this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2024
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Switzerland has recently enacted a law requiring its government to use open-source software (OSS) and disclose the source code of any software developed by or for the public sector. According to ZDNet, this “public body, public code” approach makes government operations more transparent while increasing security and efficiency. Such a move would likely fail in the U.S. but is becoming increasingly common throughout Europe.

According to Switzerland’s new “Federal Law on the Use of Electronic Means for the Fulfillment of Government Tasks” (EMBAG), government agencies must use open-source software throughout the public sector.

The new law allows the codifies allowing Switzerland to release its software under OSS licenses. Not just that; it requires the source code be released that way “unless the rights of third parties or security-related reasons would exclude or restrict this.”

In addition to mandating the OSS code, EMBAG also requires Swiss government agencies to release non-personal and non-security-sensitive government data to the public. Calling this Open Government Data, this aspect of the new law contributes to a dual “open by default” approach that should allow for easier reuse of software and data while also making governance more transparent.

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[–] BakedCookie@lemmy.dbzer0.com 8 points 3 months ago

Eh, really depends on the use case. For example if you want to edit something distributed in a psd format gimp won't even tell you something got imported wrong. So the file will import but will look wrong.

And then there's the UI. It just refuses to follow any current standards. Whether that's a good or bad thing depends on the user.

Personally I use affinity photo. Works for my use case and is a one time purchase product, which for me is ok.