[Fsf-friends] Cuba Embraces Open-Source Software

Frederick Noronha fred@[EMAIL-PROTECTED]
Tue Feb 20 03:58:07 IST 2007


http://apnews1.iwon.com//article/20070216/D8NB1EK05.html

Cuba Embraces Open-Source Software
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Feb 16, 3:42 PM (ET)

By JOHN RICE

(AP) Richard Stallman, President and founder of the Free Software
Foundation, speaks during the...
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HAVANA (AP) - Cuba's communist government is trying to shake off the
yoke of at least one capitalist empire - Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) - by
joining with socialist Venezuela in converting its computers to
open-source software.

Both governments say they are trying to wean state agencies from
Microsoft's proprietary Windows to the open-source Linux operating
system, which is developed by a global community of programmers who
freely share their code.

"It's basically a problem of technological sovereignty, a problem of
ideology," said Hector Rodriguez, who oversees a Cuban university
department of 1,000 students dedicated to developing open-source
programs.

Other countries have tried similar moves. China, Brazil and Norway
have encouraged the development of Linux for a variety of reasons:
Microsoft's near-monopoly over operating systems, the high cost of
proprietary software and security problems.

Cuban officials, ever focused on U.S. threats, also see it as a matter
of national security.

Communications Minister Ramiro Valdes, an old comrade-in-arms of
President Fidel Castro, raised suspicions about Microsoft's
cooperation with U.S. military and intelligence agencies as he opened
a technology conference this week.

He called the world's information systems a "battlefield" where Cuba
is fighting against imperialism.

He also noted that Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates once described
copyright reformers - including people who want to do away with
proprietary software - as "some new modern-day sort of communists" -
which is a badge of honor from the Cuban perspective.

Microsoft did not return calls seeking comment. Cuba imports many
computer preloaded with Windows and also purchases software in third
countries such as China, Mexico or Panama.

Valdes is a hard-liner who favors uniforms and military haircuts, but
the biggest splash at the conference was made by a paunchy,
wild-haired man in a T-shirt: Richard Stallman, whose Free Software
Foundation created the license used by many open-source programs,
including Linux.

Middle-aged communist bureaucrats and ponytailed young Cuban
programmers applauded as the computer scientist from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology insisted that copyright laws violate basic
morality; he compared them to laws that would threaten people with
jail for sharing or modifying kitchen recipes.

Stallman also warned that proprietary software is a security threat
because without being able to examine the code, users can't know what
it's doing or what "backdoor" holes developers might have left open
for future entry. "A private program is never trustworthy," he said.

Cuba also has trouble keeping proprietary software current. Its
sluggish satellite link to the outside world makes downloads of
updates agonizingly slow. And U.S. companies, apparently worried about
American laws restricting trade with Cuba, are increasingly blocking
downloads to the island.

Cubans try to get around the problem by putting software updates on a
server located on the island. But many computers wind up unpatched and
vulnerable.

Cuba's Cabinet also has urged a shift from proprietary software. The
customs service has gone to Linux and the ministries of culture,
higher education and communications are planning to do so, Rodriguez
said.

And students in his own department are cooking up a version of Linux
called Nova, based on Gentoo distribution of the operating system. The
ministry of higher education is developing its own.

Rodriguez's department accounts for 1,000 of the 10,000 students
within the University of Information Sciences, a five-year-old school
that tries to combine software development with education.

Cuba is also training tens of thousands of other software and hardware
engineers across the country, though few have computers at home. Most
Cubans have to depend on the slow links at government internet cafes
or schools.

Rodriguez shied away from saying how long it would take for Cuba to
get most of its systems on Linux: "It would be tough for me to say
that we would migrate half the public administration in three years."

But he said Linux use was growing rapidly.

"Two years ago, the Cuban free-software community did not number more
than 600 people ... In the last two years, that number has gone well
beyond 3,000 users of free software and its a figure that is growing
exponentially."

Even so, most of the computers at this week's technology conference
showed the red, green, blue and yellow Windows start button in the
bottom left-hand corner of their screens.

And the start of the open-source sessions was delayed as organizers
fiddled with the computer running their projector. The conference room
screen had been displaying the words "Windows XP."
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