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Microsoft Bought Sweden's ISO Vote on OOXML?

a_n_d_e_r_s writes "The vote on OOXML looked fairly secured. Most in the Working Group in Sweden was against the vote to approve OOXML. The day of the vote, though, more companies showed up at the door. Some 20 new companies — each one payed about $2500 to be allowed to vote — and vote they did ... for Microsoft. Most of the new companies were partners from Microsoft who suddenly out of the blue joined the Working Group, payed membership fees and voted yes for approval. From the OS2World story: 'The final result was 25 Yes, 6 No and 3 Abs and this would from the start be a done deal of saying No! Jonas Bosson who participated in today's meeting on behalf on FFII said that he left the meeting in protest and so did also IBM's Swedish local representative Johan Westman.'"

340 comments

  1. Corporate whores by Stanistani · · Score: 5, Funny

    Never has the old phrase been so accurate.

    1. Re:Corporate whores by Octopus · · Score: 5, Funny

      ME STANDARDIZE YOU LONG TIME!

    2. Re:Corporate whores by TapeCutter · · Score: 3, Funny

      Offtopic? - who payed for that trick?

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    3. Re:Corporate whores by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe that should be corporate 'Johns' and Government 'Whores' given that the corporations are opening their wallets and paying the cash.

    4. Re:Corporate whores by homer_s · · Score: 1, Redundant

      Yeah baby - I want to standardize you so bad.....

    5. Re:Corporate whores by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ME STANDARDIZE YOU LONG TIME! Would you standardize according to Gregorian calendar and ISO-8601, or use one of the calendar standards from ECMA-376?
    6. Re:Corporate whores by thommym · · Score: 1

      There is a letter (e-mail) from Microsoft to its partners where they are encouraged to pay up and vote. They will receive "marketing fundings" for doing so.

      --
      Don't feed the penguins
  2. Your Windows monopoly money at work. by QuietLagoon · · Score: 5, Insightful
    First the movie studios and HD-DVD, and now standards committees are being purchased.

    Why can't Microsoft compete without buying the outcome of the game? Are their products that poor?

    1. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by tgcid · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Buying the outcome is more cost-effective.

    2. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by peterprior · · Score: 5, Funny

      Are their products that poor?

      Yes ?

    3. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by Hijacked+Public · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why should they?

      Poor products or not it looks like they invested $50k to cement their format as a standard. Considering they stand to make billions from that, it was a wise investment. It is the people who designed a system that could so easily be bought who should be ashamed, if that wasn't their intended outcome in the first place. A company can't deny its nature.

      --
      "Sacrifice for the good of The State" - The State
    4. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why can't Microsoft compete without buying the outcome of the game? Are their products that poor?

      Short answer: Yes

      Long answer: Its cheaper to pay/encourage a few idiots from some of their partners to vote than it is to fix OOXML.
      or
      OOXML is broken by design. This has been proven repeatedly. Fixing it will allow their customers to break their lock-in and would allow competitors to MSOffice to act on an equal level. This way, MS gets to claim "We're a standard" even if nobody but MS can implement the full specs.

    5. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by zeromorph · · Score: 4, Funny

      :s/?/!/

      fixed it for ya.

      --
      "Hannibal's plans never work right. They just work." Amy/A-Team
    6. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Yeah - big babies crying over a little candy they weren't using anyway. /sarcasm

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    7. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by dave420 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Because they don't have to. It's not about poor products, but why leave something to chance when you can seal the deal by splashing some cash around? I'm not defending them, it just makes a lot of sense.

    8. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by edxwelch · · Score: 2, Informative

      > Why can't Microsoft compete without buying the outcome of the game? Are their products that poor?

      Yes.
      http://www.arstdesign.com/articles/OOXML-is-defect ive-by-design.html

    9. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by _KiTA_ · · Score: 1

      Why can't Microsoft compete without buying the outcome of the game? Are their products that poor?

      Yes.

      (This has been another installment of "Simple Answers for Simple Questions.")

    10. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, if companies cannot respect community standards and common decency, if they cannot live up to the public trust, why should we allow them to continue to exist? The basis of human survival, the evolution of our societies and the creation of what little stability we have is this: trust. Why do we permit those who continue to betray that trust and weaken our societies to continue to do so? Without trust, and its applied principle "The golden rule," nothing that we consider civilised could or would exist. If we continue to allow those who serve only themselves to gain power, then everything that we consider civilised will cease to exist and we will be no better than the beasts of the field.

    11. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      :wq

      stored it for ya

    12. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      :s/\?\/!/

      fixed it for you.

    13. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by Bravoc · · Score: 1

      Yes

    14. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by jc42 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Why can't Microsoft compete without buying the outcome of the game? Are their products that poor?

      Yeah, mostly, but that's irrelevant. They do have a few good products, but that's also irrelevant to sales.

      Microsoft's entire history, and IBM's for the previous decodes, demonstrates quite well that sales in any computer-related field are determined almost entirely by marketing budget. Quality is nice, but it doesn't add materially to sales, so if you have the marketing clout, there's no financial reason to also invest heavily in quality.

      Sorry to break the news to you. The best product doesn't win. The best-marketed product wins.

      There's no (financial) reason that MS should care whether OOXML is good or bad. Their primary concern is that people use it, and this only requires that it be minimally usable. Investing what is for them a small amount to get their encoding declared a "standard" is just a (standard;-) marketing approach, and it would be puzzling if they didn't do it.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    15. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by Bossk-Office · · Score: 1, Funny

      Help! You just modded a guy Insightful for asking whether Microsoft products are poor!

    16. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by Kazoo+the+Clown · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Why can't Microsoft compete without buying the outcome of the game? Are their products that poor?

      Well, it's pretty obvious they're "that poor." What's interesting though is that these sort of tactics show that it's obvious not just to us but to them as well. They have far more confidence in their ability to game the system than they do in their ability to produce products that are competitive on a level playing field (though fortunately, they're often poor at gaming the system as well).

      It's simply their corporate culture. I expect it may have to do with the fact that a large number of their programming workforce were hired right out of college without a lot of real-world experience, combined with the fact that their management style is apparently, management by intimidation. Combined, those factors make a pretty lousy recipe for producing quality products on time.

    17. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by MumbleStumbleGrumble · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >>> A company can't deny its nature. Hogwash!! Companies do not exist outside of the people that comprise them. Humans ARE capable of controlling their actions. A company's "nature" is totally dictated by the people that comprise it. Microsoft's "nature" is anti-competitive because its management wants to exist outside the laws and outside the ethical behavior standards that govern normal social behavior. Microsoft is fully capable of changing its "nature". It's management does not want to. It needs to be punished under the laws that govern our country and other countries so that it pays the full cost (and suffers the consequences) of such illegal behavior. At the moment Microsoft sees no bad consequences for its illegal behavior and has no reason to change. It time they did suffer the consequences. Well, alright, past time.

    18. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by CDarklock · · Score: 1, Troll

      Buying the outcome is just another game.

      Look, face facts: $2500 is roughly dick to the average large company. That's about the salary and benefits of one senior programmer for one week. When you set it up so I can invest that little piddling amount of money and cast my vote, I'm going to vote when it really matters.

      The real question here isn't why Microsoft did it - it worked, so it was a perfectly smart and sensible thing to do - but why the opposition couldn't mount a defense. What, you couldn't find fifty people willing to spend $2500 to stop Microsoft? Why not?

      Microsoft's partners will not hesitate to lay money on the table so their side wins. Microsoft doesn't have to bribe anyone, or pay anyone, or even encourage anyone. The story right here on Slashdot got to plenty of folks in the partner program who could volunteer $2500 and support the source of their bread's butter. Most of them didn't do it, because they just couldn't be arsed. But across all the media outlets, more than enough of them did.

      So where are all the free software people? Surely SOME of you have $2500. After all, it's not the money, it's the PRINCIPLE of the thing - right?

      The free software community needs to stop whining about what's fair and start thinking about how to win. Sure, I sit in an office on the Redmond campus, but having more than 40% of the market is bad for everyone - it's bad for the consumer, it's bad for the market, and it's bad for the market leader. I want to see Apple and Linux take a big-ass bite out of this market and give us some competition. But before they can do that, they have to stop all the damn whining and do something that matters.

      If a community whines about competition, the very least they can do is to compete.

      --
      Microsoft cheerleader, blue flag waving, you got a problem with that?
    19. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by budgenator · · Score: 1

      It might become interesting if Microsoft gets locked out of government and business contracts because their software fails to meet the ISO standard they bought and paid for; A company can't deny its nature, and we all know how long microsoft can meet a standard!

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    20. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by davidkv · · Score: 1

      Why should they?

      Poor products or not it looks like they invested $50k to cement their format as a standard. Considering they stand to make billions from that, it was a wise investment. It is the people who designed a system that could so easily be bought who should be ashamed, if that wasn't their intended outcome in the first place. A company can't deny its nature. A company is part of their society too. If they fuck it, they should be prepared to be met by something similar.
    21. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why can't FOSSies and teh Lunix compete without stocking "standards" bodies with MS-haters? Are their products that weak?

    22. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, I sit in an office on the Redmond campus

      So how did it feel when your soul left your body?

    23. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by xtaski · · Score: 1

      Standards are not supposed to be set by competing on who has more friends with more cash to spend, but by experts collaborating on the strength and merit of the standard. You obviously missed the whole point. Standards bodies are not the place for this type of competition and it's alarming to think this is how other standards could be compromised.

    24. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by CDarklock · · Score: 1

      What Microsoft did isn't against the rules. If it's wrong, then the rules are bad.

      So change the rules. If the rules let you do bad things, fix it.

      And if you're not going to change the rules, don't bitch about it.

      --
      Microsoft cheerleader, blue flag waving, you got a problem with that?
    25. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by TeXMaster · · Score: 2, Informative

      :s/\?/!/ fixed it for you

      --
      "I'm never quite so stupid as when I'm being smart" (Linus van Pelt)
    26. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by malfunct · · Score: 1

      What I fail to understand is why its so horrible for MS to have its format documented as a "standard". If it sucks noone has to use it. If the MS monopoly is the reason that people are afraid of OOXML then standardization won't matter as people will use it regardless of its status.

      Just because a body votes on something doesn't make it a "standard" in the more spiritual sense. To me the importance of a standard is that everyone uses it properly. De facto standards are often far stronger than de jure standards only because of the fact that they are the ones people use. If ODF is the best then people should use it and if people use it, it will win. The downside of ODF winning is that MS will likely try to embrace and extend because thats what is smart for thier business.

      --

      "You can now flame me, I am full of love,"

    27. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by Bluesman · · Score: 1

      :%s/?/!/

      Fixed that for all of you. vi isn't PERL.

      --
      If moderation could change anything, it would be illegal.
    28. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by namekuseijin · · Score: 1

      just keep walking, man. and try to enjoy the ride while it's still not downhill...

      --
      I don't feel like it...
    29. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Why can't Microsoft compete without buying the outcome of the game? Are their products that poor?"

      Dude, have you seen Vista?

    30. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      What I fail to understand is why its so horrible for MS to have its format documented as a "standard". If it sucks noone has to use it.
       
      The objective is to be able to win government and corporate tenders that specify "ISO Standard file format."

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    31. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by RobNich · · Score: 1

      Just because the rules don't specify that something can't be done does not mean that it is acceptable or moral to do that thing. It was a violation of the spirit of those rules, regardless of how they were written. Microsoft did something reprehensible in messing with ISO in this way.

      Your mindset is the real problem with Microsoft. You think that just because the government hasn't stepped in to stop you that it's acceptable to continue doing things that at the very least bend the laws and certainly are not moral or just. The government should not have to step in to fix your own ethics, they're YOURS.

      You're stretching morality further and further, and eventually it will cause enough outcry that something will be done. But it would never occur to you to just act morally and do what you know is right instead of trying to screw your customer and pull the wool over everyone's eyes. It would help you in the long run. There's a reason that Google is winning in the markets they step in to. They're not assholes.

      --
      Hello little man. I will destroy you!
    32. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by CDarklock · · Score: 1

      > Microsoft did something reprehensible in messing with ISO in this way

      Suppose for a moment that Microsoft did nothing - that the partners, of their own free will, saw the situation and decided of their own accord to join the committee and cast their votes for what they themselves wanted.

      Does that change the way you view it?

      Because fundamentally, we don't have any clear indication otherwise. If my business stood to make $50,000 next year alone in projects supporting a particular format - Microsoft or otherwise - and I saw a significant likelihood that the format was going to be rejected in committee, I'd spend $2,500 to cast another vote in my direction. That's just good business sense.

      And what if the opposite happened? What if Microsoft was about to get a standard approved, and suddenly twenty new members popped up to vote against it? Would you be complaining about that, or would you be laughing about how Microsoft deserves it?

      I think you'd be laughing. I think this thread would be full of "ha ha, that's what you get, stupid Microsoft - the people have spoken!" Because when Microsoft loses, the people are speaking, but when they WIN it's because they're nasty corrupt bastards who want to rule the world. Is it so hard to believe that some people LIKE Microsoft and WANT them to win? Because my portfolio value sort of depends on that.

      Now, I do agree that the process is flawed. I shouldn't be able to write a check and cast a vote. That damages the integrity of the process. But if I can do it, why would you complain that I did it? Complain about the rule, sure. But what I did isn't against the rules. It's legal. Not only didn't anyone stop me, they couldn't - everything I did was by the book.

      And at this point, there's nothing fair you can do to stop it. Sure, you could say the vote doesn't count, and then change the rules so all the new guys can't vote, and then do a recount... but that's not fair. What happened was fair; anyone could have done it. Both sides of the debate had the same opportunity. Indeed, I'd bet that if you go back over the historical record, you'll find this isn't the first time it's happened.

      --
      Microsoft cheerleader, blue flag waving, you got a problem with that?
    33. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by RobNich · · Score: 1
      All that you are saying ignores the fact that ISO exists to evaluate standards and approve them. The actions of Microsoft (or its partners) circumvented the process, after the members had evaluated the standard and found it lacking. This was a technical discussion and the standard was found to be contradictory and confusing. There already exist other standards (or at least one) that provide the same features without being contradictory and confusing.

      So, being that you are a Microsoft partner, I'm not surprised in the least by your statement that, "If my business stood to make $50,000 next year alone in projects supporting a particular format...I'd spend $2,500 to cast another vote in my direction." Considering that this format is going to cost companies and individuals worldwide long-term in a number of ways: cost to purchase software (from Microsoft, since it's the only one to implement it "fully"), cost to figure out how to retrieve those documents later, cost to support an infrastructure (Windows PCs) that could potentially be replaced with something less costly.

      As I said, your attitude is the problem at Microsoft. As a partner, you're selling a product that you have to push on people because they wouldn't otherwise want it.

      I shouldn't be able to write a check and cast a vote. That damages the integrity of the process. But if I can do it, why would you complain that I did it? Are you trolling? The answer is, "I will complain that you did that unethical thing because it was unethical for you to do it, and therefore you should not have done it." I don't mean to be condescending here, but I feel like I'm explaining ethics to one of my children. Just because you are not stopped from doing something by the rules does not mean that you should do it with impudence.

      Rules and laws do not define all that is right and wrong, they are only put in place to stop abuses. Before law enters the picture, there is first personal and professional integrity.
      --
      Hello little man. I will destroy you!
    34. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by CDarklock · · Score: 1

      > I feel like I'm explaining ethics to one of my children.

      Since when is it unethical to join an organisation for the purpose of voting on a matter you deem important? Isn't that why most people join the ISO in the first place?

      Face it, sitting in the ISO while standards are reviewed gives you an inside track on implementing them. If you need more time, you hold it up in committee until you get the bugs worked out, and then you let it go through. Companies do this all the time on standards tracks. Then they get an advantage over the competition because they've already become experts on the standard before it was approved. So why, exactly, is it unethical for partners to join that body and push the standard through before the competition is ready?

      --
      Microsoft cheerleader, blue flag waving, you got a problem with that?
    35. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by SillySlashdotName · · Score: 1

      Company A can, under the rules, write a check and vote immediately. Probably not good, but allowed under the current rules.

      That is NOT what happpened.

      What happened is that Company A wrote a check, and companies B,C,D,E,F,G,H,I,J,K,L,M,N,O,P,Q,R,S,T, and U voted the way Company A told them to vote.

      I don't know what to call it - bribery, coercion, undue innfluence, racketeering, evil, or just Microsoft doing 'business as usual' (i.e., 'all the above')- but whatever it is called, it is wrong.

      Like most Microsoft fans, you seem to have lost sight of the means, concentrating on the ends.

      If the standard was intended to be for sale to the highest bidder, then why go to the trouble of having a vote?

      If they went to the trouble of having a vote, why was the decision decided by the highest bidder?

      --
      Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
    36. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by CDarklock · · Score: 1

      I haven't seen any actual evidence of these allegations. As far as I'm concerned, it's on the same page with Area 51 and the second guy on the grassy knoll.

      Personally, I don't find it hard to believe that twenty people independently wanted the standard approved and weren't bribed, coerced, or influenced by anyone except themselves. I don't see why you find it hard to believe, except that you simply can't imagine anyone might actually like Microsoft of their own free will.

      --
      Microsoft cheerleader, blue flag waving, you got a problem with that?
    37. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by mhazen · · Score: 1

      s/([A-Z])([A-Z]+)/$1 . lc $2/eg

      Fixed that for you. Perl isn't PERL.

      --
      Rock is dead. Long live scissors and paper!
    38. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by smilindog2000 · · Score: 1

      Geeze! Gotta love slashdotting... the poor world of actual non-super-geeks out there have no freaking idea what this thread is about :-)

      s/?/, unless you believe power/money does not corrupt/

      --
      Beer is proof that God loves us, and wants us to be happy.
    39. Re:Your Windows monopoly money at work. by gtall · · Score: 1

      His soul wouldn't technically have to leave his body for him to work there. It might simply have a lien on it and he gets to use it for awhile...probably while it hasn't completely blackened and shriveled.

      Gerry

  3. And we are surprised why? by CodeShark · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Repeat after me "money buys influence money buys influence money busy influence...."


    Too bad the truth gets lost when the money starts talking. *sigh*

    We all know that M$ doesn't play fair in terms of open standards, and never will. Why are we surprised?

    --
    ...Open Source isn't the only answer -- but it's almost always a better value than the alternatives...
    1. Re:And we are surprised why? by Phisbut · · Score: 1

      Repeat after me "money buys influence money buys influence money busy influence...."

      Money busy influence?

      I repeat, but people look at me weird...

      --
      After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
      - The Tao of Programming
    2. Re:And we are surprised why? by lixee · · Score: 3, Informative

      We all know that M$ doesn't play fair in terms of open standards, and never will. Why are we surprised?
      Who said anyone was surprised?

      We are outraged.
      --
      Res publica non dominetur
  4. Ahh... by Zatchmort · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...good old-fashioned democracy at work. Seriously, though, what kind of organization are they running, here? Any company, from anywhere, can suddenly be a member just by paying 2500-- a nominal fee, for many large companies. That seems like asking for trouble to me.

