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ISO Rejects OOXML Protest Appeals

snydeq writes "ISO and IEC gave OOXML the greenlight after organization leaders rejected appeals from four countries to protest the vote that approved OOXML as a standard. According to an ISO press statement, appeals by the national bodies of Brazil, India, South Africa and Venezuela did not garner support from two-thirds of the members of the ISO Technical Management Board and IEC Standardization Management Board, which is required by ISO/IEC rules to keep the appeals process alive."

25 of 258 comments (clear)

  1. Better Articles by GNUChop · · Score: 4, Informative

    See NoOOXML, OpenDot, NoOOXML">Boycott Novell and Groklaw for better analysis. People are very angry about this and they should be.

  2. ISO is dead by Ariastis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    RIP ISO 2008

    1. Re:ISO is dead by g2devi · · Score: 4, Funny

      > RIP ISO 2008

      Invalid disk: Corruption found

  3. woops, missed the NoOOXML link. by GNUChop · · Score: 4, Informative
  4. Re:What you can do? by oyenstikker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Historically, it always ends in fighting.

    Armed revolution.

    Foreign takeover.

    Collapse into anarchy.

    Breed like rabbits, vote against the current leaders, and get labeled undesirable and attacked.

    Pick your poison.

    --
    The masses are the crack whores of religion.
  5. Re:MS by corsec67 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Some governments are passing laws saying that documents must be stored in a format that is a documented standard.

    This is just MS's way of checking that box without actually making their format open.

    You are right in that they don't want to open their format, but they need to have the appearance of having one.

    --
    If I have nothing to hide, don't search me
  6. ISO=I Sold Out (so F***en shut up) by denis-The-menace · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Nice to see that the price for ISO members was high enough to prevent appeals from going through.

    Standards for sale.
    Act now before the prices go up.

    --
    Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
  7. Re:What you can do? by Milyardo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Thats how we got into this mess in the first place. Rather than accepting ISO decision to make ODF the international standard. Micrsoft decided everyone already uses office, so we'll use that instead. Microsoft doesn't really give a damn if OOXML passes or not. They just want to be able to say they are standards compliant(easy to do when you define what that standard is). ODF is still a standard as well though, although I don't know what good will come of there being two standards.

  8. Re:What you can do? by Culture20 · · Score: 4, Funny

    So, the ISO needs to allocate a defense budget now. Excellent; let's hope they use Excel to crunch the numbers.

  9. Re:standards are falling by Shados · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is only in the spotlight because it matters to anti-MS geeks. International standards have ALWAYS been such a freagin mess. It has always been a fight of power and money. "Fine, we will let you have your feature in the standard, if our technology is part of the standard too, then we'll vote for your proposition, and you vote for our proposition tomorrow".

    Its why many are so stupidly hard to implement, are political mess (XHTML2 anyone?), and why corporations eventually feel the need to make their own, to just bypass it all and be done with it.

    It was -always- this way. ISO has -always- been a freagin joke, and most people who implemeneted their crap already know this (ISO9001, lol). This is just a whole lot of same old same old.

  10. Re:MS by Narpak · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Norway has decided that all official documents must be available through ODF, PDF or HTML; which ever is most suited to the information in question. Also schools and public offices must accept ODF as a valid format. This is because no policy should require citizens to purchase expensive software to use public services. Among other things.

  11. Re:What you can do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Breed like rabbits

    I know which of those sounds more fun....

  12. Re:Cooler heads prevailed by an.echte.trilingue · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seems like "Because we hate Microsoft" isn't a compelling enough reason for the ISO.

    True, but "unimplementable" should be.

    --
    weirdest thing I ever saw: scientology advertising on slashdot.
  13. Re:Cooler heads prevailed by Timosch · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It is not about "We head Microsoft", it is about the fact that something like WordWrapLikeWord95 should not exist in an ISO standard.
    BTW: There was a very interesting graph in the German magazine c't. The essence was as follows:
    XHTML: ~100 pages, ~400 days of standardization process
    ODF: ~800 pages, ~900 days
    SVG: ~600 pages. ~1050 days
    SOAP: ~200 pages, ~950 days
    ...
    OOXML: ~6500 pages, ~350 days.
    You've no idea how incredible that looks in a graph...

  14. Re:Who cares? by dgatwood · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The damage to the standard has been done, but by outright rejecting the protests, ISO is also irreparably damaging its reputation. That damage could have been mitigated. Instead, they covered their ears and screamed "LA, LA, LA, LA, LA! I CAN'T HEAR YOU!" like a petulant five-year-old child.

    Today, they might as well have released a press release that said, "We are a standards body that represents the desires of the highest bidder. Screw you all." That's certainly the way the entire open source community is going to interpret this. The result can be nothing less than a large percentage of people who should care about ISO standards replying, "Screw you, too." No other outcome is possible at this point; they have effectively marginalized themselves in the eyes of the technical community---probably irrevocably so. In the eyes of the community, the ISO simply no longer matters, or more accurately, must be completely ignored for the good of standardization.

    Or, in government terms, "One wrong turn deserves another."

    --

    Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  15. Re:What you can do? by Adaptux · · Score: 5, Informative

    What *we* can do when the goverments, corporations and organisations are corrupted and we cant turn to ask help from them, because those who has power, controls those who could help us....?

