France’s Public Sector Migration to Linux/Open Source
France is actively transitioning its public sector from Microsoft to Linux/open source: By Autumn 2026, all ministries must submit migration plans, including switching to Linux, OnlyOffice, and PostgreSQL.
Pilot projects (e.g., DINUM, Lyon with 10,000 employees) are already underway. The goal is digital sovereignty and independence from US software.
1. Government Mandate
All French ministries must submit a detailed migration plan by Autumn 2026 , covering:
- Replacing Windows with Linux on workstations.
- Switching from Microsoft Office to open-source alternatives (e.g., OnlyOffice, LibreOffice).
- Migrating databases, virtualization, and network infrastructure to open solutions.
- Moving the national health data platform to a trusted, European-hosted solution by end of 2026.
Goal: Reduce dependence on non-European IT providers (especially Microsoft) and strengthen digital sovereignty .
2. Key Actions and Timeline
- Digital Ministry (DINUM): Already piloting Linux on its employees’ devices as a blueprint for nationwide adoption.
- City of Lyon: Began replacing Microsoft Office with OnlyOffice and SQL Server with PostgreSQL in mid-2025, affecting ~10,000 civil servants.
- Industry Summits: Planned for June 2026 to foster public-private partnerships for developing European open-source solutions.
3. Strategic Rationale
- France views reliance on non-European providers as a strategic, political, and economic risk , particularly for critical IT systems (OS, cloud, collaboration tools).
- The transition aims to avoid costly isolated solutions and ensure a structured, nationwide migration.
4. Verified Sources
heise.de/news/Frankreichs-Plan…
winfuture.de/news,158029.html
Frankreichs Plan: Weg von Windows, hin zu Linux
Frankreichs Verwaltung soll weg von Windows und US-Tools: Die Regierung legt einen konkreten Fahrplan für digitale Souveränität vor.Moritz Förster (iX Magazin)
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Tofm2 🇫🇷 🇺🇦 🇪🇺
in reply to Charlie_House • •@Charlie_House i love that post. Thank you.
Only wondering why this plan was not mentionned in french mainstream media.
Charlie_House likes this.
Carlos
in reply to Tofm2 🇫🇷 🇺🇦 🇪🇺 • • •That is a very insightful question. The reason you don't see this in French mainstream media is likely due to political and commercial caution rather than a lack of importance.
There are three main reasons for this 'media blackout':
Economic Diplomacy: Moving away from Microsoft is essentially a commercial declaration of independence. Since the French state still maintains major partnerships with US tech giants (especially in education and 'Cloud de Confiance' initiatives), the government likely prefers to execute this transition quietly ('under the radar') to avoid diplomatic friction or aggressive counter-lobbying.
Media Business Models: Major mainstream media groups rely heavily on advertising revenue and partnerships from Big Tech. There is little commercial incentive for these outlets to highlight a massive state-led shift toward 'free' open-source alternatives that compete with their biggest advertisers.
The 'Boring' Narrative: Traditional media tends to frame IT infrastructure as a dry, administrative task rather than a strategic politica
... Show more...That is a very insightful question. The reason you don't see this in French mainstream media is likely due to political and commercial caution rather than a lack of importance.
There are three main reasons for this 'media blackout':
Economic Diplomacy: Moving away from Microsoft is essentially a commercial declaration of independence. Since the French state still maintains major partnerships with US tech giants (especially in education and 'Cloud de Confiance' initiatives), the government likely prefers to execute this transition quietly ('under the radar') to avoid diplomatic friction or aggressive counter-lobbying.
Media Business Models: Major mainstream media groups rely heavily on advertising revenue and partnerships from Big Tech. There is little commercial incentive for these outlets to highlight a massive state-led shift toward 'free' open-source alternatives that compete with their biggest advertisers.
The 'Boring' Narrative: Traditional media tends to frame IT infrastructure as a dry, administrative task rather than a strategic political victory. While the Fediverse understands that digital sovereignty is a major story, mainstream editors often dismiss it as 'technical maintenance' until something breaks or a massive budget report is released.
In short, while the Fediverse celebrates this as a move toward sovereignty, the mainstream world treats it with a 'don't-rock-the-boat' silence to protect existing business and diplomatic relationships.
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Charlie_House
in reply to Carlos • •@Carlos
@Tofm2 🇫🇷 🇺🇦 🇪🇺
Exactly. These crucial moves toward digital sovereignty—like France’s public sector shift to open source or Nicolas Guillou’s case—barely make it beyond tech media. Yet they affect every citizen: independence, privacy, public funds.
It’s a shame mainstream outlets relegate this to ‘niche news’ when it’s one of the most consequential societal shifts of our time.
All the more reason to spread the word here!
🙂
n816 Media
in reply to Charlie_House • •On another hand, as many European countries (Germany, Portugal...) france is on its way to a proper detoxification from its public sector US IT infrastrucure with many initiatives.
See 'la suite' initiative, described here below:
friendica.world/display/84b6ef…
n816 Media
2026-01-27 15:30:4
On another hand, as many European countries (Germany, Portugal...) france is on its way to a proper detoxification from its public sector US IT infrastrucure with many initiatives.
See 'la suite' initiative, described here below:
friendica.world/display/84b6ef…
n816 Media
2026-01-27 15:30:45
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Charlie_House
in reply to n816 Media • •And thanks for the additional info and links on Portugal’s open-source efforts. It’s inspiring to see these movements gain momentum 😉