This article of mine appeared at
http://opensource.com/government/10/11/open-standards-policy-india-long-successful-journey

Venky
=====

Open standards policy in India: A long, but successful journey

Posted 19 Nov 2010 by Venkatesh Hariharan (Venky) (Red Hat)

Last week, India became another major country to join the growing, global
open standards movement. After three years of intense debate and discussion,
India's Department of IT in India finalized its Policy on Open Standards for
e-Governance, joining the ranks of emerging economies like Brazil, South
Africa and others. This is a historic moment and India's Department of
Information Technology (DIT) deserves congratulations for approving a policy
that will ensure the long-term preservation of India's e-government data.

A major victory for the Open Source community is that the policy now says,
"4.1.2 The Patent claims necessary to implement the Identified Standard
shall be made available on a Royalty-Free basis for the life time of the
Standard."

This victory is really important to the open source community because open
source and open standards have a symbiotic relationship. While open source
is the freedom to modify, share and redistribute software source code, open
standards refer to the freedom to encode and decode data and network
protocols. One freedom without the other is a limited freedom.

In the Indian policy, proprietary software vendors wanted to define open
standards in such a way that even royalty-based standards would be included.
Due to stiff opposition from the free and open source software community,
Civil Society Organizations (CSOs), academia and others, this proposal was
rolled back.

Under the National e-Government Action Plan, the Indian government is
spending more than 10 billion dollars on e-governance. Some of the largest
greenfield e-governance projects are in India. For example, one project aims
to give a unique ID to more than 700 million Indians. Given the scale and
scope of e-governance in India, the storage, archival and retrieval of
e-governance data is a critical state responsibility. The standards selected
by India also have global implications because the sheer volumes of usage in
India, could make those standards the most popular standards in the world.

It must be remembered that while software changes every few years, the
underlying data (birth and death records, census data, tax data etc.) is
fairly static and might have to be preserved for centuries. If the
government stores its data in a closed format, it could permanently lose
access to that data if the owner of that format goes out of business or
refuses to provide access to that format. If the government stores its data
in proprietary formats that require royalty payments, the negotiation power
of the vendor goes up as more and more data is stored in that proprietary
format; a situation that no sovereign power should tolerate.

The Indian policy also states that a single open standard will be used for
e-governance. This clause is also extremely important. For example, if a
Central Government Ministry requests a certain set of information from state
governments in India, and each state government submits the data in a
different format, enormous amounts of time will be wasted in converting the
data into a common format. There is also risk that data could be lost in the
process of converting data from one format to another. Therefore, the usage
of a single, open standard for an application area is the backbone that will
unify these applications and enable the sharing of data across different
applications. This will drive more efficiency in e-governance enabling
policy makers and e-government practitioners to quickly pull together data
from different government departments and take more informed decisions.

It was a very tough fight and the proprietary vendors used their market
clout and strong field presence in their attempts to subvert open standards.
For example, in the previous draft policy dated 25/11/2009, the wordings of
the key section read,

"4.1.2 The essential patent claims necessary to implement the Identified
Standard should preferably be available on a Royalty-Free (no payment and no
restrictions) basis for the life time of the standard. However, if such
Standards are not found feasible and in the wider public interest, then RF
on Fair, Reasonable and Non Discriminatory terms and conditions (FRAND) or
Reasonable and Non Discriminatory terms and conditions (RAND) could be
considered."

Commenting on the final policy, veteran journalist, Glyn Moody said, “As you
can see, there is no room for doubt here, no quibbling with 'RF on Fair,
Reasonable and Non Discriminatory terms and conditions (FRAND)' or
'Reasonable and Non Discriminatory terms and conditions (RAND)' as the
earlier version suggested: just a clear and simple 'Royalty-Free basis for
the life time of the Standard'.”

So how did the Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) community succeed
against tremendous odds? Some key actions that helped us succeed are:

   1. We worked long and hard to educate the  public and the media. At
first, some journalists shied away from writing on this subject because they
found it too arcane and complex. It took over six months of talking to
mediapersons before one of the mainstream publications carried an article on
open standards. Once that happened, the dam broke and other publications
also started to write about this “arcane” subject.
   2. The academic community, especially in the prestigious Indian academic
institutions, were very supportive of open standards. Many academicians have
influential positions on government committees and their support helped.
   3. India has a very vibrant set of Civil Society Organizations. The FOSS
community worked with leading CSOs like IT For Change, Center for Internet
and Society, Knowledge Commons and others that are founded by people who
have tremendous experience in working on technology policy issues. A
loose-knit coalition was formed under the title of FOSSCOMM and some
excellent representations were made to the Indian government.
   4. Many sections within government itself were firmly in favor of open
standards and the community worked closely with them.
   5. The community made common cause with sections of industry that
supported open standards. This helped counter the pressure from industry
associations that were supporting proprietary standards.

It was a long but extremely rewarding issue to be involved in and I am
documenting this in the hope that other countries can benefit from the
experiences we gained in fighting for open standards in India.  Jai Ho! (May
you be victorious!)

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