    Despite the name, ISO is not an international organization in the same sense as e.g. WTO or WIPO are international organizations with countries as members. ISO is simply a cartel of national "standardization organizations". Everyone has the right to start an organization to compete with them. I believe that ISO is so strongly committed to acting in the best interest of the dinosaurs that there is no real alternative anymore to doing this. If you agree, please join us at OpenISO.org.

  16. Re:standards are falling by NickFortune · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My point is that "respected" bodies like ISO aren't falling. They've hit the lowest ground years (and in some cases, decades) ago.

    Then maybe it's time we started demanding standards that were truly fit for purpose. That could be the one true thing to come out of this mess. It it raises general in the technical community of how badly broken ISO is, then maybe we're seeing the first steps on the road to a workable standards process.

    In any event, there's nothing to be gained by accepting the status quo, and everything to gain from making a fuss. Good standards are important. If ISO can't deliver them we need a standards body that can.

    The whole idea of "independant standard bodies" is about as flawed as the idea behind software patents.

    I think you're conflating two ideas there. Firstly, there's the notion of a standard is a technical specification that (I expect and demand) everyone can implement and conform to. Secondly, there's the notion of a sort of government monopoly - in the sense that if YoYoDyne Inc control Standard X and the govt mandates that all frobnitz conform to Standard X, then only YoYoDyne can practically market frobnitz.

    The point I think you're missing is that if a standard is a standard in the first sense, then the abuse implicit in the second scenario is impossible. It's not that standards are inherently broken, it's that closed, proprietary standards are broken. And so the problem comes back to IP rather than standards, per se.

    --
    Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
  17. Re:Cooler heads prevailed by an.echte.trilingue · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I guess most of the countries' representatives ond't effectively govern as well as you could. Too bad you can't rule the world and bring us the Utopia in your head :)

    Who do you think that these wonderful leaders are? They put their pants on one leg at a time just like you and me. Most of the bureaucrats who prepare these decisions are no more educated than you or I. Governments, even authoritarian ones, are the people.

    What's more, I live in a democratic republic, and in such a system, the people must participate or it fails. Questioning government positions is part of what you call a country's "political discourse," which is necessary for the society as a whole to come to a coherent decision that expresses itself in elections.

    --
    weirdest thing I ever saw: scientology advertising on slashdot.
  18. Re:This is what you complain about? by Enderandrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Last year I was in a car accident. Someone rear-ended me and totaled my car. The insurance agent called me, and without seeing the car or knowing any facts, said I was 15% liable for being rear-ended. I didn't speed, I stayed in my lane, etc. I called a lawyer who said I was screwed. There wasn't enough money to justify fighting the case in court. The body shop guy said he saw it ever day in my state, that the insurance company wouldn't pay the full claim and just screwed people if the case was small enough to stay out of court. He saw someone parked on the street had their car totaled, and the insurance company said they were partially liable for being parked on the street legally. If the car wasn't on the road, it never would have been hit.

    I was furious, so I called my state senator to talk about the partial liability law. We have term limits, so he wasn't up for reelection and wouldn't personally benefit, but he called me back several times to get info. He researched the law, and several cases like mine where we were ripped off. Then he went into legislation and fixed the law.

    Sometimes there are a few decent people in office who want to do good. But if you never bring these things to their attention, nothing will ever be done.

    Contacting your elected officials may not work, but it beats doing nothing.

    --
    http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
  19. Re:What you can do? by AJWM · · Score: 4, Informative

    Microsoft doesn't really give a damn if OOXML passes or not. They just want to be able to say they are standards compliant

    Ironically, they are NOT compliant with the version of OOXML that ISO/IEC approved, which isn't the same as the version of OOXML that ECMA originally handed them. (It's not even clear that the ECMA OOXML spec conformed fully to what Microsoft Office does, but that's a moot point now.)

    --
    -- Alastair
  20. Re:What you can do? by Enderandrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Furthermore, Microsoft said they won't even attempt to get Office 2007 to support it via a Service Pack. Instead, they won't attempt to support that standard until the next version of Office at the earliest, and that could mean at any point in that product's life span.

    --
    http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
  21. Re:Cooler heads prevailed by nschubach · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I tend to look at it like this...

    If nobody speaks up, Microsoft has won. There are a lot of underhanded business practices that MS has "gotten away with" because nobody cared to speak up. If people just let it die off, it opens door for other companies to undermine the standards practices because "people will soon forget."

    --
    Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
  22. Re:Cooler heads prevailed by Sloppy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think what the numbers mean is: the more impossible something is, the less time I want to spend reviewing it. SVG is worth getting right; OOXML is worth nothing.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  23. Re:MS by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They don't even need the appearance.
    They just have to match the legal requirements.

    It is like the word games redefining torture as not being torture.

    It is like defining a rope with a hook as a "braking system".

    If the law says torture is illegal, just make sure your actions are legally not torture.
    If the law requires a braking system, just make sure a rope with a hook is defined as a braking system.

    If the law requires and open standard, just make sure some government or standards body calls it an "open standard". It does not have to actually be open.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  24. Re:Cooler heads prevailed by holloway · · Score: 4, Informative
    It's currently unimplementable because the ISO OOXML does not exist, no one has seen it, not even the National Bodies who -- as per the rules -- should have seen it in late February.

    Further, there are mathematical differences between the spec and what Microsoft Office does. Now which do you think an implementor will implement? Your interoperability study is based on reverse engineering, not on following any OOXML specification.

    Yet further, there are defects remaining in OOXML that were not addressed and that prevent interoperability. When you try to make a specification in such a short period of time this is to be expected.