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Digital Sovereignty & Ethical and Sustainable C...

Digital Sovereignty & Ethical and Sustainable Computing: Two challenges for the French OSS business ecosystem

Presentation given during the CNLL / OSS Sweden (online) meeting on March 30, 2022.

Stefane Fermigier

March 30, 2022
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  1. Stéfane Fermigier Co-founder & Co-Chairman @ CNLL | Co-founder &

    Chairman @ APELL | Founder & CEO @ Abilian Digital Sovereignty & Ethical and Sustainable Computing: Two challenges for the French OSS business ecosystem
  2. Context • Each year, the CNLL publishes a study on

    one or more aspects of the free software sector in France or in Europe: market, technologies, employment, social issues, etc. • Last year, in line with current events, two of the topics of the study were the links between open source software and digital sovereignty on the one hand, and ethical and responsible computing on the other
  3. A de fi nition for Digital Sovereignty "Digital sovereignty" has

    been de fi ned by the French General Secretariat for Defense and National Security (SGDSN) in the 2018 Strategic Cyber Defense Review (p. 93) as: a strategic autonomy in which, without seeking to do everything internally, it is a matter of preserving an autonomous capacity for assessment, decision and action in the digital space. http://www.sgdsn.gouv.fr/uploads/2018/02/20180206-np-revue-cyber-public-v3.3-publication.pdf
  4. ⚠ Digital Sovereignty != Data Sovereignty • Data Sovereignty =

    Ability to decide what happens with self generated and stored data • This is the basis for trustworthiness of communication • But it’s quite limited • Digital Sovereignty = Ability to act self-determined and shape and innovate the IT according to one's own vision and requirements • So Digital Sovereignty is the ability to control and to shape • But it does not mean autarky or protectionism!
  5. F/OSS and Digital Sovereignty according to the Commission In its

    Oct 2020 open source plan (“Think open”), the Commission notes that "the open source model has an impact on Europe's digital autonomy. It is likely to give Europe a chance to create and maintain its own independent digital approach to the digital giants in the cloud and allow it to retain control over its processes, information and technology.” But no mention of an underlying industrial strategy or promotion of the private sector. https://ec.europa.eu/info/departments/informatics/open-source-software-strategy_en
  6. European Commission - DIGIT’s OSPO • The European Commission launched

    in October 2020 its “think open" plan which aims to "develop software solutions, [taking] into account openness, sharing and reuse, security, privacy, legal issues and accessibility". • But this plan, whose quality and intentions we welcome, is nonetheless limited to the internal IT of the EU institutions, and insu ff i cient for the current challenges. • We believe it must be coordinated with a real economic policy aiming to develop European open source software publishers and integrators, and to support them against the in fl uence of foreign software and cloud players https://ec.europa.eu/info/departments/informatics/open-source-software-strategy_en
  7. European F/OSS companies are also a key asset in regaining

    our digital sovereignty • SGDSN: "an industrial strategy based on open source, provided that it is part of a thoughtful commercial approach, can enable French or EU companies to re-gain market share and thereby enable France and the EU to regain sovereignty.” • A. de Montchalin, France’s Minister of Public Service: “By accompanying administrations so that they use open source to the best of their ability, I hope that the Free Software Mission will support the French and European economic players in this ecosystem, in particular by taking better account of the criterion of transparency of source codes in public procurement”
  8. MP Latombe’s report on digital sovereignty • Key proposal: •

    No. 52: Impose the systematic use of free software within the administration, making the use of proprietary solutions an exception. • And also • No. 26: Give preference, in terms of public procurement, to solutions from French or European technological players. • No. 30: Develop practices and the legal framework for public procurement [In particular at European level with a European "Small Business Act"]. • No. 53: Impose the systematic use of French digital solutions within the administration, when their level of performance is satisfactory for the uses concerned.
  9. Strasbourg Declaration (March 2022) • The European Ministers responsible for

    public administration […] with the support of the European Commission, declare their intention […] to promote open source software within public administrations and their sharing, by: • Recognising the major role played by secure open source solutions in the transformation of public administrations, which allow for the pooling of investments among multiple organisations, o ff er transparency and interoperability by default and guarantee control over the technologies used as well as greater technological independence; • Leveraging open source solutions to strengthen collaboration between public administrations, by promoting the sharing of such solutions created or used by administrations within the European Union; • Promoting a fair redistribution of the value created by open source solutions, especially for those who produce and share open source code.
  10. We need to do more, now • Enforce existing regulations

    “encouraging”, “preferring” or “mandating” the use of F/OSS in the public administration, add missing ones • French MP Philippe Latombe: “The State must by default use free software. The only constraint that the State understands is the normative one, i.e. when it’s imposed by the Parliament.” • Finance both innovative and maintenance work, using the proper fi nancial tools • Promote the F/OSS ecosystem, including the EU business sector
  11. Goals • Show that the values and principles (transparency, openness,

    inclusiveness...) of the F/OSS ecosystem are fundamentally aligned with the current concerns of a growing part of society (including IT workers and customers) in terms of respect for human and environmental rights • WIP: ethical charter for companies in the sector
  12. Older example: The Free Employment Charter (2013) 1. Provide a

    free / open source professional environment (operating system and application software) to each employee who wishes so 2. Promote employee contributions to free software communities, including by encouraging the redistribution of changes made to existing open source software in course of the company's business 3. Participate, by sending collaborators and / or through fi nancial support, to events in the open source ecosystem 4. To allow employees to train themselves over the course of their career on open technologies in order to ensure their professional development in the fi eld of free software 5. When paying the compulsory apprenticeship tax, consider fi rst and foremost the higher education courses which o ff er a teaching of methods, techniques and tools speci fi c to free software Launched in 2013, with about 100 signatories (companies) who pledge to: