-
We're very happy to have digital minister
of Taiwan, who's come to our DebConf '18.
-
I don't even have to tell him what to say,
because he knows what to do.
-
[applause]
-
Thank you, everyone, happy to be here.
-
To somewhat compensate the lack of Q&A time
in the previous session, we will start with
-
the Q&A.
-
If you have any device connected to the Internet,
please go to this website.
-
It's called slido.com, S-L-I-D-O.com.
-
Once you're on this website, you will be asked
to enter a number.
-
Without the hash, it's just seven two eight,
or today's date.
-
Once you enter the three digits, you can press
join or a small, green button.
-
Then you will be dropped into this anonymous
or pseudonymous chat channel.
-
Here, feel free to ask me anything, like literally
anything.
-
If you see other people's questions that you
would also like to see me answer, you can
-
just press like.
-
The questions with the most number of likes
will float to the top on this projection here.
-
For the rest of this hour, I guess, the next
15 minutes, I'll begin with a short introduction,
-
maybe 15 minutes, maybe 20 minutes, about
my work in the Taiwan administration in the
-
public digital innovation space, the PDIS,
as we're seeing here.
-
Meanwhile, as I'm talking, feel free to ask
me any and all questions, which will show
-
up on the phone here.
-
Once there's sufficient number of questions,
then I will switch right back to Slido.
-
My current favorite programming language is
text/plain character set UTF-8.
-
[laughs] It's one of the most versatile programming
language there is.
-
I'll explore that more in my talk.
-
I'm sure it's your favorite programming language
too.
-
[laughs] Let's get started.
-
Unlike many people working on democracy today,
I'm an optimist when it comes to democracy
-
and especially Internet democracy.
-
This strange condition began when I was 15
years old.
-
That was 1996.
-
I discovered that the future of human knowledge
and indeed future of democracy is happening
-
on the web and my education in school is a
little out of date.
-
I told my teachers that I found this wonderful
constitutional democracy called Debian -- no,
-
really, I did -- on the Internet, where people
use Condorcet voting methods and these very
-
advanced algorithms and policy development
process and so on.
-
I want to quit school and begin my education
on the World Wide Web.
-
Surprisingly, my teachers were very reasonable
people and they all agreed with it.
-
After that, I just dropped out of high school
and started a few web startups and just participated
-
in this wonderful community of the Internet
Society and the open-source and free software
-
communities to basically see that how people
can at least come to consensus or at least
-
consent through radical transparency and rough
consensus and so on.
-
Today I'm Taiwan's digital minister for a
year-and-a-half now.
-
I'm applying the lessons that I learned when
I was 15 years old, civic participation, rough
-
consensus, radical transparency to the representative
democratic system here.
-
Surprisingly, it's working
and it's changing, gradually, our society.
-
Two years ago, when President Tsai Ing-wen
first became inaugurated as our president,
-
she said an inspiring statement in her inauguration
speech.
-
She said, "Before, when we think of democracy,
we think about the opposition between two
-
opposing values.
-
But now, from now on, Taiwan's democracy need
to become a conversation between many diverse
-
values."
-
The key point here is the plural of this word
"value."
-
There's many values in Taiwan and we're going
to build a conversational, deliberative democracy
-
out of those very different but diverse values.
-
Indeed, previously, when people think about
the government or the state, or things like
-
that, people tend to have this picture, like
we have different departments.
-
We have different ministries.
-
We have different council within the parliament,
who talk to, for example, the environmental
-
agency may talk to the environmentalist groups.
-
The minister of economy may talk to developmental,
more capitalistic groups and so on.
-
There's different nodes within the government
to talk to the different sides of stakeholders.
-
People imagined that the government is what
brings people together and who arbitrates
-
between those conflicting or opposing forces.
-
This model of governance, as all of you know,
has become bankrupt within the previous decade
-
or so with the advent of the social web and
the Internet activism.
-
The reason is that people can organize now
perfectly fine without a representative organizer
-
from the mainstream media or from the representative
democracy.
-
Also, because there's so many emerging issues,
we can't have a different ministry or a different
-
agency for each of them.
-
If the government insists on being still this
kind of rope in between, not only is its organizational
-
value much lower than before, it would be
torn between so many different interests that
-
it become paralyzed.
-
The distance between the government and people,
while not increasing...The distance between
-
people and people have much shortened.
-
It leads to a recession or a distrust to the
democratic institutions.
-
The way we're working on this is basically
reimagine the questions governance systems
-
ask.
-
Instead of asking who we need to represent
or what is fair arbitration, we ask instead
-
what is the due process in which that the
various different stakeholders can find common
-
values, and given the common values, can we
come up with solutions that works for everyone,
-
that everyone can live with.
-
This is the idea of civic tech or, basically,
technology that enables people to listen to
-
one another.
-
This has, basically, a lot of international
metrics measuring this, like the diversity
-
of gender and participation in the Internet,
like the rank of open data and accessibility,
-
like the access to e-participation platforms.
-
Since 2015, Taiwan has been consistently ranked
number one or number two in all of those metrics
-
worldwide.
