Opening up the Yangon Government
Open Standards, Free/Open Source Software, Open Data, and Cyber-Security
Pranesh Prakash
Policy Director
Centre for Internet & Society
Bengaluru + New Delhi
CC-BY-SA 4.0
no proprietary software or standards were used in the making of this slideshow.
Centre for Internet and Society
an independent non-profit research organization
working mostly on policy issues:
- Accessibility for persons with disabilities
- Access to knowledge & copyright/patents
- Internet governance
- Cyber-security
- Freedom of expression
- Privacy
- Open data + open standards +
free/open source software + open access + OER - Telecom reforms + Net neutrality
and also some academic research on digital humanities
Why?
- Improving government + governance
- Empowering citizens
- Inclusive and equitable society
- Creating opportunities for non-profits and commercial activities
- Solving public problems
- Evidence-based policymaking
How?
- Transparency
- Participatory governance
- "Government Enterprise Architecture"
- "Open data"
- "Open standards"
- "Free/open source software"
Open Budgeting + Spending
Brazil
Transparency Portal
Impact
Citizen input
Public monitoring of spending
Exposting waste + corruption
Challenges
Privacy
Open Contracting & Procurement
Slovakia
Impact
More than 2 million contracts published
8% of population uses each year + 90,000 "heavy" users
25% increase in stories on procurement in media
Multiple
Problem
Transparency ≠ Accountability
Open Education Monitoring
Mexico
Mejora Tu Escuela
Impact
Integrated Tracking
Knowing Schools + Comparing + Grading + Improving
Used even by legislators & governors
Open Corporate Data
United Kingdom
OpenCorporates
Impact
$56.4 billion found in investigations
85 million companies covered
105 jurisdictions covered
Uncovering "beneficial" ownership
Open Legislative Information
United Kingdom
Online Hansard + Know Your MP
Impact
Improving Democracy
Standards
means
causes difficulty, inefficiency.
Open Standards
vs.
causes difficulty, inefficiency.
Open Standards
The Internet is completely based on Open Standards.
Open Standards
Any one can study.
Any one can implement.
Open development.
Can be implemented in free/open source software.
Open Standards
Why should Parliamentarians care?
Vendor-neutrality.
Multiple implementations.
Free/Open Source software can be used.
Flexibility.
Future-proofing.
No forced taxation of citizens.
In short: saving costs, long-term benefits
Open Standards
Why should Parliamentarians care?
This can be legislated, mandated.
Penalties required.
Free/Open Source Software
Four Freedoms
Freedom to use
Freedom to study
Freedom to modify
Freedom to share for a fee or for free
Free/Open Source Software
Why is this Important?
Stable, scalable
Vendor independence
Reduced total cost of ownership
No balkanisation of human resource
Security via transparency
Increased innovation
Cultural and linguistic innovation
Free/Open Source Software
Policy to prefer, but not to mandate
Require this as part of the procurement policy
Cyber-Security
No simple solution.
But need careful planning.
Security by transparency: FOSS
Militaries use FOSS
(e.g., U.S. Dept of Defence)
Cyber-Security
Much of it is not in your hands as individuals, but in hands of computer administrators.
Need security experts
Opening Up the Yangon Government
By Pranesh Prakash
Opening Up the Yangon Government
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