EditorsAbout the SiteComes vs. MicrosoftUsing This Web SiteSite ArchivesCredibility IndexOOXMLOpenDocumentPatentsNovellNews DigestSite NewsRSS

03.02.08

Assorted Web/Blog Reactions to OOXML BRM

Posted in Asia, Deception, ECMA, Europe, ISO, Microsoft, Open XML at 2:18 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Noooxml.org could not contain a bit of excitement about the outcome. Its headline was:

BRM in Geneva is over: big failure for OOXML

Only ten national delegations voted, and only 4 P-members were for approval. 4 P-members disapproved, a whopping 15 abstained, and 2 even refused to register a vote in protest.

If you count all voting delegates, including those who are not P members, the vote was 6 approvals, 4 disapprovals, 18 abstentions and 4 refusals to vote. Expect this to be announced by Microsoft as a “3 to 2 majority for OOXML approval” in the next few hours. The reality is of course that this is a huge setback for Microsoft. The tricks they have been trying have backfired, and it is now more clear than ever before that OOXML is an immature specification which was totally inappropriate for the fast track procedure.

Same headline echoed by Open Malaysia:

BRM in Geneva is over: big failure for OOXML

As noooxml.org points out, Microsoft will try to spin this. It is already trying to spin (it's a pattern), so here is the point to bear in mind and prepare for:

Microsoft’s New Meme: ‘Marketplace Relevance’

This seems to be preparing the ground for an eventual rejection of OOXML. The line would be well, being an official ISO standard isn’t *so* important: what matters is “marketplace relevance”. And we all know what that means: just keep that status quo rolling…

Here is the summary of an article from InfoWorld, which also appears in CIO.com.

About four-fifths of the proposed changes to a draft standard for the OOXML document format were waved through, undiscussed, at the conclusion of a weeklong meeting in Geneva.

This relates to the prophecy of Bob Sutor, which he posted in his blog several days ago.

Although a month remains for changes of heart (brace yourself for colossally heavy lobbying by Microsoft), the following post prematurely predicts failure.

The BRM meeting in Geneva is over. The plan was, from the Microsoft point of view, that OOXML should now be an ISO standard. It didn’t make it.

Noooxml.org later posted an update almost identical to ours and it’s focused on Tim Bray’s spilling of the beans.

The Canadian BRM delegate Tim Bray strongly criticised the ISO process while he doesn’t blame the BRM failure on ISO but on the vendor that used the ECMA proxy.

Tim Bray, redirecting his readers to this page, was not too happy with the headlines, possibly ours included.

The Open Malaysia blogger posts another last update which concurs with what we find in the press.

The final day was absolute mayhem. We had to submit decisions on over 500 items which we hadn’t have the time to review. All the important issues which have been worked on repeatedly happened to appear on this final day. So it was non-stop important matters. Unfortunately I was caught up in a change from Malaysia, so I must have missed deliberating on a few important matters.

Articles from the mainstream press agreed that the final day was somewhat of a mess. This BRM ought to be remembered as a disaster, as predciated all along [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]. It leaves ECMA, Microsoft and even ISO quite seriously wounded. In another Web forum, someone has begun asking if the European Commission can take action against ECMA, not just Microsoft, which is already under antitrust investigation for its abuse of ISO.

ISO standard

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • co.mments
  • DZone
  • email
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • NewsVine
  • Print
  • Propeller
  • Slashdot
  • Technorati
  • TwitThis
  • Webnews
  • YahooMyWeb

If you liked this post, consider subscribing to the RSS feed or join us now at the IRC channel. To use your own IRC client, join channel #boycottnovell in FreeNode.

Pages that cross-reference this one

4 Comments

  1. James Williams said,

    March 2, 2008 at 2:46 am

    Gravatar

    Of course, what you’re failing to recognize here is that all of the blogs and the press that you mention are pretty much orchestrated through a select few, probably arranged during the side meetings that the OFE set up in Geneva. With IBM, part of the US delegation, and part of the Canadian delegation leading the charge.

    Starting with the US Head Of Delegation, who speaks for himself on this matter, not for the United States. Followed up by a startlingly incorrect blog post that Andy Updegrove put out – then picked up by a bunch of people who can only be described as breathing their own exhaust fumes.

    See a very brief comment from the BRM convenor, Alex Brown, posted below Andy’s terrible and inappropriate rantings.

    http://www.consortiuminfo.org/standardsblog/comment.php?mode=view&cid=18785

    The rest we will know a couple of weeks from now I suspect.