-
The reason is that at the end of 2014, there
is a radical U-turn of national direction
-
by embracing the wisdom of the crowd and open
government as the national direction.
-
It was catalyzed and epitomized by Occupy
movement back in 2014 where people occupied
-
the parliament for 22 days in a nonviolent
demonstration.
-
When we say demonstration, we mean it in like
the demo day sense.
-
It's a demo.
-
At the time, the members of the parliament
in Taiwan refused to deliberate a cross-strait
-
service trade agreement because they think
constitutionally Beijing is part of Taiwan.
-
In any case they refuse to deliberate a statement,
a treaty.
-
People occupied the parliament and did the
MPs work for them by basically deliberating
-
line by line what the service trade pact entails.
-
There's more than 20 different NGOs in all
the different streets around the parliament,
-
in a non-violent way, just deliberating aspects
of this cross-strait service agreement.
-
I was part of the movement that supported
the logistics and the ICT communication for
-
this movement.
-
It's called g0v.tw or just g0v.
-
The idea of g0v is very simple.
-
For any Taiwan government services that all
end in gov.tw, we just register this domain
-
g0v.tw so that people, whenever they see a
government service or website that's not to
-
the people's liking, they can just fork that
website and build a more interactive, open
-
version that just changes the O to a zero
on your URL.
-
It's very easy to discover.
-
It solves the discoverability problem.
-
Like for the legislation, legislative yuan
gov.tw, the corresponding shadow government
-
is just ly.g0v.tw.
-
It's very easy to remember.
-
It's a very neat hack. [laughs]
-
The first project of the g0v movement, back
in 2012, before I joined, was called budget.g0v.tw.
-
It's essentially interactive platform that
shows a visualization of the national budget.
-
Everybody can just look on the part, the specific
project that they are interested in, have
-
a real-time discussion on the discussion forum
center on that budget item as the social object
-
instead of on the budget as a whole.
-
The idea is forking the government.
-
Usually, the g0v projects are under a free
software license or really the Creative Commons
-
Zero license, which is not a license.
-
It's just a declaration of donation to the
public domain.
-
The result is that when the state-level government,
at the end of 2014, want to incorporate this
-
into the participatory budget program and
things, they don't have to ask anyone.
-
They just take the g0v forked versions and
merge it back to the state-level governments.
-
So far, there's like seven different cities
adopting this.
-
As of this year, the national government also
merged this in.
-
Today, in join.gov.tw, you can see all the
1,300 national projects and all its KPIs,
-
its deliverables, and have a real-time discussion
with the career public servants in charge
-
of that governmental project, essentially
bypassing the representative democratic system.
-
It enables a real discussion.
-
Why are there so many civic hackers in Taiwan,
who, during the Sunflower Movement, just a
-
lot like me...I just talk to my clients that
I need to take a three-week leave because
-
democracy needs me.
-
There's hundreds of people who did that back
in 2014.
-
Why is that?
-
I'm 37 now.
-
We're the first generation in Taiwan that
can actually do democracy after three decades
-
of martial law, which was lifted in 1989,
around the time of personal computers.
-
We only had our first presidential election
in 1996 which is about the year of the popularization
-
of the World Wide Web.
-
Internet and democracy, they're not two things.
-
They're not two different branches of people.
-
It's the same generation of people.
-
It's the same thing in Taiwan.
-
The advent of democracy and the advent of
Internet and direct democracy is the same
-
time in Taiwan.
-
We don't have 200 or 300 years of a representative
democracy tradition.
-
When we had democracy, we had also the Internet.
-
In Taiwan, when we see or when we talk about
free software, we translate it as [Mandarin]
-
. It's always free as in freedom to assemble,
freedom of speech, freedom to express, and
-
never free of cost.
-
We know that freedom is never free of costs.
-
Our parents' generation, our grandparents'
generation fought very hard to get those freedoms.
-
It's up to us to use the software freedoms
to keep the society free.
-
At the end of 2014 and after the Occupy, there's
many mayors, mayor candidates who were Occupy
-
supporters or Occupyers themselves, who very
surprisingly found themselves elected mayors
-
when they did not expect.
-
It's something that also happen in Spain also
[laughs] and in many other Occupys in that
-
time.
-
At the time, the premier during the Occupy
resigned, saying, "I don't understand you
-
people."
-
He just resigned.
-
A new premier, an engineer, said, "OK, so
from now on, crowdsourcing and open governance
-
is just going to be the national direction."
-
The Occupyers and us, the supporters of the
Occupys, the facilitators and the ICT experts,
-
were then hired into the national government
in early 2015 to help designing systems to
-
collaboratively solve issues, such as Uber,
at the time.
-
Uber, in 2015, has entered Taiwan and operated
legally using rental cars and professional
-
drivers for a while.
-
In 2015, they also introduced a new line of
service called uberX.
-
It is using unlicensed drivers and unlicensed
cars and without insurance.
-
The PR idea of Uber at the time is to use
this meme, which is a virus of the mind, this
-
meme called "sharing economy."
-
This meme means very different thing to very
different people.
-
For the Uber PR department at the time, it
means very specifically that code dispatch
-
cars better than laws, so we obey code not
laws.
