It seems that many people have been confused by Microsoft's attempt
at trying to portray MS-OOXML as an Open Standard, which includes
methods such as paying
bloggers to manipulate Wikipedia or trying to confuse people about
competition on the basis of a common standard, which is generally good
for competition, vs competition of multiple standards, which is
generally bad
for competition.
Since this confusion exists in many national standardisation
bodies, it is not surprising to also find it on the net and in various
online sources. If they are not outright manipulated, that is. So it
comes as no surprise that journalists have a hard time to see through
the smoke, and not everyone does as good a job as the Neue Zürcher
Zeitung (NZZ).
We therefore decided that it was time to help people working with the
national standardisation bodies and journalists inform others about
the issues in a way that would not require more than 5-10 minutes on
the receiving end. The result has just gone online: Six questions
to national standardisation bodies by the Free Software Foundation
Europe (FSFE), also available in a PDF for
pretty printing. These six questions, namely
- Application independence?
- Supporting pre-existing Open Standards?
- Backward compatibility for all vendors?
- Proprietary extensions?
- Dual standards?
- Legally safe?
raise issues that every national standardisation body
should have satisfactory answers for, otherwise it must
vote No in the ISO/IEC process and request that Microsoft incorporate
its work on MS-OOXML into ISO/IEC 26300:2006, the Open
Document Format (ODF).
In order to counter the misinformation that is currently floating
around on the net it is important to spread the word far and make sure
that these six questions are submitted to every single national
standardisation body and used as widely as possible to inform people
in politics and media.
In case you want to link the page, you can use this button
to link to the page, which exists in two versions:
- 250x98 pixel version, code:
<a href="http://fsfeurope.org/documents/msooxml-questions" border="0"><img src="http://fsfeurope.org/graphics/msooxml_small.png" /></a>
- 500x195 pixels version, code:
<a href="http://fsfeurope.org/documents/msooxml-questions" border="0"><img src="http://fsfeurope.org/graphics/msooxml.png" /></a>
Please help us spread the word.
[update]
And while you're at it, you should also consider to sign the online petition against MS-OOXML.