Survey: Open source gaining traction in US government

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A survey says more than half of all IT decision-makers in the US government have implemented open-source software

More than half of all US government executives have rolled out open-source software at their agencies, and 71% believe their agency can benefit from open source software, according to a survey.

Fifty-five per cent of respondents said their agencies have been involved or are currently involved in an open-source implementation, according to the survey, commissioned by theFederal Open Source Alliance, a group pushing the use of open-source software in government. The alliance is made up of Intel, Hewlett-Packard and Red Hat.

In addition, 29% of respondents who haven't adopted open-source software plan to do so in the next six to 12 months, the survey said.

"Open source is really gaining momentum in the federal marketplace," says Cathy Martin, director of public sector initiatives at HP. "It really came out loud and clear here. It was a little stronger than I even anticipated."

The survey of 218 IT decision-makers in the US government found that 88% of those in intelligence agencies said that their agencies can benefit from open source. This may not be surprising, considering that the US National Security agency has been supporting a secure Linux project, called Security Enhanced Linux, since 2001.

Ninety per cent of the respondents who have implemented open-source software said they believe their agency benefits. The top reasons for embracing open-source software, according to the survey, were the ability to access advanced security capabilities and customise open-source applications, and a trend toward consolidated datacentres.

Back-office implementations seem to be where open source is making its gains in the US government, Martin says. "I don't think the drivers are more on the desktop," she says. "I think they're in the datacentre."

Oddly, security was one of the top reasons among survey respondents who haven't implemented open source. The top reason for not adopting open-source software was organisational reluctance to change from the status quo, according to the survey, which was released at the beginning of November. Another major concern was a lack of consistent standards in open-source products.

More than 97% of respondents say the open-source implementations they've been involved with were successful or partially successful. "When you compare that with your general success rate in IT deployments, that's phenomenal," Martin says.

Open source makes sense for federal agencies, adds Morris Segal, a software architect who has worked on government contracts for more than 20 years.

Segal, who attended a Red Hat users conference in Washington, DC, this week, is currently working on a project for the US Department of Homeland Security, using Linux and other open-source software, as well as Microsoft software, to create web portals. The portals need to be able to run software developed using both Microsoft and open-source tools, he says.

Open source is "going to grow everywhere," he says. "It's just makes sense."

One of the main reasons for using open-source software, he says, is because it has traction in the development community. "When you have a proprietary solution, you pretty much are owned by the proprietor," Segal adds. "With an open solution, you have lots of choices."

This is the first survey the alliance has done, but it plans to conduct a similar survey annually to track the trends of open-source software in the US government, Martin says.

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