-
It's very simple message that spreads around
the world.
-
It's not just in Taiwan.
-
It's like epidemic of the mind.
-
People, after becoming a driver for a couple
weeks, maybe they feel that there's no protection,
-
that they didn't actually earn that much.
-
They quit driving for uberX, but during that
two weeks' time, just like the common flu,
-
they would have spread through apps to their
passengers and to other drivers and to other
-
passengers.
-
It's impossible, actually, at the time, for
us to negotiate with an app or with a virus
-
of the mind like the "sharing economy" because
it's in a different category.
-
It's impossible to argue with the common flu
either.
-
At the time, many state governments try use
Old World methods such as confiscating.
-
In Paris, they confiscated office, confiscated
machines, put people to jail.
-
Then the next morning, Uber still operates.
-
It doesn't really work in the old governmental
methods.
-
We thought about it.
-
We thought that during the Occupy, where people
listen to each other's positions deeply and
-
feel each other's feelings around the CSSTA,
maybe we can reuse some of that technique
-
and to work on the Uber issue.
-
Basically, we think that deliberation is a
vaccine of the mind.
-
Once people have really felt and empathized
with different sides' positions and come up
-
with common values, people become immune to
specific virus of the mind in the future.
-
I promise to check the questions at this point.
-
I'm just going to do it right now.
-
There's 17 questions.
-
I'll finish this section and then switch right
back to questions.
-
A proper deliberation involves four different
stages.
-
We used a system invented in Canada, in 2005.
-
It's called the focused conversation method,
or FCM.
-
It's known as the ORID method also because
it separates the discussion into four different
-
stages.
-
The first is objective or facts, where people
ask each other.
-
Like the government publishes open data, all
we know about uberX.
-
We also ask all the private sector and civil
society to donate data into this shared, fact-checked
-
database.
-
Once people check the facts on the timeline
and we can all agree with the facts, the various
-
stakeholders then express their feelings.
-
For the same fact, you may feel angry, and
I may feel happy.
-
It's all OK.
-
It's not until we checked everybody's feelings
that we find that there are some resonating
-
feelings that people all feel as important
concerns to ideate on.
-
After the facts, the feelings is the ideas.
-
The best ideas are the ideas that takes care
of the most people's feelings.
-
Once we uncover those ideas, we then translate
it into legalese.
-
Using the old governmental method, the main
barrier is the language barrier.
-
The professional public servants, the private
sector lobbyists, and the independent academics,
-
and so on use a professional language, while
people on the street using a different language.
-
Under this situation, when people say the
same thing but mean very different things,
-
the facts and the feelings gets clouded.
-
Ideas in this environment become ideologies.
-
Ideologies are an even more potent virus of
mind that blinds people to new facts and to
-
each other's feelings.
-
After we get everybody on the same page, checking
the facts that by itself is important, we
-
use a free software system under AGPL called
Pol.is.
-
Pol.is is a so-called AI-powered conversation
that basically just provides a face to the
-
crowd.
-
We ask everybody to basically look at one
statement that their friends or just a random
-
person on the Internet propose about their
feeling, their [Mandarin] something.
-
I think that, or I feel that passenger liability
insurance is important.
-
As you agree or disagree with the statements,
your avatar will move among your social media
-
friends -- or you don't have to login -- among
well-known people on social media.
-
You can discover that your friends and your
family actually think about this in a very
-
different perspective.
-
They are still your friends and family.
-
You just didn't talk about this over dinner.
-
It makes it difficult for people to antagonize,
to treat people with different viewpoints
-
as enemies.
-
Rather it enables people to say that OK, after
answering a few yes or no questions, I can
-
also contribute my feelings.
-
People compete on feelings that resonates
with the most number of people.
-
We say if your ideas or if your feelings resonates
with a supermajority amount of people -- that
-
is, across all the groups, every group has
more than majority agreeing with you -- then
-
the feelings and proposals with the most resonance,
with the most consensus, we use that as the
-
agenda to talk with the stakeholders, with
the taxi unions, with the Uber people and
-
so on.
-
In this way, we send the same URL to everybody,
and then spread it.
-
One of the key interface design decisions
during a Pol.is discussion, unlike many other
-
social media venues, is that you don't see
the reply button here.
-
There is no reply.
-
What we discovered is if you have reply, people
focus their energy on discrediting the person
-
who posted a comment that they don't agree
with.
-
Like Slido, Pol.is, basically, if you see
something that you don't agree with, your
-
best recourse is to prepare something more
nuanced, that other people can agree with.
-
After a few weeks, in all the Pol.is discussions,
what we see is that people recognize their
-
differences in those divisive statements,
but they don't spend more time on it.
-
People instead spend a lot of time refining
the nuanced consensus, so that people can
-
resonate, kind of compete, with the most resonance
across the different groups.
-
We use a live consultation method, where all
the stakeholders are invited.
-
The taxi company, Uber, union people, and
so on, the co-ops and so on.
-
We just checked with them all the agenda set
by this Pol.is conversation, one by one.
-
Saying, "Do you agree?
-
If you don't, why?
-
If you do, why?"
