on: 2020-04-24
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In the attachment to the letter, the minister takes note of ongoing efforts in the public sector and makes detailed promises of enabling and encouraging a Free Software community in the public sector. One of these is a promise to investigate possible changes to the current market regulations in order to make exceptions for publishing Free Software by the government. This will remove the current legal grey area. A new procurement policy will also be adopted: Free Software by default is the way to go, and the government and its institutions will actively start to publish Free Software. The minister will report on the progress of these measures in the beginning of 2021.
"At the FSFE we welcome this policy and we will monitor the progress together with our strong partners in the Netherlands." says Nico Rikken, the FSFE's coordinator for the Netherlands. "We also invite Dutch national and local governments to sign our open letter that demands that publicly financed software developed for the public sector be made publicly available under a Free Software licence."The Public Money? Public Code! campaign aims to set Free Software as the standard for publicly financed software. Public administrations following this principle can benefit from collaboration with other public bodies, independence from single vendors, potential tax savings, increased innovation, and a better basis for IT security. The Free Software Foundation Europe together with over 180 civil society organisations and more than 27.000 individuals signed the Open Letter. We will use the signatures to contact decision makers and political representatives all over Europe and convince them to make public code the standard. You are invited to add your signature to make a bigger impact.