Peter Sayer
Executive Editor, News

French gov’t report recommends standardizing on ODF

news
Oct 3, 20062 mins

Report says that all government documents should be made available in OpenDocument Format

All French government publications should be made available in OpenDocument Format (ODF), according to a report commissioned by the French prime minister.

In his report, “On Equal Terms,” National Assembly Deputy Bernard Carayon calls for a law making it compulsory for French government departments to use ODF when they create or distribute documents, and suggests that France ask its European partners to do likewise when exchanging documents at a European level.

Carayon’s report, submitted to Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin on Sept. 14 and published late last week, is not just about ODF.

De Villepin asked Carayon to investigate how European businesses could play a greater role in developing global industrial standards, in order to level the economic playing field and reduce Europe’s economic dependance on other regions. Carayon’s report carries no legal weight, but French policy makers should take account of such reports, which the prime minister can commission on a wide range of matters.

In the report, Carayon also recommended the government fund a research center dedicated to open-source software security, and set up a system to help national and local government agencies exchange information about best practice in the use of open-source software.

He also suggested that the European Union should create an agency with the ambitious goal of ensuring its technological independence.

Separately, Carayon has also pushed for the French National Assembly to give deputies the choice of proprietary or open-source software on the workstations provided for them, beginning with the next parliamentary session in 2007.