    1. Re:Ahh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not defending Microsoft, and think what they have done is nothing short of outrageous, but what would you suggest?

      Having a working group that demands high capital interest will just stop people participating. It some cases even lock out valuable input. So how would you suggest membership is qualified?

    2. Re:Ahh... by Hoppelainen · · Score: 5, Informative

      Any Swedish company can become a member of SIS buy paying somewhere around $300-$500 per year. To be allowed to vote in this particular issue an extra 15 000 Sek ($2500) was needed. So yeah, it is open for anyone with cash (but they had to be members of SIS since before.

    3. Re:Ahh... by VE3MTM · · Score: 4, Interesting

      My understanding, from watching Bjarne Stroustrup's lecture before about the standardization process for C++ (also through the ISO), was that you need to attend a certain number of meetings (3?) before you can vote.

      Why wasn't this the case here?

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0 Whoops, silly middle mouse button...
    4. Re:Ahh... by MontyApollo · · Score: 1

      If you are going by a majority of companies, then MS will probably win everytime because of all their partners.

      Letting any company vote is probably not the best way to go about this, but at a certain level you do have to take into account to some degree what the majority of the IT industry thinks.

    5. Re:Ahh... by MontyApollo · · Score: 1

      >>Why wasn't this the case here?

      It is hard to say what the case was here, because the info only seems to be coming from bloggers on one side of the issue. This is not to say they are wrong, but there is definate spin going on. They immediately claimed microsoft bought the vote without providing any evidence. All the new companies were MS certified partners, so it was in their best interest to vote the way they did.

    6. Re:Ahh... by PinkyDead · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Seriously, though, what kind of organization are they running I think this is the nub of the problem. ISO standards are used all around the world to protect people - and they're certainly used for far more important things than document formats.

      But in the case of car manufacturers or construction engineers or whoever else, the ISO protects the companies by providing highly quality standard by which to work. If Ford etc follow the standards for manufacturing their cars yet one of them still crashes or explodes or whatever, then Ford is covered (somewhat) by its adherence to the standards.

      This organization works very well in the non-software model, as Ford don't want cars blowing up any more than the ISO does.

      Thing is, throw Microsoft in there. They couldn't give a crap whether documents are unreadable in the future, no one is going to sue them anyway. So they can safely work against the principal of quality standards with no impunity.

      Now if they could be sued every time they screwed up your document - then there'd be a different story here.
      --
      Genesis 1:32 And God typed :wq!
    7. Re:Ahh... by perrin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I fail to see how anyone other than MS would have anything to gain from pushing OOXML, unless they are getting kickbacks. Even companies partnering with MS would benefit greatly if a more open standard, such as ODF, was being used into which they could integrate into more easily and actually do something useful with. This all sounds like a corruption of the standards organization unlike anything I have ever heard of previously. If this does not become anti-trust material a few years down the road, at least in the EU and Japan, I would very surprised.

    8. Re:Ahh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Majority of the IT industry wants MS. That doesn't include you. It includes people who "own" you.

    9. Re:Ahh... by MontyApollo · · Score: 5, Informative

      I fail to see how anyone other than MS would have anything to gain from pushing OOXML, unless they are getting kickbacks.

      They were MS Gold certified companies. They make their living pushing MS products.

      Even companies partnering with MS would benefit greatly if a more open standard, such as ODF, was being used into which they could integrate into more easily and actually do something useful with.

      I doubt they see it that way. The more people sticking with MS, the more cache "MS Gold certified partner" has. OOXML will be more easy to integrate if everything is already MS.

    10. Re:Ahh... by twitter · · Score: 1

      it is open for anyone with cash (but they had to be members of SIS since before.

      Perhaps these companies can be removed for such an obvious violation. That would at least drive the cost of vote buying up. It would be better to just never consider proposals from convicted monopolists.

      --

      Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    11. Re:Ahh... by knewter · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I quit my job at a Microsoft Gold Partner instead of taking their meaningless MCSD exam. The company requested I certify, because MS wanted us to have more MCSDs in order to keep our prime pricing on their products. I started out, aced the first exam, and then realized that all of the time I spent on this was solely for the company (didn't benefit me in the least, aside from signaling [that I'm a tool]). I quit and started my own Ruby on Rails-based startup (in limbo, might not fail) and became a partner at another local company heading up the (Ruby/Rails-driven) programming team. I make more money, I'm much happier, and I'm not feeding the beast.

      All of you that are helping make computers more like contracts and less like lumber: fuck you. Quit your job like I did. Everyone's better off.

      --
      -knewter
    12. Re:Ahh... by seriesrover · · Score: 1

      But what did they violate that is so obvious? If they paid their dues and voted what rules did they break - none that I've heard of. Now, don't get me wrong I don't think its particularly a good way of doing things but one should blame the system.

    13. Re:Ahh... by guruevi · · Score: 4, Informative

      Having worked for MS Gold partners, MS Gold partners are just extensions of Microsoft itself basically. They push Microsoft products and are not allowed to promote alternative products.

      I worked for a hosting company that was a MS Gold partner but our 'free' hosting and static domain names was on Apache/Linux for the 'free' reason and we had to proxy the requests through a bunch of IIS boxes or reroute certain ICMP traffic on the firewall so it would come up as IIS/ASP.NET/Windows 2003 with NetCraft. And then the sales junkie finally got the report that more than 50% of their machines were Windows.

      The sales were not allowed to sell Linux or Mac unless specifically asked and persisted on by the customer and then we had to support Apache/PHP/MySQL on Windows (that was back in 2002), then on tradeshows we had to say 70% of our machines were running Windows, that metric we got only because we didn't include our internal Linux service machines (you know Nagios, e-mail, spamfilters, Snort, firewalls, ...).

      By the way: we hosted parts of MSN (Belgium) and the dumbest thing they did: buy a cheap Shared Hosting package for MSN advertisements (which were going to display nationwide) and they HARD CODED the shared package URL (msn.server.hostingcompany.com) in MSN Messenger, we had to redirect our nameservers for that URL to a separate server.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    14. Re:Ahh... by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Interesting

      All the new companies were MS certified partners, so it was in their best interest to vote the way they did.

      Bullshit! Do you know just how bad OOXML is? It's so bad that the only way even Microsoft can benefit from it is by using it as a tool to prop up its monopoly. Hell, I'm not even convinced it's in Microsoft's best interests to be pushing OOXML -- its monopoly might be better served by MS Office implementing ODF, since MS Office still has great mindshare and interface advantages over OpenOffice.

      Microsoft's tactic of pushing OOXML is like trying to gain territory via nuclear war: sure, they might get the territory in the end, but it'll be radioactive and worthless.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    15. Re:Ahh... by Tacvek · · Score: 1

      I'm afraid that the only thing that can be done is to fight this the same way Microsoft fights. (I.E. Pay companies to join the national standards organizations and vote NO.) The correct thing would have been for ISO to outright deny the fast tracking. After all, the standard conflicts with an existing standard, fails to use many exiting standards when relevant, and has no verified implementations. (One might say it has no implementations at all!) I mean the whole thing was stupid. Why did Microsoft even choose to go to an XML based format that actually has no benefits? The few benefits that XML could have brought have been canceled out by poor format design.

      --
      Stylish sheet to fix many problems in Slashdot's D3: https://gist.github.com/801524
    16. Re:Ahh... by pakar · · Score: 1

      I would suggest that they either require the voters to register at least 2 months before the actual vote, and maybe that they would need to be on atleast 50% of the technical-meetings around it...

      Another way that would be much better would be to vote for a standard with software and if less than 50% have it implemented after a year or 2 then the it will not become a ISO standard.. Then only the companies that actually implement the stuff will get to vote.

    17. Re:Ahh... by someone1234 · · Score: 1

      They joined for the voting. Isn't that obvious they were sent by M$?

      --
      Patents Drive Free Software as Hurricanes Drive Construction Industry
    18. Re:Ahh... by SillySlashdotName · · Score: 1

      What did each company violate that was so obvious? Any integrity they might have started with.

      Not because they paid their money and cast their vote, but because they paid their money and cast their vote AS DIRECTED BY MICROSOFT and with the expectation of gain by the reductions in pricing they were offered in exchange for their vote.

      Reminds me of that old chestnut

      "Would you sleep with me for a million dollars?"

      "Yes!!!"

      "How about for two dollars?"

      "What do you think I AM!?!"

      "we've settled _that_, now we are haggling over price."

      They can be a good whore, a bad whore, an expensive whore, a cheap whore, or even a whore with a heart of gold, but in the end, they are still just whores, willing to do things they would not otherwise do when offered enough money.

      --
      Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
    19. Re:Ahh... by SillySlashdotName · · Score: 1

      at a certain level you do have to take into account to some degree what the majority of the IT industry thinks.


      How can you 'take into account...what the majority of the IT industry thinks' when the vote that would tell you how 'the majority of the IT industry thinks' does no such thing, it only shows who is willing to drop their pants and take it when Microsoft tells them to?

      --
      Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
    20. Re:Ahh... by ccp · · Score: 1

      Thing is, throw Microsoft in there. They couldn't give a crap whether documents are unreadable in the future, no one is going to sue them anyway.

      I'm afraid you don't fully understand MSFT: they actually give a crap whether documents are unreadable in the future, and make sure they are not.
      Because document incompatibility is the best way to force people to upgrade, and upgrades are what keeps MSFT in the game.

      Cheers,
      CC
    21. Re:Ahh... by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      because if they had tried to submit the word binary format they would have had an even harder time getting through the standards bodies.

      What MS wants is a "standard" that noone else can actually implement properly so that they can claim to provide standards compliant soloutions while maintaining lockin.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
  5. Evil bastards by ColonelPanic · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Truly, they are evil, and any person of conscience could not work there and retain their integrity.

    --
    "Skill shows through where genius wears thin." -Wittgenstein || Religion: uniting aviation and architecture.
    1. Re:Evil bastards by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

      Hmm, if you look at the MS jobs web site, you'll see that they have more than ten thousand open positions - so clearly people *don't* want to work there. My guess is that a fair bunch of MS employees do so *only* to keep a shirt on their backs and not for the love of the job or the company.

      --
      Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    2. Re:Evil bastards by Otter · · Score: 1
      Truly, they are evil...

      Apparently Google showed up at the last moment to vote on the other side and they're by definition Not Evil. So, truly, they are not evil.

    3. Re:Evil bastards by OldeTimeGeek · · Score: 1

      My guess is that a fair bunch of MS employees do so *only* to keep a shirt on their backs and not for the love of the job or the company.

      Welcome to the real world. The vast majority of people work where they do to keep a shirt on their back.

    4. Re:Evil bastards by hxnwix · · Score: 4, Funny

      Truly, they are evil, and any person of conscience could not work there and retain their integrity. Sir, walk carefully, for you are treading on other people's livelihoods. I know a number of Microsoft employees, and they couldn't possibly be more offended by your suggestion that they lack the right stuff. At Microsoft, they all feel like they are finally important, like they are finally part of something bigger than themselves. At Microsoft, everybody gets to be an integral part of stealing money from donation boxes and candy from babies.
       
      If that's not integrity, what is?
    5. Re:Evil bastards by Bazer · · Score: 1

      You're missing the context: 20 companies with MS Gold Certificates voting "Yes" and none with Google partnership voting "No".

    6. Re:Evil bastards by PinkPanther · · Score: 1

      At Microsoft, they all feel like they are finally important, like they are finally part of something bigger than themselves.

      I am so-o-o-o relieved to see how you ended that post. I was about to rip you a new one before that.

      Having been part of the machine for a bit, the reason I turned them down for long-term employment is specifically because the culture makes you feel like you are finally important, but reality is that real decisions are made in corner offices and scripture is passed down the the rank-and-file for implementation-without-further-input-nor-interpret ation.

      --
      It's a simple matter of complex programming.
    7. Re:Evil bastards by tarlong · · Score: 1

      You can, but they will eventually fire you for some lame ass excuse. I know, it happened to me.

      cheers

      albert

      --
      What? A beutiful butterfly you say? And how exactly are you going to turn into a beutiful butterfly then?
    8. Re:Evil bastards by BlackSnake112 · · Score: 1

      in other words, microsoft is like most of the other major corporations in the world. The upper management makes the decisions and leave it up to the rest of the working staff to make it happen.

    9. Re:Evil bastards by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Your clearly low ranking enough to not have a proper understanding of why rich people and organisations "donate" to charity...
      I'm not a religious man, but one bible story always sticks with me.... It's the one about all the rich men who came into church and made a big show about how much they were donating, while a poor woman tried to hide how little she was donating. Who was more generous? The rich men who donated their pocket change, or the poor woman who donated a week's earnings?
      Charitable donations are a tax dodge and PR exercise, they also provide advertising opportunity and in microsoft's case potential lock-in... microsoft is even capable of directly profiting from charitable donations. Much of their donations are in the form of software, which costs them nothing to produce but they claim back the tax based on the retail price, thus making a profit at the taxpayer's expense. Plus, by donating proprietary software they are creating new locked-in customers.
      Start talking about charity when they donate no-strings-attached cash anonymously.

      Also, if your proud of working at microsoft... what are your views on the ooxml format? What is your response to all the flaws in it that have been pointed out recently? And what about microsoft's ignoring of the existing iso standard, and trying to force their own through rather than proposing updates to the existing standard (if thats even necessary)?

      And what is it exactly that makes you proud to work for microsoft? Your proud that your hard work goes to make someone else (who probably doesnt work very hard at all) even more rich, and that you yourself will never amount to much?

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    10. Re:Evil bastards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, Google and Microsoft both have a real technical interest in the standards, as they both implement document formats. Random Microsoft software resellers don't; neither would Google software resellers, if such things existed.

    11. Re:Evil bastards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does charity trump all wrongdoing? Regardless of who gives the most, I can attest that Microsoft employees give the loudest. Can't Microsoft defend it's business practices in any way other than "look at all our charity!"?

      Also, if giving software to schools counts as charity*, than isn't open source giving too?

      (I'm not implying that's most of what Microsoft does.)

    12. Re:Evil bastards by PinkPanther · · Score: 2, Interesting
      However, the culture attempts to make each employee feel like they can make a difference. The place at the time (early 90's) was full of stories where a "janitor" would see something on a screen and say "wouldn't it be better if..." and that became a cornerstone of MS-blah-blah-blah.

      Recruiters always told me that working for them I could "make a real difference, be a voice for the customers/end-users, unlike anywhere else". I saw that my managers, many of whom had put in 8+ years already, were just getting to a point where they were consulted during initial requirements gathering phases.

      --
      It's a simple matter of complex programming.
    13. Re:Evil bastards by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Truly, they are evil, and any person of conscience could not work there and retain their integrity.

      If Microsoft is your measure of "evil", then you need a serious LARTing.

      On the 1-10 scale of evil corporate bastardry, Microsoft wouldn't even merit a 5.

    14. Re:Evil bastards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your clearly low ranking enough to not have a proper understanding of why rich people and organisations "donate" to charity...

      Microsoft, as a company, isn't the one donating (in my example, at least). The employees are. On their own accord.

      Also, I'm not sure where you drew your conclusions about my being so "low ranking." Put simply, if I wanted to retire today, I would. But I don't. I enjoy what I do.

      Lastly, I'm proud to work at Microsoft because I know the difference between "you're" and "your".

    15. Re:Evil bastards by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Do I get the black leather uniform if I sign on?

  6. Microsoft bully tactic VS flawed system... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As usual we see the good old "bully" tactic being adopted.

    Btw now if your procedures are flawed since the beginning don't come to whine.

    1. How come could some companies who didn't participated into the "preparation meetings" could come here and vote ?
    2. Ah wait there was some buck to pay to vote...

  7. products are not poor, they are sh#t by wardk · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    prove me wrong fanboys, after you're done rebooting

  8. Who paid? by LordEd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One would think that SIS would not accept new companies to participate in the vote since they haven't been part of the earlier discussions and meetings. But according to SIS they didn't see any problem that new companies wanted to take part in this vote without prior notice. So what happened here is that Microsoft gather together a bunch of loyal partners that would vote yes to their standard without any questions.
    Did Microsoft pay their fee? If yes, then they stuffed the box. If not, then 23 companies with a common interest with Microsoft joined an organization to vote for something in their own interests.
    1. Re:Who paid? by jhhdk · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The sad thing is its probably not in their best interest, but they are too stupid to see it.
      - OOXML gets rejected by ISO
      - Public procurement policies dictate ODF
      - Microsoft supports ODF
      - Customers are free of lock-in
      - Larger percentage will choose F/LOSS
      - costs shift from license fees to training / consulting
      - more money for local companies.

    2. Re:Who paid? by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 0

      What makes you think ODF would free customers of lock-in? ODF leaves an astonishing amount as implementation-defined, including most of spreadsheets. Microsoft could easily make Office read and write ODF 100% following the standard, and have horrible interoperability with OpenOffice, simply by not recognize OpenOffice's non-standard elements.

    3. Re:Who paid? by burnin1965 · · Score: 1

      23 companies with a common interest with Microsoft joined an organization to vote for something in their own interests


      In which case it is no longer a standards committee but instead is a Microsoft edict committee. The purpose of a standards committe is to bring together multiple industry leaders to create and agree on a standard from which they can all cooperate and compete. If all it takes is for one company to throw cash at it, whether its their cash or that of their partners, then its no longer a standards committee but simply a group with a single interest forcing their edict on the entire industry.
    4. Re:Who paid? by LordEd · · Score: 2, Interesting

      one company to throw cash at it
      Who paid?. Microsoft partners pay money to Microsoft for licenses. Was a discount offered or money exchanged?

      If a community is full of Christians and they vote along their beliefs, does that mean the church controls the city?

      Considering the market share of Microsoft products, is it possible that there would be more technical companies aligned with them than others? Do you think Microsoft and all of its partners should only have 1 vote? If a Microsoft partner voted against the standard, what happens to that vote?
    5. Re:Who paid? by Skapare · · Score: 1
      Did Microsoft pay their fee?

      If Microsoft in any way even communicated the suggestion to these companies to join and vote this way, or even just to join, then, yes, Microsoft effectively paid the feed. Microsoft will most certainly be giving these companies some kinds of favors in the coming future, if not done already.

      --
      now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
    6. Re:Who paid? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did Microsoft pay their fee? If yes, then they stuffed the box. If not, then 23 companies with a common interest with Microsoft joined an organization to vote for something in their own interests.


      except it very well may not be in their own interests. perhaps, perhaps not. i'd have to know what the companies did. if they all resell msft stuff then, yeah, it was in their own interest. if msft paid them off in order to vote against their self interests then that is pretty nasty.

      msft is quite the cunning. they lay low and then get ya at the last possible moment.
    7. Re:Who paid? by SamLJones · · Score: 1

      Sounds like this is more a case of a community with relatively equal populations of several religions, but a few hundred Christians come to town one day just to vote, then leave again (having been invited by the local church)

    8. Re:Who paid? by burnin1965 · · Score: 1

      Who paid?. Microsoft partners pay money to Microsoft for licenses. Was a discount offered or money exchanged?

