• dwazou@jlai.luOP
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    17 days ago

    To be clear. This is a government agency endorsing the software as safe and effective. So bureaucrats and employees can’t be reprimanded they use them.

    This isn’t the French Prime Minister announcing the country will cancel Microsoft Office subscriptions and build a fund to support FOSS projects. Gimp has nowhere near the ressources they actually need.

    • mke@programming.dev
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      17 days ago

      It’s still nice! A bit of recognition, legitimacy, and although it’s not funding, it might be a small step towards it. I see many great works, that stand tall on their own. More eyes will only make them shine even brighter.

      Thanks, Fr*nce.

    • Jolteon@lemmy.zip
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      17 days ago

      Haven’t they also been trying to put back doors into everything for the last decade?

      • themurphy@lemmy.ml
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        17 days ago

        EU is democratic, which also means everyone can propose a law. Never have EU put a backdoor into anything, but its true that there have been law proposals for it.

        Never voted through.

  • twen@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    The SILL About page translated explains the list :

    https://code.gouv.fr/sill/readme

    Why this catalog?

    The socle interministériel de logiciels libres (SILL) is the reference catalog of open-source software recommended by the French government for use throughout the administration.

    This catalog helps administrations find their way around the open-source software they are encouraged to use, in line with Article 16 of the French Law for a Digital Republic

  • blind3rdeye@lemm.ee
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    17 days ago

    The full list: https://code.gouv.fr/sill/list

    Hold on. That page does not list VLC or KeePass. Is there more info about this other than the list? Or is the info in the title of this post incorrect?

    [edit]

    I see now. The page does not list VLC or KeePass, but those two both do come up if you put them into the search box. The software listed on the page is a very long list, but it is apparently on the ‘most popular’ stuff - not the entire list. (Although it is strange to see a heap of niche stuff, and stuff I’ve never heard of on the ‘most popular’ list while VLC doesn’t make the cut.)

    I’m not sure this list is a very strong endorsement by the French Government. It seems to just be listing free software options, and then asking other people to sign up to say which ones they use.

  • Brkdncr@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    The first thing any government should do is move away from ms office.

    The 2nd thing they should do is fund and contribute to a distro and begin the transition from windows.

  • realitista@lemm.ee
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    17 days ago

    EU governments are probably the only path to mainstream adoption for desktop Linux. If they all did it and invested in the features they needed, it could provide a valid option for mainstream office use.

  • Aatube@kbin.melroy.org
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    17 days ago

    Redis is also on the list, but not Valkey. Gitea is on the list, but not Forgejo. Still nice to see governments endorsing the open-source-ish software they know and FOSS principles, though!

    • Tja@programming.dev
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      17 days ago

      To be fair, I know redis and gitea (barely, gitlab is way more popular) and not the other two. Enterprise support and name recognition are quite important for government usage.

      • Aatube@kbin.melroy.org
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        16 days ago

        Valkey was created recently as Redis changed their license, having clauses which made the user choose between being “discriminatory against users of the software that use proprietary software within their stack, as the license requires the open-sourcing of every part interacting with the service, which under these circumstances might not be possible” or being non-commercial. Forgejo was created when Gitea decided to go the JetBrains route a few years ago. It’s since absorbed Gitea’s clout.

          • Aatube@kbin.melroy.org
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            16 days ago

            Yeah, and you have to pay for that. Lots of open source software have enterprise support and usage limit licenses but having to pay for something isn’t open source. I am personally ambivalent at non-commercial licenses but I agree that the restriction against using proprietary software with Redis in commercial usage is kinda bad.

            • Tja@programming.dev
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              16 days ago

              Of course you have to pay for a commercial license, it’s in the name. Development, tooling, support, etc, all costs money.

              I like the distinction. If you want to profit from open source, make your code open source. If not, pay up.

              • Aatube@kbin.melroy.org
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                4 days ago

                Sorry, I didn’t see the notification for some reason. The SSPL would prohibit people from running Redis from Windows, as Windows is proprietary. That forces them to use the source-available RSAL.

                • Tja@programming.dev
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                  4 days ago

                  I don’t think that’s correct. It maybe prohibits people from building a service to offer redis to third parties on Windows, but you can run redis in your stack on whatever OS you want, as long as what you are building is not “redis as a service”. So any end-user SaaS that just uses redis as a cache is not bound to section 13.

                  And even if you built a redis as a service, the operating system is not explicitly mentioned in the license, so it would be for a lawyer to say whether that’s required…

    • Kuma@lemmy.world
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      17 days ago

      It changes the UI text of the website, such as filters, titles, and sorting options, but not the descriptions.

      I can’t decide which is worse, a functioning language switch that never included English for the descriptions (which is the only text I actually need translated) or a broken language switch. The way it switches languages is also quite odd, as if it’s asking, ‘Are you sure?’"