[Qgis-user] QGIS for safe organization use.

Madry, Scott madrys at email.unc.edu
Tue May 23 10:34:12 PDT 2023


A more germane point to our Canadian friend’s query is the fact that the U.S. NGA, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, went completely Open Source back in 2017 due to the fact that ESRI would not allow them to view the source code to check for trap doors, etc. They had been a very large ESRI user up to that point. They let out a US$ 36 million contract in 2017 for Open Source geospatial software, support, maintenance, etc.

Here in North Carolina, our State Board of Elections went Open Source in 2019 due to the same issues. So in an important way, Open Source is potentially more secure because there is the ability to look at the code for security threats.

And I really don’t think discussing QGIS on a mailing list or chat is covered under ITAR…

Best regards to all!

Scott

Scott Madry, Ph.D.
Research Associate Professor of Archaeology
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Tel         1-919-448-4493
Email:    madrys at email.unc.edu<mailto:madrys at email.unc.edu>
https://scottmadry.web.unc.edu
Skype:   scott madry


On May 23, 2023, at 1:20 PM, Randal Hale via QGIS-User <qgis-user at lists.osgeo.org<mailto:qgis-user at lists.osgeo.org>> wrote:

Greetings from the South of Canada.

So I'm a user and not a programmer by any stretch. The open source license for QGIS covers the Software. Your data is your data and no one else's unless you physically share it. It's not any less safe than Arcpro. The data it builds is compatible with ESRI products (it can build and edit ESRI file Based Geodatabases (which I'm guessing may be a requirement)). It's my daily driver....well - my only driver for Desktop GIS (I say that and PostGIS will make you feel things deep down in your soul).

Anyway - I know that's a short answer but - Enjoy your QGIS'ing. Make Data. Enjoy.

Randy




On 5/23/23 12:09, Simon via QGIS-User wrote:
Hello,

I work at the Department of National Defense for the Canadian government and had some questions regarding QGIS.

Firstly, I'm working on a project to determine the seismic risk and vulnerability of all the department's buildings different Canadian Provinces. An important part of the project will be to create a geodatabase containing crucial information about each building. After, I plan to create a layer that will show the location of these buildings on a map.

Now, a large portion of the information regarding the buildings and their locations is confidential, and so I'm wondering if the geodatabase and layer that I plan to create will be safe and protected, or if other users will have access to them since QGIS is free and open source?

At first, I was planning to work with ArcGIS Pro but I'm currently waiting for a license. When or if it comes through, I'll stick with ArcGIS but for now QGIS seems to be the best alternative.

If QGIS is not safe, are there other safe and similar softwares you can recommend?

Thanks,

Simon




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--
Randal Hale
North River Geographic Systems. Inc

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