Hi John,

John McCreesh wrote:
Another example like Daniel's of yeaterday:

  BSA offers £20k piracy bounty to rat on your boss
  Three-quarters of staff say they'd drop their employer in it...
  http://newsletters.silicon.cneteu.net/t/115934/463176/183536/0/

Please send any other examples to this list. I'm keen to do something
under the strapline - "Get legal - get OpenOffice.org"

How about administrations forcing citizens to buy software from the same unique vendor ?

I am sure this is the case for other countries too, but here is the example I know:

Many public institutions and administration here in Romania, still provide electronic documents to citizens, through official websites, in the old 'de facto' standard .DOC format. This is without offering at least an alternative PDF (for non-editable docs) and ODT (for editable docs) download (like you already see on some if not all Eropean Union's sites).

More, in Romania the average monthly salary is approximately half of the cost of MSFT Office (so, too many people need to not eat 2 months to buy a copy of this software).

Under the circumstances, people who need to use those documents are tempted to use illegal copies of MS-Office. Same goes for small businesses which are forced to interact this way with authorities.

It's administration's fault because they are not enforcing yet the usage of open standards in administration. Due to low salaries here, usage of illegal copies of software is encouraged this way.


Some people say: Hey, luckily there is OpenOffice.org which can open those documents and save them in the same format (and this goes in the line of get legal - if this solution spreads well across population).

But what if OOo and similar solutions did not existed (like it was since long before SO5 and OOo) ?


In other words:
1. this message about getting legal is good for citizens from this perspective too

2. we could gather links to public administration sites in countries still offering only .DOC formats to citizens and index them as examples of bad conduct. Forcing them to offer an alternative non proprietary file format, also brings OOo/SO under their attention. (How about online petitioning respective govts to offer ODT alternative downloads ? :)


I'd like to hear from other countries too if there are similar situations.


Best,
Cristian



Thanks - John



--
Cristian DRIGA

==
OpenOffice.org Romanian Native Language Project Lead
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
ro.openoffice.org
www.openoffice.org


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