-
Because it's live streamed, with thousands
of people watching, people become bound to
-
whatever they have said.
-
Uber, at the time, said, "OK, so we work with
our drivers, to help them obtain a professional
-
driver's license."
-
They're bound by the words they spoke at this
live stream meeting.
-
After this, we then worked on ratifying the
new what we call the diversification of taxi.
-
One of the highest score is actually contributed
by the free software community, by Irvin Chen,
-
from the Mozilla community here.
-
Who said that we should take this opportunity
to upgrade the taxi regulations, so that the
-
best practices from Uber, for example, taxi
doesn't have to be painted yellow, and there's
-
the two-way rating system, and so on, could
be used to facilitate better taxi qualities
-
here in Taiwan.
-
Led by that consensus and six other consensus
items, we then created a law so that now Uber
-
is operating legally in Taiwan, but only with
registered driver's licensed cars.
-
You also get email about your rides, insurance,
every Uber ride, and you can also call taxi
-
with Uber, and vice versa.
-
This is what we call a multi-stakeholder consultation,
after which people's consensus set the agenda
-
for the politicians to talk about.
-
Let's take some questions.
-
There's 13 people, I think, 15 now, would
like to know, "How can we help other governments
-
enable open standards?"
-
This is an excellent question.
-
In Taiwan, we have this idea of the GDSP,
or the Government Digital Service Principal.
-
It is modeled, loosely, after the Government
Digital Service in the UK, who also published
-
their digital standards.
-
The GDS is a thought leader in this area,
and they pioneered a lot of digital standards
-
that are not just open, as in open source,
or open as in open protocol, or format, but
-
open as in open innovation, where people,
everybody can contribute.
-
One of their key principles is being user-centric,
which we here expanded in Taiwan, meaning
-
that the users here not only include citizens
but also people working in the front line
-
in the public service.
-
The second thing that the UK GDS also advocates
is that when you build a digital service,
-
you need not to only test with people, and
the frontline staff, but also test with the
-
ministry and the cabinet from the beginning
to the end.
-
Ultimately, they're accountable for this digital
service, and they can then solicit more idea
-
of innovation from this service.
-
We adopted this spirit, and also call for
leader to be basically cross-disciplinary.
-
I think the person who asked this question
is maybe most interested in our GDSP number
-
eight, which says, "Open first," basically,
open is the priority.
-
To reduce the time spent on developing services,
and the total cost of ownership, open should
-
be the foremost principal when designing and
building services.
-
By open we mean specifically that all the
machine-to-machine data built by this system
-
need to be available under an open license,
most commonly the Creative Comments Attribution
-
4.0 license, which is the default license
for all the ICT systems built in Taiwan.
-
Also, we prioritize open source.
-
If the service component reuses existing open
source components, we recommend people to
-
use Linux Foundation's SPDX, or S-P-D-X, manifest
to solve this warranty issue for the system
-
integrators.
-
Once they declare their reusable free software
components under SPDX, the warranty in the
-
legal perspective has a clear delineation.
-
By this, we want to encourage people to innovate
based on what the government has delivered,
-
and improve on existing government services
by forking the government, occasionally getting
-
it right, and getting governments merging
it back.
-
Not only open data and open source, we also
say that it need to conform with open standards,
-
so that it could be reused and also, it builds
on common API and common components.
-
All this is so that we can quickly reiterate
and improve the services.
-
We have a support group of all the governments
who endorse this standard.
-
It's called Digital Nations, and previously
known as Digital Five, or Digital Seven, depending
-
on the number of people in it.
-
We have a chat channel.
-
We share GitHub repositories.
-
We communicate very regularly, so that the
governments who embrace open by default have
-
this venue.
-
I think our next meeting is Forward 50, in
Ottawa in Canada this November.
-
All the governments are solving very much
similar issues.
-
All the components that we deliver, it's not
just for improvement of our citizens.
-
Also, offering it, so that it could be reused
by the government and people building their
-
own self-governance system, not necessarily
state government or representative governments
-
worldwide.
-
The short answer to this is to develop and
adhere to a clear government digital service
-
principle, to publish and circulate this widely.
-
To encourage this in the procurement laws,
and to encourage this in the accountability,
-
in the auditing laws, in the statistics laws,
which we all have done.
-
Then participate internationally in support
groups in the democratic and open governance
-
governments and basically share these best
practice, or at least better practices, as
-
open toolkits.
-
That's the thing that we're doing.
-
12 people would like me to answer, "What do
I wish from Debian?"
-
I wish that Debian would live long and prosper.
-
[laughs]
-
[applause]
-
Really, along with other large endeavors,
like the Mozilla Foundation, and the Linux
-
Foundation, which I just mentioned, Wikimedia
Foundation, you folks are the foundation upon
-
which that we are advocating to the representative
democratic system that, "Hey there is some
-
merit in this kind of radical transparency,
and that kind of radical participation."
-
As a conservative anarchist minister, I have
three conditions going into cabinet.
-
The first is that I don't issue a command
to anyone, nor do I take a command.
-
Everything is by voluntary association.
-
This is straight from the Debian Constitution,
where, by constitution, nobody can really
-
be forced into doing any non-voluntary work.
