Difference between revisions of "Governments developing free software"

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(The point is to gather examples that can be used when others are asking their government to release software as free software.)
 
((For a list of examples of '''use''' of free software, see [https://wiki.fsfe.org/Free_Software_usage_in_public_administration FSFE's wiki page: FS in public administration]))
 
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:Status: '''experimental'''
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This page is a collection of governments that '''develop''' software and '''publish''' it as free software.  (For a list of examples of '''use''' of free software, see [https://wiki.fsfe.org/Free_Software_usage_in_public_administration FSFE's wiki page: FS in public administration])
  
This page is a collection of governments that develop software and publish it as free software.
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The point is to gather examples that can be used when others are asking their government to release software as free software.
 
 
The page is new and the scope isn't yet completely clear.  The general plan is to take a restrictive view of "government", such that "government bodies" would be excluded.
 
 
 
This may change as the page gathers examples ...we'll see how practical and useful the distinction is or isn't.
 
  
The point is to gather examples that can be used when others are asking their government to release software as free software.
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It's difficult to define "government", since one could include "government bodies" or third-parties contracted to do some work, but the purpose of this page is collect examples where the development and publishing of the software is close enough to the government to imply some form of endorsement or at least satisfaction.  So it's a fairly narrow definition of "government".
  
 
==UK==
 
==UK==

Latest revision as of 13:54, 4 November 2012

This page is a collection of governments that develop software and publish it as free software. (For a list of examples of use of free software, see FSFE's wiki page: FS in public administration)

The point is to gather examples that can be used when others are asking their government to release software as free software.

It's difficult to define "government", since one could include "government bodies" or third-parties contracted to do some work, but the purpose of this page is collect examples where the development and publishing of the software is close enough to the government to imply some form of endorsement or at least satisfaction. So it's a fairly narrow definition of "government".

UK

USA

The White House wrote a petition module for Drupal and published it under GPLv2 in August 2012: