 Chương Anh Tuấn, Cô Mì Tuấn, from Vietnam. I'm the Vice President of V4SAR. It stands for Vietnam Free and Open Software Association. About five years ago, we tried to form up from a lot of open source community to an association called V4SAR. Today I would like to introduce about our association and then something about the first ecosystem in Vietnam. And the last one is a case study. A brand new open source project just opened for a public sector. Who we are? We are a guy of local NGO. We create in non-profession and try to promote open source and open things, everything, every open things in Vietnam. We founded in 2012 and before that we are a lot of small communities, for example Linux user groups or some other guys of community. We try to form up into an association for better working with government, with innovation, with enterprises and so on. Nowadays we have about 50 members. It's increased weeks to weeks, month to month. We try to enlace our association. We have some kind of universities, institutes, government agencies, enterprises and hundreds of individuals, members. In V4SAR, we try to represent for the Vietnam open source communities to work with government agencies. We try to consult them to do the best thing for the IT system, for the government. We try to propose policy changes for them to have better policies for IT development. We working with the whole community. Nowadays the open source community members in Vietnam, about hundreds of thousands of people, they divided to a lot of small community. We try to connect them together to promote open things, everything, like open source, open hardware, open data, open educational resources and a lot of other open things. We try to work with universities, institutes and other educational organizations to do capacity building to have more human resources for open source. That's V4SAR, our association. Next, I would like to introduce a little about the open source ecosystem in Vietnam. In Vietnam, we have most organizations in Vietnam now try to involve into the open source community, including the government agencies. We have the main IT related ministry, like the Ministry of Information and Communication. They have a lot of policies to promote and encourage the open source uses in Vietnamese government agencies. We have ministry of science and technology who support a lot to promote, to do localization, to do building open source solutions and so on. We have a lot of other government agencies currently use open source every sector. In universities, we are working with a lot of universities in Vietnam, both IT or non-IT universities. We work with universities, but especially we prefer to work with private universities because their policies, their needs are more close to the open source. They can easily decide to adopt to open source. In Vietnam, we work with a lot of universities along the Vietnam from the north to the south. Vietnam is a long country, Hanoi, Danang, Ho Chi Minh City, Can Tho and a lot of big cities. Some issues we just government just establish the center for research and development open technology. They just establish, but they will have much to the community to do more open source research and development. I believe that in the first ecosystem in Vietnam, we also have enterprises. As I mentioned before, we have about 50 members in Viet Vo Sa over half of them are companies and enterprises. From there, they may be open source user, open source integrator, or higher open source contributor, they run some open source projects, open source community. A lot of levels. We have also a lot of individuals like traditional news user group, Fedora or Ubuntu community in Vietnam. Or we may be some localization team for Ubuntu, for library office, Mozilla or something. We have committee in DevOps, system engineer or in programming like Python, Java, PHP or something. A lot of type of committee and a lot of individuals member try to involve into the open source committee. We also try to promote some other related open things like open technologies, open data. Earlier of this month, March, we organized the first open data event in Hanoi, the Vietnam capital. It's called Open Data International Day. And now I would like to bring to you a case study. We just established a new project. It's called OpenCPS, stands for Core Public Services. In government agencies, the Vietnamese government try to build a government. In the past, they bought a lot of private property solutions from Microsoft, IBM or some other vendors. Even in Vietnam, the company, the enterprises in Vietnam, they provide solutions to the government by private property solutions, not much open source. Some other try to provide open source but they pick open source, maybe close it, give it to the government, something else. But in the past, now a lot of enterprises in Vietnam, they seize the chances to provide services, open source services to government. That's why we come up with about four companies we try to form up to the projects for public services. Just open source code, open CPS. From the four companies, we try to apply the open source development model from the beginning. From the Rhythmify, what project is or something we try to put a license. Here is AGPL and try to put everything on HIP GitHub in AGPL license. We try to have transparent roadmap and plan to encourage people, more people to join to our project. We try to do the methodology like document first and then code following. So from the beginning, a lot of documents put on the GitHub, put on the wiki, a lot of guidelines, roadmap plans and everything. We try to build documentation first and then encourage people to join into our project. You can see our project just open about a month but everything open on GitHub. And we have public communication channels on main list, RSE and we have regular meetings on ISE. We meet both to look the meeting minutes. We have a website if you can see on the internet everything. So we try to do documentation first