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[OCLUG-Tech] [clabchuk [ at ] greenparty [ dot ] ca: [GPC-GEN]: Canadian Greens add FOSS to election platform]

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From: Camille Labchuk <clabchuk [ at ] greenparty [ dot ] ca>
To: gpc-general [ at ] conscoop [ dot ] ottawa [ dot ] on [ dot ] ca, gpc-members [ at ] yahoogroups [ dot ] com
Subject: [GPC-GEN]: Canadian Greens add FOSS to election platform
Reply-To: gpc-general [ at ] conscoop [ dot ] ottawa [ dot ] on [ dot ] ca

A great article from Linux.com -- http://www.linux.com/feature/120280

Canadian Greens add FOSS to election platform
By Bruce Byfield on November 02, 2007 (8:00:00 PM)


Thanks to a founding member of Free Geek Vancouver, the Green Party of
Canada has quietly become the first major political party in Canada to
make support for free and open source software (FOSS) part of its
election platform. Like officials in the Green Party of England and
Wales, deputy leader Adriane Carr sees the move as compatible with
basic Green ideas, but IT consultant Neil Adair also points out the
move serves the practical purpose of helping the party match the
technical resources of more established parties.

At the same time, the party has come out in favor of net neutrality in
its platform, although it is not specifically mentioned in the
official policy statement.

Although founded in 1983, the Canadian Green party has been a serious
contender in federal and provincial elections for less than a decade.
So far, it has yet to win a seat, despite some near misses. However,
with support hovering constantly around 12% in 2007, and
dissatisfaction with the leading Liberal and Conservative parties
likely to lead to the third successive minority government, the Greens
are strongly positioned for their first breakthrough, and could become
a key element in the balance of power.

Other Canadian political parties have FOSS interest groups, and the
New Democratic Party included a pro-FOSS resolution in its convention
in September 2006. However, the Greens are the first party to endorse
FOSS as party policy.

According to Carr, the idea originated when Scott Nelson, a founder of
Free Geek Vancouver who does IT in her office, "came to me and said,
'Do you have anything in your platform about open source and net
neutrality?' We didn't, and he said, 'Well, you need to. It's really
the leading edge, and it totally meshes with the philosophy of the
Green Party.'"

People had raised the topic with Carr "for eons," she says, and her
office had been using FOSS for some time, but Nelson's suggestion was
the first time she had thought seriously about putting FOSS in party
policy. Nelson drafted a proposed policy, which Carr took to the rest
of the shadow cabinet -- the party leaders who create official policy.
Last spring, in anticipation of an election that never came, the FOSS
plank found its way into Vision Green, the official Green election
platform.

The open source policy is remarkable more for its historicity than its
detail or originality. Starting with a brief definition of FOSS, the
FOSS section of Vision Green goes on to say that FOSS can increase
Canada's competitiveness in IT. More specifically, it states that
Green Members of Parliament will promote the use of FOSS "in all
critical government IT systems" as well as throughout the education
system.

The decision was made without consultation with other Green Parties
around the world, Carr says, "Although I do know that open source and
net neutrality are talked about among other Greens. It just fits with
our policies."
FOSS and Green philosophy

For Carr, support for FOSS is a close fit with Green Party ideals.
"Amongst our fundamental principles are grass roots democracy and
control, and I believe that that fits perfectly with the idea of open
source software. It puts people in control of the technology that they
rely on, and creates a more independent society. We believe in the
need to strengthen people's ability to have control over their own
fate. Controlling your software, not being dependent on a corporation
to create it for you -- that's just fundamental.

"It's also a question of where the economy is heading. I believe that
we have created an economy where too many decisions are made by too
few decision-makers, both on the government level and in the economy
as a whole."

Carr also discussed the ability of FOSS to extend the life of
hardware, citing her own office as an example. "We work in an office
surrounded by old hardware," she says. As for the idea of upgrading
perfectly good systems solely to use Windows Vista, she says, "That's
as bad as George W. Bush saying we should fight terrorism by going out
and spending money on useless purchases."

As for making government documents available in free formats, Carr
considers that only sensible. In an argument likely to appeal to the
majority of Canadians -- although it might sound strange to American
ears -- Carr suggests that, if citizens must buy a specific piece of
software in order to read government documents, then "you're saying
that certain people can have access to information if you buy into it.
It's like saying that you can get more health care if you can pay for
it. It's a two-tier health system (which, by the way, we violently
oppose). You don't want a two-tier information system, either."

Like many people with no background in technology, Carr occasionally
sounded unclear about the differences between the functionality of
specific software and the benefits of FOSS in the abstract. However,
one thing she was clear about: FOSS enables the Greens to have an
infrastructure that would be beyond their budgets if built with
proprietary solutions. "It's liberated me," she says, referring to the
possibilities that FOSS opens up.
The technical side

To get a better sense of how the Green Party is using FOSS, Linux.com
talked with Neil Adair, who manages the party Web site. Although the
party allows workers to make individual choices about what desktop
they use, the party's infrastructure has been completely FOSS since
early 2007, when its previous Microsoft Access database was replaced
with MySQL. Other FOSS infrastructure, according to Adair, includes
ClarkConnect, Debian, Apache, PHP, and Drupal.

Listening to Adair, it soon becomes obvious that one of the advantages
of FOSS is that it places the Green Party at the forefront of
technology trends. For one thing, Adair says, in the past few years,
supporters have tended to connect to the party via the main party Web
site, rather than the sites for individual ridings and campaigns, as
was the case in the past. By switching to FOSS when it did and
developing an online database, the Greens have overcome the bottleneck
that occurs when the main site has to concern itself with funneling
information to the local organizations.

For another, the use of civi-CRM allows Green Party technicians to
interact with other mid-sized parties that face the same challenge of
competing with larger, better-funded organizations. According to
Adair, through the civi-CRM community, Green Party technicians can
interact with dozens of similar parties, including the New Democratic
Party, a number of provincial parties, and some Democratic campaigns
in the United States.

"At the open source project community label, there's no hostility"
between parties, Adair says. "We all see it as enabling democracy.
And, yeah, we might have some different opinions about the direction
that democracy might take, but, on a fundamental level, we're all
pretty much in agreement. Most of the parties involved are on the
progressive side [in social policies], and they're generally the
smaller parties."

Using FOSS and modern Web techniques sometimes causes problems, Adair
says. Transfers of donations and membership with major banks can be
sometimes be difficult, he suggests. He also mentions that some Green
Party officials are uneasy about the use of blogs, which seem too
uncontrolled -- never mind that more than half of those who go to the
main Green Party site click on the blogs. Some, too, are uneasy about
local workers gaining access to the central database, although that
access is carefully controlled.

However, for the most part, the advantages are so obvious that Adair
and the rest of the Green IT team are looking into the possibility of
using social network sites such as Facebook in the next election. As
Carr points out, FOSS and modern Web techniques "speak to the
demographics that are most Green, and that's youth." In adapting such
techniques, the Green Party is playing to its strengths.
Putting FOSS on the agenda

Whether the Greens can win their first seats provincially or federally
remains uncertain. However, according to Carr, the Greens will have
achieved a small victory, or at least a consolation, if they manage to
put FOSS on the Canadian political agenda.

"The whole point of doing this is to challenge the other parties and
to make change happen," Carr says. "So, to me, it's exciting that
we're on the leading edge of that. But I sure hope that other parties
catch on fast, because it needs to get implemented. 'So go ahead and
steal our ideas,' we say to the other parties. Just so long as you
implement them."
Bruce Byfield is a computer journalist who writes regularly for
Linux.com and IT Manager's Journal.


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