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France Towards Open e-Government
Government Agency to Enforce Open Standards and Promote Open Source /
Free software
EuroLinux
Alliance
petition.EuroLinux.org
For immediate Release
Paris, Munich, Amsterdam - 2001-11-21 - France Committee for e-Government announced today
that the French Agency for e-Government (ATICA) would be in charge of
selecting open standards to be enforced all over public
administrations in order to guarantee full interoperability. The French Agency
for e-Government, which is also officialy in charge of promoting open source
/ free software, is going to select in 2002 the copyright license, based on
existing open source / free licenses, under which future software developments may be
published.
EuroLinux welcomes this move. An EU country now officialy endorses open
standards and open source / free software through an application law. It
confirms the adoption of open source / free software within European public
administrations. For Harmut Pilch, president of the FFII, "projects
including the GnuPG cryptographic software, the SLIS communication server
for schools, the Mioga toolkit for extranet or the Yihaw portal component
for Zope have proven that the use of open source / free software through
customisation and maintenance contracts between public administrations and
commercial software companies is an efficient and sustainable economic model
for software infrastructure."
Bernard Lang, Vice President of the French-speaking Linux User Association (AFUL) adds:
"Open Source / Free Software is the best guarantee for citizens to know
what kind of information they exchange with governments". With Open
Standards & Free Software, e-Government preserves privacy, individual
liberties, and the right for every citizen to access public information.
"Open Standards & Free Software are the best technologies to build trust
between e-Government and citizens" says Luuk van Dijk, Spokesperson of the
Dutch Open Source Association (VOSN).
Open Standards and Open Source / Free Software are also required to
accelerate the construction of e-Governement at the European Union level. As
stated by French MP Jean-Yves Le Déaut back in an April 2000 proposal of Law,
"open communication systems and source code availability are compulsory in
order to guarantee at the European level a high level of interoperability
between information systems of public administrations". EuroLinux strongly
urges all national governments and the European Commission to officialy
endorse open standards and to consider the use of open source / free
software.
EuroLinux suggests to upgrade the IDA programme of the European Union into a
European Agency for e-Government in charge of harmonising open standards
between national e-governments and coordinating the publication of reference
Open Source / Free Software implementations. The adoption of Open Standards
and Open Source / Free Software in Europe is the fastest path to an open,
trustable, privacy savvy, interoperable and competitive e-Governement in
Europe.
"Next generation e-Government has two requirements: interoperability and transparency.
These are the two strengths of open source software. Therefore, I am taking little risk
when I predict that open source software will take a crucial part
for the development of e-Government in the years to come"
summarises Michel Sapin, French Minister in charge of Public Administration and e-Governement.
References
ATICA - http://www.atica.pm.gouv.fr/
Application Law which creates ATICA -
http://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/citoyen/jorf_nor.ow?numjo=PRMX0105055D
The Carcenac report which agrees to enforce open standards in public
administrations and adopt open source / free software -
http://www.internet.gouv.fr/francais/textesref/rapcarcenac/sommaire.htm
The Le Déaut / Paul / Cohen / Bloche proposal of Law which suggested the
creation of an Agency in charge of enforcing open standards in public
administrations - http://www.osslaw.org
The Laffitte / Trégouët / Cabanel proposal of Law which suggested the
creation of an Agency in charge of enforcing open source / free software in
public administrations -
http://www.tregouet.org/senat/prop_lois/PL 117 12-99.html
SLIS - http://www.ac-grenoble.fr/carmi-internet/slis/
GnuPG - http://www.gnupg.org
Mioga - http://www.mioga.org/ and http://www.cgm.org/extranet.html
Yihaw - http://www.eionet.eu.int/EIONET_Tech/Yihaw
IDA - http://europa.eu.int/ISPO/ida/
Michel Sapin Statements on e-Governement -
http://www.fonction-publique.gouv.fr/leministre/lesdiscours/discours-200111151520.htm
The EuroLinux Alliance for a Free Information Infrastructure is an
open coalition of commercial companies and non-profit associations
united to promote and protect a vigourous European Software Culture
based on Open Standards, Open Competition, Linux and Open Source
Software. Companies, members or supporters of EuroLinux develop or
sell software under free, semi-free and non-free licenses for
operating systems such as Linux, MacOS or Windows.
The EuroLinux Alliance launched on 2000-06-15 an electronic
petition to protect software innovation in Europe. The EuroLinux
petition has received so far massive support from more than 90.000
European citizens, 2000 corporate managers and 300 companies.
Press Contacts
France & Europe: Jean-Paul Smets jp@smets.com
+33-6 62 05 76 14 Germany & Europe: Hartmut Pilch phm@ffii.org
+49-89 127 89 608 Denmark and Northern Europe: Anne Østergaard
aoe@sslug.dk Belgium: Nicolas
Pettiaux nicolas.pettiaux@linuxbe.org
Netherlands: Luuk van Dijk
Permanent URL for this PR
http://petition.EuroLinux.org/pr/pr15.html
Legalese
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