Putin Loves Linux, Orders Government Transition to Open Source

Meanwhile, in Russia… If Google translate is to be trusted, a Russian publication has claimed that Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has signed an order to transition the technological “power structures and the federal budget to free software” starting in the second quarter of 2012. The 17-page document, “Transition Plan of the Federal Authorities and Federal Budgetary Institutions to Free Software,” covers the period from 2011 to 2015. According to Deputy Head of the Ministry of Communications Ilya Massuh, the document describes a complete transition of the federal government and state employees to GNU/Linux. The time-line set forth in the document has set 5 goals:
- 2011, 2nd Quarter: Approbation of a basic package of free software in the pilot sites
- 2011, 3rd Quarter: Approval of data formats to be supported by free software
- 2011, 3rd Quarter: Plan developed for changes in instructions to record intangible assets
- 2012, 2nd Quarter: Creation of a national repository
- 2014, 3rd Quarter: Introduction of a package of free software in government and fiscal institutions
With havin so much written content do you ever run into any problems of plagorism or copyright infringement? My blog has a lot of completely unique content I’ve either authored myself or outsourced but it seems a lot of it is popping it up all over the web without my permission. Do you know any solutions to help stop content from being ripped off? I’d certainly appreciate it.
Vladimir Vladimirovic is better than anyone when it comes to governing a country, HE ALWAYS DOES WHAT HE SAYS. Not like some Presidents who keep on saying their country will embrace open source but sign secret deals with Microsoft under the table, even worse they’re looking like clowns for having becoming Sales Promotion Guy for Apple, Inc.
@Tranis
No. Piracy is not a viable solution to a company / government.
In the internet, Windows, or any other software you want can be downloaded for free.
I tried to think of a better one, but it’s a challenge. Actually, “source opens you” would have been better than mine.