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September 26th, 2008

Congress: Open-source for U.S. military

Posted by Andrew Nusca @ 8:49 am

Categories: Offbeat news, Politics

Tags: Software, Open-source Software, U.S. Congress, House, GCN, Tools & Techniques, Open Source, Software Development, Management, Software/Web Development

Open sourceIf you thought you’d never see the phrase”open-source” in a federal funding bill, think again.

The House’s proposed National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (H.R. 5658) includes language that calls for military services to consider open-source software when procuring manned or unmanned aerial vehicles, according to Government Computer News.

In Section 143 of the House bill, which calls for the Defense secretary to set a strategy for procuring manned and unmanned vehicle systems, the objectives listed include “open source software code.” 

Although the language is confined to aerial vehicles, its implications are broader, according to a House Armed Services Committee report accompanying the measure:

“The committee is concerned by the rising costs and decreasing security associated with software development for information technology systems. These rising costs are linked to the increasing complexity of software, which has also resulted in increasing numbers of system vulnerabilities that might be exploited by malicious hackers and potential adversaries. The committee encourages the department to rely more broadly on [open-source software] and establish it as a standard for intra-department software development.”


Whether the open-source mention will remain in the final measure remains to be seen. The House version of the bill was passed in May; the Senate debated its own version of the bill, S. 3001, last week.

GCN’s Joab Jackson reports: “If the provision does survive, it could pave the way for greater acceptance in the defense community, which traditionally has been wary of open source, at least for official duties.”

Google Android, anyone?

Andrew NuscaAndrew J. Nusca is an associate editor for ZDNet and SmartPlanet. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.


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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 17 Talkback(s)
Insecure at any price?
What a load of populist trash! Embedded Linux sounds great: cheap, secure because you can see the source code. Wow!

There is a set of standards for secure code, the highest being EAL7, where ev... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Patanjali Posted on: 10/03/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Posting to an open source forum  Anton Philidor | 09/26/08
If this is your attempt at humor  Jim Blaine - Bellingham WA. | 09/26/08
"... they will contract out with either Novell ... or Red Hat"  Anton Philidor | 09/26/08
You crack me up like no other minimum wage earner can!  B.O.F.H. | 09/26/08
Don't forget  Jim Blaine - Bellingham WA. | 09/26/08
So the law was unnecessary at the DoD...  Anton Philidor | 09/26/08
Since the taxpayers are paying for all of this, spelling out that  DonnieBoy | 09/27/08
Or Oracle, or HP, or Sun, or IBM, or SAIC, or ...  Yagotta B. Kidding | 09/26/08
Posting to an open source forum  Real World | 09/26/08
LOL  LBiege | 09/26/08
Not to worry  Yagotta B. Kidding | 09/26/08
ROTFLMAO  Hemlock Stones | 09/26/08
So...  Cardinal_Bill | 09/26/08
Even with the GPL, there is NO requirement to release the source code if  DonnieBoy | 09/27/08
Note to congress: Open Source less secure  Johnny Vegas | 09/29/08
Actually...  zkiwi | 09/29/08
Insecure at any price?  Patanjali | 10/03/08

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