An experiment in open source at the Department of War.
The U.S. Department of War (DoW) faces unique challenges in open sourcing its code. Unlike most software projects, code written by U.S. Federal government employees typically doesn't have copyright protections under U.S. and some international laws. This can make it hard to attach an open source license to our code.
This repository is the open source home for the public-facing web site Code.mil.
The Department of War is charged with protecting our citizens and national security. We have an incredibly diverse portfolio spanning from communications, logistics, education, healthcare, and even the next generation of GPS (yes, the GPS!) that supports billions of people across the globe.
We need your help in contributing to our projects to build better products and services for the American people. You can contribute by finding a project, reviewing its contributor guidelines, and submitting an issue or Pull Request!
Note
Questions about Code.mil?
Code.mil is maintained by the Department of War Chief Information Officer (DoW CIO). For questions, contact us at osd.mc-alex.dod-cio.mbx.devsecops@mail.mil.
We've drafted documentation on implementing OSS within the DoD and a guideline for accepting contributions to DoD OSS projects so the DoD can participate in the open source and free software communities, even where we may not have copyright. This lets us harness the depth and breadth of talent in the open source and free software communities to improve our software and make our code available for public use.
We want your help to continue making our open source strategy better. Our philosophy is continuous iteration. We encourage everybody to open an issue (or a pull request!) with your suggestions on how to continue improving.