Malaysian Open Source Procurement Policy Amended 18
Ditesh writes "The Malaysian Open Source Masterplan, which favoured open source over proprietary public sector procurements when all other evaluations are equal, has been reversed to a purely 'neutral technology platform' policy due to 'negative reaction towards open source (from the IT market)'. This comes after months of hard lobbying by Microsoft Malaysia. This reversal is certainly unfortunate, as the policy has helped raise comfort levels of other policy makers worldwide in pursuing similar goals. The Malaysian Open Source Alliance has published a position statement asking for clarification of the term 'neutrality', and has received support from MNC's, local companies and free software developers in Malaysia."
Whack-a-mole (Score:2)
In related news, Ballmer plays punch the monkey.
Re: (Score:2)
Bad thing... (Score:1, Insightful)
What to use Linuz? Or Windows? Use them, but please let the politics out. Think for your self. And think logically. And technically.
Never ignore the license (Score:5, Insightful)
There is nothing "ideological" about preferring a license that gives your organization the freedom to optimize the deployment and maintenance of the software for both current and (unforeseeable) future needs, over a license that put limitations on use and/or the future evolution of the product.
It is simply due diligence on the part of the decision makers.
Re: (Score:1)
You have to evaluate the whole package for a particular use, and if you are setting broad government policy you must consider many other
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
The moment merely obeying the Law of the Land requires a piece of proprietary technology -- any kind of proprietary technology, be it closed-source software or a patented widget -- then the Law has been privatised via the back door.
You surely don't need telling how and why that's a bad thing.
OK, let's do that (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Being free vs commercial is not a political matter. In fact mostly detractors of FOSS utter that word. We're not choosing between two equivalent solutions because of sympathy for a hippie. They are two different things from a technical (as in: "can't recompile for a new arch", or: "can't get support for an obscure FOSS project") point of view.
Say
Re: (Score:2)
Governments exist to serve the interests of their people; if that includes increasing the freely-usable software available to those people, and if using F/OSS for government proj
Look at my Journal (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
They're saying if an open and proprietary piece of software are equal on quality, usefullness and price, then the open one should be chosen.
Aside from that, there are many valid business reasons to choose open source:
Support - support can be gotten from local vendors (it makes sense for a government to spend money locally instead of to a foreign company, if they spend locally they get a portion of it back in tax and contribute to their own local eco
Why get upset about it? (Score:1)
As to their illegal action
malaysian politic landscape (Score:2, Informative)
Basically the IT market is telling malaysia, hey this sorta thing is going to put your workers out of business. This is being as a disportionate amount of IT firms, programming farms, and support centers are locate in these asian former brittish colonies for their language profeciency, and low wages. whilst open source as a hole, is dominated by other reigons. this has brought malaysia to question wheather free software is good fo
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
That's Microsoft (Score:1)
Anything to try and retain business. Of course any other company would do the same, but then again any other company isn't Microsoft .
So....who bribed who? (Score:1)