Guido Stevens: Public Sector & Open Source: Natural Allies

published Nov 27, 2024

Talk by Guido Stevens at the Plone conference 2024 in Brasilia.

Link to talk information on Plone conference website.

The worldwide Crowdstrike outage on Windows computers this year: crazy how such a thing can happen. I have better quality control than that! How resilient is our tech infrastructure?

What is the point of writing code if the world is going to pieces?

A short history of the internet revolution. The Berkeley software was started in the sixties. It grew a lot, in the nineties Web 1.0 started. Metcalfe's law: the value of each new connection increases.

Mandelbrot wrote The (mis)behavior of markets. From bell curve to power law or the long tail: a few people get very rich and most people get very poor. That happens in networked connections. People are more geared towards linear connections.

Web 2.0, in the 2000s, went from a read-only web, to a read-write web.

Trump, Brexit, Covid, they all rocked the world.

"Post-truth is pre-fascism", writes Timothy Snyder in On tyranny. You should read this.

Web 3.0 is skipped and we just have AI. AI will swamp the web with nonsense, and no one can find your content anymore.

I had higher hopes, too. I did not sign up for this dystopia. I have an MBA in environmental economics, done OSS web development for decades, am on the Plone Foundation, and founder of Quaive.

I wrote a book Systems of intent: Open source (Plone) plus knowledge management = Quaive. Quaive changes the Plone UI. It shows an activity stream, documents, news, personally configurable dashboard. It enables a shift in the company from top-down to bottom-up. Technology can also cause problems. But is technology the problem? Or is capitalism the problem? Resistance is not futile.

Chaos theory, butterfly effect: small acts can have huge effects. You and I are all complex individuals, complex systems. It is a shift from a clockwork universe to an alive universe. Emergence: on a higher level something more happens than what you can imagine looking at the lower levels.

Adrienne Maree Brown: Emergent strategy. Adaptive: constant change. Move at the speed of trust.

Principles:

  • Local autonomy. Have control over your technology.
  • Strive for technological excellence. Our stuff needs to be good and secure.
  • Networked agility: how we cooperate and coordinate effectively.
  • Community sharing: celebrate that we are not alone.

The clients that use Quaive may not be interested in our GPK license, but they do care about those principles.

Asterix: the whole of France is occupied? No, one corner not. Same now: Half of Belgium (the Walloon region) uses Plone in basically all their towns, supported by IMIO. We got into an agreement when I visited personally.

Technical detail: using Docker, IMIO was able to host 8 sites on a server where we previously could only host one site.

Think global, act local. Open source is not only free as in beer, but free as in freedom. The community makes this possible: Free as in community. Public sector and open source are natural allies.