as I mentioned before. Everything, business, analysis like software requirement, specification and system architect, detailed design, test plan, installation guide, packaging or a lot of documentations. We root guidelines for the contributor to join to our project development process, coding conventions, grid flow guidelines, job description for each role in join to the project. Public communication of course and a lot of things we try to do document first. We also public the whole system architecture just very simple but we will try to make it more detailed later and later open from the meeting. In our architecture, the system architecture we try to build a back end and have room for everyone to build front end to connect back end. Including Java, PHP, .NET, mobile or everything, they can make any front end to connect to our open source back end with the API, predefined API. That is grid flow we apply to the project. We try to open to public the roadmap for this year and we try to make the roadmap for next several years. And after a month we try to do the right things. I think they are the right things. After a month from four companies we encourage another some other company now we have dozens contributors from over 10 companies in Vietnam. Because the corporate service, the first person we want to apply to Vietnamese government so maybe it is suitable for Vietnamese to come first. But in the future maybe we want to elastic to other country, ASEAN or all over. I would like to put something about another long time project open source project in Vietnam. It's called Nuke viet CMS. Why I would like to mention to this project because this is one of the first community want to join to open CPS to build a front end. It's a CMS build on PHP a long time about 10 years in Vietnam open source 10 years and they want to build a front end to connect into open CPS back end. A lot of interesting things we try to connect the community together. So that's all I want to introduce something about Vietnam. Thank you. I have any question? For open CPS you choose HGPL as the reason why HGPL? As I try to introduce, I want to introduce a bit about myself. I join, I participate in open source community about 15 years and I dig into the licensing a lot. Firstly open CPS, I would like to build a project which open every time the whole life. When I use the license license, I want the next derivation on the next fork. They use the same license so we can choose a GPL but we decided to use a GPL because one more statement. They enforce if the service provider try to run open CPS on their cloud with some chains or without chains and things but they must open the source for the user. That's why because in Vietnam nowadays the member companies in open CPS not have big pour companies like Vietnam, VNVT or something. We want to protect open CPS project if Vietnam or something want to use open CPS to run on our cloud to provide services to government. They must open the source code under a GPL license. That's the reason. Okay, any more questions? How long did the process of combining all these various open source groups take to have your first meeting of VFOS? VFOS. About VFOS, I would like to introduce Mr. Quang, our president. Mr. Quang, can you stand up? We are in separate communities for a long time. As I mentioned I joined to the open source project for over 15 years including a lot of big committee in all over the world like Fedora. Fedora committee know me a lot. In Vietnam we are in separated communities and one day we sit down together and decided we must have a bigger group, an official group to do something, do some better things, official things. So as a long time participating in open source committee like me, like Mr. Quang and some other we just decided and then we try to connect to the government agencies and other association as an organization like Vietnam association for information processing. So we try to convince them to accept us to be the new member in the community, in society. That's all. It's easy. I was a bit curious because I noticed you listed in your member organization or who is part of VFOS, some ministries. I guess if you have smaller groups from private universities it's easier to convince them to join and take part in your organization. But talking to government. So I was wondering how long, whether you face any roadblocks in that process or anything. And the time before VFOS established we already have some connections with government agencies, not just from VFOS established before that. So when we form up to an official association it's much easier for us to work with the government agencies. Much easier. We work with them before. But after that it's much easier. We have an official voice for the open source committee to talk with government agencies. After VFOS established a lot of other policies to promote open source and other IT sectors. It's not a nightmare. By talking about VFOS, one part I think you are mentioning that you are working on the policy segment. In the policy segment in one part there are laws which prevents freedom of expression. For example, copy basing from social media can even get you jail. That kind of laws are there. So usually in many countries I found 4 people are the same people campaigning for freedom of expression. But that resulting in a hate and lover hate relationship with government. So how you find, because while talking with government, if you are campaigning in some other aspects, sometimes it will not work. So how you are finding the balance? Yes, it's difficult. It's not easy. First of all, in the past the open source situation is really bad. And following the movement from all over the world. And inside Vietnam we have an official organization. So we try to put together inside community and outside community to push our government. It's not easy. It's a long story. 2 hour session for the whole series of long stories that we have. In the absence of other questions, let's thank the speaker again. Thank you.