Tory leader David Cameron has said that the Conservatives would avoid
large-scale central IT systems such as the
NHS National Programme for
IT.
Cameron also praised open-source development, saying it would help smaller
companies grow.
“We will follow private sector best practice which is to introduce open
standards that enables IT contracts to be split up into modular components," he
said.
"So never again could there be projects like Labour's hubristic NHS
supercomputer,” - an reference to the National Programme.
Cameron said the Tories would create a level playing field for open source
software in IT purchasing and open up the procurement system to small and
innovative companies.
Addressing the National Endowment for
Science, Technology and Arts in London Cameron said the reason for
government IT failures was a desire to run large "closed" systems that "reduce
competitive pressures and lead to higher risks and higher costs."
Cameron talked about open-source models such as Linux as a prime example of
how liberating information could be beneficial to the economy.
Much of the speech by Cameron looked at how a more open approach to
information could reform public services - the same topic covered by minister
for transformational government Tom Watson in a speech earlier this week –
prompting a disagreement between the parties over who came up with the ideas
first.
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