Open Source for America to Host Discussion on Government & Private Sector Collaboration at GOSCON

Our friends at Open Source for America will host a focused discussion on the legal, ethical, and logistic questions around government-private sector collaboration. Gunnar Hellekson, Co-Chair of Open Source for America and one of our esteemed speakers for GOSCON 2010, has issued the following invitation. We're passing it along to the community so folks can join in the discussion.

Friends,

Over the last couple years, many of us involved with open source in government have had discussions about what it means for citizen coders to become involved in state, local and federal efforts. There are all kinds of legal, ethical, and logistics questions that haven't been answered. Everyone seems to be solving them individually, but it's not well-coordinated. This means that agencies who want to engage developers are wasting valuable time trying to figure out the "right way" to work with the public.

The domain is large and already bearing fruit; I think we're all enthusiastic about CivicCommons, CrisisCommons, and a host of public service oriented application development contests in many major cities.

On the other side, the Federal government is putting its toe deeper in the Open Source waters, recently making agreements with SourceForge and other web-based developer services. The GSA has announced its intention to launch forge.gov, inspired by forge.mil. The VA is exploring how to open source their VistA electronic health record system. The list goes on.

It seems now is a good time to bring together the disparate voices, various citizen coders and stakeholders in both online and in person venues to determine what we expect from the Federal Government. We anticipate a series of open workshops and online discussions leading to a more engaged developer community, articulation of what the Federal Government needs from us and what we'll need in return. We'll want to turn so e of these ideas into practice during a code-a-thon if we find it make sense as a result of our discussions.

Why should you care: the government literally spends billions of dollars a year on creating new software and source code. As we've seen with code bases made available to the public (VA Vista, FalconView, caBIG, NASA WorldWind, etc.), pushing them to be open has huge benefits both for the government and citizen developer.

We'll kick off this effort at the upcoming GOSCON 2010 Conference in Portland, Oregon, October 27-28th. We'll have our first discussion @0800 Oct. 28th and continue dialogue throughout the conference. Other folks have also approached about the potential of continuing the discussion in Washington DC in November/December.

Join the online discussion now: http://groups.google.com/group/forgegov

Tag your Tweets and blog posts on this topic with the hastag #forgegov.

Follow @goscon and @opengov on Twitter for more updates about the efforts.