Defense Department sets up its own SourceForge

  • Thread starter The poster formerly known as 'The Poster Formerly
  • Start date
T

The poster formerly known as 'The Poster Formerly

I wonder with the release of Win7 and the fact it's a better product
than Vista, which way the DOD will swing next?

********************************************************

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13505_3-10154053-16.html?tag=nl.e703

The dam holding back U.S. federal adoption of open source just burst
with the introduction of the Defense Department's Forge.mil.

Forge.mil is an open-source project repository built in the image of
SourceForge.net, Federal Computer Week reported Friday.

Despite being based on SourceForge's technology, Forge.mil has one
significant difference: security. As David Mihelcic, chief technology
officer for the Defense Information Systems Agency, told Federal
Computer Week, the Department of Defense's code repository has been
"upgraded to meet DOD security requirements," with smart cards used to
provide log-in credentials.

There are only three open-source projects hosted at Forge.mil so far,
and it's initially restricted to the Defense Department's technology
community, but I suspect this number will soon increase as various
federal agencies discover it and ask to collaborate on code through it.
It's also a new way for vendors to participate in Defense Department
projects, as Mihelcic noted about one project, which is designed to
automate server configuration:

"Our intern had to stand up 50 Linux machines in a lab and he said,
'Boy I don't want to do this by hand; why can't I use Bastille to do
this for me?'" Mihelcic said. "He looked at Bastille and saw it couldn't
do all the things he needed, so he started an open-source project. He
got folks like Red Hat to jump in and participate."

All of the code is open for public view, though only those with the
right Defense Department credentials can edit or contribute to the
projects. As the public sees the code, however, it's almost certain to
lead to individuals wanting to contribute to the code.

The Defense Department, which has been pushing hard to get involved in
open source for some time as a consumer, is now involved as a developer.
In just a few years, open source has gone from being "risky" to one of
the best ways to mitigate risk.

--
"Software is like sex, it's better when it's free."
- Linus Torvalds

DRM and unintended consequences:
http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/security/?p=435&tag=nl.e101
 
A

Alias

The poster formerly known as 'The Poster Formerly Known as Nina DiBoy'
wrote:
I wonder with the release of Win7 and the fact it's a better product
than Vista, which way the DOD will swing next?

********************************************************

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13505_3-10154053-16.html?tag=nl.e703

The dam holding back U.S. federal adoption of open source just burst
with the introduction of the Defense Department's Forge.mil.

Forge.mil is an open-source project repository built in the image of
SourceForge.net, Federal Computer Week reported Friday.

Despite being based on SourceForge's technology, Forge.mil has one
significant difference: security. As David Mihelcic, chief technology
officer for the Defense Information Systems Agency, told Federal
Computer Week, the Department of Defense's code repository has been
"upgraded to meet DOD security requirements," with smart cards used to
provide log-in credentials.

There are only three open-source projects hosted at Forge.mil so far,
and it's initially restricted to the Defense Department's technology
community, but I suspect this number will soon increase as various
federal agencies discover it and ask to collaborate on code through it.
It's also a new way for vendors to participate in Defense Department
projects, as Mihelcic noted about one project, which is designed to
automate server configuration:

"Our intern had to stand up 50 Linux machines in a lab and he said,
'Boy I don't want to do this by hand; why can't I use Bastille to do
this for me?'" Mihelcic said. "He looked at Bastille and saw it couldn't
do all the things he needed, so he started an open-source project. He
got folks like Red Hat to jump in and participate."

All of the code is open for public view, though only those with the
right Defense Department credentials can edit or contribute to the
projects. As the public sees the code, however, it's almost certain to
lead to individuals wanting to contribute to the code.

The Defense Department, which has been pushing hard to get involved in
open source for some time as a consumer, is now involved as a developer.
In just a few years, open source has gone from being "risky" to one of
the best ways to mitigate risk.

Good news.

Alias
 

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