The European Parliament is discriminating against EU citizens by
using software which is not freely available to everyone for its
digital services, according to the open source community.
But Parliament cited technical and security reasons to justify its
decision.
Several free software associations yesterday (21 May) launched a petition calling on the European Parliament to use open standards in order
to provide all EU citizens with "non-discriminatory" access to its
representatives and documents "irrespective of software choices".
The petitioners explicitly refer to the live web streaming of the
European Parliament's plenary sessions, "which is currently only
available to those using Microsoft's MediaPlayer". They argue that by
using exclusive non-interoperable software, the European Parliament is
not allowing all citizens to follow its work and is obliging them to
buy software from a single company.
This "ICT lock-in" is deemed to be "in conflict with the first
article of Chapter 1 in the Treaty of the European Union, which
stipulates that 'decisions are taken with the greatest possible respect
for openness and as near as possible to the citizens'," reads the
petition.
A Parliament press source told EurActiv that the use of open source
software is avoided by MEPs because it is perceived as less secure
against hackers. On the other hand, the technical support provided by
the selected software companies is considered highly important to carry
out digital services in the 23 official languages used by the
Parliament.
The European Commission uses open source software for a range of
activities. Linux is used for server operating systems and the external
blog platform is based on free programs, like for its wiki service and
for the eVoting polls. At the same time, the Commission uses software
from Microsoft and Oracle to run other services.
Alongside the petition to the European Parliament, the pro-free
software Digital Standards Organisation (Digistan) yesterday (21 May)
signed the Hague Declaration
, which calls for open standards to be used in all government procurement.
The same day as these initiatives were launched, Microsoft
announced
that it will improve the interoperability of its flagship Office
software suite with open standard formats. The move comes as the
European Commission is carrying out an extensive investigation on
Microsoft's alleged abuse of its dominant position in the EU market.
Background
The European Parliament has endorsed EU research on open source
software but has never applied it to its digital services. Meanwhile,
the Commission uses a range of free software on its blog platform and
for other IT activities.
The Commission officially supports the development of open source software. In a recent
study
commissioned by a UN research centre, the EU executive outlined
the economic importance of free programs for European enterprises
See: Euractiv News 22/5/2008 for more information.