50% of Venezuela Government Software will be Open Source by 2007

Venezuela's National Information and Technology Center says that the planned transition to Free Software in the country's public administration will be a challenge, but by 2007 50% of all software will be "free software."

Venezuela Linux

Caracas, Venezuela, March 5, 2005— Venezuela’s president of the National Technology and Information Center (CNTI), Jorge Berrizbeitia, says that the migration from private software to free software in Venezuela’s public administration will present a great challenge for the government and the country’s data processing companies.

According to a presidential decree passed in December 2004, Venezuela’s public administration must present a plan within three months for how it will raise its usage of free software. The best known example of free software is the Linux operating system, which is steadily gaining in market share worldwide, relative to the private operating system Microsoft Windows. Following the president’s approval of the plans, the departments of the public administration will have two years to implement it.

Berrizbeitia explained that the Venezuelan government is aware that such a transition will cost money and that it also means transition expenses for the companies that currently supply the government with software. Berrizbeitia said that the government would be willing to take over the costs of translating software, so that it can be used in Venezuela.

One of the main reasons the government is interested in switching to free software is that it wants to consolidate its technological independence and lower its vulnerability for not controlling the software it uses.

Part of the CNTI’s long-range plans is to create a Venezuelan Internet, which would serve as a technological platform for the state and that would support the government’s concept of endogenous development.

Berrizbeitia added that part of this plan is the design and construction of a “Bolivarian” (in honor of Venezuela’s independence hero) computer, with a high number of components made in Venezuela, that uses mainly open source software. It would come with Open Office and an instant messaging system that works on all popular messaging networks.

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