Insurance and Open Source Software
Open source software has certainly had an impact on the worlds of business and computing. The clearest example of this is the open source Apache web server. Netcraft (www.netcraft.com) reports that in June of 2007 it was the most popular web server on the public internet with more than 65 million sites being hosted on Apache servers. Microsoft’s IIS ran a distant 2nd with just under 44 million. That’s pretty amazing when you consider the muscle Microsoft has put into positioning their systems as being Internet ready.
So what is open source software and is it important to the insurance business. The idea behind open source software is an interesting one. A group of people deciding to collaborate on a piece of software to solve some problem they share is remarkable enough, but then to decide to share that software with anyone who wants it in the hope that they will work to improve it over time is profound indeed.
The natural question for me is “How can an insurance carrier, MGA or agent benefit from open source?”. There are open source projects that help to solve a wide range of problems that nearly all organizations in the insurance business have. Document management, business process management, OLAP, web services, the list is almost inexhaustible.
In future blogs I will look at specific open source projects and how they can benefit the insurance business.
February 26th, 2008 at 5:52 pm
You may find this site interesting.
I am involved in a new project on SourceForge (an on-line open source development community), the project is called OpenQuote and it is an open source quotation system.
Looking to publicise the project we became very aware of the difficulty in finding open source software designed specifically for the insurance industry, whether searching on the internet or anywhere else for that matter – even SourceForge doesn’t have an insurance category! With this in mind we have created the site http://www.opensourceinsurance.org, a completely free resource designed to catalogue open source projects for the insurance world. So far four projects have been submitted, and I hope many more will join in the future.
Anyway, I though you may like to take a look before your next post.
Matt