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Re: [DFRI-listan] Fwd: [EPFSUG] Free Software and Open Standards in the EP - a 2nd Opinion by Mitopics on DG-ITEC Discharge Report



i

On 2013-11-24 03:19, 19x20 wrote:
"De" tycker att den är lustig, vår förening. Vår förening är inte en
riktigt politiskt partisamling som man kan engagera sig
.
//19x20


On 2013-11-23 12:49, Erik Josefsson wrote:
Medveten om risken för att det utbryter ett epidemiskt politikerexem i
DFRI vill jag ändå höja exponeringen genom att visa på möjliga
(politiska) lösningar som själva grundfrågan "hur sköter man en
demokrati?" ställer.

//Erik


Link to study:
http://epfsug.eu/wws/arc/epfsug/2013-11/msg00034/20131031ME-2nd-Opinion-on-DG-ITEC-report.pdf



-------- Original Message --------
Subject:     [EPFSUG] Free Software and Open Standards in the EP - a 2nd
Opinion by Mitopics on DG-ITEC Discharge Report
Date:     Fri, 22 Nov 2013 16:21:41 +0000
From:     JOSEFSSON Erik <erik.josefsson%europarl.europa.eu@xxxxxxxxx>
Reply-To:     epfsug@xxxxxxxxx
To:     Epfsug@xxxxxxxxx (epfsug@xxxxxxxxx) <epfsug@xxxxxxxxx>



Dear all,

Please find attached a "2nd Opinion" by Mitopics on the DG-ITEC
Discharge Report commissioned by MEPs Bart Staes and Amelia Andersdotter
on behalf of the Greens/EFA.

It walks through what has been answered and not answered in response to
the 2010 and 2011 Discharge resolutions:

    /“Requests for the second time, after the first request relating to
    the discharge procedure was made in 2010, a full report on how
    Parliament's Free Software projects have developed with regard to
    use and users in Parliament, citizen interaction and procurement
    activities; invites for the second time to investigate, in a full
    study, Parliament's obligations under Rule 103 of its Rules of
    Procedure with regard to Free Software and Open Standards; regrets
    that Free Software and Open Source solutions are not more widely
    used in the Parliament's IT infrastructure;”/

The Opinion says:

    This resolution contains several questions in two separate
categories:
    * The extent of the development, use, users and procurement of free
    software; and
    * how Parliament’s transparency obligations under Rule 103 of its
    Rules of Procedure translate into obligations to use free software
    and open standards.

Wrt Rule 103 the Opinion states:

    *Further recommendations
    *
    Since the letter by Mr. Schultz indicates that no analysis of the
    Parliament’s transparency obligations under Rule 103 of its Rules of
    Procedure vis-à-vis its ICT-policies have taken place, it is
    recommended that such a study be completed and should at least
    answer following questions:

    Given that Rule 103 of the Rules of Procedure touch upon the vital
    role of the Parliament’s records and proceedings in both democratic
    participation in its legislative process as well as its legitimacy,
    the logical conclusion is that the following principles of good
    electronic government and governance[1] apply to the Parliament’s
    citizen interactions, records keeping of its proceedings and
    legislative history:

        1. Authenticity: the ability to prove the provenance of
        Parliamentary information;
        2. Integrity: the ability to ascertain that Parliamentary
        information has not been changed in the meantime;
        3. Irrefutability: the ability to use a Parliamentary record as
        irrefutable proof;
        4. Transparency: the ability to detect and analyses changes in
        the Parliamentary record’s contents;
        5. Availability: the availability and accessibility of a
document;
        6. Flexibility: the extent to which technology can be adapted to
        future requirements and can avoid obsolescence;
        7. Confidentiality: the extent to which Parliamentary records
        can be kept confidential if warranted.

    In light of this, any study to the application of Rule 103 to the
    Parliament’s ICT-infrastructure would require a mapping of all
    processes that touch upon citizen interactions and the Parliament’s
    proceedings and legislative process and would analyse the current
    information flows, the means and software used for them and the
    digital formats used to process, store and share them. Furthermore,
    such a study would apply the above principles to these information
    flows, the software and formats used for them and result in
    recommendations to what extent the use of FOSS and open standards is
    critical to adhere to these principles as a whole.

    [1] H. Franken, Kanttekeningen bij het automatiseren van
    beschikkingen, in: Beschikken en automatiseren, VAR-reeks 110,
    Alphen aan den Rijn 1993.

I find these points compelling.

I think a study on Rule 103 would be very useful.

//Erik






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