⚡ Key Takeaways

Algeria's government runs overwhelmingly on proprietary software it cannot inspect, creating vendor lock-in and security opacity. France's Gendarmerie migrated 70,000 workstations to GendBuntu Linux, saving EUR 7 million annually with a 40% TCO reduction. Germany's ZenDiS and Italy's CAD mandate demonstrate that FOSS-first procurement policies are a proven path to digital sovereignty.

Bottom Line: Algeria should adopt a graduated FOSS-first policy: mandatory open source evaluation for all government procurement, open source defaults for custom-commissioned software, and a national FOSS catalog modeled on France's SILL.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for AlgeriaHigh
Algeria spends heavily on proprietary licenses while lacking code transparency for critical government systems
Action Timeline12-24 months
for policy framework; 5-7 years for meaningful migration
Key StakeholdersMinistry of Knowledge Economy, Ministry of Post and Telecommunications, High Commissioner for Digitalization, Ministry of Finance, FOSS community, university CS departments
Decision TypeStrategic
policy and procurement reform requiring executive decree or ministerial circular
Priority LevelHigh
Should be prioritized in near-term planning — important for maintaining competitive position

Quick Take: Algeria’s proprietary software dependency is expensive, opaque, and strategically risky. A graduated FOSS-first policy — starting with mandatory evaluation and open source defaults for custom code — would reduce costs, increase transparency, and build local capacity. The European playbook exists; Algeria needs to adapt it to local conditions.

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