this post was submitted on 05 Apr 2024
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If governments actually employed most of the development teams who build their services, and cut out most of the private middlemen consultants, managers, sales staff etc they could 1) build an engineering and cybersecurity capability without surveillance capitalism, focused on data security and privacy 2) save money 4) create productivity multipliers by unifying and sharing code for common functions across governments around the world 5) return our tax dollars to us through FOSS software that benefits us, instead of enriching big tech corporations who are already richer and more powerful than most nation states.
For example, covid tracking apps — instead of every dumb cunt government paying tens/hundreds of millions for consultants to reinvent the wheel or reskin someone else's code, they could have had in house devs coordinate common FOSS codebases and collectively saved 80+% of the cost. This is the same for most standard or common services using bespoke or proprietary software and systems.
Politicians are criminally corrupt idiots though, so they'll continue enriching big tech and surveillance capitalism at the expense of civilisation.
You mean this? They've been working on it for a while, this is about adopting stuff they've already done.
Germany's is open source. Developed by Telekom and SAP, most of the money didn't go towards development (it's simple enough of an app, after all) but infrastructure and end-user support. You can't just tell random FLOSS people to deal with 80 million DAUs.
Yes. I'm aware there are a few who appear to be moving in the right direction, but I have strong doubts it'll become more than an outlier.
You've got my vote
Example: https://www.theregister.com/2024/04/05/local_council_tech_struggles/
Maybe if they collectively owned a software company it would be more responsive.