Siem Reap (Cambodia), Sept 3 -- Twenty countries joined a three-day Asia 
Pacific consultation on Free and Open Source Software, which ended Saturday 
evening on an optimistic note which saw non-proprietorial software playing an 
increasingly important role in this talent-rich, resource-poor region.

In a historic region, home to 12th century temple structures at a town called  
Siem Reap, Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) campaigners, supporters, 
funders and officials from across Asia debated the pros and cons of FOSS versus 
proprietory software. The focus was on development paradigms of FOSS, open 
content, e-governance, capacity building, localisation, and more. Participants 
included techies, government officials, educators, professionals using and 
supporting FOSS, and others.

Free software can be used, copied, studied, modified and distributed. It was 
built by hackers collaborating across cyberspace, starting in the 'eighties, 
and today is being seen as a boon for the countries of the Asia-Pacific, in 
view of the otherwise high and unaffordable global prices of software.

Cambodian deputy prime minister Sok An, in a speech delivered on his behalf, 
argued that Free and Open Source Software could help Cambodia to have a "lot of 
savings in license fees", make software readily available locally and reduce 
usage costs drastically, eliminate software piracy, and enable Cambodian 
students to closely study the software code and "understand its behaviour".

This event was sponsored by UNDP's Asia-Pacific Development Information 
Programme, and co-sponsored by the US-headquartered Intel Corporation. Local 
hosts were Cambodia's National ICT Development Authority (NiDA) and the Open 
Forum of Cambodia.

Shahid Akhtar, the Pakistani-born Canada-educated head of the Bangkok-based 
UNDP Asia-Pacific Development Information Programme (APDIP), made a short but 
pointed presentation at the launch of this event. 

Many developing countries are caught up in a vicious circle of poverty and 
piracy, said APDIP coordinator Shahid Akhtar, during the conference. "They are 
too poor to buy proprietory software, resulting in 'piracy' levels of 90% or 
more in some countries (of the Asia-Pacific region)," he argued. Then, 
countries cannot clean their act on 'piracy' because they are poor. 

"Free and Open Source Software provides a way out of this vicious cycle. It 
also increases the user's control. It also provides a framework for
promoting intellectual capital, and achieving the United Nations' Millenium 
Development Goals (MDGs), which were accepted by countries across the globe", 
Akhtar commented.

Richard Stallman, the founder of the two-decades-old Free Software Foundation, 
said at the end of the conference: "People here represent a broad spectrum in 
beliefs and their goals. There are people from both the Free Software and Open 
Source movements. It looks like we can work together and make programs that 
ensure users can be in control of the software they use. I've seen a lot of 
useful things come up here."

Building software capacities was also seen as important in a world where this 
form of FOSS software -- which can be used, copied, studied, modified and 
redistributed -- is trying to make its dent in schools, universities, IT 
education, government policies and strategies of global agencies. 

Localisation -- or translating software into local languages -- was another 
issue strongly discussed. There were interesting issues that came up about 
localisation of software into the Khmer language.

One of the suggestions to come up was that FOSS needed its "global ambassador" 
to promote its case.
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