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India thinks Western software technology is 'bugged'

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India thinks Western software technology is 'bugged'
Wants its own proprietary operating system


By Spencer Dalziel
Tue Dec 21 2010, 12:58

India is to develop its own proprietary operating system (OS) rather than use "bugged" Western systems.

The Indian government is still intent on developing its own operating system so it can own the source code and architecture rather than rely on Western technologies.

Dr V K Saraswat, scientific adviser to India's Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) said that the Indian OS is needed to protect India's economic framework. While we admire India's decision to write its own OS, the decision seems to be driven by paranoia about Western technology.

Saraswat said earlier this month that Western hardware and software are likely to be "bugged". By bugged, he doesn't mean that Windows is chock full of unsecure hackable exploits. Saraswat specifically thinks that our technology is bugged so we can spy on India.

"Unfortunately even today we import most of these items. They are coming from various countries. So there is possibility that these hardware parts are already bugged," said Saraswat.

"So we have started doing design and development of our own hardware. We are trying to build it in our own country," he said.

"Second part is software. Most of us use commercial software available in the country. We have got Windows and some use Linux. These software packages are likely to be bugged."

Aside from overseeing development of the OS, Saraswat's main role is looking after India's missile defence system, so paranoia and security are second nature. At the time Saraswat made the OS announcement, The INQUIRER reported that the Indian government had been leaning on RIM so it could access communications on Blackberry smartphones.

The concerns about Western expansionism and spying are clear. But lumping open source technology with closed source software systems is surprising, given the popularity of open source projects in India.

In 2008 free software founder, Richard Stallman popped over to India to see a new Indian open source operating system called E-Swecha being rolled out in educational faculties. The project was overseen by the Free Software Foundation of India, but Stallman said the government wasn't chipping in.

India also has another, bigger open source OS that it built up from Debian Linux. This year, the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing developed Bharat Operating System Solutions (BOSS), a GNU/Linux distribution with advanced server features. :cheers::cheers:

Unfortunately, India didn't want to use BOSS as a foundation to roll out a nationwide government stamped OS. Instead, it's sticking to designing something from scratch with 50 scientists and IT specialists located in New Delhi and Bangalore spearheading a national effort to create the OS.

As we've said, we have nothing but respect for India's attempt to control its own technological destiny. But, if its products, specifically its OS, are developed out of a culture of paranoia and fear, then everything we have to offer gets tarred with the same brush.

The philosophies behind closed and open source software aren't even in the same postcode. Despite that, it seems that India is unwisely denying itself access to the benefits that open source technologies can provide.


Read more: India thinks western software technology is 'bugged'- The Inquirer
The Inquirer - Computer hardware news and downloads. Visit the download store today.
 
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The heading of the thread might send jitters to F-16 lovers across the border..
 
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the western software may be bugged but the Indian software dysfunctional..things like windows vista and whole of MS 07/08 product line comes to mind where everything failed.

India may go on the footsteps of Russia on developing its own flavors of open sources. Currently the most secure distribution of Linux comes from Russia. But with no considerable software industry of its own the "out source" babus are very unlikely to break any records. Also the profit driven mentality of growing indian youth is a road block here..how many are willing to contribute to open source?

Let us lay out the rule of thumb that anything developed on the linux or unix kernel is technically not "indigenous".
 
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India thinks Western software technology is 'bugged'
Wants its own proprietary operating system

If government wants whole systems to be Made in India, then its fine but they should be more appropriate in their use of language when dealing with such affairs. Calling systems to be bugged would be politically incorrect, they could have said they want their systems to be more secure. Also it would have been better being outsourced to some Indian research lab in Indian Institute of Technologies/IISc in collaboration with Indian IT companies rather than putting DRDO to the work. DRDO should concentrate on core defence related work.
 
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Heights of stupidity. Thank god that most of these grand announcements are nothing much but Vapourware.

The source for Linux/Gnome/Xorg/GNU Tools are available right there. If these guys are so concerned about security, why don't they spend resources and fixing bugs in the open source variants so that every one benefits instead of trying to re-invent the wheel.
 
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Heights of stupidity. Thank god that most of these grand announcements are nothing much but Vapourware.

The source for Linux/Gnome/Xorg/GNU Tools are available right there. If these guys are so concerned about security, why don't they spend resources and fixing bugs in the open source variants so that every one benefits instead of trying to re-invent the wheel.

Its not about re-inventing the wheel, Operating system research is still open to debate as there is no such thing called ultimate operating system. Its good thing to try to develop new kinds of OS as hardware technologies change but it should be for creation of something better, hope they do get things right instead of having a more screwed up OS than what they are using.
 
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Its not about re-inventing the wheel, Operating system research is still open to debate as there is no such thing called ultimate operating system. Its good thing to try to develop new kinds of OS as hardware technologies change but it should be for creation of something better, hope they do get things right instead of having a more screwed up OS than what they are using.

Yes. I agree with all your points but what do they mean when they say that they want a new OS because the existing ones could be bugged? Aren't there easier ways of ensuring that they are not bugged?

Almost all security problems affecting Operating systems are caused by software bugs not because the OS producer had a back door on them. How do these guys intend on getting rid of Software bugs?
 
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kitane decades main banega???


Nahi banega aur bana bhi to tujhe kaise najar ayegga ??? teri najro pe to hate india ki chaddar chaddi hai ....zhandu....:rofl:
 
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I think GOI is not looking for only OS but entire IT infra to make sure that there will be no loop holes.
DRDO’s concern is true and we should not follow all designs, standards and chip level architecture which west follows.
We should develop our own standards, new protocols and design parameters for at least defense related stuff.
 
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Thinks? In software and computer science world all things are based on facts. If a government thinks that the OS is bugged then they may test it in every way that compromises the privacy of a system. One cannot stand up and simple say that this software is faulty because he/she thinks it is. Besides, they cannot get into the OS market so easily.
 
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