German government publishes open source guidelines

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Jul 10, 20032 mins

Public sector agencies get guidance in migrating to open source software

Federal agencies, state and local governments, and other public-sector administrations in Germany interested in migrating their computer systems to open source software, particularly the Linux operating system, can now turn to a set of guidelines for support.

“Migration guidelines for basis software components” is the name of a new reference guide that Germany’s Federal Ministry of the Interior presented Thursday at the LinuxTag exhibition and conference in Karlsruhe, Germany.

The ministry announced its intention to publish software deployment guidelines for the public sector in June, after signing a widely publicized deal last year with IBM to receive discounted computers running pre-installed Linux software.

The guidelines are designed to help IT managers in the public sector decide, first of all, whether to continue with their current commercial software licensing agreements, use both commercial and open source software, or whether it makes more sense, both economically and technically, to abandon their commercial licensing agreements altogether and migrate fully to open source products, according to state secretary Göttrik Wewer.

The new guidelines, based on several open-source pilot projects, present various steps and measures that ministry IT experts view as essential for open source software to be deployed successfully in the public sector.

The guidelines can be found on the Web site: www.kbst.bund.de.