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How the U.S. funds open source abroad

By Scott Clark
on October 13, 2009

President Obama gets a lot of credit for his pro-open source policies, but the United States has been funding open source well before he took office. The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), which describes itself as the principal federal agency for extending “assistance to countries recovering from disaster, trying to escape poverty, and engaging in democratic reforms,” has been in the habit of funding open source abroad since at least 2007.

As but one example, USAID kicked off its Open Source Development 2.0 challenge last fall. The contest and other USAID activities led to a wide roll-out of Joomla, an open-source content management system, throughout the Mongolian government, including 200 of its Web sites, as Elin Waring, president of Open Source Matters, a company that advocates Joomla adoption, told me. But Joomla is just one part of USAID’s global investment in open source. The agency has also created the Global Development Commons, which promotes U.S. interests by encouraging open development abroad. Apparently, the idea is that U.S. interests are served as local economies sustain and grow on their own, rather than requiring ongoing foreign investment.

In the case of open source, the software may come from elsewhere but it quickly becomes a domestic good as local firms tailor and improve it. With proprietary software, local firms can provide implementation services but they, as well as the end-customers, are always dependent on a foreign vendor for the core value.

Read the whole story here: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13505_3-10372812-16.html