Brazil, India Join Appeals of OOXML Approval
Despite the approval of Microsoft’s Open Office XML standard by two worldly standards bodies, the document format is not yet on stable ground. India and Brazil have joined South Africa in contesting the approval, standards officials revealed.
“By the deadline last night (Thursday), we had received three appeals, from Brazil, India and South Africa,” said Jonathan Buck, spokesperson for the worldly Electrotechnical Commission. The IEC, along with the universal Organization for Standardisation, is responsible for the technical committee that approved OOXML.
“The (Brazilian) appeal was not lodged in the exact procedure — it was not sent to the CEOs of the two organizations — but nonetheless it has been received,” Buck said, adding that it will be treated in the same way as the Brazilian and South African appeals.
Process Criticized
The process in which the Joint Technical Committee approved OOXML has been roundly criticized, particularly by countries with strong open-source communities. OOXML was approved
At the February ballot-resolution meeting, delegates had just five days to address more than 1,000 complaints about the proposed standard. The changes were voted on without discussion, but since that rushed approval the JTC has delayed publishing the approved spec. Now, a month after the deadline, the final draft is still not published.
Technology lawyer Andy Updegrove, who writes about standards on the Standards Blog, reported that Brazil and South Africa are both objecting to the failure to publish the reconciliation draft. “Despite the fact that that release has been requested by many different parties representing multiple viewpoints, no public or private explanation has thus far been given for the failure to follow rules calling for the release of…
Orginal post by Top Tech News
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