Video: The DoD makes it official: open source IS commercial software.

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Opensource.com

Towards the end of 2009, the office of the DoD CIO issued a memo clarifying their position on open source software. There were some misconceptions, misunderstandings, and just plain FUD surrounding their stance previously, and they wanted to make it clear that they considered open source just as viable for development as any other type of software.

We tracked down some very smart people--software security expert David A. Wheeler and Dan Risacher, who authored the memo in question--to help explain how the memo came to be, and what it means for the Government sector moving forward.

Check out the video below.

You can download an ogg of this video here.

 

 

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I'm a video editor and producer who has been with Red Hat since 2008. Before that, I worked in television. I have a passion for storytelling and story structure in a variety of forms. I'm interested in visual culture in general, and documentaries in particular.

3 Comments

Just a bit of a nitpick...

Product or service arent (non)commercial, its the _application_ of a product or service that makes it commercial or not.

also one that I think the video makes implicitly. The memo was intended to reassure people that you could choose software developed in an open fashion--with code that's available for others to use and modify--and apply it in contract-procurement situations the same way you would a proprietary developer's code. This is the perspective from which the title of this article was written. Sorry for any confusion.

Jesse

Governments are trying to take over the Internet by developing the Semantic Web aka giant global database.
http://kencraggs.livejournal.com/789.html

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