefits for governments and civil society, policy makers are still reluctant to improve legislation. It is time to change this. Since it is our public money, it should be our public code as well! Today the Free Software Foundation Europe publishes an open letter in which we call for legislation requiring that publicly financed software developed for the public sector must be made publicly available under a Free Software licence. This will allow everybody to use, study, share, and improve the software. 31 civil society organisations throughout the EU have already signed it. Also Edward Snowden, President of Freedom of the Press Foundation, supports our campaign, stating "Right now, the blueprints for much of our most critical public infrastructure are simply unavailable to the public. By aligning public funding with a Free Software requirement -- "Free" referring to public code availability, not cost -- we can find and fix flaws before they are used to turn the lights out in the next hospital." Now it is up to you! Please help and join us by signing this letter and ask your friends and colleagues to do likewise: * Sign the open letter: https://publiccode.eu/#action Why is this important? Public institutions spend millions of euros every year for the development of new software for them. But the public sector's procurement choices play a significant role in determining which companies are allowed to compete and what software is supported with taxpayers' money. This means, that changing policies in public procurement will have a huge positive impact on the Free Software community. Great chances for improvement and synergies are missed when proprietary licences restrict our freedom to use, study, share and improve publicly funded software. Nowadays, we often have the absurd situation that public administrations on federal or local level have problems to share code with each other - even if they funded its complete development on their own. Without the option to run audits or other security checks on the code, sensible citizen data may be at risk. * That's why you should sign the letter: https://publiccode.eu/#action Experience from many projects all over the world show that Free Software and public administration can be a perfect match. Some EU member states have taken initial legislative steps for supporting Free Software in public administrations. With this campaign we reach out to those still hesitating. Please help us, to make Free Software the new gold standard in public procurement. Sincerely, Matthias Kirschner, President Free Software Foundation Europe PS: You can support this campaign as well by ordering and distributing stickers <https://fsfe.org/contribute/spreadtheword.html#pmpc-sticker>, by sharing the campaign video <https://publiccode.eu/#about> and by using one of our web graphics or banners <https://download.fsfe.org/campaigns/pmpc/>. # 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: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: