Sun's McNealy: Some feds see open source as anti-capitalist
Sun's chairman wants Obama's administration to encourage open source software adoption; calls open source 'all about choice' and the market economy
Follow @infoworldSun Microsystems chairman Scott McNealy wants President Barack Obama's administration do what the United Kingdom, Denmark, and other countries have done: Encourage, as a matter of policy, open source software adoption.
Although open source platforms are widely used today in the federal government -- particularly Linux and Sun's own products, Solaris and Java -- McNealy believes many government officials don't understand it, fear it, and even oppose it for ideological reasons.
[ InfoWorld's Neil McAllister advises Obama: Repealing software patents could give a much-needed boost to the tech industry | Track the latest trends in open source with InfoWorld's Open Sources blog. ]
McNealy cited an open source development project Sun worked on with Health and Human Services Department, during which a federal official said "that open source was anti-capitalist." That sentiment, McNealy fears, is not unusual or isolated.
"If you think about it, proprietary software is the software equivalent of a planned economy led by a dictators, whereas open source is all about choice, the market economy, and multiple competitive players," said McNealy.
That's the message McNealy and Bill Vass, the president and chief operating officer of Sun's federal division, are now delivering. They have already met with Obama Administration officials to offer a paper on open source that has since grown into a discussion about the merits of having a federal CIO. The new administration has plans to appoint a chief technology officer, but not a CIO.
"There is not a corporation, a Fortune 1000 company, around that doesn't have a CIO," said McNealy. "Yet, the federal government dwarfs all those organizations and they really have an empowered, cabinet kind of position."
The Obama administration has not yet spelled out its federal technology plan nor has it appointed all the key people it needs to run it. Meanwhile, outside observers are trying to glean broad policy directions from tactical moves, such as the use of the open source content management system Drupal for the Recovery.org Web site.
The Fiscal Year 2010 budget released Thursday reaffirms plans to appoint "the nation's first [CTO] to ensure that our Government and all its agencies have the right infrastructure, policies and services for the 21st Century. The CTO will work with each of the federal agencies to ensure that they use best-in-class technologies and share best practices."
That's little different from what the president said during the 2008 campaign, and it doesn't provide specifics about what those best practices may be. But the Obama Administration has been soliciting advice -- and McNealy's arguments may be particularly well timed.









