Right, so keep it simple and just open source it
Comment on We tested a transport app that cost the public £4m against Google Maps
CannonFodder@lemmy.world 2 days agoPublic money of one jurisdiction shouldn’t necessarily pay for things so a different jurisdiction gets them for free. It’s an opportunity for the city to generate some revenue to offset other costs. Or it could be structured as a non-profit effort to develop open source, paid by ongoing grants from a number of cities that would use it - that would be nice, but difficult to orchestrate .
20dogs@feddit.uk 1 day ago
VeganCheesecake@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 day ago
See my replay to the other comment.
I really do believe that the most sensible way to formalise it is just requiring publically funded code to be open source. Requires less complexity than co-op, and works out the same if enough countries opt-in.
See this as an example:
github.com/Governikus/AusweisApp/
…europa.eu/…/european-union-public-licence_en