Denmark Becomes Fourth Nation To Protest OOXML
I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "The rumors of a fourth OOXML complaint turned out to be true. Denmark has become the fourth nation to protest the ISO's acceptance of OOXML, and Groklaw has a translation of their complaint. They now join India, Brazil, and South Africa. There are going to be plenty of questions about deadlines, because people have been given two different deadlines for appeals, and the final DIS of OOXML was late in being distributed and not widely available. In fact, that seems to be one of Denmark's complaints, along with missing XML schemas, contradictory wording, lack of interoperability, and troubles with the maintenance of DIS29500. In other words, we should expect a lot of wrangling over untested rules from here on out, and Microsoft knows how to deal with that."
Will noone step up and defend the credibility and proud history of ISO here? They have done good work in the past. Cannot someone defend the way they've handled this?
No?
Anybody? Anybody at all?
I thought not.
Reputation. 60 years to build and 6 months to burn down.
Goodbye ISO.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
Maybe if the Danish go on strike with the Canadians instead of taking their jobs, then they'll be heard.
they say the want to keep developers but then they do something like VB6 end of life.
They are driving developers to other platforms.
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
When they deprecate .NET the squeals will be heard 'round the world. Developers are dumb. Cats are smart. You can't catch the same cat in the same trap twice.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
Erm. I mean... um... obviously there were some payments under the table to ISO.. yeah... how many countries do we need in order for them to get that MSXML is not only not functional, but shouldn't be any standard. Anyone got a tissue I could use?
[presses remote button and explosion rips through ISO headquarters in Geneva]
Similar to the upcoming US election results
... Denmark has not protested, there is no protest from the national standards body here, just a letter from Open Source Denmark. India, Brazil and South Africa are the only three protests.
Is anybody else tired of reading OOXML articles every other day?
But it had to be said. Many thousands will read this thread. Already this thread is the number one hit on google news for "ISO". While there's still time to change the outcome the downside risk must be made very clear to the people making the decision. It was important that the first comment not be some GNAA garbage.
The ISO's stock in trade is their reputation. If they will not defend it they deserve to fade away.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
To the best of my knowledge, the split ordered by judge Jackson was never carried out - because he made unwise comments in public in a moment of anger over Microsoft behavior.
... what ramifications does ISO's decision actually have?
You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
No: Denmark has not protested formally. Denmark is represented in ISO by Dansk Standard which, as you may recall, somewhat controversially changed its vote to "Yes".
This is a protest letter from Foreningen af Open Source Leverandører a vendor's association (literally: "The Association of Open Source Vendors", their official English title seems to be "The Danish Open Source Business Association"). They happened to be part of the technical committee (as I understand it, I may be wrong) in Denmark, but are not formal representatives of Dansk Standard.
The recipient of the letter, Jacob Holmblad, is the managing director of Dansk Standard, who also happens to be vice-president of technical management at ISO.
While an interesting complaint, which raises a number of pertinent issues, this is not a formal complaint from a national standards body as those from South Africa, Brazil, and India.
As a wiser poster than me observed some time ago, that ISO failed to have management processes in place a year in advance of predictable environment changes is evidence they fail even at following their own standards.
That they've let this issue go so long past its natural conclusion - laughing at a proposal to fast-track a 6000 page un-implemented proprietary standard - is evidence they are themselves compromised by agents of an external entity.
If they abort this atrocity all is not yet well. Until they dig out and expel every agent that perverted their mission and monitor for some time that their processes do now work, they will remain suspect.
If they fail to do the right thing, well, they're done. Stick a fork in them. The nations of the world would prefer to return to the bad old days of setting their own standards and negotiating equivalence by treaty. They will not stand for having their standards dictated to them by a US corporation, even through a puppet ISO.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
Until ISO PUBLICLY admits the SPECIFIC mistakes made AND takes action against the people who committed those mistakes, there is no reason to believe that ISO will do anything differently in the future.
ISO sold out. That's all there is to it.
As can be seen from this charade, the votes do not matter.
It is who counts the votes that matters.
Microsoft could not buy off all the geeks. So Microsoft bought off the administration staff. Which then allowed a single secretary to get their "standard" on the fast track when it failed every one of their rules for that.
... Balmer is preparing his "Axis of Evil" speach.
Have gnu, will travel.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
You've just said too much. Now everybody knows who you are.
