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  • State-Adopted Documents Not Satisfactory For Assisting With Informat

    STATE-ADOPTED DOCUMENTS NOT SATISFACTORY FOR ASSISTING WITH INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES INTRODUCTION

    Noyan Tapan
    Nov 01 2006

    YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 1, NOYAN TAPAN. The results of a survey conducted
    in 14 Armenian ministries (of foreign affairs, education and science,
    finance and economy, and others), and big universities (the American
    University of Armenia, Yerevan State University, and others) show that
    the documents adopted by the state for introduction of information
    technologies are not satisfactory. Tagui Tumanyan, of the Center for
    Information Law and Policy (CILP), stated this on October 31 during
    the two-day international conference "Open Source Software Policy
    Importance for Information Society Development". According to her,
    among such documents are the concept of IT industry development and
    the strategy of e-document circulation introduction adopted by the
    Armenian government, under which pilot programs are being implemented
    in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Finance and Economy
    and some other ministries. In these programs, open source software
    packages (Linux, Open Office) are used in intradepartmental networks
    with the assistance of donor organizations. The speaker noted that 71%
    of the organizations surveyed said that they have no IT use policy,
    which, in the words of T. Tumanyan, reflects the imperfection of the
    state policy on IT use. According to 22% of those surveyed, they try to
    develop such a policy for their organizations. Only 7% said that they
    use a policy. 29% of surveyed said that 80% of software packages used
    by them are licensed, another 29% said that 30% of the packages used
    are licensed. 35% of the state governance and educational organizations
    surveyed expressed their willingnes to use open source softaware, 29%
    said that they are ready to do this, if Microsoft requires that its
    licensed software packages be used. 7% said they do not trust open
    source software in terms of safety, and 29% replied that they have
    not yet decided whether to use open source softaware or not. T.
    Tumanyan indicated the following common fact: the internal budgets
    of those surveyed did not envisage money for refreshing their software.
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