----- Forwarded message from gora at sarai.net -----
     Date: Fri, 23 Feb 2007 18:55:50 +0530
     From: Gora Mohanty <gora at sarai.net>
Reply-To: gora at sarai.net, The Linux-Delhi mailing list  
<ilugd at lists.linux-delhi.org>
  Subject: [ilugd] When is a standard not a standard (sub-titled  
Microsoft and BIS)?
       To: ilugd <ilugd at lists.linux-delhi.org>, prc <prc at sarai.net>
       Cc: "Nagarjuna G." <nagarjun at gnowledge.org>, "Dr. Sanjeev  
Singh" <sanjeev at iic.ac.in>, Kiran Chandra <kiran at gnu.org.in>, Robert  
Adkins <radkins at technetra.com>, Prabir Purkayastha  
<prabirp at gmail.com>, Guntupalli Karunakar <karunakar at sarai.net>, Rahul  
De <rahul at IIMB.ERNET.IN>, Venkatesh Hariharan <venky at redhat.com>,  
Alolita Sharma <asharma at technetra.com>, Arun M <arun at gnu.org.in>,  
Ravikant <ravikant at sarai.net>, Mishi Choudhary <mishi_c at rediffmail.com>

(This message is being sent primarily to the ILUG-Delhi and Sarai PRC
  mailing lists, but is also copied to people that Venkatesh Hariharan
  had sent the original message to. Please note that henceforth, I will
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  to post there (see
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Hello,
   I had the (mis-)fortune of attending a seminar on Information
Technology Standardization [sic] organised for the Bureau of
Indian Standards (BIS), by MAIT. The ostensible reason for the
meeting was to identify requirements of the IT industry in order
"to formulate effective, meaningful and implementable standards".
The background for this is an effort by Microsoft to push through
a 6000-page document on Office Open XML (OOXML), presumably as a
counter-standard to Open Document Format (ODF). Details on this are
available on Venky's blog at http://www.osindia.blogspot.com/

   Due to other commitments, I had time to attend only the inaugural
session, which had a keynote address by Craig Mundie, the chief
research and strategy officer of Microsoft Corporation. Incidentally,
Microsoft was the only company represented on the panel, and allowed
to give a formal presentation, though representatives from open-source
companies, and the community were also present. Questions on the
talks were also not entertained. What was frankly disgusting was the
attitude of BIS officers, even those of senior ones, towards Microsoft;
going beyond courtesy, and even obsequiousness, to border on servility.
The HP laptop being used for the presentation prominently displayed the
Microsoft Vista logo.

   Mr. Mundie's presentation was, in my opinion, a masterpiece of double-
speak, and fascinated me so much that I made sure to make a transcript
of his slides. Apparently, having solved issues with security, privacy,
and reliability, Microsoft has been focusing on inter-operability over
the last 1.5 years. While this might seem like great news, Mr. Mundie
was diligent in avoiding any specific commitments, such as the simple
one of guaranteeing that any Microsoft application will be able to
export to an openly-published, patent-unencumbered, standard format,
without loss of information. While the presentation went ahead to extol
the virtues of meta-data, and the use of XML data formats, Mr. Mundie
somehow omitted to mention that XML does not automatically imply
openness, or freedom from patent restrictions. Finally, it seems to be
the opinion of Mr. Mundie that industry standards are needed to keep a
check on "unconstrained innovation", which leaves me wondering how
Microsoft knows about innovation, unconstrained or otherwise.

   Fun and games aside, I think that it is worthwhile for the open-source
community in India at large to formulate a coherent position on the use
of openly documented, and patent-free standards for any government data,
and to publicise the same to both government organisations, and the
media. It is our data, so we should have an absolute guarantee of
freedom in using it. I believe that Venky is drafting such a  document,
that we can put up on a Wiki, and use as a basis for a formal policy
paper.

Regards,
Gora


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