![]() C2C dialogue CàC : Witness 2 Wsis 2
|
Navigation
Forum topics
Active forum topics New forum topics WSIS Wire
Technorati blogs on WSIS
Reports
Links
·Links (104)
Story Section
·News (93)
|
Open Source
by aamir aziz on 2005, April 1 - 5:47pm To: WSIS, Canadian Commission for UNESCO
From: Aamir Aziz Date: April 1, 2005 Re: Open Source Almost half a century ago, Marshall McLuhan, predicted that electronic media would bring the world closer together into one community. If we look at today’s world, we do not have any doubt that McLuhan’s prediction has become true, because in today’s era whole world is treating as a “global village”. There is no limitation of any boundary or distance in order to access the information or resources. And the good thing is that there is no end to it or we can say, “Sky is the limit”. In real world, it is hard to believe that someone is offering his/ her services free of cost. One of the examples is open source software. The idea has been around for over 30 years, but it has got attention in the last two years. In open source software, the source code is bundled with the software and is free for everyone to use. While, traditional proprietary vendor software protects the source code and the goal is to increase their profits. According to Eben (2004), “ The goal of the Free Software Movement is to enable people to understand, to learn from, to improve, to adopt, and to share the technology that increasingly runs every human life.” There are different features, which are available for open source license but are not available for traditional software license: · Source code is available · Software is freely transferable · Software can be modified · Software must be available to others on open source terms · Any work derived from the software must be made available to others on open source terms Moreover, universities also like open source because they are enriched in terms of talent but are not good in terms of money and funds for software. There are several licenses associated with open source software such as GNU General Public License (GPL), GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL), Mozilla Public License (MPL), Apache software licence, MIT license, Artistic License for Perl Programming. Most of the companies are taking interest in order to promote open source. Some of the examples are: IBM launched massive and campaign to support open source. HP has released the first notebook computer pre-loaded with an open source operating system (Linux). Novell also support open source such as Apache, Tomcat, MySql, PHP, Perl, Rsync, and Novel Nsure UDDI Server. There are number of facts related to the open source software such as 65% of the world’s servers run UNIX/LINUX with linux accounting for 26% and growing fast. 60% of the world web servers are open source (apache). LINUX is two and a half times faster than other equivalent operating systems at the data transport level. If open source software is getting popularity so it does not mean that traditional software are not good but also they also having their significance. Corporation like Microsoft also use open source and may be in future both will work in a combination. According to Bradley Tipp, software engineer of one of the United Kingdom software company, “We have nothing against open source, from Microsoft's point of view, it's not a religious thing, it's not them versus us… there are a lot of things we have learnt and there are a lot of things we should learn from open source." Recommendation This is responsibility of information society, private sector and civil societies to provide these open source software to the third world countries, because they cannot afford the expenses of annual contract fee that has to be paid to the proprietary companies for license. This is also true that if any fund is created then there is no surety that it would be utilized for the right purpose. So, this is a better solution that create it but don’t hand it over to the developing countries but deploy the technology in their countries in order to resolve digital divide between rich and poor, developing and developed countries, and also open source and traditional proprietary software. References http://www.wsis-canada.gc.ca/act/en/docs/ICT.pdf http://www.its.niu.edu/its/Document/Big10/Greg%20Brady-Effect%20of%20Copyright%20Law%20on%20Open%20Source%20Software%20-%20UPDATE.ppt http://www.westyorkshire.bcs.org/opensource.ppt http://developer.novell.com/events/webinar/Forge_Webinar.ppt http://www.govis.org.nz/conference2003/presentations/david-mcguinness.ppt http://news.zdnet.co.uk/software/linuxunix/0,39020390,39117841,00.htm |