-
The second one is that I get to work anywhere
on the planet, and it still counts as working.
-
It's teleworking, and it also enabled a lot
of e-government imperatives, when people discovered
-
that by a paper-based delivery they can't
really reach me.
-
They can reach me after a week or so.
-
It is far easier if you just use email.
-
The third thing, also very important, is that
when I develop those voluntary co-creation
-
methodologies, it is important for me to be
radically transparent.
-
By radical transparency I mean not just meeting
with lobbyists and journalists, are all published
-
online, even internal meetings that I chair,
we also publish everything as a transcript
-
two weeks after every internal meeting.
-
It looks like this, it's also using a free
software system, called SayIt developed by,
-
I think, mySociety, in the UK.
-
When David Plouffe, speaking for Uber at the
time, come to a lobby and have a conversation,
-
not only is our discussion on the record,
it's on 360 Record.
-
We can put it on VR or Cardboard or something,
and relive the conversation.
-
[laughs] Every utterance has a permanent URL.
-
You can get full accountability of who said
what, where.
-
This is important for the government service,
because the public servants in this situation
-
they become very innovative, contrary to popular
belief.
-
Previously, when something gets right, and
people like it, the minister always takes
-
all the credit, and if something gets wrong,
it's always the career public servants who
-
didn't execute well, or something and the
netizens has a way to blame the people in
-
charge for it.
-
In that situation, there is no motivation
for them to innovate.
-
Now, with this radically transparent system,
not only is the civil society more understanding
-
of the context before making a decision, but
also all the credit gets shared to the actual
-
career public servants who proposed something
innovative in the first place.
-
If anything goes wrong, well, because as far
as I know, I'm the only minister in the world
-
doing this, it's all Audrey's fault.
-
I can absorb that blame, while people share
the credit.
-
We get a lot of very innovative ideas, frankly,
from the public service, such as adopting
-
a thoroughly free software system called sandstorm.io
for our entire public service, in all the
-
different branches of government, not just
the administration.
-
We use only free software on this sandstorm.io
system.
-
Davros replaces Dropbox, EtherCalc replaces
Google Spreadsheet, Etherpad replaces Google
-
Doc, Wekan replaces Trello, and there's also
Rocket.Chat.
-
I'm sure you know the other tools that the
free software people uses.
-
Basically, we say any public servants, as
long as they have a gov.tw email address,
-
can enjoy this for free, and even develop
new applications on it, because it's cyber
-
security hardened.
-
We ask our best white hat hackers to attack
it, and they filed a few CVEs, so that we're
-
[laughs] reasonably sure that it's very secure
now, so that people can develop applications
-
by themselves, which is free software, and
planning travels together, ordering lunch
-
boxes together.
-
Unleash innovation within the government,
because they know that this system can absorb
-
the cybersecurity risk, and I can absorb the
political risk.
-
17 people would like to know, "It's good that
you discovered Debian, and what makes it interesting
-
at such a young age, do you run Debian yourself?
-
Have you contributed to Debian?"
-
Personally, my desktop environment when I
started learning -- I think it's around 1999
-
-- system-level programming -- I'm sorry -- has
always been FreeBSD.
-
[laughs]
-
I've never actually...I used the Debian compatibility
layer.
-
I don't know whether that counts or not.
-
[laughs] I've always been a FreeBSD developer
and contributed to also driver support in
-
FreeBSD.
-
Also, most of my contributions in the Perl
community and in OpenFoundry, here in Taiwan,
-
in early 2000s, were first committed to the
FreeBSD port system.
-
It's a different culture.
-
It's not copyleft.
-
It's not copyright.
-
It's copy center.
-
You go to the copy center and make many copies.
-
That's a [laughs] very permissive [laughs]
community.
-
That's my primary community, the FreeBSD community.
-
There's various efforts within Debian to reconcile
with, for example, the module signing system.
-
I piloted the module signing system in CPAN,
in the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network.
-
There's a lot of packaging issues and so on.
-
I basically chime in from here to there.
-
I did not participate in the Debian democracy,
but I really admired from afar, in the FreeBSD
-
camp.
-
[laughs]
-
"Does Taiwan has an open-source strategy?"
-
Yes.
-
I'm glad you asked.
-
It's called DIGI+.
-
I don't know how much of this is translated
into English.
-
Oh, all of it.
-
It's good.
-
If you go to smart.taiwan.gov.tw...We tend
to have one web page for each major government
-
policies.
-
There's smart.taiwan.gov.tw.
-
There's AI Taiwan.
-
There's bio Taiwan.
-
There's also CI Taiwan -- I think that's not
yet translated -- where the CI stands for
-
civil IoT, which is the shared open data and
also open algorithm platform for all the different
-
environmental data aggregated in a supercomputing
center that combines the people's, the g0v
-
site of air sensors and also the government
site of government sensors.
-
We can all talk with the same fact-based or
evidence-based policy-making process.
-
I encourage you to check out Smart Taiwan
and also links to Asia Silicon Valley.
-
When we talk about open society here and also
about the education, like interdisciplinary
-
digital talents, in the DIGI+ plan, we specifically
said especially in the basic education level,
-
that is to say K-12 level...