    What is happening here is pretty representive of the sneeky, deceptive and underhand way that the pro-ODF crew have run things over the last few months.

    This time around thought they have gone way overboard and the deceptions can’t be hidden in the same way as they have over recent months.

  2. Roy Schestowitz said,

    March 2, 2008 at 5:06 am

    Gravatar

    Actually, the press concurs with these observations. I wouldn’t take Alex Brown’s word on this too seriously because he’s defensive. It’s his future career at stake.

    http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9065958
    http://www.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/idUSN2923321820080229

    Yes, the BRM failed. If you can find articles that suggest otherwise, please share. For all I can tell, Microsoft is already spinning and changing its tune (just watch their blogs). Call it “damage control” or “fallback”.

    I remain unconvinced by your arguments, but as I wrote earlier, I expect a conferable amount of lobbying from Microsoft to come this March. Lobbying does not change a reality, but hand-overs of money, as we have recently seen, does indeed make a difference. I came to discover throughout my conversations with Stocholm, for example, that he works for a Microsoft partner.

    Microsoft can never earn ISO for OOXML. It can try to buy ISO, but trying may not be enough. Buying it is not legal (watch what Bryan said about Microsoft). Regardless of the outcome, people deserve to know this truth about this breathtaking fiasco.

    Mind you, I’ve received and come under endless personal attacks. This type of smear campaign consistently comes from pseudonymous or anonymous voices (it’s very libelous, but I cannot accuse unnamed individuals) and about 20-30 posts per day are now used against me. I can’t keep up with it, but I imagine something is behind this.

    Having raised this concern in a disucssion with a friend he told me:

    Again two tactics: name calling and amnesia

    The amnesia is interesting, because the articles and even whole magazines and web sites disappear. Microsoft astroturfers try it again and again. We saw just the other week with the developer tools question. They ignored the last 10 years and claimed that if there were any ‘alternative’ tools, why aren’t people talking about them or using them… Tricks like that often catch the unwary.

    I often wonder if Microsoft employs cranks to write from their jail cells.

    Their purpose is to drag you down to their level, if they can, and if nothing else burn up your time in name calling. They win if you write about them and their movement.

    That’s just why I rarely write about the abuse that’s directed against me (not here anyway). That helps them win.

    Whether these are the OS/2-days Munchkins, I don’t know, but their names have been the same for about 10 years and some of them were involved in smearing the names of OS/2 supporters. I’ve heard about death threats too and I get my fair share of death wishes (which I ignore).

    Have a look at the Tim Bray tale. It’s nothing new.

  3. James Williams said,

    March 7, 2008 at 2:41 am

    Gravatar

    Of course it concurs, that is what orchastrated press is supposed to do.

  4. Roy Schestowitz said,

    March 7, 2008 at 3:34 am

    Gravatar

    Have a look at Alex Brown fighting to save his dignity amidst this latest update.

    Alex Brown has updated his blog post about the voting rules at the BRM. “This was the wrong clause” he says.

    [...]

    Some questions for the audience:

    1. Which one is the “normal JTC1 procedures”?
    2. None of them mentions which majority should be taken. Simple majority of 50%, or 66% of P-members?
    3. Where is the “letter” in the letter ballot?

    Look at Alex getting grilled. He’s replying, but it’s not truly compelling. It’s like the powwow with Andy.

What Else is New


  1. Government Cronyism Watch: Microsoft Inside FCC, California, Washington, and Bahrain

    Latest examples of Microsoft entering the non-commercial arena and influencing decisions so as to help its bottom line



  2. The Brute Force and Sheer Power of Microsoft Windows

    How Windows botnets enable criminals to make a lot of money at the expense of Windows users



  3. IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: March 21st, 2010

    IRC Log for March 21st, 2010



  4. Xbox 360 Dies Without a “Coffin” and Microsoft's Other Hardware Endeavours Seemingly a Dead End

    Microsoft's attempts to sell hardware products such as consoles, portable media players, and phones seem destined to burial



  5. Jerry Seinfeld Makes “Lousy Celebrity Endorsement” for Microsoft After Reportedly Dumping Windows

    Key Vista endorser Jerry Seinfeld is named as one of IDG's top 10 "Lousy Celebrity Endorsements"; Compatibility problems in Vista 7 stressed again to rebut Microsoft's latest spin



  6. Microsoft Vice President Quits in China, Others Do Too

    The Great Microsoft Exodus carries on, particularly in a division that loses obscene amounts of money



  7. SCO Cash Infusion Came from Former SCO Staff

    A new disclosure of names of those who fund SCO's lawsuit against Linux reveals many former members of SCO



