Petition Summary: The petitioner calls for the European Union to actively develop and implement a Linux-based operating system, termed ‘EU-Linux’, across public administrations in all EU Member States. This initiative aims to reduce dependency on Microsoft products, ensuring compliance with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), and promoting transparency, sustainability, and digital sovereignty within the EU. The petitioner emphasizes the importance of using open-source alternatives to Microsoft 365, such as LibreOffice and Nextcloud, and suggests the adoption of the E/OS mobile operating system for government devices. The petitioner also highlights the potential for job creation in the IT sector through this initiative.
- sibachian ( @sibachian@lemmy.ml ) English7•3 hours ago
I’ve said this a million times, but it’s definitely about time we stop spending taxes on a rogue entity across the ocean who definitely does not have our best interests in mind. I’m not convinced it’s even legal and I don’t understand why the legal prospects have never been brought up about this fucking situation. R&D money should not go to a foreign corporation. In addition, I (and pretty much everyone else on the planet) already paid for microsofts products and services so my government can use it (against my will), so why the fuck do they get away with setting a public price at all? It should legally be free or the governments shouldn’t need to pay for it in the first place, and it should legally be open source because it’s publicly funded. There are just so many problems with the entire idea of our government using Windows, Office, and their services.
- Alsephina ( @Alsephina@lemmy.ml ) English1•2 hours ago
Fucking up microsoft is always good
- NutWrench ( @NutWrench@lemmy.ml ) English1•2 hours ago
Especially in light of Microsoft CoPilot. You do not want obvious spyware on any computer.
- ptman ( @ptman@sopuli.xyz ) 6•4 hours ago
- 0x0 ( @0x0@programming.dev ) 9•5 hours ago
Focus instead on enforcing standards’ compliance so i can open a
.docx
with any program and be usable anywhere.Then focus on enforcing FOSS software in public services but don’t bother with a “european linux distro”, that’s just a waste of resources. There are already a great deal of distros around. Considering geopolitics i’d go with SuSe or some other EU-based distro.
- ShortN0te ( @ShortN0te@lemmy.ml ) 9•4 hours ago
Focus instead on enforcing standards’ compliance so i can open a
.docx
with any program and be usable anywhere.That’s an impossible task. Not even Microsoft manages that. Do not want to count how often i used libreOffice to repair or convert an older MSOffice file so it can be opend with modern Versions of MSOffice.
Once there was a 500MB Excel Sheet with lime 500-1000 used Cells, opened and saved it to.a xlsx file using libreOffice and reduced it to a few MB while still being fully functional.
- ⁂ jnk :InfinityVerified: ( @jnk@masto.es ) 4•4 hours ago
@ShortN0te @0x0 I mean the real problem here is that MS office is a mess but somehow still standardized, so “enforcing standards” would be as easy as showing MS the middle finger and using libre office. They’d save a lot of money and time, it’s a clear win-win scenario imho
- ShortN0te ( @ShortN0te@lemmy.ml ) 3•4 hours ago
Open standards are the first step of a functional transition to an open government. From there Open Source Software can compete against commercial software, once the ppl see that the FOSS offers the same features then the proprietary paid software they can easily switch to it. With open standards they only need to train the users, no data to migrate etc.
- Handles ( @halm@leminal.space ) English3•5 hours ago
Focus instead on enforcing standards’ compliance
For sure, but ¿por qué no los dos?
Completely agree with your other prioritisations.
- Papamousse ( @Frederic@beehaw.org ) 6•4 hours ago
Just use Debian, it has old root, stable, still being developed, it’s the base of various others distro that “enhance” it (sometimes badly).
Debian.
I’m using MX Linus AHS, based on Debian, BTW.
- Cyborganism ( @cyborganism@lemmy.ca ) 20•6 hours ago
They could call it Eunux!
Oh…
- Samsy ( @Samsy@lemmy.ml ) 1•6 minutes ago
Eubuntu.
Or Keubuntu, the KDEU spin.
- MonkderVierte ( @MonkderVierte@lemmy.ml ) 3•4 hours ago
Exists already; OpenDesk
- N0x0n ( @N0x0n@lemmy.ml ) 11•6 hours ago
As long as the EU doesn’t reinvent the wheel, why not? I mean if they are going to fork Linux and rewrite a EU-based linux OS, this would further divide the community and make issues and security a lot more wacky… Not sure this is a good idea.
- Fisch ( @Fisch@discuss.tchncs.de ) English17•6 hours ago
Pretty sure they’re talking about making a distro, not forking the Linux kernel. I don’t see any reason why they would need to fork it anyway.
- elucubra ( @elucubra@sopuli.xyz ) 8•6 hours ago
This is dumb. Hand over development to bureaucrats? create a set of guidelines and requirements, and allow distros to be certified, and fund development of distros that are being used.
- Handles ( @halm@leminal.space ) English16•6 hours ago
It would make so much more sense to fund existing Linux development than making a new distro, tbh.
If the EU changed to Linux systems and donated the same amount back to open source development as they currently pay for Microsoft licenses, that would make a hell of a difference.
just an idea, it could be based on #NixOS , if I remember well the project was partially funded by European Research or Opensource funds.
Please correct me if I am wrong on the fundings, I say this from distant memory.
EDIT: it was just an idea, as it is not the most user-friendly distro out there…
- jonne ( @jonne@infosec.pub ) 7•6 hours ago
Or they could use a distro that’s already been created by a European vendor, maybe even create a competitive tender. There’s no point in creating a new distro, add a new repository if you must.
- kaugman ( @kaugman@lemmy.today ) English1•6 hours ago
Thanks but no thanks.
- GolfNovemberUniform ( @GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml ) 2•7 hours ago
Ain’t no way that’s getting accepted. It’s like asking to completely destroy and rebuild one of the EU countries.
- Fonzie! ( @lord_ryvan@ttrpg.network ) 9•6 hours ago
They’re already putting out a petition so they’re not wholly against the idea of an EU-Linux.
Also, this has been done before by other governments, like parts of the UK’s and many Indian governments.
I think it’d be a big step, but a doable one and for the better.
Why do you compare it to destroying and rebuilding one of the EU countries, if I may ask?
- GolfNovemberUniform ( @GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml ) 1•5 hours ago
Why do you compare it to destroying and rebuilding one of the EU countries, if I may ask?
Because destroying and rebuilding the digital infrastructure is very similar. It’s extremely expensive and causes a lot of breakages in the process.
- sibachian ( @sibachian@lemmy.ml ) English2•3 hours ago
most software is web based and OS-agnostic so there is no destruction and rebuilding happening, and for everything else, FOSS is literally free. How is it expensive to switch from X with a monthly cost to X that is free? Even if things breaks initially, the cost would equalize and long-term be considerably reduced.
most software is web based and OS-agnostic so there is no destruction and rebuilding happening
I don’t think EU backend and government job software is OS-agnostic.
and for everything else, FOSS is literally free
Yes but they need to switch and develop new utilities which is time and money.
Even if things breaks initially, the cost would equalize and long-term be considerably reduced.
That might be true depending on the maintenance costs of the new solutions.