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Microsoft hustled UK retreat on open standards, says leaked report
Computer Weekly - The British government withdrew its open standards policy after lobbying
from Microsoft, it has been revealed in a Cabinet Office brief leaked
to Computer Weekly.
The Department of Business, Innovation & Skills (BIS) also formerly opposed the policy before Cabinet Office withdrew it.
BIS supported Microsoft's position against open standards, the backbone
of the government's ICT policy. The Business Software Alliance,
infamous for its lobbying against open standards policy in Brussels,
also lobbied against the government policy.
Microsoft took up
direct opposition to the ICT Strategy's pledge to give preference to
technologies that supported open standards of interoperability between
government computer systems, said the briefing paper.
The
software supplier was concerned this would prevent companies from
claiming royalties on the point of exchange between those systems.
It
complained specifically about the wording of UK procurement policy,
which in January 2011 established a definition to explain its edict that
open standards should be used in government computing wherever
possible. UK policy specified that "[open standards] must have
intellectual property made irrevocably available on a royalty free
basis".
2007-2012
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