There are free ISO specifications, like schematron and a handful more.

http://standards.iso.org/ittf/PubliclyAvailableStandards/

You can even ask for an ISO norm to be free. In fact asked for ISO 13606 to
be free, but received no answer.
On 04-09-15 19:55, Ian McNicoll wrote:

> I am happy to debate the relevant merits of the ISO vs. open-source
> approaches recognising
>
The one does not exclude the other, I would say.

But on second thought, does ISO prohibit giving a free license, or
publishing the specs for free?
I am not sure about that.
I am sure they prohibit publishing their document.

As is with AOM1.4, it is published as ISO's version by ISO (as part of
ISO13606) and it is published  as OpenEHR's version by OpenEHR , so that
can be done.
That both contain the same information.

It is a bit Kafkaesk, but that is normal when bureaucrats get involved.


Bert

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