free software in latin america

April 17, 2008

What will Microsoft do to the Yahoo open source culture?

Filed under: Free Software, San Francisco — ryan @ 11:14 am

As news continues to trickle out about Microsoft’s potential buy-out of Yahoo, lots of speculation is being written about what will happen with Yahoo’s open source culture, as just one of many cultural differences between Microsoft and Yahoo. For instance, Yahoo is a big supporter of PHP and Rasmus Lerdorf (credited as being PHP’s inventor) works there. Yahoo is also probably the most famous company that uses FreeBSD (our open source OS of choice, also). But if Microsoft buys out Yahoo, what’s going to happen to that open source culture? Some people are speculating that it will give Microsoft a convenient excuse to start being more accepting of the open source phenomenon. Other predictions are more downbeat and gloomy. Only time will tell.

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April 13, 2008

Ecuador passes new law officially mandating switch to free software

Filed under: Free Software, Latin America — ryan @ 6:23 pm

As previously noted on this website, Ecuador’s President Rafael Correa has been an open supporter of free software for a while. But, within the last week, the news has been spreading that Ecuador has now officially passed a law, Decreto 1014 (pdf here), mandating a switch to open source, similar to laws in Brazil and Venezuela. This officially makes yet another Latin American country which is completely switching to free software! Ubuntu is ahead of the game with their Ecuador team already assembled. :)

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Children using open source software in Cuba

Filed under: Free Software, Latin America — ryan @ 6:12 pm

Although this article isn’t translated very well, it provides insight into a rural program in Cuba which gives children educational access to open source, free software. According to the Cuban vice-minister of Informatics and Communication, more than one million people have participated in this youth computer club over the 20 years it has existed. Cuba has been one of the most vocal Latin American countries supporting the shift to free software in the region.

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Digital inclusion is an imperative in San Francisco and Sao Paulo

Filed under: Free Software, Latin America, San Francisco, northxsouth — ryan @ 5:59 pm

This is an interesting story because it provides a direct link between San Francisco and Sao Paulo. For North-by-South, our two main hubs are in SF and SP. In Brazil, Inclusao Digital is a project initiated by the administration of President “Lula” da Silva in 2005. Its intended goal is to bring technology and training to the poorest sectors of Brazilian society in a country with some of the sharpest contrasts between rich and poor. Combined with Brazil’s commitment to open source software, this program has done amazing things like build media centers in urban favelas (basically, huge ghettos that encircle Rio and Sao Paulo and other major cities) but also in remote regions of the country (like the Amazon) where many indigenous populations live. The entire program is built on open source, free software so not only has this program helped bridge the digital divide but it has also provided state-funded employment and experience for open source programmers.

But, this isn’t really news. The program in Brazil has been active for over 3 years and many of the developers working with North-by-South have experience working at Inclusão Digital. What led me to bring this up is a recent story in PC World about a digital inclusion program beginning in San Francisco. While SF is the center of the internet world, there is an enormous gap between the high-paid technology workers and the poorest sectors of San Francisco:

Access to technology is substantially below average for San Franciscans earning less than $10,000 up to $25,000 per year, the study said. There is also a big technology gap for the large numbers of residents who speak only Spanish or Chinese.

And, like in Brazil, open source is playing a key role in San Francisco’s digital inclusion program:

The PCs were ill-equipped with old operating systems like Windows NT and Windows 2000, Griffiths said. “They were a wreck, there were pop-up ads and spyware and most of them didn’t load Internet Explorer because no one took care of the lab.” Griffiths got to work, replenishing the lab with 15 donated computers and getting volunteers to load up Edubuntu OS, a version of Linux for the classroom. Now the training center offers free classes to teach basic computing skills to individuals.

The task force for a digital inclusion program in San Francisco was joined by the mayor’s office last year. However, a local non-profit, Media Alliance, has indicated that San Francisco needs a more comprehensive program, similar to the one in Brazil. In an area which has generated so much wealth from the technology industry, it seems like we could at least do as much as Brazil has. That said, this link between San Francisco and Sao Paulo is compelling and highlights the real world impact of open source software. It isn’t just a serious option for enterprise-level business, free software is a critical part of closing the digital divide. When you support free software, you’re helping to change the world for the common good.

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Venezuela hosts open source and free knowledge conference

Filed under: Free Software, Latin America — ryan @ 5:05 pm

Here is a lengthy and detailed description of the Third International Forum on Free Knowledge, a conference held in Maracaibo, Venezuela and focusing on open source software, worker co-operatives, intellectual property and more. From this person’s description, it seems like it was an exciting event. Venezuela passed a law in 2006 mandating that all government systems migrate to open source software and the government there has been one of the leading voices in the open source phenomenon happening throughout Latin America.

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