

That’s great. But I work adjacent to the financial industry, and the govt is forcing that industry in the opposite direction. Payments Canada mandates all ATMs be on Windows. Regulators, even the provincial ones, effectively force mergers + cloud adoption, in part because our government regulators are all in the cloud and it’s “easier” to integrate / less risk from their POV. Almost all your ‘scanned’ cheques, go through Microsoft’s cloud.
Most banks use FISERV for their backend, which runs off an Oracle database – both US companies. Some use Temenos, an EU company with all its development in India, and fully in US clouds. Big CUs like Vancity use Intellect Design for their Online banking, an Indian Headquartered company, with most of its developers in the UAE, running the application via Microsoft Cloud. Some orgs like First West use Veripark, an app so nested in MS cloud it can’t be moved to another hyper scaler. The big banks are 100% captured.
Even many smaller “community” credit unions have these entanglements. There’s only 1 CU in BC that I know of that uses a Canadian back end (made by a Canadian company, in Canada, with Canadian devs, hosted in a Canadian private cloud - runs on SUSE and postgres if I recall right). But even with them, they’re stuck using services like Equifax which are entangled in US shit, because the gov/regulators view getting Credit Score information as more important than handing over people’s personal information to the US. And even with that Canadian stack, they ain’t growing – they’ll likely be killed off by regulators soon enough, forced to merge and send more data to the USA by govt decree. David Eby doesn’t give a shit, nor does Carney. Hell, Carney was a bank regulator type, who basically pushed this shit forward. Guy basically dug our grave, and we’re hoping he’ll dig us out.
Long and short, it’s great that your business is protecting itself, or trying to. But if all of Canada’s critical industries are as captured as the financial sector, it won’t really matter much what we do in other industries. If people can’t pay for your businesses goods, because all of our digital payments go offline due to the US’s interference, having a linux server won’t save you.






Eh, I’m on the fence on this kind of thing at this point.
Personally, with the funding where it’s currently at, I don’t feel like I’m getting any real service – it’s gone significantly downhill since I was younger. I have family members who’ve waited years to get assistance with basic mobility issues, and being on wait lists for specialists for years seems super common in general.
I also hear stories from people who work as nurses, about the abuses of the system that commonly goes on. There’s one woman I know of who’s earning well north of $100k per year in the Vancouver region, who typically works like 4-6 days per month, due to how easily the system is gamed by health care professionals. Heck, our lack of doctors is in part the result of the doctors union/associations refusing to put effort into certifying foreign trained doctors, because in part they want to keep the talent pool small and the revenue high.
So I generally get this sense that the increased funding they’ve gotten over the years, has been completely wasted money. It’s managed to get us a less efficient and less patient-oriented system, while allowing union based workers to enjoy ever increasing benefits while providing reduced service. Sorta like how increases in education funding doesn’t help sort out the lack of teachers/marketable skills at graduation, it just pays the current teachers more to continue producing non-producing graduates in a flat market.