      Time will tell, it wouldn't be the first time the convicted monopoly was caught performing dirty deads to thwart competition.

      If a community is full of Christians and they vote along their beliefs, does that mean the church controls the city?

      Interesting analogy, as with politics, law, and economics, virtually every religion, christianity included, have a sordid history of corruption and abuse by leadership to further the will of a few. The day that Christian leaders stop spoon feeding politics to their flock from the pulpit is the day Christians begin to understand the issues they are voting on and allow their beliefs to guide their votes rather than their religuous leaders. Don't hold your breathe.

      Here is a good question, of all the Microsoft partners who suddenly joined the Working Group how many can ellucidate on Microsoft's OOXML standard and the serious issues which have been brought up by its opponents?

      Of all these new Microsoft partner members how many voted No because after their extensive study of Microsoft's proposal they felt compelled to side with the opponents? I can answer that one, zero.

      Considering the market share of Microsoft products, is it possible that there would be more technical companies aligned with them than others?

      Are they voting on a standard for use industry wide for cooperation and competition, or is the objective of the group to vote all other companies out of business? Its a standards committee, not a playground with bullies.

      If a Microsoft partner voted against the standard, what happens to that vote?

      Heh, a better question would be, if a Microsoft partner voted against Microsoft's proposal (its not a standard yet), will they remain a Microsoft partner?

    9. Re:Who paid? by LordEd · · Score: 1

      Here is a good question, of all the Microsoft partners who suddenly joined the Working Group how many can elucidate on Microsoft's OOXML standard and the serious issues which have been brought up by its opponents?
      Agreed. This is another thing that the article doesn't make clear.

      Are they voting on a standard for use industry wide for cooperation and competition, or is the objective of the group to vote all other companies out of business?
      At least it is some sort of standard. It would at minimum be better than a closed encrypted mess. I haven't fully followed this issue, but if one is voted in, does that mean no other document standard can be introduced and used?

      Heh, a better question would be, if a Microsoft partner voted against Microsoft's proposal (its not a standard yet), will they remain a Microsoft partner?
      I don't have the full details of the partner program, but the requirements for joining include x certified employees, y customer reviews, and the yearly fee (there is some other stuff depending on the type of partner). I don't know the full agreement, but I don't remember any section requiring us to vote in favor of any Microsoft proposal, bow to Gates, or to sacrifice a penguin on a ritualistic alter each morning.
    10. Re:Who paid? by jesterzog · · Score: 1

      If not, then 23 companies with a common interest with Microsoft joined an organization to vote for something in their own interests.

      Apparently while also making no effort to take part in the preceeding constructive debate with others who had an interest. This is the entire point of such organisations, because by actually talking to people with other points of view, everyone's final decision is much more informed.

      But that's not what happened. 23 companies showed up to vote at the last minute, quite possibly being completely ignorant about what they were voting for, not giving any realistic opportunity for others to talk to them about their vote, and they were allowed to. Irrespective of whether it's legal, if it's true, this doesn't look very good for the Swedish Standards Institute, nor does it look that great for the quality assurance methods of the ISO, unless the ISO somehow takes actions to invalidate the vote or at the very least make sure that it can't happen again.

      Perhaps it was the SIS's fault for not properly communicating what it was voting on with reasonable notice, but hearing about this kind of manipulation of the system really does sicken me.

    11. Re:Who paid? by BillyBlaze · · Score: 1

      If a community is full of Christians and they vote along their beliefs, does that mean the church controls the city?

      Yes, if their beliefs involve voting as the church does for fear of divine retribution. That's why we have the separation of church and state.

      However, this is more like a lot of people that don't even live in the community voting on for an ordinance that will hurt the community, but will benefit the surrounding areas. Do these Microsoft partner companies have any *technical* interest in the standard?
    12. Re:Who paid? by HeroreV · · Score: 1

      ODF is still being worked on, and has a much more open specification process. They care more about doing things well than doing things quickly.

      If Microsoft really cared about interop with OpenOffice, they can have someone create documentation from the source code of OpenOffice. That isn't a very desirable situation, but it's much better than the situation with the closed-source Microsoft Office.

    13. Re:Who paid? by burnin1965 · · Score: 1

      I don't have the full details of the partner program, but the requirements for joining include x certified employees, y customer reviews, and the yearly fee (there is some other stuff depending on the type of partner). I don't know the full agreement, but I don't remember any section requiring us to vote in favor of any Microsoft proposal, bow to Gates, or to sacrifice a penguin on a ritualistic alter each morning.


      Well, the news is in, and as usual when it smells like crap its a good bet it is crap. This voting fiasco smelled like the same old Microsoft illegal manipulation of an industry for their own benefit not through valid marketing, competition and cooperation but through coercion and corruption.

      You may make light of the outrageous and at times outright illegal behaviour of Microsoft in their attempts to maintain a monopoly status on the desktop but for many in the industry who actually do try to compete in the market and provide value and innovation Microsoft is an ever present impediment not through the technical capability of their many engineers but through the pathetic back door dealings of their scumbag management.

      Yep, business as usual for the convicts.
  9. Yes, there is a reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's called conflict of interest. Had these companies *not* been Microsoft partners it *might* be acceptable, but not otherwise.

    1. Re:Yes, there is a reason by pthor1231 · · Score: 1

      So the other companies that had a vested interest in OOXML not succeeding are allowed to vote, but not the companies that had a vested interest in OOXML succeeding? Double standard much? If these companies were just shell corporations for MS to stuff the ballot, then yes, it was wrong. IF they are legitimate companies who happen to have an interest in the best for MS since they are MS certified partners, they deserve the same vote as someone who isn't a certified partner.

    2. Re:Yes, there is a reason by realdodgeman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The vote shouldn't be based on a company's interest, but in the functionality and necessity of the standard.

    3. Re:Yes, there is a reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually no, they don't (as you put it).
      The *idea* of this standard is having an open format. That's a technical question and not a question of what is best for MS (or some other company).

  10. Google Joined to say No by courtarro · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Kudos to Google for being one of those to "suddenly" join, but on the "No" side. Most of the other companies on the list of new arrivals are unfamiliar to me, excepting Google and HP, and we don't officially know how HP's vote went.

    Shame on the others for having no sense of decency.

    1. Re:Google Joined to say No by Z00L00K · · Score: 1
      Most of the companies in the list are consultant companies. No real products of their own (at least not much) and with interest in getting a good deal with M$.

      And SIS are defending their standpoint in the case.

      The trust in the standardization organizations decreases...

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    2. Re:Google Joined to say No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Google Joined to say No

      Results 1 - 5 of 5 for "Joined to say No". (0.56 seconds)

      We are definitely on a lose side...

  11. Interesting ... by gerddie · · Score: 5, Informative

    ... in Germany, Deutsche Telekom and Google would have voted "no". However, both were not allowed to vote because they came in late. And another guy left the voting session early, but his "yes" was counted although before it was said that only votes count that were given in presence. (according to Heise (german))

    1. Re:Interesting ... by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Hmm.. Interestingly enough, the german IBM delegate then somehow managed to join the Kenyan delegation, and managed to write the objection. How can someone be both a german and kenyan delegate?

      http://ooxmlhoaxes.blogspot.com/2007/05/has-ibm-an nexed-kenyan-iso-national.html

      Sounds like both sides aren't playing fair.

    2. Re:Interesting ... by gerddie · · Score: 1

      Since many companies (Google, Microsoft, IBM, ...) seem to be able to vote in different countries, I wouldn't see this as something special, after all, it's the company that is represented, why should not one well informed guy do it in more then one country? Most probably, in each of these companies they have formulated certain opinion about the issue, and only a few guys get to write it down and present it. IMO, it would be more surprising if each branch of the company would give a different response.
      I don't know what would be really a fair process, but after reading this and this it seems to me that a big "no" to OpenXML as an ISO standard could only be a good thing.

    3. Re:Interesting ... by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      Actually, the articles you link to are a bit disingenuous. Sun controls the ODF committee at OASIS. It's employees account for abou 1/3 of the working group, including the chair. If you include IBM who is closely tied to Sun on this subject it's over 50% between two companies. Sun has created an illusion of openness quite successfully, and people have fallen for it hook, line, and sinker.

      People continue to harp about the patent issue, but one of the top open source licensing advocates, who literally wrote the book on open source licensing, doesn't see a problem with Microsoft's patent license.

      http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=2192

      The thing you're NOT doing is looking at what biases the people you're trusting have. They are aligned with Sun for financial reasons. They have reason to want ODF to succeed that has nothing to do with it's quality as a standard.

      For example, the second article you link to says this at the bottom:

      "The author is Vice President & Director of Business Affairs at the OpenDocument Foundation, Inc"

      How about we get some analysis by people that do NOT have a financial stake in the winner?

    4. Re:Interesting ... by ArtDent · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your comment is nonsensical.

      Sun is not IBM. They are separate businesses with different business interests. The ODF spec represents an intersection of those interests. That is a good thing for the format and its users. Are you really claiming that ODF would be better if it was created by people who wanted it to fail?

      Microsoft is a single business. Their interest is in dressing up their format as a standard while locking customers in and competitors out.

    5. Re:Interesting ... by gerddie · · Score: 1

      The thing you're NOT doing is looking at what biases the people you're trusting have. They are aligned with Sun for financial reasons. They have reason to want ODF to succeed that has nothing to do with it's quality as a standard.
      Well, some of the points of the second article are: OpenXML has Non-Disclosure of Elements of OOXML, is OOXML ... Not Fully Implemented in Any Application, has Platform Dependencies, and has an Inadequate Specification. These issues are not depending on any bias, they are just there. Besides, the article you're linking to is nearly two years old and was written at at time, when only little about the proposed standard was known. Now, we know about 6000 pages more.

      Insert lineWrapLikeWord6 here, and please, I'd like to apply useWord97LineBreakRules, does anybody know how to do this, apart from Microsoft?

    6. Re:Interesting ... by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is not the only member of the ECMA working group. It also includes Apple, Novell, Corel, The British Museum, The Library of Congress, etc... You implication that OOXML is only proposed by Microsoft is false.

      The point was that the ODF comittee is composed by a majority of members with a financial interest in preventing Microsoft from doing anything to succeed.

    7. Re:Interesting ... by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      No, the bias is how much weight is given to those arguments. The exact same issues, for the most part, exist in ODF, yet you don't see those people complaining about those issues there.

      For example, OpenOffice creates ODF documents with more than 100 application defined tags. See http://blogs.msdn.com/brian_jones/archive/2007/02/ 20/beyond-the-basics.aspx

      The only difference here is that Microsoft defines the application defined tags as deprecated, rather than letting implementors find out about them on their own. In other words, it's Sun lying by omission.

      The tags you mention are deprecated, and will never be used by any version of Office to create OOXML documents, other than when converting legacy documents. They're a non-issue. They're simply defined for completeness, because apps will HAVE to deal with them whether the standard defines them or not, just like apps have to deal with OpenOffice's crud... they just don't tell anyone about it.

    8. Re:Interesting ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem to be conveniently ignoring that the MS patent pledge or whatever they are calling it only applies to *complete* implementations of the standard. Oh, and you can't legally reverse-engineer the pieces of software you'd need for that complete implementation. Too bad for the competitors, huh?

    9. Re:Interesting ... by gerddie · · Score: 1

      For example, OpenOffice creates ODF documents with more than 100 application defined tags.
      You're right in that this is bad. However, at least with OpenOffice everyone could dig into the source code to find out what these tags really do, in other words, a reference implementation is readily available. For OOXML no such things exists, and given the 6000+ pages describing the proposed standard, it probably never will exists.
    10. Re:Interesting ... by ArtDent · · Score: 1

      The ODF spec is less than one-sixth the size of OOXML, and yet the OASIS group spent more than twice as long as the ECMA group working on it. In other words, ODF received over an order of magnitude more attention from the OASIS group than OOXML from ECMA.

      Be real: Microsoft wrote the spec and ECMA rubber-stamped it.

      The point is that OOXML was written by Microsoft and ODF was written by a group of independent, competing companies, all with an interest in producing an implementable spec. That's why then ended up producing a better spec.

    11. Re:Interesting ... by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      That's because ODF is under-specified. Let's see how big it is after they add the spreadsheet formula syntax they should have had in the first place. My guess is that it will be over 1000 pages. OOXML includes the specifications for sub-formats, such as DrawingML. And, it includes copious examples. Roughly half of it's size is examples and commentary, *NOT* specification.

      Further, when MS submitted OOXML to ECMA, it was 2000 pages in size. The ECMA working group fleshed it out to 6000 pages.

      Finally, the amount of calendar time a working group "works" on a standard cannot be adequately compared. Most working groups have comittee members who work part-time, and they're typically lucky if they can meet twice a year when they can align everyones schedules. the ECMA group was motivated, and worked on this full-time. I would estimate that ECMA spent at least 6x as many man-hours on the the standard than OASIS did.

      You should read this comment by Gary Edwards, the president of the OpenDocument Foundation. Basically, he says that if MS joined the ODF OASIS TC, then they would have to add all the same functions to ODF as OOXML has, and that Sun would not allow this to happen.

      http://about.diigo.com/about/show?url=http://www.c onsortiuminfo.org/standardsblog/article.php?story% 3D20070629070544217

  12. Re:Sweden threesome at work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft & OOXML & You at the front

  13. Re:Sore losers by networkBoy · · Score: 1

    Yes, they did.
    The normal way things are supposed to work is that all parties to the vote debate prior to voting. This allows various opinions to be heard and concerns addressed.
    In this case the whores were ex-parte to the debate then overran the vote nearly 2:1.
    -nB

    --
    whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
  14. But... didn't they want it like that? by Tipa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Step 1 - allow votes to be bought.
    Step 2 - take money from companies who wish to buy votes.
    Step 3 - Profit!
    Step 3a - Complain about the unfairness of it all, all the way to the bank.

    1. Re:But... didn't they want it like that? by saibot834 · · Score: 1

      You forgot about the most important part:

      Step 2a: ?????

  15. Re:Sore losers by Zapotek · · Score: 1

    Did they cheat somehow? Is there some reason that these companies should NOT have been allowed to vote? Are any of them not legitimate companies?

    No? Then STFU and stop whining. I'll take a wild guess here and say that you're on the payroll by one of these 20?

    Well, would you call the Mafia cheaters? It's like MS is selling "protection" for an annual fee and a vote!
    Coza Microsoft...
  16. Yes they cheated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not sure what the actual written rules were; however the spirit of the process is clear. The aim is that companies involved in standardisation should try to independently vote for what they think is a good international standard. The fact is that a bunch of companies that knew nothing voted for MS because they were told they would benefit. That is corruption (abusing public processes for personal gain) and everybody involved should be in prison with a life exclusion from any position of authority.

    It's also very funny the way that people have so completely lost track of what they should do and only thin about what the could do. I can set tens of "legitimate companies" tomorrow. Does that mean I should be able to influence international decisions? Don't be stupid.

  17. Like the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act is any help by AHuxley · · Score: 1

    Shame the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act does not work for Working Groups.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_Corrupt_Pract ices_Act

    --
    Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  18. Self Interest by JeremyGNJ · · Score: 1

    I dont see this as "being bought", so much as the self interest of the companies who voted. If you're a Microsoft partner, it's in your best interest to vote for Microsoft. However I'm sure Microsoft rang their phones to "remind them" that they could go vote.

    1. Re:Self Interest by forgotten_my_nick · · Score: 1

      I would be interested to see if those companies were offered anything in the way of cash or benefits to go out and vote.

    2. Re:Self Interest by GuyverDH · · Score: 1

      Actually it's against their best interests to vote yes, as the M$ proposed standard is broken and cannot work as presented.

      A vote yes is a vote to ratify a non-functional standard.

      How is that beneficial?

      --
      Who is general failure, and why is he reading my hard drive?
    3. Re:Self Interest by k12linux · · Score: 1

      A vote yes is a vote to ratify a non-functional standard.

      How is that beneficial?

      Easy answer: MONEY. I mean how many times have you seen one of these guys push a solution that was so completely wrong for the customer that it was painful to watch? But push it they did because it was an MS product and fit in with the "MS ecosystem" that they sell and support.

      Standards only matter if you want to interoperate with others. OR if you want to SELL to people who care about standards and think it means a level playing field, more competition and compatibility with others. No reason to think that MS partners care if the standard is broken or care if anyone but MS can use it. As long as it works with MS products they'll get their sales and customer lock-in.

    4. Re:Self Interest by GuyverDH · · Score: 1

      However in today's litiguous society, proclaiming that a specific format is xyz, and not being xyz, will lead to State AG investigations (when the states buy into the scam due to M$ hype), and class-action law-suits.

      So by all means MS, please - continue. I look forward to joining in the multitude of lawsuits for falsifying official state and federal documents proclaiming open and interoperative standard, when it obviously isn't.

      --
      Who is general failure, and why is he reading my hard drive?
    5. Re:Self Interest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't it a conflict of interest? I know no one knows what it means anymore, but come on guys, wake up, otherwise ethics is dead. Long live greed until the great collapse.

  19. No Surprise by Double+Entendre · · Score: 1

    I would file this under corporate strategy. One could argue that it would have been irresponsible for Microsoft (or any business for that matter) to not attempt to sway a decision that directly impacts their business through lobbying tactics where it has the ability to do so. Plus, there was nothing to indicate that it involved nefarious or illegal methods to do so.

    I'm sure many would do the same with their own companies to bolster support for something they created.

  20. What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by athloi · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The F/OSS people make themselves look like ninnies by whining over this. Capitalism is war for the most profit, by any means necessary that aren't illegal. This wasn't illegal. They won. Either change the rules, or stop complaining.

    1. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because we understand doesn't mean we have to like it.

    2. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by cching · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Capitalism is war for the most profit I'm so sick of everyone trumping up war for every justification. Capitalism is not a war. Stop turning every little thing into a war.
    3. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by Loke+the+Dog · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And you don't think creating opinion against this is part of changing the rules?

    4. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by McNihil · · Score: 1

      Legal or not... it is highly unethical.

      Also standards are to make business smooth and whoever is placing a wedge in between companies by their offering that quite possibly doesn't address all issues will gain from that. This approach is VERY parasitic and has nothing to do with capitalism... it is the gain of money by not doing anything.

    5. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by lukisi · · Score: 4, Interesting
      This is not capitalism. This is communism.
      Only, instead of a state, we have a corporation, Microsoft.
      They buy their power with their money. And a big part of their money comes from our wallets via taxes.
      I mean, a really big part.
      I mean a part much bigger than what you'd think.
      I mean, much bigger than what I'd think, too.
      I mean, *huge*.

      Then, with this power, they take away what really is common goods. Or aren't "standards"?