-
Also because in the next five years all the
college-level students also need to learn
-
computational thinking and programming, half
of it, I think, by the year 2021 or something.
-
All of it needs to be based on free software.
-
If the student graduates and joins the private
sector and choose to use proprietary software,
-
that is their choice.
-
Of course, the government can't do much about
it, but while they're still children, while
-
they're still in the schools, it is very important
for us to not let the children or the students
-
to be subject to vendor lock-in.
-
By the time they graduate, maybe the vendor
has already moved somewhere else.
-
Maybe the vendor lose interest in that product
line.
-
We see a lot of that dynamic.
-
At least in the education system, we're very
firm that we prefer free software for education.
-
When teaching computational thinking, when
teaching artificial intelligence, when teaching
-
all those different DIGI+ powered smart machinery,
green energy technology, and so on, we prefer
-
free software when it's in the school.
-
In the DIGI+, there is a strategy to raise
awareness and have talents in school.
-
There's also twoss.io, I think -- I hope I
remember this right -- which is not yet translated
-
in English.
-
it's somewhat translated to English.
-
In any case, what this tries to do is basically
by getting people sufficient education materials,
-
so people working on any level of education
can point to existing communities and introduce
-
their students to such community.
-
Even people working in like city-level government
or national-level government can also point
-
to the success cases of incorporating PostgreSQL
or OpenStack or Docker Ecosystem and/or TensorFlow
-
or whatever and which is the success story.
-
You're replacing proprietary systems.
-
It's not about procurement anymore.
-
We already change our procurement regulations
and the government digital service principle.
-
All that people need now is a boost of confidence
of [Mandarin] , basically, [laughs] by people
-
keep telling them it's OK to use free software.
-
This is the twoss.io.
-
If you find anything wrong with it or anything
you can contribute, please feel free to let
-
us know in twoss.
-
"Why is Taiwan so restrictive on Internet
access, captive portals, register with ID
-
for iTaiwan WiFi access, etc.?
-
Is there the reason, bad experiences or not?"
-
The reason is usually cited as "cybersecurity,"
but it is not a very strong reason.
-
We are actively looking, actually, like in
the Taiwan high-speed rails, to relax the
-
captive portal.
-
Especially when you're on a high-speed moving
train, it is very difficult to actually resume
-
from hotspot to hotspots if you need to go
through like five or three screens to register.
-
That's the first place where we will relax
this captive portal thing.
-
Once this is done and piloted and proven that
it really doesn't need two more cybersecurity
-
guards, that we can put other cybersecurity
guards elsewhere on the stack, not necessarily
-
on the personal identification level, then
we will also relax the internal.
-
Within the government agencies, we often provide
two WiFis, one for employees of the government
-
and one called iTaiwan, also for visitors.
-
The visitor WiFi, we then will also look to
relax more.
-
That's because those two venues, in the high-speed
rails and also in visitors to government agencies,
-
you already did your registration somewhere
else.
-
We don't physically actually need you to register
again.
-
I'm less sure about the city-level public
WiFi, like TPE-Free, or other city-level WiFi
-
because they have a certain level of autonomy.
-
We don't actually dictate what they do.
-
We just pilot this relaxed login portal thing
and also establish corresponding cybersecurity
-
rules.
-
Maybe the city-level people will also get
enlightened.
-
We'll see.
-
There's eleven people who want to know, "Is
it possible to be a citizen in Taiwan and
-
interact fully with the government without
using any proprietary software?"
-
I'm glad you asked because that's one of the
cases that I'd like to show.
-
[laughs]
-
It used to be very, very difficult.
-
Just last May actually, there was a petition
that talks explicitly about it, very explicit.
-
[laughs] Last May, there was an e-petition
or a national e-petition system.
-
After 5,000 people participate online...You
can use email or SMS.
-
It's not a real-name basis.
-
Basically, after 5,000 people counter-signed
a petition, the government is obliged to respond
-
to it.
-
This petition is by this user experience designer
卓志遠, which says that our tax filing
-
system is explosively hostile to users.
-
It's negative energy in that petition.
-
There's more negative energy in the body,
which I will spare you the quote.
-
Basically, at the time, about 80 percent of
comments in that petition discussion area
-
is very negative.
-
It caused for the resignation of the minister
of finance.
-
It caused...there's a lot of accusations to
the vendors who provide the system, and all
-
because in Windows there is a proprietary
Windows-based application for tax filing.
-
For Linux and for Mac and basically non-Windows
systems, there is a Java applet.
-
Because last year Oracle Inc. deprecated Java
applets, the user experience become very,
-
very bad.
-
People will see that "Please wait.
-
It's still installing some applet components."
-
Because the pop-up is by default blocked,
so nothing happens.
-
After 40 minutes, people are still waiting.
-
It really is very, very difficult to use.
-
After the e-petition, basically there's a
participation officer team in each ministry.
-
Each participation office, or POs, is responsible.
-
Just like media officer who talk to journalists
or a parliamentary officer who talk to MPs,
-
POs talk to such emergent petitions.
-
By basically saying, I think, not only very
quick, like 36 hours after this petition,
-
our PO 楊金亨 just posted publicly that
everybody who complained about our tax filing
-
experience on non-Windows systems is cordially
invited to a co-creation workshop, some Friday,
-
in the Ministry of finance.
-
This is very interesting because just by proposing
this invitation...Previously, like 80 percent
-
of people were just flaming.
-
20 percent of people were saying, "Well, we're
using Windows.
-
It works kind of OK."
-
Nobody really took heed to them.
-
After this invitation is sent, 80 percent
of people started proposing useful suggestions,
-
useful recommendations.
-
Only less than 20 percent still remained trolling
or flaming people, but people don't pay attention
-
to them anymore.
-
Basically, what we did was inviting the trolls,
who turns out to be not trolls.
-
They were just fed up with the tax filing
system.
-
They had to vent their feelings.
-
After they vent their feelings, we all then
solicit ideas from them.
-
People who can make it to Taipei, make it
to Taipei.
-
Otherwise, people can still participate using
live-streaming.
-
One of the key thing here is radical transparency
and also accountability, meaning that people
-
who say that the words are explosively crowded,
we just put that, post it as words are explosively
-
crowded, that it is so brilliantly written
that people are confused.
-
Then we just post it.
-
People say instead of designing a system makes
people feel better, people don't feel good
-
at all when they think about filing taxes,
so we should shorten the experience instead
-
of trying to make people feel better and so
on.
-
Basically, people who proposed such ideations
online, we just use service design methodologies
-
and hold five co-creation workshops with all
the different stakeholders involved in the
-
tax filing experience.
-
This year, the tax filing experience for non-Windows
systems is entirely HTML5-based.
-
It adheres to the open standards.
-
People can just using any platform that can
run a browser to access the tax filing system.
-
The short answer to this question is that
it has become more and more possible while
-
we translate or transform existing desktop-oriented
or Windows-specific or Java applets into web-based
-
situations.
-
Now, if you insist that all the JavaScript
libraries and CSS libraries that government
-
system use has also to be open source or free
software, that would take a little bit more
-
time.
-
It will need the current generation of system
to be wholly replaced by post-government digital
-
service principle, post-GDSP, systems.
-
We are focusing on reducing the load on the
client side first.
-
At the time, I think you can complete most
of the interactions of the governmental issues
-
like filing taxes and so on if you're OK with
using a free software browser, but there's
-
still some proprietary JavaScript code.
-
This is the compromise situation we're in
at the moment.
-
With the rollout of GDSP, we're also looking
to make the JavaScript and CSS and also the
-
backend systems more non-proprietary.
-
Anonymous would like to know the shared objects
in the tax filing plugin is not open source.
-
Why?
-
Because the copyright belongs to, I think,
the vendor Chunghwa Telecom.
-
Back when we signed the agreement with the
Chunghwa Telecom, the GDSP was not in effect.
-
The contract, basically, attributed the copyright
to the vendor, who only conferred usage right
-
to the government and the citizens.
-
This is a mistake that we will not repeat.
-
At the moment, we don't have the legal recourse
for the current generation of plugin systems
-
to be relicensed as free software.
-
I tried.
-
[laughs]
-
The easiest way is just for the next version
of identification methods, such as the national
-
healthcare card, which, by the way, is currently
in public consultation.
-
If you want to contribute, like you demand
free software stack for the entire Medicare
-
system, please feel free to go to join.gov.tw,
where we are now asking for consultation on
-
people who are looking to virtualize their
universal Medicare card and/or to use NFC-based
-
authentication.
-
We want to know about people's preference
when it comes to the technology, to the regulations,
-
as well as to the total cost of ownership,
and also of usage.
-
If you feel strongly about it, please do contribute
online on Join platform, so that we can say
-
to the people writing the contracts that people
really feel that it is very important for
-
our next-generation authentication methods
to be nonproprietary.
-
Eight people would like to know, "What is
your opinion on e-commerce application refusing
-
to operating on restriction-free devices like
rooted Androids and jailbroken iDevices.
-
Is it fair?"
-
Mostly, I think they do this with the call
to "fraud prevention."
-
[laughs] It's not about fairness.
-
I think it is about the choice or the freedom
of choice or the liberty of users.
-
The reason why GDSP prefers free software
is because when it comes to healthcare or
-
tax filing, there really is no choice.
-
To be a citizen in Taiwan, you have to go
through some government-sponsored API endpoints
-
to produce some government-sponsored form
data and so on.
-
Because there is no choice, we really need
to be open so that people can hold us to account
-
to be more transparent and also innovate on
existing solutions.
-
For e-commerce applications where there are
no de facto monopolies, when people still
-
have a choice, the government, at the moment,
does not take a stance against the e-commerce
-
apps who uses fraud detection or prevention
methods that result in incompatibility with
-
rooted Androids and jailbroken iDevices.
-
I think one of the possible direction out
of this dilemma is to basically talk to people
-
who work on "fraud prevention," just like
how we talked with the high-speed rails and
-
the government agencies providing iTaiwan
software and WiFi for free.
