Supongo que supondrá un avance interesante en la gestión de contenidos web:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/10/24/AR2009102401266.html

*White House opens Web site programming to public
*

Saturday, October 24, 2009 3:37 PM

WASHINGTON -- A programming overhaul of the White House's Web site has set
the tech world abuzz. For low-techies, it's a snooze - you won't notice a
thing.

The online-savvy administration on Saturday switched to open-source code for
http://www.whitehouse.gov- meaning the programming language is written in
public view, available for public use and able for people to edit.

"We now have a technology platform to get more and more voices on the site,"
White House new media director Macon Phillips told The Associated Press
hours before the new site went live on Saturday. "This is state-of-the-art
technology and the government is a participant in it."

White House officials described the change as similar to rebuilding the
foundation of a building without changing the street-level appearance of the
facade. It was expected to make the White House site more secure - and the
same could be true for other administration sites in the future.

"Security is fundamentally built into the development process because the
community is made up of people from all across the world, and they look at
the source code from the very start of the process until it's deployed and
after," said Terri Molini of Open Source for America, an interest group that
has pushed for more such programs.

Having the public write code may seem like a security risk, but it's just
the opposite, experts inside and outside the government argued. Because
programmers collaborate to find errors or opportunities to exploit Web code,
the final product is therefore more secure.

For instance, instead of a dozen administration programmers trying to find
errors, thousands of programmers online constantly are refining the programs
and finding potential pitfalls.

It will be a much faster way to change the programming behind the Web site.
When the model was owned solely by the government, federal contractors would
have to work through the reams of code to troubleshoot it or upgrade it.
Now, it can be done in the matter of days and free to taxpayers.

Obama's team, which harnessed the Web to win an electoral landslide in 2008
and raise millions, has been working toward the shift since it took office
Jan. 20 with a White House site based on technology purchased at the end of
President George W. Bush's administration.

It didn't let the tech-savvy Obama team build the new online platform it
wanted. For instance, 60,000 watched Obama speech to a joint session of
Congress on health care. One-third of those stayed online to talk with
administration officials about the speech. But there are limits; the
programming used to power that was built for Facebook, the popular social
networking Web site.

"We want to improve the tools used by thousands of people who come to
WhiteHouse.gov to engage with White House officials, and each other, in
meaningful ways," Phillips said.

It's also a nod to Obama's pledge to make government more open and
transparent. Aides joked that it doesn't get more transparent than showing
the world a code that their Web site is based on.

Under the open-source model, thousands of people pick it apart
simultaneously and increase security. It comes more cheaply than computer
coding designed for a single client, such as the Executive Office of the
President. It gives programmers around the world a chance to offer upgrades,
additions or tweaks to existing programs that the White House could - or
could not - include in daily updates.

Yet the system - known as Drupal - alone won't make it more secure on its
own, cautioned Ari Schwartz of the Center for Democracy and Technology.

"The platform that they're moving to is just something to hang other things
on," he said. "They need to keep up-to-date with the latest security
patches."


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