      Communism.

    6. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by Blue+Stone · · Score: 1

      You got modded flamebait unfairly (so what's new on /.?!)

      --
      Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce
    7. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you change the rules if you're not in the position to make rules? By complaining, of course! (just make sure you complain to the right people and do it well)

    8. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by Maximum+Prophet · · Score: 2, Interesting
      These are not the actions of capitalists, these are the actions of monopolists. Capitalism is an interesting system in that most of the participants are in it to end competition, when a true capitalist would realise that you have competition in order for markets to work. Capitalism isn't war, it's more like a race. Even though you are trying to win, there must be other competetors for there to be a race. Imagine Lance Armstrong tried to have a bike race where he was the only entrant. What would be the point?

      Perhaps it's time to write a "Capitalist Manifesto"
      • Competition is good, there must be competitors for there to be a race.
      • You are trying to beat the clock, time is your enemy, not the other racers.
      • Buy low, sell high.
      • Private ownership is a good thing.
      • Public ownership is a good thing.
      --
      All ideas^H^H^H^H^Hprocesses in this post are Patent Pending. (as well as the process of patenting all postings)
    9. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by Dystopian+Rebel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Here are the parts of Capitalism that I don't understand:
      - unsafe products
      - unhealthy products
      - unsustainable processes
      - suppression of the truth about unsafe products
      - exploitation of the poor and the uninformed
      - outsourcing (abandonment of the community)
      - tax evasion
      - consumerism
      - competition that puts profits before people
      - profitable relationship with war

      But then if you accept the premise that People Don't Matter, all the above makes perfect sense.

      --
      Rich And Stupid is not so bad as Working For Rich And Stupid.
    10. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      # Private ownership is a good thing.
      # Public ownership is a good thing.

      So, it's all good as long as somebody.. owns... something?
    11. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 2, Informative

      The F/OSS people make themselves look like ninnies by whining over this. Capitalism is war for the most profit, by any means necessary that aren't illegal. This wasn't illegal. They won. Either change the rules, or stop complaining. Even if this is "war" what do you propose OOXML opponents (and its not just "F/OSS people") do? Sit back and take it? Shrug it off as a right of the Interest with the biggest available budget?

      The first steps to countering these kinds of shennanigans is bringing them to light. Change the rules? Maybe. But definitely make sure everyone understands what is going on first. Let's call a spade a spade.

      Microsoft will likely call it as some kind of standards mandate; justification for their work. Denial of their critics. We can sit back and accept that. Or we can let everyone know how Microsoft's interests subverted the process and, perhaps, not everything Microsoft claims is as it seems.

      Meanwhile, those who own this process can review how a single interest subverted it and decide if the system is serving their interests or not. I like to think the ISO process is about technical review and standardization for the general good of the industry those they serve. But maybe it's not.
    12. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by businessnerd · · Score: 1
      I'm not really sure what's not to understand about these. In fact, capitalism is your best defense against a large majority of the things you point out. Lets take them one by one.

      - unsafe products

      If a product is unsafe, don't buy it. True capitalism works because of competition. If you don't like one company's product because of either price or quality, buy someone else's. No one has a product that meets your needs? Start your own company to fill that niche.

      - unhealthy products

      See above

      - unsustainable processes

      Not sure how to address this one (I'm only human)

      -suppression of the truth about unsafe product

      Once again, see my first point, but to go even further, this is why we have consumer advocacy groups. Ralph Nader comes to mind. I also don't see how this is exclusive to capitalism. Let's say you live in communist Russia. The shoes you've waited in line for all day turn out to cause severe damage to peoples arches that could require surgery to fix. You complain to your government that has provided these shoes to you and they say, "At least you have shoes!" Then they throw you in the trunk of a car. You wake up in Siberia.

      - exploitation of the poor and the uninformed

      What can I say, people are jerks. No system is perfect. However, this is something you can combat by staying informed. As for the poor, sometimes there isn't a lot you can do, but in a capitalist society, at least you have the freedom to try to climb the economic ladder. The term Rags to Riches comes to mind.

      - outsourcing (abandonment of the community)

      Do you mean outsourcing or off-shoring. Cause there's a huge difference. Outsourcing just means you don't do something in house. Coca-cola outsources its bottling in some regions and they certainly don't manufacture aluminum cans. This doesn't necessarily mean that I'm outsourcing to India or China, though. In fact it could mean I'm outsourcing to someone across the street in the same community. If you're beef is about losing American jobs, then working for one of the sources should solve that problem. Are you an aluminum can manufacturing specialist? Then don't be mad that Coke doesn't make aluminum cans. Go work for someone who does. Outsourcing, in general, is a good thing. You end up with a better product for a lower cost. Off-shoring on the other hand is another matter. I'm not going to get into whether its good or bad because it depends on who you ask. But essentially, that is when Dell outsources its customer service line to somewhere not in the United States. Like India. I'm not sure if Canada counts, but its at least a separate economy. This raises issues about American jobs and often the quality might not be as good. Sometimes the reason they can do it faster and cheaper is because of poor labor laws and cutting corners. But you don't necessarily get poor service/product.

      - tax evasion

      Um yeah...that's illegal. If you're caught, you go to jail. Just ask Al Capone. Not sure what capitalism has to do with it.

      - consumerism

      Once again, no system is perfect. If this is the worst you can come up with, then you shouldn't lose any sleep over it. In a free country, you can either be materialistic, or you can not be materialistic. No one is forcing you one way or the other, but you do have the freedom to chose you're own path in that respect. Me, I want to make money so I can afford nice things. I want to buy food that tastes better. I want a car that doesn't fall apart in the middle of my morning commute. I want to do entertaining things that cost money (movies, travel, concerts). I want my kids to be able to go to college. I dont' want to live in a cardboard box. Just because I don't need these things to sur

      --
      "It's not whether you win or lose, it's how drunk you get." -- H. J. Simpson
    13. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by kocsonya · · Score: 1

      Not really. It is capitalism at its best. It is the ultimate free market for you: you can buy and sell anything. Including votes, influence, laws, people, wars, whatever. Everything is for sale and goes to the highest bidder. The name of the game is making money, anything goes, it's up to the market to put value on anything and everything. There are no limits, if you can get away with it and it turns a profit, it's OK. If doing it results in a hefty fine from some pesky government institution but you make more than the fine (i.e. you make a profit), it's OK to do it. Ethics, moral, common good and all that are just ideologies, they have no cash value and thus are irrelevant.

      If a bombmaking company can pursue the government to start a war and consequently buy huge amounts of bombs from the taxes they collect, it is not an -ism, but a business model. If a software company can force their way and create a standard that only they can satisfy and subsequently pursue the government to mandate that standard, well, it is a business model again, nothing more.

      A communist state did not herd all the money to keep it, they redistributed it(*). You know, universal free healthcare and education, full employment, guaranteed pensions, cheap housing, subsidised culture and arts and all that. Problem was, they were very inefficient in making money. Microsoft is very efficient in making money and they do not redistribute it, they keep it for themselves and/or use it to make even more money. You can say a lot about Microsoft but they have nothing to do with communism. They are quintessential capitalism, lock, stock and barrel.

      (*) The people who were more equal than the others got their loot of course, but that was just petty theft, not an institution.

    14. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by QuietObserver · · Score: 1

      Very well made comment.

    15. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by Old+Wolf · · Score: 1

      God, what a load of crap. How can anyone mod that up?

      Here are the parts of Capitalism that I don't understand:
      - unsafe products
      - unhealthy products

      Yeah, communism and fascism fix this problem. Auschwitz was teeming with Occupational Safety & Health inspectors I'm sure.

      - unsustainable processes
      It's in a company's best interest to do something sustainable, they don't want to go out of business in 10 years or any length of time. On the other hand, state governments don't care about anything except retaining power again in 4 years' time.

      - suppression of the truth about unsafe products
      Go on, name an unsafe product that's been suppressed. I'm sure I can find dozens of web links revealing the truth.

      - exploitation of the poor and the uninformed
      Many organizations exist to inform the poor and uninformed. School being one of them. If people don't avail themself of the opportunities handed to them on a platter, whose fault is that?

      - outsourcing (abandonment of the community)
      QQ

      - tax evasion
      Any society has criminals. To pretend that a non-capitalist society won't have people who try to avoid contributing to the state coffers, is ludicrous.

      - consumerism
      Oh noes, people might actually cater to what other people want!

      - competition that puts profits before people
      So how are you going to 'force' microsoft to make a good OS instead of one that makes the most money? And where do business profits go anyway? answer: PEOPLE. The people who choose to invest in the company. The people who work at the company. The people who receive charitable donations from the Gates foundation. Etc.

      - profitable relationship with war
      Profit from war comes about because the prospect of war makes people afraid, so they approve of companies involved in war efforts. In other words, war helps companies to control people and channel resources away from the people. In a communist or fascist society, the state controls people anyway. War companies (which would be commandeered by the state) are fantastically profitable, having first pick of available resources. People come last. Have you read 1984?

    16. Re:What part of "capitalism" don't you understand? by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      If a product is unsafe, don't buy it. True capitalism works because of competition. If you don't like one company's product because of either price or quality, buy someone else's. No one has a product that meets your needs? Start your own company to fill that niche.
      Generally you can't easilly test stuff yourself (much testing is destructive, requires special equipment or both) and testing products after they are on the open market would mean a delay between the dangerous product being on the market and people being warned it is dangerous. Even assuming the warnings were published immediately most people would not have the time to check a database of product warnings every time they went shopping. There is also the issue of products that are a danger to people other than thier owner (cars are a good example, if your car loses control you aren't the only one who can end up hurt or injured).

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
  21. How to defend against this by mcrbids · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's a tactic that's unfortunately too common, but easily defended against, with either of these options:

    A) Don't let new members vote for any issues until they've been members for a certain period of time, or

    B) Don't let new members vote on any issue that had already been opened for debate (or perhaps officially proposed) prior to their joining.

    It's as simple as that.

    --
    I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    1. Re:How to defend against this by garcia · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's a tactic that's unfortunately too common, but easily defended against, with either of these options:

      A) Don't let new members vote for any issues until they've been members for a certain period of time


      It's an issue that we dealt with before even approving bylaws for our organization. Someone in the proposed membership mentioned that they wanted protection against this and we decided to require 6 months in the org before allowing voting membership (or 7 days following the Spring Meeting). This was eventually lowered to 3 months by the membership by vote.

      We don't charge dues so anyone could have walked into a meeting and maliciously taken it over with no intentions on doing anything but spend the few dollars we have.

      The only reason an organization like this could allow that is because they wanted the money for their coffers and couldn't care less about the actual "standards" being approved.

    2. Re:How to defend against this by SolitaryMan · · Score: 1

      From the summary: ...each one payed about $2500 to be allowed to vote...

      So, there are about 2500 * 20 = 50000 reasons they should be allowed to vote.

      --
      May Peace Prevail On Earth
    3. Re:How to defend against this by stonecypher · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, because nobody has ever thought of planting people ahead of time, and there isn't already a cadre of Microsoft employees, and indeed from every other major computing organization, on every major standards body. All that means is that Microsoft submarines half a dozen people onto any committee they want to work on for some up-front amount of time. It's the Price Is Right Conundrum: any amount of time you put up there on the board, Microsoft will add one dollar - pardon, day - and bid there. Why do you think Netscape, a tiny company, had so many people on the various W3 standards? Why do you think Opera does today? It's the exact same thing, and this is just how these boards work. There's no particular way around it; you can't set time limits, price limits, count of people from a company, because they're all trivially easily gamed.

      Any time you make a plutocracy, it will be commercially exploited. If they want to be immune to this crap, they need to move to a meritocracy or an election. Next time you have a solution, put your black hat on and see if you can break it in under 15 seconds of honest thought. (You could have, this time, several different ways.)

      --
      StoneCypher is Full of BS
    4. Re:How to defend against this by mcrbids · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Next time you have a solution, put your black hat on and see if you can break it in under 15 seconds of honest thought.

      Sorry to break the news to you, but you can't wait 6 months in 15 seconds.

      (You could have, this time, several different ways.)

      Nice. Implies that you have "several different ways", yet you provide none. Come back when you have something to say.

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    5. Re:How to defend against this by stonecypher · · Score: 1

      Sorry to break the news to you, but you can't wait 6 months in 15 seconds.
      "figure out" does not mean the same thing as "accomplish." You don't actually have to wait to be done before you've decided what to do.

      Nice. Implies that you have "several different ways", yet you provide none.
      Perhaps you weren't reading. In fact, not only did I suggest a way that the current system could be exploited, but I claimed that that method was under regular use, named three companies with a history of it as well as a sampling of places they'd done it, and in fact suggested that it was inevitable and suggested a reparation.

      Come back when you have something to say.
      You're pretty angry when someone disagrees with you, aren't you?
      --
      StoneCypher is Full of BS
    6. Re:How to defend against this by krbvroc1 · · Score: 1

      Thinks of the millions of dollars, if not billions, or productivity that will be lost, all for the paltry sum of $50000.

    7. Re:How to defend against this by Cyclops · · Score: 2, Informative

      That would mean Microsoft would be able to silently buy Portugal's vote, since they were able to buy the TC *before* it was formed by privately gathering puppets that would support their position, and who proposed to become "founding" members.

      Instead I was able to join in and bring transparency to the meeting, even though the NB's representativy unilaterally decided to give less than 48h before refusing new members, as it saw that Microsoft's control would be wrestled out.

      They don't give that excuse, of course, they mask it by room space (it could handle more and they chose not to use an auditorium) and representativity (just count the Microsoft Business Partners, or people with strong ties to Microsoft: 13 against 7).

    8. Re: How to defend against this by Dolda2000 · · Score: 1

      Alternatively, it could be dealt with on a case-by-case basis. Seriously, the ISO must be seeing what is going on, since this isn't exactly the first story on this subject. Weren't at least the U.S. and Portuguese standards bodies reported on Slashdot to have experienced the same thing? Even if the national standards bodies themselves for some weird reason can't see what's going on, then at least the ISO itself should be clear-sighted enough to launch an investigation into the matter. Surely, they don't want to become an organization where just about anyone with enough money can buy a "standard"?

    9. Re:How to defend against this by gtall · · Score: 1

      Not really, it would only have helped this time. Now Gates and Ballmer have learned the new trick of stacking standards committees to push through Microsoft Open Standards TM. Expect to have several more of these standards shoved down PHB throats.

      Gerry

  22. Re:Sore losers by tinkerghost · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Did they cheat somehow? No, They followed the rule required to vote - they payed the fees.

    Is there some reason that these companies should NOT have been allowed to vote?
    They failed to participate in any of the discussions leading up to the vote & in fact most have not partecipated previously in any discussions on any ISO related standards.

    Are any of them not legitimate companies? No? Then STFU and stop whining.

    You're right we should stop whining & petition ISO to change the rules on voting to block this kind of ballot stuffing. I doubt very much that any of these companies have seen the document spec let alone read & understand it.

    This is actually one of the fairer subversions of the process - in Portugol they denied IBM & SUN access claiming the room was too full, then allowed MS partners to enter & vote. In another place, the chairman - an employee of an MS partner announced the voting procedure as

    • Consensus to approve - vote to approve
    • majority approve - vote to approve
    • no majority - vot to approve
    • majority to dis-approve - vote to approve with comments
    • consensus to dis-approve - abstain

    Now that's how to really stack the deck - you completely remove the option to vote against the standard.

  23. Re:Sore losers by erroneus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There's a huge difference between "legal" and "right." I'd really like you to make an argument that this was a right and correct tactic for Microsoft to use. What if, for the sake of argument, people could buy their way into a jury in criminal prosecution? I think we'd see right away what would happen. Every person with an agenda would routinely buy his chance to vote to "hang'm high!"

    In this case, it's a chance to vote on an international standard -- one that many governments are obliged to allow, support or follow. This is, in effect, a chance to "buy" your way into government policy.

    But there are certainly, in my opinion, two problems here:

    1. That the ability to vote has such low entry requirements and that no amount of knowledge or understanding seems to have any bearing on whether or not someone is qualified to vote. (yes, I realize you could make the same argument for local elections, and I do.)
    2. That Microsoft has no shame in deploying such an obvious, self-serving tactic of essentially buying their way into being elected as an international standard. It may be 'legal' but it's unethical and definitely not right.

  24. Re:Sore losers by varmittang · · Score: 1

    I say yes. I say there should be a rule to keep people from showing up at the last minute and voting. Otherwise big companies can pay smaller ones just to show up and vote, never hearing or knowing what they are voting on. This is a classic case of this happening. Big MS buys smaller companies to show up on vote day and buys a winning ticket for their format. A rule should be put in place that you need to be a member for a certain amount of time, 3 months, a year, before you can cast a vote.

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  25. Re:Sore losers by everphilski · · Score: 2, Informative

    They played by the rules of the ISO. The 'normal way things are supposed to work' are apparently not what they had in mind, if they allow anyone to join at any time and vote at short notice. I agree, its dumb, but they followed the rules to a tee.

  26. Re:Sore losers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're saying this to a website called "OS/2 News"...

  27. Re:Sore losers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those are some big lips to reach Bills dick from here.

  28. Re:Sore losers by mastropiero · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm sorry to break this to you, but ISO approval of standards is supposed to be governed by TECHNICAL considerations. By this logic, a vote on whether OOXML is approved by fasttrack should be based on the TECHNICAL merits of the proposal, not on how popular Micorosft Corp. is.

    Sadly, the fact that these people joined the discussion only *after* the debate on those technical merits was over only shows that this process has become nothing more than a high-school president election in a bad B-movie.

  29. Theres only one word for that... by pjr.cc · · Score: 0

    Sickening.

  30. What part of "monopoly laws" don't you understand? by Catbeller · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We have monopoly laws, not to outlaw monopolies, but to prevent ONE company from using overwhelming advantage in one market from simply buying out, in turn, all and any other markets they care to. We have laws preventing this. If they were actually enforced. Microsoft would be in a straitjacket but for the Bush Justice Department walking in on a fait accompli dismantling of their corporate advantage after Judge Jackson's spanking, and simply tossing the conviction out the window by ignoring it.

    Now they are openly -- brazenly -- buying markets. And the DOJ doesn't give a damn. Well, they'd best hurry, the Repubs are about to lose power for a decade or more. Steal what you can, "retired" Mr. Gates.

  31. Probably Stupid Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK, so I know a lot of people here get up in arms about OOXML. So I'll ask the naive question--why? What will be the tangible difference if this does/does not become an ISO standard? MS will still use it either way, I assume. There will still be a cloud hanging over it for "vendor lock in," even if it's officially a "standard."

    So, what's the specific objection? Does being a standard give some sort of legal or contractual high ground to MS? Or is this just something to put in marketing materials? Or is something else going on?

    Note that I'm NOT trying to say that I think the whole thing is unimportant. I just don't understand the issue. Someone help me out with why I should get worked up about this.

