Open Source PolicyRecent blog entries tagged with Open Source Policy.
Important Announcement: EDUCAUSE-Sakai Statement on Blackboard Patent PledgeCreated by Colleen Luckett (EDUCAUSE) on February 01, 2007
Since early November 2006, EDUCAUSE has been engaged in ongoing discussions with Blackboard regarding their assertion of patent rights and the concerns raised in a letter to the Blackboard leadership [PDF 38.9 KB] EDUCAUSE President Brian Hawkins sent in October on behalf of the EDUCAUSE Board of Directors. Other groups, including The Sakai Foundation, have also been engaged in discussions on this matter.
Today, February 1, 2007, Blackboard announced a non-assertion pledge that directly emanates from these discussions. The boards of directors of EDUCAUSE and The Sakai Foundation have agreed to and have issued a joint statement [PDF 41.2 KB] about this pledge. Open Source in the militaryCreated by Stuart Yeates (University of Oxford) on August 21, 2006
The Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology & Logistics recently published the "Open Technology Development Roadmap Plan", another step towards moving the military to open standards, if not open source. This is going to be a long road, given that they can't even publish their own objectives in an open standard. The document makes the business case for open source: it argues how the DoD can do it's job better using open source. To quote from the report: [Open source software] and open source development methodologies are important to the National Security and National Interest of the U.S. for the following reasons:
It also mentions that China wants to become an open source leader. Are they hoping that military types who won't respond to issues of effectiveness, cost and fitness for purpose will be motivated by "us and them" competition? OSS Watch Sustainability Conference Day 1Created by Stuart Yeates (University of Oxford) on April 11, 2006
Day one of the OSS Watch went very well, rihgt up to the conference in the dining hall at Exeter College, which dates from 1618. The dark, wood-panelled part you can see at the far end of the hall is the choir gallery, dating from when all the Oxford colleges were primarily religious rather than primarily academic institutions. Whatever drawbacks Oxford may have as a place to live, a place to work or a place to hold events, there is not lack of history and no lack of architecture. An Interview with UNC's José-Marie GriffithsCreated by Matt Pasiewicz (EDUCAUSE) on December 15, 2005
In this 29 minute recording, we'll hear from José-Marie Griffiths, Dean and Professor of the UNC School of Information and Library Sciences. She's also the principal investigator of The Future of Librarians in the Workforce study and we'll hear about her activities on that front. We'll also learn about her session at CNI's Fall Task Force meeting about a recent report from the President's Information Technology Advisory Committee.
Developing University Policies That Engage With Open Source SoftwareCreated by Stuart Yeates (University of Oxford) on November 17, 2005
A slightly updated version of my presentation for the SIGOSSEE conference is on the web. Off to the Open Source for Education in Europe ConferenceCreated by Stuart Yeates (University of Oxford) on November 12, 2005
I'm about to leave for the Open Source for Education in Europe Conference in Heerlen. I hope to be able to blog more from there, depending on network connectivity. OSS Watch has a new websiteCreated by Stuart Yeates (University of Oxford) on November 09, 2005
OSS Watch has a new website. The previous website was built around what we thought OSS Watch would become, the new website is built around what OSS Watch is. So if you're looking for balanced and authoritative advice on open source in post-compulsory education in the UK, look no further. On the technical side, the new website is a new set of XSLT stylesheets and navigational documents around the previous content, plus some new content and branding. Since the textual content is all in TEI XML, repurposing the documents was little or no hassle whatsoever. The site has been live for a couple of days. Brazil keeps up the push for open sourceCreated by Stuart Yeates (University of Oxford) on November 08, 2005
Gilberto Gil, the serving culture minister of Brazil, has been in London talking about open source and intellectual property. In an interview with the Guardian, he talks about music, politics and IPR. The kernel of the issue is that in less developed countries the economics of software production are completely altered by the significantly lower costs of labour, which is made significantly worse by the move to selling software as a service and licensing it on a per-individual basis. Coupled with this are the facts that very little of the money is spent locally and that local independent companies are frequently caught in the cross fire by incumbent monopolies' efforts to strengthen their monopolies using closed formats and limited interoperability. As a result, Brazil and Peru but have policies supporting open source, and Ubuntu has exploded out of Africa. UK educational IT funding agency releases Open Source PolicyCreated by Stuart Yeates (University of Oxford) on October 17, 2005
The Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC) (which is funded by top-slicing the UK higher and further education funding councils) has released a policy on open source. Many centrally funded development, IT pilot, interoperability, and infrastructure projects are likely to fall under this new policy. To be clear, the new policy does not prevent funded projects from developing closed source, proprietary, software on closed source, proprietary, platforms. What it does do is force projects to state up-front what licences they intend to use and then follow software engineering and IPR best-practices during the project. National Center for Open Source Policy and Research foundedCreated by Stuart Yeates (University of Oxford) on October 15, 2005
The National Center for Open Source Policy and Research (NCOSPR) has been founded by the Open Source Software Institute (OSSI) at the University of Southern Mississippi. |