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EC Takes One Step Forward, Two Steps Back in Openness
The Standards Blog - Andy Updegrove - Last Thursday the European Commission took a major step forward on the “openness” scale. The occasion was the release of a new version of the European Interoperability Framework (EIF) which definitively endorsed the use of open source friendly standards when providing “public services” within the EU. This result was rightly hailed by open source advocates like Open Forum Europe.
But
the EC took two steps backward in every other way as it revised its
definition of "open standards," presumably reflecting IT industry
efforts (e.g., by the Business Software Alliance) to preserve the value of software patents.
In
this blog entry, I’ll review the seven-year long process under which
the “European Interoperability Framework” (EIF) first set a global high
water mark for liberalizing the definition of open standards, and then
retreated from that position.
If one were to choose the single most disputed question in standard setting over the past decade, it would have to be the deceivingly simple question, “What does it mean to be an ‘open standard?’”
2007-2012
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