Oregon joins states considering open-source legislation
Proposal favors 'freeware' such as OpenOffice
March 27, 2007 12:00 PM ETComputerworld - Oregon has joined Texas, California and Minnesota as states that may vote this year on legislation that would mandate the use of open document formats for public documents and records.
Oregon state representative Peter Buckley, a Democrat from Ashland, proposed House Bill 2920, which would require state government agencies, the state library, and all public libraries in the state to make certain documents and records available in open document formats.
The bill as it is currently written appears to more explicitly favor the use of free, open-source software such as OpenOffice and its native format, Open Document Format for Office Applications (ODF), than do pending proposals in other states.
It requires state agencies, "when practicable," to use "open formats for which freeware is available."
Additionally, it states that all libraries would have "to install and maintain freeware" so that members of the public can view, print and make copies of public documents -- as long as doing so does not force the library to "incur additional administrative or operational expense."
Other states’ proposals mandate the use of open XML-based formats but do not specify the use of free software.
Open field of battle
ODF was approved by the international standards group ISO last year as an open standard. It is being pushed by vendors such as IBM and Sun Microsystems Inc. as an alternative to the new Office Open XML format that Microsoft Corp. has developed for its Office 2007 software.
Microsoft is fighting back. Open XML was put onto the ISO’s five-month fast track for approval as an open standard earlier this month, despite lingering objections by some member nations.
Massachusetts has already passed a law mandating the use of open documents, though it is moving slowly on its migration away from Microsoft Office.
According to a press release put out Tuesday by the one-year old ODF Alliance, a Washington-based lobbying group, a total of seven national governments and four regional governments have approved the move to open document formats.
Additional Resources


White Papers & Webcasts
Sun GlassFish Portfolio - Deploy Web Applications with Open Source
As enterprises struggle to develop and deliver new and more dynamic services to more people, they must do so with severe budget constraints....
Enabling Identity and Security Management with Open Source
(Source: Novell) Novell's Dale Olds discusses enabling identity and security management with open source....
Sun Business Ready HPC Solutions: Building HPC Systems for Business-Critical Workloads
Learn about the complete end-to-end HPC architecture that is designed to grow from a single rack up to tera- and peta-scale deployments. This...
Accelerating Your Mobile Workers: Controlling the Uncontrollable
Today's workforce is truly mobile. Unlike the managed environment of the office LAN, remote users face many challenges to being productive while out...
Open Source Security Myths Dispelled
(Source: Astaro) Open Source Software is computer software whose source code is available to the general public. This openly viewable nature...
Disaster Recovery 2008: Reduced Costs and Improved Performance
How long can your Enterprise afford to be without your data? With an accelerated disaster recovery program, you never have to answer this...
Sun Glassfish Portfolio: Build a High-Performance, Open Web Platform
(Source: Sun) Choose the Sun GlassFish Portfolio and leverage the powerful advantages of an open-source Web platform to drive business growth. This high-performance...
Best Practices for Model-based Systems Engineering
Based on a small set of key principles and practices from the IBM®Rational® Harmony library of best practices, the Harmony for Systems Engineering...
The 2009 Handbook of Application Delivery
Ensuring acceptable application delivery will become even more difficult over the next few years. As a result, IT organizations need to ensure that...
Systems and Software Product Line Engineering with SysML, UML and the Rhapsody/Gears Bridge
One of the great challenges and opportunities in systems and software delivery today is Product Line Engineering - creating, evolving and maintaining a...
Subscribe to Computerworld
