The government of Cuba has announced plans to take the whole country open
source as soon as possible.
Communications Minister
Ramiro
Valdés announced the plan at a conference in Havana, and said that
Microsoft
had cooperated with government agencies and intelligence services in the past.
Valdes insisted that the information technology industry is a "battlefield"
on which Cuba must fight.
He also highlighted a quote from Bill Gates, who described open source
enthusiasts as "some new modern-day sort of communists", pointing out that this
would be a badge of honour for Cubans.
Richard
Stallman, founder of the
Free
Software Foundation, also gave a speech at the conference, describing
commercial software as violating basic morality by seeking to prosecute those
who did the computing equivalent of sharing recipes.
"A private program is never trustworthy," he said, according to reports in
Associated
Press.
Parts of the Cuban government, such as the Customs Service, are already using
open source software.
But there is still a huge amount of work to be done, according to Hector
Rodriguez, whose Cuban university department of 1,000 students has been
dedicated to developing open source code.
"It would be tough for me to say that we would migrate half the public
administration in three years," he said.
"Two years ago, the Cuban free software community did not number more than
600 people. In the past two years, that number has gone well beyond 3,000 and is
growing exponentially."
Cuban students are developing their own version of Linux, called Nova, based
on the
Gentoo
Linux coding structure.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article