    1. Re:Probably Stupid Question by moseman · · Score: 0

      Simple: Create a standard (ISO) that is so complex it will be very difficult for competitors to implement. Then market it to every country/state thinking of switching to ODF. "Look, you don't have to switch from MS software as we fully support an ISO standard. There is no vendor lock-in here!"

      --
      Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to think "profiling is worse than the slaughter of innocent people..."
    2. Re:Probably Stupid Question by petermgreen · · Score: 4, Informative

      many government departments and even entire governments arround the world are threatening to require arhived documents to be in standard formats. MS is trying to do an end run arround theese requirements by getting standards bodies to approve a fake standard they have written. Unfortunately it seems that they are having quite some sucess in doing so thanks to thier use of various dirty tactics.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    3. Re:Probably Stupid Question by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      The ODF supporters are trying to use open standards as a weapon against Microsoft. If Microsoft's format becomes an open standard, then all the effort put into ODF and lobbying for laws requiring government use of open standards will be a big waste. If OOXML becomes a standard, they won't be able to sue governments with open standards laws into using ODF...

    4. Re:Probably Stupid Question by gerddie · · Score: 1
    5. Re:Probably Stupid Question by Tony · · Score: 2, Informative

      Not exactly.

      Supporters of open standards wish for Microsoft to adhere to a true standard, one that is well-documented, easily implemented, and available for all. Currently, ODF does all that.

      OOXML, on the other hand, is obtuse, hard to implement (even for Microsoft), leaves much unspecified, and is Microsoft-centric, rather than document-centric.

      The problem is actually with Microsoft. They have rigged the system to favor their platform above all others, rather than risk losing their stranglehold on your documents. If Microsoft were to support ODF, and participate in the OASIS working group once again, their office suite would have to compete entirely on merit. A person or company could use the office suite of their choice, and exchange documents with no difficulty.

      The place to make money is in the friction. The more friction there is-- that is, the more painful *not* using your product or service is-- the more money you can charge. Microsoft is great at increasing friction by manipulating the market.

      Microsoft is ensuring they are able to keep up the friction.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    6. Re:Probably Stupid Question by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

      "Or is this just something to put in marketing materials?"

      BINGO
      ODF advocates want ODF to be the sole ISO standard so they can use that status as ammo when lobbying governments to mandate exclusive use of ODF. They want to deny any competing format from achieving the same status, lest their talking point disappears.

      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    7. Re:Probably Stupid Question by amorsen · · Score: 1

      Supporters of open standards wish for Microsoft to adhere to a true standard, one that is well-documented, easily implemented, and available for all. Currently, ODF does all that.

      The fact that OOXML is a hundred times worse does not make ODF a good standard. Then again, the world would have been better off if the word processor had never been invented.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    8. Re:Probably Stupid Question by yorugua · · Score: 1

      ODF advocates want ODF to be the sole ISO standard so they can use that status as ammo when lobbying governments to mandate exclusive use of ODF. They want to deny any competing format from achieving the same status, lest their talking point disappears.

      OR : They don't want a competing format becaming a standard, when implementation of said "other" standard seems both impossible, and also having to do with propietary formats not clearly "defined" in the standard and also covered with patents owned by the company, which happens to be a convicted monopolist, that it pushing for the "second" standard. Having parts of the "open standard" covered by patents, or not clearly defined, makes such an standard as open as any closed format ... :)

      Nothing is stopping this other company from implementing ODF if it becomes an open standard. No patents to pay for its use.

      What do you figure out of this? C'mon... seems easy...

    9. Re:Probably Stupid Question by AJWM · · Score: 1
      ODF advocates want ODF to be the sole ISO standard

      I don't think that's true for most of them any more than you do (unless you're stupider than you look).

      I doubt most ODF "advocates" would have any problem with another ISO open document format standard that made technical sense. MSOXML of course doesn't make technical sense: it is self contradictory, contradicts a number of pre-existing ISO standards (1900 as a leap year, anyone?), and is insufficiently specified to implement properly ( SpaceLikeWord95 tags?).

      It's like complaining about a dog turd on the sidewalk and being accused of not liking dogs. No. Like "OO"XML, the complaint is because it's shit, not because of where it came from. (Except perhaps for a few folks.)

      --
      -- Alastair
    10. Re:Probably Stupid Question by fritsd · · Score: 1
      OK, keep that thought, ODF advocates lobby governments to mandate ODF exclusively. Agreed.

      Now consider what happens next:

      Microsoft issues a press release saying, grudgingly, they'll have full 100% read/write compatibility with ODF in Microsoft Office 2007 1/2 within 3 weeks, so that governments and private customers can keep on using Microsoft Office indefinitely.

      What's your problem with ODF being the sole ISO standard, now? If all word-processor companies can boast "100% compatible with ODF" and speak the truth?

      Or are you saying Microsoft is incapable of allocating the people/time/money to implement a 700 page standard (as opposed to their own 6000 page standard)? In fact there are already several plug-ins with which this can be done (one commisioned by Microsoft from may 2007 which apparently is unusable and one by Sun which apparently works).

      The point is, and I think it's a very important point, if ODF is mandated nobody loses (not even Microsoft; I don't believe *everyone* will drop Microsoft Office and switch to different word processors immediately; do you?). But if OOXML is mandated, the whole world ex. Microsoft loses. Government-sanctioned vendor-lock-in to a 3x convicted monopoly-abuser, what an enticing concept!

      --
      To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
    11. Re:Probably Stupid Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The ODF supporters are trying to use open standards as a weapon against Microsoft"

      That is a weird definition of "weapon". You make it sound like Microsoft will be victimized. Open standards are more like keys to unlock the shackles MS has on office-suite users. ODF is supposed to guarantee that governments (as well as other sensible organizations) will have access to their data that cannot be jeopardized by the whim of a single corporation. It could do away with "we have to use MS Office because that is what everyone else uses, and we have to exchange files" and "we have to use MS Office because we have a boatload of old Office files".

      If OOXML is rejected and ODF is required by governments, it will not lead to MS Office being barred from government work. It will lead to MS Office supporting ODF, just like MS products support html, jpeg, and other open formats. However, people will suddenly have choice in whether to use MS Office (real-world, practical choice that is, not just in theory).

  32. PR from FFII Sweden by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Partial translation of FFII Sweden press release:
    http://ffii.se/pr/2007-08-27-se-ooxml-vote-en.html

  33. Just like at the end of Deadwood by maynard · · Score: 1

    The rich dude (Hearst) walked away with town and all its gold by rigging local elections. Unbelievable.

  34. Re: Money Busy Influence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oops. My tpying siklls sometmies deyf loigc.

    Shoulda previewed, ya think?

  35. irrelevant by apodyopsis · · Score: 2, Interesting

    irrelevant in a way because ODF looks to be fast becoming a de-facto standard regardless. out numbering OOXML something in the order of 250 to 1.

    see:
    http://www.robweir.com/blog/2007/05/so-where-are-a ll-ooxml-documents.html
    http://www.geniisoft.com/showcase.nsf/archive/2007 0813-1201

    of course, the MS tactic is to get OOXML recognized and then default to it across the windows suite.

    but as I remember they have tried this was a number of formats before - but once a file format is recognized as a de-facto standard (MP3, HTML, JPG) they are notoriously hard to shift.

    irrelevant as it may be its still a damn depressing indication of the way business is done and sensible, rational decisions are perverted to line company pockets. this sort of thing annoys me.

    1. Re:irrelevant by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      I don't know where you are from... But .doc seems to be the de-facto standard around here.

    2. Re:irrelevant by apodyopsis · · Score: 1

      lol! Apologies, I clarify. de-facto standard for open xml based documents.

      sorry 'bout that. :)

    3. Re:irrelevant by achurch · · Score: 1

      Of course, .doc/.xls outnumber XML documents by some ridiculous factor--and there's a good chance those will naturally shift to OOXML as Microsoft pushes it over the old formats. They've already got an OOXML update for Office 2003, so they don't even need to convince people to learn ribbons instead of switching to OO.o.

      Don't get me wrong, I'd love for ODF to get itself firmly established . . . but looking at Microsoft's recent shenanigans, I'm rapidly losing hope.

  36. The funniest thing of all by TheSciBoy · · Score: 4, Funny

    This is a quote from the SIS.SE home page:

    Det är inte pengar som får världen att fungera
    Vill du veta vad det är?

    Translation in english: "It's not money that makes the world go around. Do you want to know what it is?"

    Apparently the answer is: money

    --
    Badgers, we don't need no stinking badgers! - UHF
  37. Re:Sore losers by MBraynard · · Score: 1
    You are complaining about a process that subverts ... well, what you want the outcome to be. But this democratic process subverts something else: market forces.

    Now I realize that ISO is not a government but rather a governing body of a standard, and that all organizations need to make decisions like this.

    However, the deck stacking of allowing some kind of democratic system where all companies get an equal voice regardless of their size, their revenue, or their contributions to the group (apart from the standardmembership dues) is also pretty subversive to a decision making process.

    Look - if ISO is suppose to be resolved by all the companies in a coutry, and then all of them show up and vote for OOXML (as awful as it is based on my current assessment), then there isn't anything to complain about.

    If only the decision were made by a single corporation that had a profit motive, they would be more inclined to make the best decision and dump OOXML.

  38. More OOXML shenanigans by RelliK · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm surprised it has not been covered on slashdot, but similar things have occured in Germany, Switzerland, Norway, Portugal, Australia, etc. Microsoft is determined to push its proprietary "open" format through by any means neccessary:

    http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=200708241 23112581

    http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=200708151 25524759

    http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=200707232 35113424

    --
    ___
    If you think big enough, you'll never have to do it.
    1. Re:More OOXML shenanigans by thetagger · · Score: 1

      In Brazil, Microsoft brought a lot of their partners to vote. You know, people who make a living installing OEM copies of Windows were suddenly so worried about the finer points of office format standardization... Fortunately the issue was not decided by vote. The chair (who is a permanent member of the standards body, not related to any sides) informed everyone that decisions were always achieved by consensus. Obviously, there was no consensus, which surprised him a lot, and to avoid ballot stuffing, he took upon himself to review the discussion and make the final choice. While no justification for the NO vote was given, it seems clear that he noticed the technical arguments against OOXML went unchallenged by the YES-side. If you think about it, taking a vote for this kind of thing is rarely the correct thing to do, which is why the weight should be given to technical issues and whether they were properly addressed. Other than that, it is hard to determine a metric for "fairness" w/r/t who should be able to cast a vote. Let Microsoft's buying so many national standards bodies serve as proof.

  39. everyone knows if you can't play fair, then cheat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Such awesome leadership! Such resposible corporate governance!

    Aren't you just so proud to be part of such a great system?

    BTW, thanks Billy!

  40. Retarded by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You hold a vote for a standard, & charge more for the privledge to vote than not many more companies than Microsoft would be willing to pay, & don't expect somthing like this to happen ?

    Whoever made this decision better be retarded, or a Microsoft employee, that's the only way they're getting out of this alive.

  41. Let's talk about change by athloi · · Score: 1

    First we need to know what we want. I wouldn't want a Communist system. It's just like a software project. Can we patch capitalism, or do we need to do extensive modifications, or is it time for an extended re-code with added or changed capabilities? If we know what we want, then we can find out who to ask, how to get VCs involved, and how to popularize it in the mass media.

    1. Re:Let's talk about change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can we patch capitalism, or do we need to do extensive modifications, or is it time for an extended re-code with added or changed capabilities? Depends. If you just need to get competition working, patching works fine. But getting patches through is easier when people realize that free!=unregulated so you may want to start from that. On the other hand, if you want to save the world from drowning in useless products and work for the sake of work there's need for some pretty serious redesigning.
  42. Re:Sore losers by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You are complaining about a process that subverts ... well, what you want the outcome to be. But this democratic process subverts something else: market forces.

    You do realize monopolies are restrained by law because they subvert the free market forces, right? For example, if you have a monopoly in one area you can use it to extract more money from a market while expending less investment and giving less to consumers, thus accumulating piles of money you can use to say, pay other companies to act on you behalf in meetings. Or pressure other companies to act on you behalf under threat of financially ruining them by cutting them out of markets that interact with the one(s) controlled by your monopoly.

    This particular round of misdeeds is just one more symptom of the main problem, MS is an abusive monopoly with so much money they've been able to buy the politicians who run the courts and are supposed to enforce the law.

  43. Corporate Democracy In Action ... No Doubt! by OldHawk777 · · Score: 1

    "Corporate Democracy In Action" protects defenseless corporate, government, and religious institutions from the ravages of the viral public infestation attempting to managing national interest, markets, and resources. Corporatism estates include the public contained within which can be bought, sold, spent ... as the owning corporatism estate finds most beneficial to sustainment.

    It would be a sad state of affairs if the oligarchical owners of draconian institution, whom dress in godly-patriotic and humanitarian camouflage, could not continue to service the public for private pseudo-sexual (megalomania) satisfaction.

    God bless them, one and all, for servicing US, EU, UN ... Citizens with such an overt and public display of power and control (ThemS&MostOthers) and leaving no doubt that any public demonstration without financial dictate is pitifully fake.

    Paraphrasing an old social philosopher; "Any war will kill my enemy (the citizens), but I need to make sure I win." They always dress in dress in godly-patriotic and humanitarian camouflage. More US, EU, UN ... corporate welfare, less for US, EU, UN ....

    "Corporate Democracy In Action" is good for US, EU, UN ... Corporations.

    "We The People" are the property of the corporate-estate.
    Within the New World Order Corporate Estates, exploitation
    will get you much further in life then complaining. In a
    war you must be on the "RightSide" to be in control.

    --
    Unaccountable leaders are masters, and unrepresented people are slaves. How do US and EU fare?
  44. Re:Sore losers by DogDude · · Score: 1

    That Microsoft has no shame in deploying such an obvious, self-serving tactic of essentially buying their way into being elected as an international standard. It may be 'legal' but it's unethical and definitely not right.

    Hang on for a second here. You're assuming that this "international standard" is worth the paper it's written on. It's clearly not if all it takes is $2500 to "vote".

    If this "vote" was truly important to MS from a strategic standpoint, then it was MS's moral obligation to it's owners to buy it's way into this organization and sway the decision making.

    Your assumptions that A. This is an important decision and B. This is a respected organization C. That MS should not actively promote their own products are all either wrong, or completely unsubstantiated, as far as I can tell.

    If you don't like this particular move, you can also buy a vote. You can buy as many votes as you'd like to influence MS's decision making process. As I type this, each vote only costs $28.36. Good luck with your "voting"!

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
  45. Re:Sore losers by Bazer · · Score: 1

    I'd have them walk the plank, if you know what I mean.

    I really hope somebody in Sweden will raise hell because of this. The votes of those companies clearly should be invalidated at least on the premise of insufficient participation in working group.

  46. Re:Sore losers by NickFortune · · Score: 5, Insightful

    STFU and stop whining.

    Stop whining? Certainly. STFU? I don't think so.

    There's more to this issue than "mummy mummy microsoft did a bad thing and it's not faaaaaair!". The question we should be asking is "Is this the sort of behaviour we really want to encourge?"

    Do we really want an industry where standards are sold to the highest bidder without any scrutiny as to fitness for their supposed purpose. If so, the ISO committees may as well pack their bags and go home now, because we are headed for a world where no one will pay any attention at all to their so called "standards".

    I think that merits some discussion. Not because Microsoft did a Bad Thing so much, but because the standards process served a useful purpose. Microsoft may well be willing to burn this process to the ground in order to protect their file formats. I think the least we could do is shout "FIRE!"

    --
    Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
  47. Re:Sore losers by MontyApollo · · Score: 1

    If they don't have to show up to meetings or participate in discussions, then why would they if they already knew how they would vote? They were MS Gold certified partners.

    Why would they read the document spec or need to understand it? These are corporations who have tied there existance to supporting MS products; the more pervasive MS products then the more potential their corporations have.

    I don't know of a good way to balance out everybody's self-interests. MS partners could have just as easily went to meetings if that was required, and they could still stuff the ballot box. I think it is fair to take in account the interests of the IT industry, but I don't know if that should be the deciding factor.

  48. Almost certainly NOT legal either by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Microsoft made undisclosed payments to them to go and vote, that information is material to shareholders, and if it's not explained to them then its an SEC violation.

    Seriously, all these back door deals Microsoft does are gonna end land them in pound-em-in-the-ass-prison sooner or later.

    Look at the HDDVD one, Microsoft pays 150 million to a customer Paramount & Dreamworks to use it's HDDVD format exclusively. It then portrays it to their shareholders as a contract 'win', concealing the payment. How long before that stuff will land them in jail?

  49. Abuse by Bazer · · Score: 1

    Doing something legal does not equal doing something right. The fault is on the side of whoever set up the entry rules for the vote but such strategy on the part of Microsoft should be condemned.

  50. Re:Sore losers by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

    The ODF supporters are trying to block OOXML from becoming a standard ONLY because they've lobbied governments into passing open standards laws that will REQUIRE those governments to use their format if OOXML fails. They don't give a damn if it's the best format or not; they want a monopoly enforced by law.

  51. Important action to be taken by kanweg · · Score: 1

    Any person involved in Sweden (and any other country where purportedly similar shady actions occurred) with this issue should help to make sure that as much evidence as possible is registered, as it may be necessary in the future.

    Possible things:
    The odd 20 companies, who represented them, presentations lists of previous meetings showing their absence, etc., etc.

    Bert

  52. ISO now has no choice but to reject by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they approve OOXML, they do so at the expense of what little remaining credibility they have. Hopefully the OSI are watching this closely; see also every other working group that ever let Microsoft participate.

    Despite the continuing malice, anti-competitive behavior and outright mockery of process; WGs still can't seem to drop their pants fast enough when Microsoft make an appearance.

  53. No cheating plz by HyperQuantum · · Score: 1

    There are places where using open standards is a requirement, and Microsoft is trying to get in by creating their own 'standard' and buying voters to approve it as an ISO standard. To avoid this cheating, open standards adopters could add a rule that says: a truly open standard is one that has at least two different implementations (from distinct vendors). This principle rules out 'standards' that are not really open.

    --
    I am not really here right now.
    1. Re:No cheating plz by fritsd · · Score: 1
      In the case of Microsoft, they thought of that too: there are many different implementations! From Microsoft, Novell, Xandros, Linspire.. :-) I'm surprised SCO isn't busy writing a word processor yet.

      So I'd change

      from distinct vendors
      to "from distinct independent vendors", if I were you.
      --
      To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
  54. Re:Sore losers by Bieeanda · · Score: 1
    I don't agree with his stance either, but that kind of supposition is nothing more than a suppository.

    Legal or not, this strongly reminds me of Japan gaming the International Whaling Commission, by getting economic allies to sign up and vote in favour of relaxing whaling regulations.

  55. So, What Kind of Company is M$? by twitter · · Score: 1

    Poor products or not it looks like they invested $50k to cement their format as a standard. Considering they stand to make billions from that, it was a wise investment.

