Attention all LXers in Florida
Author |
Content |
DarrenR114
Apr 17, 2007 8:16 AM EDT |
Email your State Senator today. Call them.
Here is the email I sent to Burt Saunders:
Quoting:
Sen. Saunders,
My name is Darren R, and I am a registered voter (who does
vote) in Cape Coral.
I am writing to you today out of great concern about Senate Bill 1974
( http://www.flsenate.gov/session/index.cfm?BI_Mode=ViewBillIn...
). I understand that lobbyists for Microsoft have been speaking to the
Senate in an effort to change the wording of the bill, in effect
neutering the provisions calling for use of open standards for file
formats.
It is an outrage to me that anyone would entertain any proposal by
Microsoft, or their representatives. They cannot be trusted. This is
the same corporation who presented intentially falsified evidence in
court during their anti-trust trial back in 1999 (
http://archive.salon.com/21st/rose/1999/02/09straight.html ).
This is the same corporation that has been guilty of dirty tricks
since its inception. They didn't even actually *own* the MS-DOS that
they were offering to license to IBM back in 1980 - they were also in
negotiations with Seattle Computer Products to actually aquire Q-DOS
at the same time they were making the offer to license it to IBM,
under the name MS-DOS. The history of Microsoft is cratered with tales
of dirty dealing and outright dishonesty. Companies like Wang, Stac,
and Lotus could give you much more information if they still existed.
You can find out more from The Microsoft Collection (
http://edge-op.org/cloweth/MC.html ) by Mr. Christian Loweth.
The wording I want to see remain in the bill is:
=============================================================
28 ...(1) By July 1, 2009, the Agency for
29 Enterprise Information Technology shall develop a plan and a
30 business case analysis for the creation, exchange, and
31 maintenance of documents by state agencies in an open format
34
10:16 AM 03/28/07 s1974p-go00-pd3
Florida Senate - 2007 PROPOSED COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE
Bill No. SB 1974
Barcode 565342 585-1947A-07
1 that is capable of being:
2 (a) Published without restrictions or royalties;
3 (b) Fully and independently implemented by multiple
4 software providers on multiple platforms without any
5 intellectual property reservations for necessary technology;
6 and
7 (c) Controlled by an open industry organization having
8 a well-defined inclusive process for evolution of the
9 standard.
10 (2) Each state agency must be able to receive
11 electronic documents in an open, extensible markup
12 language-based file format for office applications and may not
13 change documents to a file format used by only one vendor.
14 (3) The Agency for Enterprise Information Technology
15 shall develop rules for state agencies to follow in
16 determining whether existing electronic documents must be
17 converted to an open, extensible markup language-based file
18 format. In developing guidelines under this subsection, the
19 agency shall consider:
20 (a) The cost of converting electronic documents;
21 (b) The need for public access to the documents; and
22 (c) The expected storage life of the documents.
=============================================================
Contrary to the portrayal by Microsoft boosters, Open Document Format
(ODF) is *NOT* a proprietary standard. It is an *international*
standard that is freely available for anyone to examine and build
software products for. The Microsoft alternative (Office Open XML -
OOXML) is a *closed* format that is not even recognised by any
government agency as a legitimate standard and cannot be fully
accessed by anyone without the purchase of a license from Microsoft.
If Microsoft were to change its formats tomorrow, and there is nothing
stopping them from doing so, then what option would government offices
have but to pay more money to Microsoft for "upgrades." It's happening
much like that today. The Open Document Format standards enable
Florida to maintain control of its destiny and its history as
contained in the documents and files it stores.
In fact, a case can be made that adopting any proprietary, closed
format, such as OOXML, is in fact a violation of the Florida Sunshine
Laws which require as much openness in government as is practical.
Adopting the closed formats of Microsoft puts the State of Florida at
the mercy of a corporation that doesn't even operate its business in
Florida. Microsoft contributes nothing to the State except maybe
campaign contributions. They operate no major business locations in
Florida and therefore contribute nothing serious in the way of sales
tax, property tax or occupational tax.
You haven't heard from me before this, because I didn't even know of
the bill's existence. Now that I do know, I will be contacting you
regularly about saving the State of Florida millions of dollars
annually with regards to Information Technology. I'm hoping that I
don't find you mesmorised by Bill Gates' billions in ill-gotten gains.
I can see no other reason you would support them.
Thank you for your time and attention to this matter. I eagerly await
your response.
Regards,
Darren R
You can find the contact information for your State Senator here:
[url=http://www.flsenate.gov/Legislators/index.cfm?Mode=Find Your Legislators&Submenu=3&Tab=legislators&CFID=35236259&CFTOKEN=55157847]http://www.flsenate.gov/Legislators/index.cfm?Mode=Find Your...[/url]
You can find the contact information for your State Congressman here:
http://www.flhouse.gov/Sections/Representatives/myrepresenta...
To find your Zip+4 to locate your representatives, the Postal Service provides this page:
http://zip4.usps.com/zip4/welcome.jsp
The House bill is number H1557:
http://www.flhouse.gov/Sections/Bills/billsdetail.aspx?BillI...
If you know anyone in FL, *please* forward this post to them.
|
alc
Apr 17, 2007 12:49 PM EDT |
Thanks for catching that. I live just outside of Orlando. |
Posting in this forum is limited to members of the group: [ForumMods, SITEADMINS, MEMBERS.]
Becoming a member of LXer is easy and free. Join Us!