If Microsoft chairman Bill Gates thought he had worries about open source stealing 
market share from Microsoft in the Australian public sector, Malaysia has just proved 
to be a much bigger problem.

Less than a month after Gates' high-profile roadshow through Asia, the Malaysian 
government has mandated the in-house deployment of open source software (OSS) in what 
may well be the biggest national backlash against proprietary software in the world, 
according to a report in Malaysia's national daily newspaper.

The technology section of The Star Online reports all Malaysian government technology 
procurement will be required to give preference to open source software under a new 
Malaysian Public Sector Open Source Software Masterplan.

The report quotes the Masterplan as saying, "Where advantages and disadvantages of OSS 
and proprietary software are equal, preference shall be given to OSS."

Chief secretary to the Malaysian government, Tan Sri Samsudin Osman is also quoted as 
saying that ICT suppliers will have to follow the government's lead in light of the 
new government commitment to the plan.

Osman was speaking at a government-sponsored Open Source Competency Centre, which is 
aimed at getting Malaysian OSS skill sets up and running.

Outwardly, the plan appears nothing short of bold with targets set for public sector 
suppliers as early as next year.

The Star quotes government sources as saying 60 % of all new servers must "be able to 
run OSS operating systems" along with "30 % of office infrastructure" such as email, 
DNS and proxy servers .

In schools, 20 % of computer labs will be required to run OSS applications.

In Australia, the Australian Government Information Management Office has also 
revealed it is preparing an open source procurement guide to assist its internal IT 
buyers to evaluate needs and systems before making purchasing decisions.

However, the Australian document will not be binding government policy and will allow 
users to make their own decisions in line with value for money and best practice. 

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