    Yeah, because a company with $40,000,000,000 in the bank could not have just hired people to make a standard people want to use.

    It is the people who designed a system that could so easily be bought who should be ashamed, if that wasn't their intended outcome in the first place.

    Careful what you wish for, apologist. They should just pass a rule against "standards" from convicted monopolists. How else can you eliminate this kind of monkey business without blocking legitimate input from small companies who care?

    A company can't deny its nature.

    So tell me what kind of company M$ is. You would be hard pressed to call them a software company because they are not really good at that. Perhaps you could call them a coercive standards company, sort of the opposite of what ISO stands for, because they are so good at buying and forcing their technically inferior crap.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:So, What Kind of Company is M$? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't shake the feeling that Twitter either applied for and didn't get a job/ or he worked for Microsoft and was fired and is very bitter about it.

    2. Re:So, What Kind of Company is M$? by Eivind · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, because a company with $40,000,000,000 in the bank could not have just hired people to make a standard people want to use.

      Sure they could. But you're missing the point: They don't want to!. They would've prefered no standards at all and the status quo of being allowed to essentially define the standard -- the standard is whatever the latest office does. Only as it became obvious that people would no longe accept that did they go for a standard at all. And now they're doing their best to make a "standard" that nevertheless makes it impossible to create competing products that support the "standard" like they do.

      From the POV of Microsoft the extreme pagecount, the lack of specification, the uncompleteness, the conflicting statements are features, not bugs. The proposed standard is as it is not because they can't afford to improve it. It is like it is because they want it that way.

  56. Let them know! Flog them with mail!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd like to write them to express my anger, and distrust in their system so that they will have pressure to reject this vote. Does anyone know an address (physical/email) that this could be sent to?

  57. Re:Sore losers by LordEd · · Score: 1

    Big MS buys smaller companies to show up on vote day
    Does the article say they paid the companies to go? I can't find that anywhere in the article and that is a very important question. If not, then 23 individual companies dropped a few thousand dollars of their own money to have a say at it.
  58. PAID. PAID. PAID. not payed by EllynGeek · · Score: 1

    I know that to be cool on /. you're not supposed to have even minimal competence in English, especially for native English speakers. But why not be even cooler and rebel against this retarded ethos! Be bold and brave! Dare to spell!

    --

    we will end no whine before its time

  59. What of ISO's credibility now? by lysse · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Hmm. If things continue this way, and we end up with the ISO effectively rubber-stamping OOXML on the strength of purchased votes, what effect will this have on the ISO's credibility in the long run? The ISO looks after a lot more standards than just data exchange formats; will we have to consider that every single one of those standards is potentially bought and paid for by its richest benecifiaries, despite technical flaws in the standard and opposition from peers?

    I can't help thinking that the OOXML standardisation effort should be shelved until one of two things becomes true: either at least two or more independent implementations, developed by distinct organisations from the specification alone, can be shown to interoperate to a degree that justifies the moniker "standard"; or preferably, a complete reference implementation, with full source code available under a BSD (or equally permissive) licence, is submitted with the proposal. In fact, I can't understand why this isn't, er, standard practice. Were it so, the OOXML efforts could be trivially dismissed on technical grounds, and this whole dog and pony show could be avoided.

    1. Re:What of ISO's credibility now? by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

      ISO didn't seem too concerned with credibility when it rubberstamped the ODF spec that OASIS gave them, warts and all. One can't even implement a basic spreadsheet using ISO ODF 1.0, yet IBM was running around the globe trying to get governments to mandate exclusive use of ISO ODF 1.0. The very thorough examination that ISO is making OOXML go through should also have been done regarding ODF, but it was not. That's why OASIS folk are working hard to create ODF 1.1, to patch over the woeful deficiencies of ISO ODF 1.0.

      ISO failed to do due diligence when rubberstamping ODF, and no slashdotter complained, in fact, they cheered. Now you're pissed that OOXML is being run through the mill (that ODF wasn't put through) and is surviving. Hypocrisy at its finest.

      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    2. Re:What of ISO's credibility now? by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      The very thorough examination that ISO is making OOXML go through should also have been done regarding ODF, but it was not. [...] Hypocrisy at its finest.

      Wow, that's breathtaking. OOXML has received *no* examination and will be rubber-stamped to approval only because of Microsoft's corruption and ISO's incompetence at dealing with corrupt businesses.

      Are you just a misguided Microsoft fanboi or are you paid for your comments? Your posting history indicates that you are a one-trick pony. Are you a full-time employee on the Microsoft campus? Is there a room full of people like yourself posting pro-company comments on online forums? How much does this job pay? Do you get dental coverage? Where can I sent my resume?

    3. Re:What of ISO's credibility now? by gatesvp · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but does ISO have any more credibility in this regards than does, say, the US Patent Office? I'd love to come down on these guys, but you really can't, the whole concept of standards and interoperability in computing has basically been one giant mess for at least a decade (some would say 2 or 3, but I'm not that old).

      Look, we can probably standardize hardware quite well over the long-term, hell my new Mobo still has a parallel port (why?!?). At the least, our ability to generate paperwork standards is fully capable of keeping up with our ability to design the next generation of parts and retrofit factories for the changes. But we cannot "keep up" with the software changes, they happen too fast and we don't have any good laws or even lawmakers with a good concept on the nature of software.

      And that makes sense, lots of people can't correctly absorb first-year calc and linear algebra (aka:vectors), it's just too abstract. Working software is an entire magnitude more abstract! Software is still akin to magic in most people's eyes.

      So how do we write laws to govern this stuff? Patent laws can't account for software, it's just different enough to be outside of any originally intended scope. But copyright laws don't really cut the mustard either b/c they were never created with software in mind. To make life worse, software is not just the finished product, sometimes it's the process that's special (new algorithm), sometimes it's the implementation that's special (more efficient algorithm) and sometimes it's the package deal (swiss army knife).

      So the ISO will do what they can, but the concept of "standards" simply doesn't apply very well in a free-market software environment. They're just changing too quickly to have any real relevance. Everyone wants their own version of the standards b/c that's their competitive edge. At the best, standards organizations can be "behind" the software curve, but it simply can't lead.

    4. Re:What of ISO's credibility now? by lysse · · Score: 1

      ISO failed to do due diligence when rubberstamping ODF, and no slashdotter complained, in fact, they cheered. Now you're pissed that OOXML is being run through the mill (that ODF wasn't put through) and is surviving. Hypocrisy at its finest.

      I didn't mention ODF. If ODF has similar problems, I would agree that it shouldn't be a standard either. However, my original post attempted to make a broader point - that the OOXML debacle might be exposing fundamental weaknesses in the ISO's procedures, regardless of how we feel about the organisations involved. Moreover, if you're going to accuse me of hypocrisy, you'll have to find something I've said which demonstrates a viewpoint contrary to the one I stated above.

      As to your specific criticism of ODF, can you give some details (or references) as to how the implementations of ODF in KOffice and OpenOffice (or any other implementation, for that matter) diverge from the published standards, and/or instances of major interoperability issues?
    5. Re:What of ISO's credibility now? by lysse · · Score: 1

      At the best, standards organizations can be "behind" the software curve, but it simply can't lead.

      That was precisely my point. Standards are baselines, minimum specifications, lowest common denominators. They're not supposed to lead, and when they attempt to do so they fail.
    6. Re:What of ISO's credibility now? by rastoboy29 · · Score: 1

      Don't sweat it.  There are TONS of ISO standards that nobody really uses.  CGM (Computer Graphics Metafile) is one of my favorites.  There are many others.

      Getting it as an ISO standard is one thing.  Getting organizations to actually standardIZE on it is quite another.  There is quite a lot of FUD going right back at MS these days, their comeuppance is due.

  60. conspiracytheory by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This story is (anonymously) tagged "conspiracytheory". I'd like to see the coincidence theorist explain how this happened without Microsoft's trademark coordinating manipulations.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:conspiracytheory by turing_m · · Score: 1

      1. This would require more than one person in a group being able to keep a secret.

      2.

      3. Hence, that would be a Conspiracy Theory (queue conditioned guffaws), impossible, and you don't believe in THOSE do you?

      QED.

      --
      If I have seen further it is by stealing the Intellectual Property of giants.
    2. Re:conspiracytheory by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Yes, because no one ever keeps secrets for a while in exchange for both getting paid and not getting caught themselves.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

  61. time to quit. by twitter · · Score: 1

    if you look at the MS jobs web site, you'll see that they have more than ten thousand open positions - so clearly people *don't* want to work there.

    That's good news.

    My guess is that a fair bunch of MS employees do so *only* to keep a shirt on their backs and not for the love of the job or the company.

    There's got to be a better way and every single person there should be looking for it. Evil people can not get things done without the co-operation of people who should know better. The surest way to stop evil is to refuse that that co-operation.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  62. Better translation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    28 Oogoost 2007: ebuoot 20 Meecrusufft pertners eppeered in zee feenel meenootes ooff yesterdey's vurkeeng meeteeng et SIS (Svedeesh Stunderds Insteetoote-a) und pooshed thruoogh a mejureety fur a SIS epprufel ooff Meecrusufft's noo OoOXML feele-a furmet es un ISO stunderd. In meeteeng et SIS yesterdey oon zee stunderdeeseshun ooff Meecrusufft's OoOXML feele-a furmet (i.i. in preencipel zee feele-a furmet used in Ooffffeece-a 2007) 23 noo cumpuneees sooddenly eppeered thet hed nut prefeeuoosly perteecipeted in zee vurkeeng gruoop, a mejureety ooff zeese-a cumpuneees ere-a Meecrusufft pertners (see-a inclused). Frum a cleer NO-mejureety emung zee members, zee resoolt in zee cuoorse-a ooff joost oone-a dey beceme-a a YES. Zee feenel resoolt ves 25 in fefuoor, 6 egeeenst; 4 members lefft zee meeteeng. Thees elsu meuns thet zee vurk veet hoondreds ooff sooggested currecshuns hefe-a beee mede-a fueed in oone-a dey; zeey veell nut be-a furverded tu ISO in uny furm -- despeete-a strung creeticism egeeenst zee prupusel frum seferel seegnifficunt perteees. Emung zeese-a, must hed beee ecteefe-a seence-a beffure-a, i.g. Neshunel Ercheefes, Zee Ruyel Leebrery und Soon, ell ooff vheech hed soobmeetted creeticism oon seferel pueents. Junes Bussun, Cheurmun ooff FFII in Svedee, cumments: "SIS hundleeng ooff thees is deffeecient tu sey zee leest -- despeete-a knooeeng a greet deel ebuoot thees prublem elreedy oon Thoorsdey zeey deed nut teke-a uny ecshun. Zee stunderdeeseshun prucess is booeelt oon zee preenciple-a ooff cunsensoos, vheech ves fery deefffficoolt tu cunceeefe-a ooff yesterdey. It hed beee pusseeble-a und desureble-a fur SIS tu drev a cleer leene-a egeeenst zeese-a types ooff scenereeus, boot regrettebly zeey hefe-a chusee tu sooppurt zee recummendeshun ooff zee vurkeeng gruoop ifee under zeese-a curcoomstunces." Zee futeeng in zee ISO (Interneshunel Oorguneezeshun fur Stunderdeezeshun) member cuoontreees inds oon 2 September. Bork Bork Bork!

  63. What infuriates me... by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 2, Interesting

    is not that Microsoft bought all those votes - but that the ISO let them. And that we can't do anything about it. Or can we? I'd love to know how.

  64. Most were against!? by PhysicsPhil · · Score: 1

    The submitter writes that most people in the Working Group were against the OOXML, then 20 new companies show up and vote yes for a final vote tally of 25-6-3 in favour. Even without those 20 votes, the tally would still be 5-6-3. I know this is slashdot, but in what way would leading by a single vote qualify as "most people" being against OOXML?

    1. Re:Most were against!? by Valpis · · Score: 1

      the 3 absense could be the companies that did leave the voting, IBM and others?

      --
      who shot the cat in the hat to experiment is insane
    2. Re:Most were against!? by The_DoubleU · · Score: 2, Informative

      4 parties, including IBM left without a vote.
      So I think these parties would have voted no so the result would have been 5-10-3.
      Looks much better.

      --
      What power has law where only money rules.
    3. Re:Most were against!? by realdodgeman · · Score: 1

      The submitter writes that most people in the Working Group were against the OOXML, then 20 new companies show up and vote yes for a final vote tally of 25-6-3 in favour. Even without those 20 votes, the tally would still be 5-6-3. I know this is slashdot, but in what way would leading by a single vote qualify as "most people" being against OOXML?
      Last time I checked, 1 more is enough for anything to be called most.
    4. Re:Most were against!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Check out the links: in total 23 companies showed up late and voted "no". So there were just two voters in favor at the beginning.

    5. Re:Most were against!? by Devistater · · Score: 1

      RTFA (like the submitter didn't), it was 23, not 20. Summary is incorrect.
      Link from the summary: http://www.os2world.com/content/view/14868/1/
      So it woulda been 2-6-3

      BTW, most means 50.0000001% (insert more zeros after the . if you like)
      so even a single vote differance is "most"

      But, 8 out of 10 votes not voting yes sure seems to me to be "most" in anyones book.

  65. OOXML is the best standard... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...money can buy.

  66. Re:Sore losers by Zaiff+Urgulbunger · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Have you evidence of this?

    I think you'll find that the law changes are only to require "open" standards, which is *why* MS are pursuing ISO certification now. If this wasn't the case, then why would a company who own (I'm guessing here) 99% of the "office" application market and have done for a good number of years, suddenly decide they need certification?

    Also, the only reason OOXML gets a slating 'round these parts, is because it is a very poor "standard", and it appears to omit enough detail to make it hard (if not impossible) for anyone to create an alternative implementation.

    It's worth noting that MS is entirely free to create an implementation based around ODF if they want to, and given their immense resources, they could probably do a good job of it if they so chose; but sadly, they seem to base all of their decisions on perceived threats. For example, if OOXML failed to get ISO certification (or if they had not even tried to obtain it) and a number of governments mandated open standards, given MS's *huge* installed base, I expect the majority would be far more inclined to switch to an MS ODF implementation. But MS seem to believe that if their customers had a choice, they'd leave! Microsoft lacks confidence IMHO; that's why they behave like bullies.

  67. "Ready! Aim! ..." by zooblethorpe · · Score: 3, Funny

    I think the least we could do is shout "FIRE!"

    ...so long as MS is against the wall. Blindfolds or not, I don't care.

    --
    "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
    "A four-foot prune."
  68. The list by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative
    According to Computer Sweden , the companies in question are:
    • Camako Data AB (Microsoft Gold Certified Partner)
    • Connecta AB (Microsoft Gold Certified Partner)
    • Cornerstone Sweden AB (Microsoft Gold Certified Partner)
    • Cybernetics (Microsoft Gold Certified Partner)
    • Emric AB
    • Exor AB (Microsoft Certified Partner)
    • Fishbone Systems AB (Microsoft Gold Certified Partner)
    • Formpipe Software (Microsoft Gold Certified Partner)
    • FS System AB
    • Google
    • HP (Microsoft Gold Certified Partner)
    • IBizkit AB (Microsoft Certified Partner)
    • IDE Nätverkskonsulterna (Microsoft Gold Certified Partner)
    • IT-Vision AB
    • Illuminet
    • Know IT (Microsoft Gold Certified Partner)
    • Modul1 (Microsoft Gold Certified Partner)
    • Nordic Station AB (Microsoft Certified Partner)
    • ReadSoft AB (Microsoft Certified Partner)
    • Sogeti (Microsoft Gold Certified Partner)
    • Solid Park AB (Microsoft Gold Certified Partner)
    • SourceTech AB
    • Strand Interconnect AB (Microsoft Gold Certified Partner)
    • TietoEnator (Microsoft Gold Certified Partner)
    If you work for any of these companies, please contact management and ask them to explain themselves.
    1. Re:The list by SlOrbA · · Score: 1

      > If you work for any of these companies, please contact management and ask them to explain themselves. Ok, will do, but I don't think I'll reporting back here ;)

    2. Re:The list by Wordplay · · Score: 1

      Google's presence on that list brings its accuracy into question. I'm pretty sure they voted no.

    3. Re:The list by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The list is of companies that joined late, regardless of how they voted. If I've understood it correctly, Google joined late, but voted "No".

    4. Re:The list by LeadSongDog · · Score: 1
      s/work for/own/p

      There. Fixed that for you.

      --
      Oh, I'm sorry sir, I thought you were referring to me, Mr. Wensleydale.
    5. Re:The list by jesterzog · · Score: 1

      They did vote No, but personally I still feel irritated that Google didn't make an effort to take part in the preceding discussion for the Swedish Standards Institute. It makes a mockery of the voting process and I don't see why a corporation should be exempt from criticism just because they voted differently from everyone else who pulled the same trick.

    6. Re:The list by durin · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Better yet, I resigned from the company.

      My previous employer (one of the GC partners above) has been pushing open source to be used within the company. I joined this effort thinking it could bring more focus on open formats, but I saw a while ago that this attitude did not seem to apply to top management, so I left the company. I hope others join me in doing so.

      --
      Why, yes! I AM new here.
  69. Re:Sore losers by Zaiff+Urgulbunger · · Score: 1

    One would hope IBM might press this issue! Also, it doesn't really do much for ISOs credibility.

  70. Reminds me of a joke... by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 4, Funny

    This reminds me of a political joke I heard somewhere. I've adapted it to programming.

    God was in a good mood and decided to give virtues to people. One day he decided to give all the programmers in the world three virtues:

    They would be smart, well-intentioned, and work for Microsoft. But an angel told him: Hey, wait a minute, aren't they too many virtues?
    "You're right", said God. "They'll have these virtues but a person can only have two of these virtues at the same time".

    Since then, programmers in the world were divided in the three following groups:

    Programmers who were smart and well-intentioned, couldn't work for Microsoft.
    Programmers who were smart and worked for Microsoft, couldn't be well-intentioned.
    Programmers who were well-intentioned and worked for Microsoft, couldn't be smart.

    1. Re:Reminds me of a joke... by Octopus · · Score: 1

      ..which in turn reminds me of that video footage of a bunch of well-dressed men in Florida banging on the doors of a county election office in 2000. Supposedly they were angry voters distressed about the recount, but it was actually John Bolton and a bunch of other party hacks putting on a school play. Disgusting.

  71. Re:Sore losers by nschubach · · Score: 1

    I wished I had mod points for you. That's the biggest problem with a monopoly, certifications, and standardization.

    --
    Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
  72. So? The world stays the same. by rdrd · · Score: 0

    We'll just create some new XLSs to transform documents from one format to the other.
    We'll survive, believe me.
    It's so common for MS, that I cannot say again "I'm outraged". It is just MS stuff.

  73. Re:What part of "monopoly laws" don't you understa by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 2, Informative

    Steal what you can, "retired" Mr. Gates.

