NASA Open Source Summit Offers Food For Thought

The US government needs to freshen up its IT apparatus and, with budgets being tight, open source looks like a good option

NASA has a simple, one-word answer for those who have ever asked any of the following questions:

Does the US government use open-source software in research, testing and production? Does it develop its own software and work within a community in an open-source manner?

And does it distribute open-source software back to the community, once it’s been vetted and sanctioned as ready for prime time by federal IT chiefs?

The answer to each of the above, of course, is yes. But legal caveats, fine print and the amorphous character of software itself make it much more complicated than all that.

NASA on 29 and 30 March hosted its first-ever Open Source Summit at the Ames Research Center at the former Naval Air Station (NAS) Moffett Field, now known as the Moffett Federal Airfield. This is generally the destination for Air Force One and Air Force Two when the president and vice president visit the San Francisco Bay Area.

Speakers at the event included Google free and open-source evangelist Chris DiBona; Pascal Finette, director of Mozillas Labs; Bob Sutor, vice president of Open Systems at IBM; and Red Hat CTO Brian Stevens.

The main point was to bring open-source and government software development into the front court, so more conversations can start up around the topic. It’s well-known that the US government needs to freshen up its whole IT apparatus, and with budgets being as tight as they are, open source and the help of a volunteer community looks like an awfully good answer for some of that project building.

NASA’s open-source license ‘incompatible’

NASA’s open-source legal guru, David Wheeler of the Institute for Defense Analysis in the Department of Defense, told a group of journalists and assorted guests on Day 1 that potential contractors should know that his agency has its own open-source license and that it is “incompatible with every other known open-source software license.”

In fact, it shouldn’t be a surprise to anybody who’s ever worked with the federal government that each federal department in its massive bureaucracy has a slightly different approach to open-source software use, development and distribution as it pertains to each of their missions.

Thus, it behooves software developers who are interested in various government projects to make sure they have all the legalese in front of them before committing to work on the project — whether the job’s as small as writing a widget for a control panel or as complicated as helping out on an ultra-sensitive aerospace initiative.

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