  8. Are Proprietary Software Users Too Dangerous for Copying and Pasting?

    The primitivism of Apple's and Microsoft's tablets or phones (respectively) as shown using some new information



  9. Given Choice, Customers Reject Microsoft

    Customers who buy new PCs choose Web browsers other than Internet Explorer, so a similar approach should be taken and applied to operating systems



  10. Eye on Security: Windows Botnets and Other New Problems

    Assemblage of security news from recent days



  11. The Vanishing of Microsoft's Misconduct (Bribes)

    Resurrection of a dead article about Microsoft corrupting academia



  12. Links 21/3/2010: LXDE in Google Summer of Code, CrunchBang Moves to Debian

    Links for the day



  13. IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: March 20th, 2010

    IRC Log for March 20th, 2010



  14. Señor de Icaza Meets Other Microsoft MVPs

    José, Miguel, and other boosters of Microsoft Corporation have a get-together at the company's annual event



  15. SCO Roundup: SCO Group Receives a $2 Million Cash Infusion

    News from the SCO case, including a few major developments



  16. Novell Staff Shrank by ~10% and Hovsepian Allegedly Plays Hard to Get With Elliott Associates

    It's rutting season for Novell's Ron Hovsepian and Elliott Associates' Singer as the company keeps diminishing but wants to be valued more generously



  17. Novell News Summary - Part III: Clarifications from Elliott Associates, Hosted Conferencing, and BrainShare 20TEN

    Elliott Associates still insists that Novell will stay in tact; Utah prepares for the annual Novell pilgrimage



  18. Novell News Summary - Part II: IBM, Novell, SUSE Appliances, and Ingres

    News about SLES, especially as an appliance but also as a server that IBM commonly uses



  19. Novell News Summary - Part I: FLISOL 2010, Linux Tage 2010, and OpenSUSE 11.3 Milestone 3

    Another restful week for "Geeko" and some news from events that featured OpenSUSE



  20. Patents Roundup: Android/Linux Defended by HTC; Monsanto and Ghana

    News about patents where the system has gone awry (the Apple-HTC case and GMO in Africa)



  21. Microsoft and Its Front Group, Association for Competitive Technology (ACT), Organise Software Patents Lobby Events in Europe

    The Microsoft PR effort to marginalise or illegalise Free software overseas carries on quietly (using proxies, as usual)



  22. Microsoft MVP de Icaza: Microsoft “Shot the .NET Ecosystem in the Foot” Because of Patent Threats

    Despite awakening and realisation of the obvious, Novell carries on promoting and spreading .NET, knowing damn well the consequences for others



  23. Links 19/3/2010: Google’s TV Project, OpenOffice.org Turning 10, OSBC

    Links for the day



  24. IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: March 19th, 2010

    IRC Log for March 19th, 2010



  25. Novell Hires More Mono People (Despite Sacking SUSE Developers) and Microsoft Buys an OSBC Spot/Seat

    Novell and Microsoft continue to fund development with the desired bias of using Microsoft APIs; Microsoft pays for its share of OSBC (again) and gets to set the tone with a keynote speech



  26. Patents Roundup: Europe, ACTA, Aldi Attacked by the MPEG Cartel, and More

    Europe's policy on software patents and the ACTA factor; the MPEG patent pool turns out to be not much of a sleeping giant but an awake one; patents relating to cancer genes continue to needlessly cost lives



  27. Linux is Not Against Software Patents (and Why Linus Torvalds Should Speak Up)

    An inconvenient truth about the Linux Foundation is brought up again now that Linux is attacked with software patents that are named



  28. Microsoft Sued by VirnetX (Again) and Kodak Alleges That Microsoft's Patent Troll Bullies Companies Along With Ray Niro

    Intellectual Ventures is said to be attacking companies using its proxies and Microsoft suffers the wrath of the very practice it advocated with investments (patent trolling)



  29. Democracy is Not the Same as Freedom

    People have lost track of real mistakes that Canonical is making and instead they focus on buttons and themes



  30. Amazon and Dell: Friends or Foes of GNU/Linux?

    What Amazon does not want to tell us about software patents in its recent deal with Microsoft; more reasons to suspect that Dell pays Microsoft for Ubuntu GNU/Linux


RSS 64x64RSS Feed: subscribe to the RSS feed for regular updates

Home iconSite Wiki: You can improve this site by helping the extension of the site's content

Chat iconIRC Channel: Come and chat with us in real time

Recent Posts