    You fail to see the point in here. Microsoft has become a living entity. It's not Gates, nor Ballmer. It's Microsoft itself, along with its shareholders and leaders. Its corporate structure has been adapted to become a monopoly, and to step on everything to fulfill its goals. Anyone disagreeing with it is rejected, and seen as a pathogen agent to keep the system running.

    Microsoft has become a cancer for the free world, and it must die.

  74. voting vs. consensus by joshuaos · · Score: 1

    This is a perfect example of the majority rules vote failing to manifest an outcome that a majority really want. I am a big believer in the consensus process, where no decision can stand that any of the group block, therefore the discussion takes longer, but the outcome is acceptable to all. Also consensus minus one is a good variant, meaning that ONE blocker does not suffice.

    My two cents. ;)
    Joshua

    --

    When in danger or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout!

  75. What part of "corporatism" don't you undersand? by Tony · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You're describing corporatism, not capitalism.

    Capitalism is based on supply and demand, where companies or individuals create the supply to fill the demands of the customer. It is as simple as that. (Okay, it's never as simple as that.)

    As soon as you support powerful corporations manipulating the market in any way, you are not longer a capitalist. You are a corporatist.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  76. PAYED/PAID by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

    WRONG:
    PAYED/PAID

    If you paid attention in school, you know that the past tense of "pay" is "paid" except in the special sense that has to do with ropes: "He payed out the line to the smuggler in the rowboat." Now I'm the last person to be a spelling nazi but fucking Christ, people!
    --
    Kwisatz Haderach
    Sell the spice to CHOAM
    This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    1. Re:PAYED/PAID by 808140 · · Score: 1

      That's cool. I never knew "payed" was a legitimate spelling in American English at least. You learn something new everyday.

    2. Re:PAYED/PAID by Jaxoreth · · Score: 1

      'Nazi' should be capitalized. Just so you know.

      --
      In general, it is safe and legal to kill your children. -- POSIX Programmer's Guide
    3. Re:PAYED/PAID by jollyreaper · · Score: 2, Funny

      'Nazi' should be capitalized. Just so you know. Not if they're midget fascists.
      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
  77. They violated ethical standards. by twitter · · Score: 5, Insightful

    An organization that has no ethics is worthless.

    Rules are always more a mater of their spirit than their letter. The protest of other members is real and well founded. It's pretty obvious that M$ played the organizations rules to get a result that is against everything the organization stands for. If the organization does not investigate and punish this kind of blatant abuse, the organization will lose all community respect.

    A reasonable US Government would investigate M$ for corrupt foreign practices.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:They violated ethical standards. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll correct that for you:

      A reasonable Government would investigate M$ for corrupt practices.

    2. Re:They violated ethical standards. by seriesrover · · Score: 1
      Way to sidestep. Your whole post is a rant about the evil that is M$ and all the evil its pushing in on the world. Yeah, that arguement is really socking it to 'em and will hold up in court.

      Ethics is very subjective - what is ethical to you may not be to someone else. We create rules to define boundaries of common ethics. If those rules aren't tight enough blame the person who created them - especially if they're getting cash from it. Here's an alternative standpoint to what happened...the evil that is the governing committee don't want them to vote but are happy to take their money.

      You hate Microsoft, we get it (I'm no big fan either). But please use reasoned arguements.

  78. Embrace and Extinguish by scruffy · · Score: 1

    It looks like Microsoft has decided to follow a scorched-earth policy on standards. Do anything to get the "standards" you want, even if you make a mockery of the standards process and soil the reputation of the standards organizations along the way.

  79. Mail SIS and tell them what you think! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.sis.se/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabid=23

    Goto SIS website and mail them and tell them what you think about this scandal!

    As a geek, it is your duty, it is your responsibility!

  80. Re:Sore losers by jsebrech · · Score: 2, Informative

    The ODF supporters are trying to block OOXML from becoming a standard ONLY because they've lobbied governments into passing open standards laws that will REQUIRE those governments to use their format if OOXML fails. They don't give a damn if it's the best format or not; they want a monopoly enforced by law.

    Nonsense. The ODF supporters want an open format, so that there is no more microsoft lock-in in the office applications market. Some of these are indeed supporting it for commercial reasons (sun and google), but most of the ODF supporters are in it for transparency in government.

    The case against OOXML on technical grounds has been made. The format is not open. See this link if you want more info: http://ooxmlisdefectivebydesign.blogspot.com/

  81. Re:Sore losers by Teun · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't think these twenty Servants of the Beast played by the rules of the ISO.
    We (can and should) expect from that organisation decisions based on technical merit, the OOXML has no such thing.
    But even if the ISO cert would be granted I eventually expect court cases evolving out of the inherent contradiction of calling it an Open Standard and at the same time referring to closed sources.

    --
    "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
  82. historical ISO, defective or bought? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how defective ISO is.

    The ISO's votes are not valid if they don't study the technical conditions of something to be declared standard.

    So, if ISO has declared OOXML standard then i hate ISO OOXML and ISO, and i don't need them.

  83. 6546 pages? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative
    From the Google reply:

    In developing standards, as in other engineering processes, it is a bad idea to reinvent the wheel. The OOXML standard document is 6546 pages long. The ODF standard, which achieves the same goal, is only 867 pages. The reason for this is that ODF references other existing ISO standards for such things as date specifications, math formula markup and many other needs of an office document format standard. OOXML invents its own versions of these existing standards, which is unnecessary and complicates the final standard. If ISO were to give OOXML with its 6546 pages the same level of review that other standards have seen, it would take 18 years (6576 days for 6546 pages) to achieve comparable levels of review to the existing ODF standard (871 days for 867 pages) which achieves the same purpose and is thus a good comparison. Considering that OOXML has only received about 5.5% of the review that comparable standards have undergone, reports about inconsistencies, contradictions and missing information are hardly surprising.
  84. What can each of us do to stop OOXML in the ISO? by Optic7 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I would like to know. Is there anything we can do? Write to the ISO? Anything? Or can we just sit and watch while this happens?

  85. OS2 World???? by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 0, Troll

    OS/2 World??? LOLOL
    Didn't know there were still sites pimping for an OS that's been obsolete for 10 years now.
    Anyway, clearly a site advocating OS/2 would have an axe to grind against Microsoft. That's fine, but I'm sure there's an opposing side to this story (not that I expect /. to cover the other side).

    And so what if Microsoft partners showed up to vote YES? Obviously those partners intend to use OOXML an want it to be an ISO standard. The stranger thing is that those that are opposed to OOXML being an ISO standard have no intent to use OOXML so why do they care?
    Obviously, the reason the care is that they want to use ISO status as a differentiator between ODF and OOXML in lobbying efforts to convince governments to mandate exclusive use of ODF. We all know that this is about politics, not technical merit, and those that deny that are just being disingenuous.

    --
    -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    1. Re:OS2 World???? by giorgiofr · · Score: 1

      Ubelievable, somebody finally got it right! The only problem here is people letting these committees rule their life - so you don't like their decision, fair enough, don't respect it. But the moment you respect it by default, you give them political power, and we know what they say about power.

      --
      Global warming is a cube.
  86. ODF vs OOXML FUD with spreadsheets by fritsd · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ODF leaves an astonishing amount as implementation-defined, including most of spreadsheets.
    Reference?

    Microsoft could easily make Office read and write ODF 100% following the standard, and have horrible interoperability with OpenOffice, simply by not recognize OpenOffice's non-standard elements.
    Microsoft is a long-term member of OASIS. They were invited to join the OpenDocument TC. They were even urged to do it by the European Commission. They declined. If, as you say, it would have been easy for them to wiggle their "embrace extend extinguish" technique into the cracks between ODF and the actual file format of OpenOffice, then WHY DIDN'T THEY DO THAT?

    And, also, why did they refuse to extend ODF to incorporate those precious (formalized / parameterized) AutoSpaceLikeWord95 features, which would have been a PITA for their competition to implement? Now they are actually whining that ODF isn't "feature-complete" enough for them so they had to invent OOXML.

    I think any comment that ODF would be deficient as the default file format for Microsoft Office is FUD until you can provide examples.

    There are lots of detailed examples that OOXML is crap (see the commentary of those national bureaus that weren't silenced or corrupted), the ODF spec is approx 10% as many pages as OOXML, surely you can come up with *some* examples where it is deficient? Otherwise all you do is spreading Microsoft's FUD.

    You mentioned spreadsheets: please enlighten us with your comments. Is it about par. 8.1.3 p. 189,

    Formulas allow calculations to be performed within table cells. Every formula should begin with a namespace prefix specifying the syntax and semantics used within the formula.
    ?

    Agreed, that's under-specified and would benefit from a future clarification, such as OpenFormula.

    But it's not wrong, unlike the "dates start at either 1900 or 1904 i forget which but at least 1900 is a leap year from now on" crap from OOXML (part 4, par. 3.17.4.1, p. 2522, if you don't believe me -- I almost fell of my chair when I read that paragraph).

    THAT is what those companies and national bureaux voted for, to make that an international standard. They should be ashamed.

    --
    To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
    1. Re:ODF vs OOXML FUD with spreadsheets by roystgnr · · Score: 4, Informative

      But it's not wrong, unlike the "dates start at either 1900 or 1904 i forget which but at least 1900 is a leap year from now on" crap from OOXML (part 4, par. 3.17.4.1, p. 2522, if you don't believe me -- I almost fell of my chair when I read that paragraph).

      I didn't entirely believe this, and anyone else who didn't should go here like I did: ECMA Standard Office Open XML Formats. Although the writing style is slightly less retarded than in fritsd's paraphrased version, the writing content isn't. It turns out that the 1900-based dating is screwed up "for legacy reasons" (in an unstandardized format that didn't exist in any previous versions??) As the spec states,

      "A consequence of this is that for dates between January 1 and February 28, WEEKDAY shall return a value for the day immediately prior to the correct day, so that the (non-existent) date February 29 has a day-of-the-week that immediately follows that of February 28, and immediately precedes that of March 1."

      I'd like to read further to try to understand why they're expressing integers as "1.0000000..." instead of "1.0" or even "1", but I'm starting to fear that the Stupid might be contagious.

    2. Re:ODF vs OOXML FUD with spreadsheets by cweber · · Score: 1

      Your comment should be labeled as both, funny and insightful. Come on, mods!
      The real meat of why this proposed ISO "standard" is deeply flawed needs to float to the top. Even non-techies can grasp that OOXML bad.

    3. Re:ODF vs OOXML FUD with spreadsheets by Devistater · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "For legacy reasons, an implementation using the 1900 date base system shall 1 treat 1900 as though it was a leap
      2 year."
      What legacy reasons? Was there an ancient excel version that MS didn't bother to fix a date bug in that they are carrying through even today? Why should they? Anyone bothering to use some ancient excel version likely wouldn't bother with the brand new office 2007 and its "open" Office XML filesystem would they? I mean if they were going to change, they'd probably prefer to have it correctly working now. And what about people who want to put in data from 1900? Thats just going to screw up everyone wanting to do that!

      Whats funny, is that their spec says if you DON'T want to use the screwed up 1900 system you don't have to... but then your dates have to start with 1904, with no possability of using a date earlier than that!

      And you'd better not be wanting to use any dates prior to 1900, neither date system will accept it. Yeah, I'm sure no country in the EU has any useful historical data prior to 1900, after all they composed of such young countries, right?

    4. Re:ODF vs OOXML FUD with spreadsheets by BerntB · · Score: 1

      The real meat of why this proposed ISO "standard" is deeply flawed needs to float to the top. Even non-techies can grasp that OOXML bad.

      Since this is a discussion about Sweden: "De stora skitarna flyter ovanpå".

      A farmer saying inspired by fertilizers (but relevant outside). It means: "The big shits floats to the top".

      --
      Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
  87. Give them a break, will you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They started making deals, they're making open source and seeking license approval, they're saying they will interoperate -- and they try to look more Linux-friendly.

    See: http://www.flickr.com/photos/48637819@N00/41286414 8

    No need to be afraid...

  88. Re:Sore losers by uglydog · · Score: 1

    Good points, but the lesson I learned is everything comes down to getting what you want, by any means. If you break the law to get what you want and the consequences are acceptable, then go ahead.

    So.. new strategy? Have a group of 5 dedicated, free software people bomb Microsoft off the map. The five either die or go to jail, but hey, no more Microsoft!

    Come get me, Homeland Security! You'll never catch me alive!

    Catch me next week, when I'll be writing from Gitmo.

  89. Done by aiwarrior · · Score: 1

    for(;;)
    {
        printf("money buys influence\n");
    }

  90. Re:Sore losers by coolGuyZak · · Score: 1

    I agree, its dumb, but they followed the rules to a tee
    What happened to acting in good faith?
  91. All signs point to HP having voted YES by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 2, Informative

    I assume that HP voted YES because they voted YES in the recent US vote that took place on 08/24/2007, the results of which were YES 12, NO 3, ABSTAIN 1, which was enough to approve OOXML.
    You can see how each party voted here:
    US OOXML VOTE 08/24/2007

    Notable YES votes include MS, HP, APPLE, INTEL, SONY.
    Notable NO votes were IBM.

    It's amusing that slashdot carried hugh headlines for the NO vote, but hasn't covered the YES vote at all (unless I just missed it).

    BTW, the US YES vote is a reversal of the 08/10/2007 US vote that was YES 8, NO 7, ABSTAIN 1, which was not enough for approval (which led to premature celebration by IBM's allies):
    US OOXML VOTE 08/10/2007

    You can check the two links to see which parties flipped from NO to YES. The most notable is the DoD.

    It's amusing that /. carried a story trumpeting the previous "NO" vote, but hasn't done a story on the more recent YES vote.

    --
    -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
  92. Whoa there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Careful what you wish for, apologist.

    Be careful with that tone, dumbass astroturfer

  93. Re:Sore losers by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    They don't give a damn if it's the best format or not; they want a monopoly enforced by law.

    Do you even know what a monopoly is? By definition an open standard requirement removes the ability of a monopoly to undermine the market. MS could easily use ODF within their products, but they don't want a true open standard because they want to be able to abuse their monopoly more easily. All an open standard does is require each competitor to compete based upon the merits of their software, not on the fact that it is hard to switch to a competitor with an offering that is better for your needs. OOXML as evaluated by numerous parties does not meet those requirements. It refers to behaviors of closed and proprietary software within the so called spec making it impossible for anyone without the source to those programs to properly implement it. That is the opposite of "open." It provides only limited patent protection so that there is guarantee that much software can legally implement it and no guarantee that that software will be able to maintain backward compatibility with older versions of the spec (patent protection applies only to the most recent version).

    I truly hope you're being paid to astroturf because the alternative is that their astroturfing is actually convincing people of such obviously absurd falsehoods.

  94. Sweden doesn't allow any 'late comers' to vote by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1
    Well, according to http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=281505&cid= 20383407 , none of the companies that voted YES in the Swedish vote "came in late" either. All were already members of the organization.
    Quoting the referred slashdot post by Hoppelainen:

    Any Swedish company can become a member of SIS buy paying somewhere around $300-$500 per year. To be allowed to vote in this particular issue an extra 15 000 Sek ($2500) was needed. So yeah, it is open for anyone with cash (but they had to be members of SIS since before.


    So there is no problem here. These companies were already members of SIS, and they exercised their right to vote in that organization.
    --
    -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    1. Re:Sweden doesn't allow any 'late comers' to vote by jgrahn · · Score: 1

      Well, according to http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=281505&cid= 20383407 , none of the companies that voted YES in the Swedish vote "came in late" either. All were already members of the organization.

      That doesn't match the Computer Sweden article which lists 24 out of 35 organizations in the working group as newcomers, 18 of these 24 being "Microsoft Gold Certified Partner", and cites a SIS representative saying there were eleven members in late June -- and that the big influx started on Thursday (two work days before the vote?!).

  95. I take it that the 3 "monitors" terms have expired by Jerry · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Maybe it's time for another DOJ action.

    But, probably not for another year, as long as Bush is pres.

    --

    Running with Linux for over 20 years!

  96. Because IBM is not a corporate whore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like IBM had any inclination to approve the MS standard. They were just beaten at their own game.

  97. quality control on standards by m2943 · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, this sort of thing highlights a general problem with quality control and standards: quality control usually happens by selecting people with too much time or companies with too much money, or people or companies who hope to benefit from participating in the standards process.

    For example, companies like to add complicated features their products already have to standards to make it harder for others to implement.

    Individuals like to make a name for themselves by drafting big and complicated sounding prose.

    Note that in addition to ISO, ANSI, and ECMA, the JCP also has a bad case of this.

  98. Re:Sore losers by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 1

    Typical spin. Accuse those you oppose of doing
    what you are really up to.

    --
    You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
  99. Economic Macro-Evolution at Work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    irrelevant as it may be its still a damn depressing indication of the way business is done and sensible, rational decisions are perverted to line company pockets. this sort of thing annoys me.


    i find it interesting that so many folks (most of slashdot) ring the bell of "survival of the fittest" when it comes to their view of biology (specifically, macro evolution), but cry in pain when economic "survival of the fittest" plays out.

    this appears to be cognitive dissonance at work.

    they want A to be true, so they embrace "survival of the fittest."
    They want B to be false, so they lament "survival of the fittest."

    there is no room for morals in a "survival of the fittest" world. bill gates and company are the economically fittest and they kicked our collective behinds - as it should be in economic macro-evolution.

    right?

    right?

    right?

    since you all support a world where morals aren't nearly as important as being the "fittest" and maximizing your survivability, this went down EXACTLY as it should have gone down.

    yes, bill gates and msft are the living epitome of economic "macro-evolution" in play.

    the big eat the small. it is the very foundation of all living creatures and should be embraced whenever the small die off... they don't deserve to live...

    right?

    right?

    right?

    is it intellectually consistent to embrace survival of the fittest when you are the fittest, but wail and gnash teeth when the fittest kicks your behind and beats you into submission?

    just curious.

    for me, the utter lack of expected evidence revolving around macro evolution (not a single transitionary entity still alive today out of millions of opportunities - COME ON! there is no reasonable explanation that 100% extinction of all transitional entities need to have died off) indicates it just might not be as true as some over zealous folks portray it (agenda is ahead of the science).

    in any case, i don't elevate survival of the fittest above morality, so i can make a morality play out of msft's shady tactics.

    can you, though, and maintain intellectual credibility? everyone must decide for themselves.
    1. Re:Economic Macro-Evolution at Work by oever · · Score: 1

      not a single transitionary entity still alive today out of millions of opportunities - COME ON!

      There were no transitionary entities. Evolution only occurs in tiny steps and each step means there was an advantage for the organism at that time. There are no transitionary entities because there is no goal and no markers along the way. Actually there is not even a way. Human have evolved into the diverse population we are now over a long time and we are still changing. The changes from generation to generation are tiny, but a billion years is a long time so it's ok.

      People seem to think that evolution leads to improvement. This is a strange notion. How do you define improvement? Evolution is just a way to describe how the set of organisms present changed over time.

