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stories filed under: "quebec"
Legal Issues

Legal Issues

by Blaise Alleyne


Filed Under:
canada, facil, procurement, quebec, software

Companies:
microsoft



Quebec Lawsuit Highlights Problems With The Software Procurement Process

from the time-to-rethink-things dept

FACIL, a free software advocacy group based in Quebec, recently filed a lawsuit against the provincial government (via Michael Geist) for favoring proprietary software without considering the free and open source alternatives. This story got plenty of attention a few weeks ago, but it's important to break down the details to understand what's really happening here.

The government is required by law to place contracts over $25,000 for tender, yet FACIL cites over $25 million worth of contracts between February and June 2008 alone in which no bids were solicited. The government is not being sued for buying proprietary software, as some headlines suggest (via Slashdot), but for failing to adequately evaluate the other options.

The lawsuit highlights a larger problem the procurement process has dealing with software. In the procurement process, the government publishes specifications for what it wants, companies submit bids and an open and transparent method is used to determine the best offer. This is mandatory except in a few special cases, like when only one supplier can meet the requirement. So, if the government publishes specs for Microsoft Office, rather than "office productivity software" then only one supplier can meet the requirement. It would be like seeking bids on a Ford Taurus. It's obvious which company is going to win.

This process may work well for tangible goods, but it's awkward for software because governments tend to use the process to acquire licenses, rather than "software." Everyone is automatically licensed to use free software, so the process isn't even needed here -- and since only the copyright holder (or someone they've authorized) can sell a proprietary software license, the whole process isn't even legally required. The important decision isn't where to obtain a license, but which software to use in the first place. In other words, the process has a huge loophole. As long as the gov't defines what it needs as "Microsoft Office" rather than "office productivity software," no competitive bid is necessary, and the law isn't broken. The copyright loophole for proprietary software basically turns the procurement process into an announcement system.

So, the real problem isn't that the gov't broke the rules, but that the rules are set up with this huge loophole due to the nature of software.

The process should really be adapted so that it can evaluate both proprietary and free options in the open and transparent setting it's supposed to facilitate. The government should solicit bids for office productivity software rather than for Microsoft Office specifically -- and the process itself should be more open so that the "bid" isn't limited to just one offering. The answer is more complex though, since one contract has implications for another throughout the software stack (open standards can help) and the financial incentives for participants need to be reconsidered (not all companies sell software), but finding a solution is imperative for the government to truly act within the spirit of the law. That's what the lawsuit is really about.

Blaise Alleyne is an expert at the Insight Community. To get insight and analysis from Blaise Alleyne and other experts on challenges your company faces, click here.

13 Comments | Leave a Comment..

 
Legal Issues

Legal Issues

by Mike Masnick


Filed Under:
local government, online forums, quebec



City Council Forces Forum Offline; Claims Debate Should Take Place At Meetings Only

from the civilized-people-don't-do-online-forums dept

Eric Samson writes "The city council of the small town of Rawdon, Quebec (population: 9400) has managed to get a court order to shut down an online forum (French only) because its users were posting messages that were considered 'defamatory and detrimental to the reputation' of the elected board. Police raided the forum owner's house, copied his entire hard drive and asked him to delete the offending posts, and when he said he had over 8,000 messages to look through, they did not specify which ones were specifically targeted.

So he simply shut down the site.

Five other users, posting under their real name, were visited by police as well. The city's lawyer declared: "What we can't do in newspapers, on the radio, or on TV, we can't do on the Internet. This is the message we're trying to get across." The mayor had this to say: "Debate should be civilized and take place during Council meetings.""


Democracy may be messy, but it seems rather pointless to completely shut off an avenue for discussion just because some parties are a little rude. If any individual was being defamatory, charge them with defamation -- don't shut down the whole thing. And, to then claim that debate should only take place at council meetings shows a council that isn't just out of touch with technology, but with democracy as well.

34 Comments | Leave a Comment..

 
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