Tim Lee points to “The Toyota Recall and the Case for Open, Auditable Source Code.”
Knowing how the technology in our cars work is not just a safety issue, but a privacy issue—and maybe even a tax issue.
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Tim Lee points to “The Toyota Recall and the Case for Open, Auditable Source Code.”
Knowing how the technology in our cars work is not just a safety issue, but a privacy issue—and maybe even a tax issue.
There was some buzz earlier this year when the White House used the free, open-source Drupal content management platform for Recovery.gov. Now the administration’s marquee Web site Whitehouse.gov will be using it.
The AP story linked just above does a good job of recounting the benefits of open source in this application: chiefly, low cost and high security.
Arnold Kling wrote recently on the Library of Economics and Liberty blog relating the work Elinor Ostrom did to win the Nobel prize in economics to how the Internet enables private provision of public goods—no regulation, little to no centralized authority at all.
Open source is nothing if not an example of that, and it’s good to see this use of open source joining many others across the big, beautiful Internet.

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