"The German government has launched a new Open Source software project called openDesk, which aims to reduce the country’s dependency on proprietary software vendors and support transparency and interoperability.
openDesk is a collection of Open Source software modules that are important for day-to-day work in the public sector, such as text creation, file collaboration, project management, email, calendar and messaging."https://opensource.net/governments-adopt-open-source-sovereignty/
@janvlug I am working on the openDesk project and couldn't be happier of my team!
@jaimeconds Great! Can you recommend some more places to read about this? In particular, explanations of why the German government decided to do this and how they are doing it. I hope we can get something like this going in Sweden as well, and I think it can help a lot to show it is already being done in other countries. Do you already collaborate with other EU countries around this?
@jaimeconds Thank you!
> digital sovereignty for German
> and French schools, as students
> data should not be on Google or
> Microsoft clouds.
Very important issue, I think not only regarding the data but also what students learn, students should learn things that are not tied to a certain big tech company's products. The interests of a healthy society is very different from the interests of those huge companies. We need a free society. Free software, free society! 🙂