      --
      DNA is the ultimate spaghetti code.
  100. America the - what was that again... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For me, as a British network admin dealing with several OS's, this action by Microsoft exemplifies the arrogant and morally bankrupt American Corporation's attitude and method.
            On a more reasoned level, how can a 'new' members of the Work Group be permitted to vote on any standards candidate when they have not participated in the research of that standard. Surely the rules would not permit that - like taking your driving test the first time you sit in a car. Not logical.
            Oh, and by the way, can we have the names of these new members? We need to monitor their Working Group activity in the future and know of their products for purchase order reference.

  101. MS bashing by drDugan · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It is stories like this that keep me as a vocal and vehement opponent to Microsoft. In my view, this business and its practices are examples for all that is wrong with software today.

  102. Re:Sore losers by Tom · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Did they cheat somehow? No, They followed the rule required to vote - they payed the fees. Your definition of "cheating" needs updating.

    If I find a bug in WoW that allows me to get a million gold everytime I click a specific key combo, you, Blizzard and every WoW player would call it cheating, even though the "rules" of the game include that bug at that point.

    Cheating is not breaking the rules. Cheating is breaking the spirit of the rules, whether or not you literaly break them. In fact, most cheating happens by lawyer-weaseling your way through the loopholes in the rules. Most board game rules do not explicitly forbid you to look at the cards stacked face-down on the board, but everyone would agree that doing so is cheating.

    And that's exactly what happened here.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  103. cheap by Tom · · Score: 1

    2.5k times 20 companies makes 50k.

    Thats pretty darn cheap for buying an entire countries vote on an international standard.

    Scale that to the entire ISO and you can have anything you want bought through for a few million bucks.

    Wow.

    I would've thought that if anyone than the standard groups would know about building resilient systems.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  104. 3 meetings to vote .. by mikeb · · Score: 2, Informative

    When I was a member of the ANSI C and C++ standards committees the rule was that you had to have attended two of the last three meetings to be able to vote. But that was ANSI, NOT the Swedish Standards Institute which will have its own rules that apparently (and unsurprisingly) are not the same as ANSI. Its position is then relayed to the ISO/IEC process and is then subject to the rules of procedure that apply there. Each national body is free to make up its own rules as long as it's happy to live by the outcome.

  105. So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...Fuck Microsoft!

  106. Um, No. by wonkavader · · Score: 1

    You can't have it both ways. If it's fine to join and vote against it, it's fine to jump in and vote for it. For Google to have clean hands, here, it would have needed to jump in and demand rules changes or a stay on the vote.

    1. Re:Um, No. by courtarro · · Score: 1

      The problem is not with the jumping in - it's with the distinct cases where the jumping in was initiated because MS bought the votes. Granted, I don't think we can prove that yet, but the coincidence is pretty absurd, otherwise.

  107. Sweden ? There must be a mistake by unity100 · · Score: 1

    Arent swedish the people which brought us the Pryratbryan (however the heck its typed) ? one of the most liberal and advanced countries in the world ? how come did they become microsoft's bitch ?

  108. Fight by leandrod · · Score: 1

    Let IBM and Sun and Red Hat and whomever else do the same at the next countries' votes.

    --
    Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
    DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
    GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
  109. Re:Sore losers by tinkerghost · · Score: 1

    The ODF supporters are trying to block OOXML from becoming a standard ONLY because they've lobbied governments into passing open standards laws that will REQUIRE those governments to use their format if OOXML fails.

    I think that you will find that people are trying to block OOXML from becoming a standard because it fails on technical merits to be worthy of being a standard. Any standard that defines half it's structures as :
    <compatibility_tag_name1> - to behave like [software][version][function]
    is defective if [software][version][function] isn't defined someplace else.

    OOXML isn't implimentable by anyone except Microsoft, because only MS knows how [software][version][function] is supposed to work. That fact alone should be causing it to fail ISO certification.

    However, let us not forget that MS can't tell time either - rather than impliment the correct ISO implimentation of leap year determination, MS continues to enjoy the singular distinction of defining 1900 as a leap year - in defiance of both reality & other ECMA standards. Again, this fact is supposed to be causing the standard to fail.

    Moving on, OOXML's inclusion of binary data blobs which contain parts of the document formating is in violation of the ECMA definition of XML standard. Again, it's supposed to fail.

    ISO is supposed to be killing badly developed standards before they are born. OOXML is one of the worst I have seen having done 8 years of working with industrial standards, on it's merits it should be in the trash. According to the ECMA rules on creating standards, it should be in the trash. According to the ISO rules, it should be in the trash. The fact that it's not only not in the trash but being fast tracked is has got anyone who has ever handled submitting, implimenting, or reviewing a standard standing around going WTF?!

    Reading about the games with voting rule changes, blocking entry to the voting meeting, stuffing the voting meetings at the last minute, etc is really just the icing on the cake. The fact that this "standard" is even up for consideration is evidence enough that MS has bought the system.

  110. Re: Controversy should nix acceptance by evought · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm sorry to break this to you, but ISO approval of standards is supposed to be governed by TECHNICAL considerations. By this logic, a vote on whether OOXML is approved by fasttrack should be based on the TECHNICAL merits of the proposal, not on how popular Micorosft Corp. is.

    Sadly, the fact that these people joined the discussion only *after* the debate on those technical merits was over only shows that this process has become nothing more than a high-school president election in a bad B-movie. Indeed, and I will go one further: the fact that there is so much controversy over the proposal should immediately tank it, regardless of who 'wins'. Standards are based on CONSENSUS, not mob rule. Given the evident controversy, the proposal clearly is not ready for standardization, let alone by a 'fast-track' process. If at some point, the political controversy dies down, ECMA-376 matures, and the industry shows some sings of consensus, let the proposal be resubmitted. But if there is a *hint* of impropriety in the process, tank it. It is better to have fewer better standards than more mediocre ones. There is no rush (to anyone but MS) to put an ISO imprimatur on ECMA-376. ISO typically sees its mandate as standardizing best-practice, not invention. ECMA-376 does not exist in the marketplace and has no history behind it. The arguments are largely mooted by an insistence that the proposal be allowed to mature (and the politics to settle) before being standardized. Given that ISO has an existing standard in this domain, it is hard to see how anyone is (legitimately) hurt by delay.
  111. Re:Sore losers by everphilski · · Score: 1

    What does good faith have to do with it? ISO just wants money for membership, they got their money, and the members followed the rules. Sounds good-faith to me ... if the ISO wants participation beforehand, great, they SHOULD!!! and it should be codified so this can't happen.

  112. Re:Sore losers by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

    hmm. Do you know what a suppository is? Well, you may well know in fact, I guess...

  113. Saved money short term, but for what? by MindKata · · Score: 1

    "So, there are about 2500 * 20 = 50000 reasons they should be allowed to vote."

    Spending $50000 has probably saved M$ a lot more money (and time) they would have spent working on the changes other organisations wanted. (The OOXML ISO standardization documentation is said to be around 6000 pages long!)

    Although I can only hope it costs them in the long run, as they have now shown one more very good example of how corrupt and arragant they are to others. Each move like this turns more people against them and less people trust them in the future.

    As for the "standard", well that I suspect is now nothing of the sort. It just goes back to being another microsoft standard. Sad as it could have been good (and useful).

    --
    There are 10 kinds of people in the world... those who understand binary and those who don't.
    1. Re:Saved money short term, but for what? by Nullav · · Score: 1

      Don't worry about it too much. It's not like anyone followed RFC 1149 or 1866. Just because something's a standard, doesn't mean people have to adopt it. Besides, can you imagine how much flipping back and forth would be needed to make sure it's all implemented spot-on (lest I damn myself/employer to court for months to come)?
      Could someone explain why page scans and raw text wouldn't be enough for legal documents?

      --
      I just read Slashdot for the articles.
    2. Re:Saved money short term, but for what? by tbannist · · Score: 1

      It's not really going to be whether anyone follows the standard. Microsoft is buying talking points they can use to win big contracts. They'll be pushing the "our stuff is an ISO certified standard" down the throats of every buyer they talk to, they're marketing people will be using it to produce FUD like the "Get the Facts" campaign.

      They're not just buying just a standard they're buying ammunition.

      On the flip side, this has shown that the ISO certification boards are essentially unreliable, if the only qualification necessary to vote is $2500, then how can you trust them to be anything but biased corporate whores?

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
  114. OOXML in Bulgria is even worse by karavelov · · Score: 1

    The voting procedure in Bulgaria is even worse. There is Bulgarian Institute for Standardization (BIS) that have different Technical Comitees (TC) in different fields. The TC in IT have voted against the promoted DIS 29500 for number of technical reasons but also because the proposed DIS 29500 doubles the functionality of an always existing standard (ISO 26300) and conflicts with a number of established others (XML,ISO 8601, ISO 639, ISO/IEC 10118-3 etc.). But in spite of that, the Institute, pushed mainly by the State IT Agency and pro-M$ parties have approved the DIS 29500 with some notes.

  115. why is it by Io+Alpha · · Score: 1

    that the price for the pdf download of the specs of odf (ISO/IEC 26300:2006) is 342 CHF (14 MB) and for ooxml (ISO/IEC DIS 29500) is 96 CHF (42 MB)?

    1. Re:why is it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Approved standards are more expensive to download than suggested ones.

  116. We CAN do something! by foxylad · · Score: 1

    I challenge you, right now, to Google your country's ISO organisation contact details, or the global ISO details, or both. Then send them an email/phone call/letter telling them how the ISO is about to lose a lot of credibility if they don't halt the fast-track process while they carry out a review of the tactics Microsoft have used to subvert their standards.

    It will take you ten minutes, and WILL make a difference. Unlike the ten minutes you'll otherwise spend reading more outraged comments on Slashdot.

    Do as I do, AND as I say - I just sent my email. Go for it!

    --
    Do as you would be done to.
  117. FWIW: there is a petition by walterbyrd · · Score: 1
  118. Re:Sore losers by Sam+Douglas · · Score: 1

    This is Sweden's national standards body's vote we are talking about here, not the ISO. The national bodies vote on what they put in the ISO's voting process.

  119. ***ASTROTURF WARNING*** by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I find the astroturf movement interesting. All your comments on Slashdot appear to be about OOXML/ODF. That blog is apparently of someone banned from Groklaw for trolling, too, for that matter (well, it says "excessive commenting and bad language" but that pretty much says "troll" to me).

    Now, I'm not logged in nor do I log in from work, but I know that normal people discuss more than one subject. I sure as hell do, even though I follow the OOXML story very closely. And I sure as hell haven't been banned from Groklaw, in spite of saying damn and hell and such a few times, so I don't think PJ is quite as strict as the blog you link to makes her sound, though I don't think she likes even those words, either. Now, she does have a policy about not letting folks astroturf and she does have a habit of looking up IPs...

    As for your objection, the reason they can do that is because they represent IBM in Kenya and Germany. One person really can do that, and Microsoft is also a member of both of those standards bodies, they just apparently have more staff and more Microsoft Certified Gold Partners.

    And come on? That's IBM joining under their own name, not hiding behind a group of Microsoft Certified Gold Partners. Yeah, some anti-OOXML people are waking up to this, but if you look at the numbers and the people who are joining, there's a tiny trickle of individual companies with no real connection vs. a torrent of Microsoft Certified Gold Partners. It's not even in the same league.

    Is IBM stacking the deck? No, I don't think so. If they were, they're doing a damn poor job of it. In the last standards body I saw numbers for, there were maybe two new members who were against OOXML vs. something like a dozen for it.

    But your post is right out of one of the Microsoft PR documents from the Comes v. Microsoft case: "Rule to live by: Never Lie", right under which it says "Be selective about which facts you emphasize."

    1. Re:***ASTROTURF WARNING*** by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      Oh, Please... Mr. Anonymous Coward. I'll bet dollars to donuts my user id is far lower than yours. My Karma is far higher than yours. And i've posted to a lot more topics than you have, I just haven't felt the need to comment in much of anything lately other than the hypocricy surrounding ODF and their anti-ooxml rhetoric that nobody seems to ever question.

      For the record, I don't think OOXML is a great standard either, but I believe it has a necessary place in the archival of legacy documents, and the storage of documents generated by Office in a publicly documented and standardized format. That's something I don't believe can be done with ODF because ODF is under-specified... so much so that even OpenOffice has more than 100 application defined tags that it stores in ODF documents, presumably because ODF isn't capable of representing native OpenOffice formats.

      For crying out loud. It's a fucking document standard. It's not about the survival of the human species as so many people seem to want to portray it.

  120. Re:Sore losers by MBraynard · · Score: 1
    You do realize monopolies are restrained by law because they subvert the free market forces, right?

    False. Well, there are two kinds of monopolies. The government enforced ones (in the US we have the postal service with a government mandated monopoly that is often flaunted by FedEx/UPS). And then there are natural monopolies and they work in with market forces.

    Alan Greenspan does a better job explaning this than I can if you are interested in learning more.

  121. Depreciated? You keep using that word... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    How can those tags be "depreciated" in the first version of a NEW standard? "Non-issue" indeed.

    > "other than when converting legacy documents"

    Yeah, they're "depreciated" all right. Depreciated until they bite you in the ass. Why? Because "converted" legacy documents aren't and never will be. They become "new" legacy documents in a fancy OOXML wrapper you can't peel off. That really defeats the entire point of conversion.

    > "because apps will HAVE to deal with them"

    My but what a lot of things "depreciated" means? We HAVE to deal with "depreciated" things that should be converted into STANDARD markup that are defined for "completeness" even though the "standard" doesn't tell me WHAT THE HELL THEY MEAN? What kind of "completeness" is that!? What the hell kind of "depreciated" means that you HAVE to deal with it?

    Did you even READ what you wrote? Yes, I know why they're in there. They're in there because of scary legacy code in Word that no one wants to screw with. The rest is BS used to justify, obfuscate and downplay the importance of that fact.

    The "complete" spec may be 6,000+ pages, but what good is that if it leaves out important things and is full of total BS and worthless crap like that? Has anyone actually considered fixing the standard instead of cramming it down the ISO's throat?

    Oh, right. It's not cost effective because it would affect the time to market. Silly me, dragging useless technical considerations into the discussion of a technical standard when the business reasons are all that really matter...

  122. fix by celle · · Score: 1

    A simple fix:

    Ban conflicts of interest. Microsoft and friends are pushing a standard, keep them out of it. It's nice to know america isn't the only country that's ethically bankrupt.

  123. Wait.... by neimon · · Score: 1

    ...I'm confused. Is money evil now or not?

    Is a lassaize-faire approach, in which only the strong and worthy survive in or out this year?

    Is it free-market devil-take-the-hindmost screw-everyone-but-me libertarian point of view the only answer or not?

    I get SO lost with the /. moral shift.

  124. Yes yes yes by Colin+Smith · · Score: 2

    Companies do not exist outside of the people that comprise them. Humans ARE capable of controlling their actions. A company's "nature" is totally dictated by the people that comprise it. Lets put it another way.

    We should expect people to behave like scheming pricks when we're designing systems which confer influence; Like electoral systems, ISO standards etc. Because there are psychopaths, sociopaths and others with defective personalities out there who'll simply use them to their personal advantage.

    To do otherwise is not just naive or unwise, it's downright stupid.
    --
    Deleted
  125. Who cares? The whole "standard" is pointless by reed · · Score: 1

    Wait, is anyone actually planning on trying to implement this thing other than MS?

    The entire point is so that MS can put the words "standard file format" and "XML" in the list of features, and help sell to governments and the like. This "standardization" has no other purpose, it's just a big distraction.

  126. Re:Sweden ? There must be a mistake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's called pirate. It's spelled the same in English. How the f**k did you manage to mangle it that bad?

  127. Secret Memo by HermMunster · · Score: 1

    The following link is to groklaw.net and has info about the secret memo sent to Swedish partners of Microsoft. This is damning evidence.

    http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=200708290 70630660

    --
    You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
  128. Re:Sweden ? There must be a mistake by unity100 · · Score: 1

    its not the same. swedish spelling is different.

  129. Re:Sore losers by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Informative

    False. Well, there are two kinds of monopolies.

    Do you know what a "non sequitur" is? It is when you make a statement like "False" in response to my claim that monopolies undermine the free market, and then you follow that statement with more statements that in no way back up your argument.

    Firstly you get the types of monopolies wrong. There are natural monopolies which result from natural phenomenon, such as geography and there are monopolies imposes by unnatural forces such as a law, a lock-in technology, or via bundling. Secondly, any monopoly can be abused to undermine a free market. Because of natural monopolies it is not illegal to obtain a monopoly in a market, merely to abuse it by undermining a second market using your first monopoly.

    Lets look at an extreme example of a natural monopoly for the sake of clarity. Suppose a meteor falls to earth with strange properties we cannot duplicate and that meteor is owned by an individual whose property it landed on. Now suppose, by drinking water that has been mixed with a small amount of this meteor you could extend your life to double or triple its normal span. The man being the only source for this substance, has a natural monopoly which is perfectly legal and while it does not conform to normal free market behavior, does not undermine any market. The problem is when that monopoly is abused to affect other markets. Suppose, for example, The man refused to sell the magical water outright, but instead agreed to sell only an expensive lifestyle package including a mansion, 4 cars, 3 pets, a wardrobe of clothing, a small jet plane, and a yacht. Well since everyone who wants said water has to buy all of these things as well, the markets for these other things is undermined. Many sellers of luxury yachts might go out of business since everyone who can afford a yacht already has one from our monopolist. It does not matter if the yachts sold by our monopolist are somewhat inferior or even if they cost 10 times the price of a similar yacht. Because it is bundled it has broken the free market.

    Any monopoly can be used to undermine other markets via tying including bundling, thus monopolies are restrained by the law from undermining other markets. Microsoft is the example of the day because they not only have several monopolies but are constantly abusing those monopolies to undermine more and more markets in blatant defiance of the law. Their entire business plan is built around breaking antitrust law for profit, then tying things up in court as long as possible, paying of politicians, and paying off the lawsuits from the small number of victims who have enough money to get their claims through the courts.

    Thanks for the link, by the way, but I've already read Greenspan's commentary as well as more about monopolies than most people who are not economics majors. I understand them just fine, you simply failed to understand either what I was saying, or how it applied.

  130. FUCK BILL GATES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am so fucking tired of Bill Gates. Someone please shove a hot poker up his backside.

  131. Re:Sweden ? There must be a mistake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Piratbyrån - The Pirate Bureau

    pirat - pirate
    byrå - bureau

    It's ovbioeusely much easier to spell in English.

  132. Late comment by Tony · · Score: 1

    The fact that OOXML is a hundred times worse does not make ODF a good standard.

    Good point.

    It *does* mean this whole OOXML thing is another method of Microsoft cramming their products down the collective throats of the world, though.

    Then again, the world would have been better off if the word processor had never been invented.

    Even better point.

    Add "presentation software" to that list of things that should never have been invented.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.