Whereas people who save their documents in OOXML have decided they want to lose access to them over time (if not immediately). And C# and .NET developers want to write code they'll have to port to next year's Next Big Thing. That's job security there, Maynard. And re-porting the same stuff over and over means you'll never make progress after the first evolution. Congratulations. You've just found a way to get someone to pay you to avoid doing useful work.
Meanwhile, ODF is portable and, well, C. What can you say? If that's not standing the test of time in programming then what is?
Help stamp out iliturcy.
I agree with you in every way. You got the message out - your post is highly moderated and right below mine. I recommend people reading this review what you've said.
When you're going for the first comment you have maybe thirty seconds on slashdot when it's slow. That's not time enough to nuance stuff. You have to strike while the iron is hot and get in the best blow you can. Too much subtlety and it's lost. Too much "blame Microsoft" and it's downmodded too fast for people to see it. I did the best I could.
We need an international standards organization. Do we need this one? I don't know. My opinion will depend on if they fix this, and what processes they put in place to prevent a recurrence. Is my opinion important? Only as much as it is insightful and informative and only to the extent I get my message out, which is why it was important to me to get my comment in first. As others here have noted this is not ISO's first offense - just the most onerous one. This is the telling one. If they will not fix this they are beyond saving. It is not impossible to "fork" ISO.
On slashdot I am fond of saying "this is a tool". Well, standards are tools too. If we don't trust this manufacturer of this class of tool we will need to find one or make one if we are to continue about the business of creating interdependent global stuff.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
Thanks for sharing. People need to know. This is the real damage that a perception of bias in ISO can cause.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
Does anyone else find it odd that Microsoft touted support for ODF then pushed back supporting OOXML to the next version of Office just before all these complaints landed on ISO's doormat?
This, to my mind, shows two things:
Apparently representatives from Microsoft were stalling for time in Brazil. So the support for ODF In Office seems like firefighting more than anything. The dropping of the Microsoft project, encoding books to OOXML, would also seem to be a sign that Microsoft is giving up.
*joke* If these appeals are successful, I for one will be on Alex Brown's blog, posting this video of Kryten in 'smug mode'. Muahaha. */joke*
I'm going to transform myself into a mighty hawk. Either that or I'll just go and work at Dixons, haven't decided yet.
Oh, FSM preserve us!
You're not referring to one of the Windows ONLY worms that crashed multiple nuclear plants are you? You have to be some anti-Microsoft troll to be bringing that (2003) ancient history up again.
Dude, if you're a Microsoft astroturfer you should make sure you pick up your personal effects on the way out today.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
If Microsoft's understanding and control of the current arena is so complete that they can pull off something like this, then it's time to change the venue. Microsoft doesn't seem to do well in novel and fluid situations.
I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
So the hierarchy of countries where there is a real informed segment of the populace or government now starts with Denmark, South Africa, India and Brazil?!?
Refresh my memory, do those countries waterboard people? Do they use rigged machines to count votes? What is the matter with those people?!?
Pinko commies the lot of 'em, allowing true interoperable anti monopoly standards and actually counting votes. They better not be brown, or we'll bomb the shit out of 'em!
I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
Why, yes. The whole Masonic answer thing was just coincidental.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
C++ is derived from C. I've never seen any C++ code that wasn't 90% standard C.
So what have you proven? That Bjarne Stroustrup at Bell Labs in 1979 had 10% to add to C? Where are the Wonders of Microsoft in this equation? On that day Microsoft was still working on a version of DOS that might have subdirectories someday. They knew barely enough about compilers to get their stuff to run.
More importantly, what have they added of value since? Come on. They're the most powerful software company in the world. It's been almost thirty years. They must have contributed something persistent to the pool of common knowledge, eh? Or maybe not.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
told to STFU by ISO now that it's a "done deal?" "Quit picking on us!" "We're righteous and benevolent and .. rich (now)!"
Personally I don't want to see the ISO "reform." Any organization who has decayed as far as the ISO has needs to be replaced by something new. With any luck a few of them will choke on the wads of money and die.
Eff 'em.
Increasingly, this notion that what we geeks are hot and bothered about is "just software, after all" is going to be questioned.
Many thousands of annual deaths are attributable to harmful drug interactions, and a lot of these result from the unavailability of standard Electronic Medical Records(EMR) across care providers.
That's right, vendor lock-in and nonstandard documents are killing people.
The (open) standardization of general-purpose office documents should have been completed a decade ago. EMRs should have been standardized 5 years ago. Many people have died unnecessarily.