-
We basically said, "You can do your fraud
prevention or cybersecurity on another layer
-
in this system and not in the particular layer
of requiring a captive portal and the MAC
-
address, which is very easy to spoof anyway."
-
I think just by talking to people like this,
or we talk to people who advocate copyright
-
protection through blocking of the Internet.
-
We say with IPv6, it's getting more and more
impossible.
-
Watermarking or real-time watermarking methodologies,
it infringes on the consumers' or customers'
-
experience is less.
-
It is actually a better solution overall than
just banning entire websites.
-
People have legitimate interest.
-
There are legitimate stakes.
-
As I said, often we think of it as like a
tug of war, but in many different cases, it
-
is possible actually with some what we call
social innovation, an innovation that basically
-
takes care of all the different sides of interest
and leaves nobody worse off.
-
I would encourage people who feel strongly
about it to contact your local, friendly e-commerce
-
association like [Mandarin] , who does have
a forum to talk about things like this.
-
We use that forum to talk about fraud detection
and prevention of people selling counterfeit
-
goods on Facebook to pretty good effect.
-
I would also encourage you to contact your
local association about it.
-
"Can we see any legislator supporting free
software in the government movement, like
-
Public Money, Public Code from the EFF?"
-
In Taiwan, when you see this government, the
GDSP, we already say this.
-
This is public code.
-
This is open data.
-
This is open standards and also common APIs.
-
We used also a Linux Foundation project called
OAS 3.0, which was Swagger, to state that
-
all the different systems built, as long as
it has a machine-to-machine component, need
-
to adhere to this machine-to-machine open
API specification.
-
The reason why we put an equal amount of attention
on the source code license versus the machine-to-machine
-
integration is that if we only talk about
public code or the license, it is very often
-
that a system integrator will deliver something
that is technically free software, but it
-
depends on, for example, expensive Oracle
systems or even more expensive DB2 systems.
-
That basically still restricts the reuse across
different ministries and agencies.
-
By saying for all the import and export, for
all the batch-level access, by basically treating
-
machine-to-machine accessibility the same
way we treat universal access, like for blind
-
people...
-
We basically say while you may still depend
on Oracle or DB2 at a point, the next vendor
-
can just build on your API and even batch
export what's in this public money-paid database
-
and rebuild a service without depending on
any proprietary technological stack.
-
I would argue that the freedom of portability
is as important as freedom to fork and freedom
-
to reuse.
-
Both are of course very important.
-
Constitutionally, I am not supposed to speculate
on legislators, but [laughs] there is various
-
younger legislators in all the different parties
who are also interested in this area.
-
Is there any chance, eight people would like
to know, that I can urge deans of higher education
-
facilities like NCTU to deploy IP version
6.
-
It's a bootstrapping problem, isn't it? [laughs]
-
This year, we see a surge of IPv6 adoption,
actually, after TWNIC changed hands and [laughs]
-
embrace a very IPv6-first roadmap.
-
We see, for example, Chunghwa Telecom has
drastically increased the IPv6 connectivity
-
of their mobile clients.
-
We also see other telecoms and other peering
institutions and ISPs starting to adopt this
-
trend.
-
Once there's sufficient amount of people using
the clients that are IPv6-enabled and even
-
IPv6-preferred, there will be sufficient pressure
then for the service providers to provide
-
as good, if not better, service over IPv6.
-
I feel your QQ.
-
I help you, your QQ. [laughs] 幫 QQ, right?
-
I think really, it is up to the students,
the clients, and the users of the Internet,
-
the last-mile providers to first build a useful
and usable IPv6 environment before we can
-
then demand the service providers to do so.
-
We are seeing pretty good trends as of this
year.
-
If you come back next year, I think there
will be sufficient demand from the user side
-
to have the institutional Internet service
providers to provide IPv6 also.
-
I'm technically out of time, so I'll just
take one last question.
-
What is my opinion of the European Union General
Data Protection Regulation, or the GDPR?
-
My opinion is that the GDPR is a much-needed
conversation that translates the idea of data
-
from what people will confuse with assets,
intellectual properties, which are leaky abstractions
-
that doesn't mean anything to a, what we call,
data agency a relationship-based worldview.
-
Basically, as a government institution, if
I hold your data, this is a beginning of a
-
relationship where you can ask what happens
to the data, who can update the data, so it
-
reflects the purpose.
-
If I try to use the data in any other way
other than pure statistics, I need to check
-
with you first, so that you can know what's
going on, and provide the most up-to-date
-
data.
-
Instead of leaving just a shadow digital trail
that's five years out of date, that results
-
in more bias.
-
I think data agency, data as a relationship,
and also data accountability.
-
Accountability interestingly only translate
in Mandarin as three different words.
-
For people who ask for accountability, it's
called 問責.
-
For us who are held accountable, it's called
當責.
-
A system within it that holds both sides together,
the relationship, is called 課責機制,
-
or an accountability mechanism.
-
So 課責 is a relational concept.
-
It is not a one-time transactional concept.
-
I think GDPR is a much-needed wake-up call
for everybody to see data as a relationship,
-
as not as some digital asset or intellectual
property.
-
Thank you very much.
-
[applause]