ΕΕΛ/ΛΑΚ - Λίστες Ταχυδρομείου

Greens call for end of Microsoft monopoly in the European Institutions

...
At a press conference in the European Parliament today, the Greens
called for an end to the Microsoft monopoly in the European
Institutions. The Greens along with the organisation Open Forum Europe
(1) presented a petition against the current situation.

Green MEP David Hammerstein, spokesperson for the Greens in the
Petitions Committee said:

"The European Parliament must practice what it preaches. We support
the "Open Parliament" petition because we believe the current
situation of a Microsoft monopoly has a negative impact on
participatory democracy, innovation and competition. Greens reject the
idea of forcing citizens to use the products of one single company
when communicating with their MEPs.  A level playing field for all
economic players, technical neutrality and interoperability are all
basic principles of the European Union that must be defended both in
the European Court and in the Public Procurement practice of EU
institutions themselves.

Therefore, we call on the European Institutions, in particular the
European Parliament, to end its "lock in" of the information
technology system of the Parliament that is not interoperable with
other Information Communication Technology systems and is based on
closed standards. While we applaud the firm record of the European
Commission in defence of a fair market for software in Europe, we
believe the public procurement practice of the EU institutions
regarding software is in clear contradiction with EU objectives and
legislation. Our daily practice must be coherent with our position in
the European Court."

Green MEP Eva Lichtenberger, vice-president of the Green Group in the EP added:

"We are confronted with a very problematic situation on the Web and
also concerning hardware: Monopolies are gaining ever more influence -
the latest news about Google taking over DoubleClick and a possible
absorption of Yahoo by Microsoft are two such examples. Monopolies
tend to loose flexibility and in the end to block innovation. The
Commission is right to take action against them. The situation is
worrying in terms of consumer protection but might also threaten
democratic structures in general. If we move towards an Internet
controlled by "Microhoo" and "GoogleClick" that could end up in the
hands of media-monopolists like Murdoch or Berlusconi, we might loose
more than economic possibilities and leisure tools."
...
http://www.openparliament.eu/content/greens-call-for-end-of-microsoft-monopoly-in-the-european-institutions/


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