My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
I live in Denmark, and do read Danish... Usually I'm not reading local tech-news, however I've been reading a little from various Danish news sites and judging from the wording there I don't think you should expect an official appeal.
Also as "spectrokid" says in a comment below you I quote: this country is a notorious Microsoft bitch
The quote you have from the article is not translated correctly in Danish it says: Jacob Holmblad får klagen direkte, fordi han har en fod i hver lejr," forklarer Morten Kjærsgaard til Computerworld. The correct translation would be
Jacob Holmblad receives/gets the complaint directly, because he has a foot in each camp," explains Morten Kjærsgaard to Computerworld He doesn't say that he'll appeal directly. I fact he's quoted for saying that he'd bring the complaint to ISO, at the end of the article.
Its shaming, I once thought that BSI were worth something ethically, then again I did think that about ISO
"After the two-month appeal period, we now have four appeals -- Brazil, India, South Africa and Venezuela," Jonathan Buck, the director of communications for IEC, told ZDNet.co.uk on Monday http://news.zdnet.co.uk/software/0,1000000121,39427754,00.htm
<humor>
Bill Gates: Ex-geek, turned to the dark side (gone greedhead)
Steve Ballmer: Greedhead / Athlete (office chairs ARE NOT light)
Steve Jobs: Unholy hybrid of an artist, a geek and a cult leader.
</humor>
<nosenseofhumor>
Nothing to see here, move along.
</nosenseofhumor>
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
Speaking of which, I can't help to think of this interesting picture placement: http://i32.tinypic.com/103zzb7.png
something kind of similar as ONU loosing some reputation over some issues ?
OOXML must be owned by Gates!
~ Artificial Intelligence is better than none! ~
Copenhagen, 30th May 2008
Complaint regarding the certification procedure in Danish Standards
Dear XXX XXXXXXXXX
The Danish Open Source Businsess Association hereby submits a formal complaint
regarding the certification procedures after the meetings in Danish Standards
committee S-445 (previously S-142/U34) as well as the decision to change the
Danish vote to a yes in connection with the treatment of DIS 29500. I write
to you in your position as Vice-President for ISO,secondly as CEO for Danish
Standards.
The Danish Open Source Business Association informed Danish Standards in a
letter of March 22 2008 that the Danish requirements to DIS29500 have not
been met. We summarized our points of views in the following five main
points:
1. Microsoft's Office formats hinder interoperability
2. XML forms are missing
3. The complete specifications text is still not ready
4. Contradictory formulations
5. The maintenance of DIS29500 is not in place
I would also like to point out that after the round of hearings during the
summer of 2007, agreement had been reached in the committee to formulate 168
change proposals and on this basis recommended a "No with comments". In order
to change this position, according to Danish Standard's rules, there had to
be a consensus in the committee. Furthermore, according to ISO's regulations,
the complete specification must be ready at the latest 30 days after the BRM,
so that the committee can consult the specification in order to verify to
what extent the Danish technical objections were accommodated.
The discussion on the meeting March 26 was based on the unfinished
specifications draft and on editorial notes from the BRM. This was far from
sufficient to assure the committee that the 168 change proposals had been
accommodated. Therefore, as you know, there was a great deal of disagreement
during the meeting. Quite simply, we discussed specifications that did not
yet exist.
Two months after Danish Standards announced the changed vote, we note that:
* There never has been agreement in the committee regarding whether
the Danish requirements were met
* The five main points in our letter 22 March 2008 have still not been
solved
* The specification is still not ready, so that we can make certain
that the change proposals have been incorporated
On this basis, the Danish Open Source Business Association ascertains that the
procedures and the decision conflict with ISO's rules, and the process has
caused considerable damage to the reputations of Danish Standards and ISO.
It is highly unusual that there are still no combined specifications, and I
would like to bring to your attention the fact that Deputy Director of Danish
Standards, Jesper Jerlang, in Danish Computerworld on May 22 admits that
ISO's rules have been broken because Danish Standards has not received the
final specifications. This is stated in section 13.12 in ISO's JTC 1
directive, which states:
"In not more than one month after the ballot resolution group meeting the
SC Secretariat shall distribute the final report of the meeting and final DIS
text in case of acceptance."
The process has thus been formally annulled now for 2 months -- since March
29, at which time the specifications should have been sent to the national
standardization organizations. The prerequisites for the fast-track procedure
no longer exist, and, therefore, I expect that ISO recommence the case.
I also expect that Danish Standards will inform ISO that it wishes ISO to
recommence the case. The legitimacy of an ISO