ISO confirms approval of OOXML, gives two months to appeal
The International
Organization for Standardization (ISO) announced that its members have approved
adoption of a draft standard based on Microsoft's Office Open XML document format,
a day after the company itself declared victory.
But Microsoft will have to wait at least until June before it can lay its hands
on a copy of a formal ISO standard for the format, as it waits for ISO's formal
appeals process to run its course.
"Subject to there being no formal appeals from ISO/IEC national bodies
in the next two months," the text of the standard will be published as
ISO/IEC 29500, ISO said Wednesday.
If any national standards organizations do make appeals to JTC1, the Joint
Technical Committee of ISO and the International Electrotechnical Commission
(IEC) that worked on the draft, then Microsoft may have to wait several months
longer while the appeal is heard, according to Section 11 of the ISO/IEC
JTC1 Directives.
Only so-called P-members of JTC1 -- in this case, the 41 countries who participated
in development of the standard -- can appeal against the committee's actions.
They must show that an action is either not in accordance with the JTC1 directives,
or not in the best interests of international trade and commerce, or such public
factors as safety, health or
environment.
Decisions on a draft international standard, such as that for OOXML, "are
only eligible for consideration if questions of principle are involved; the
contents of a draft may be detrimental to the reputation of IEC or ISO, or the
point giving rise to objection was not known to JTC1 ... during earlier discussions,"
according to the directives.
The prospect of an appeal can't be ruled out.
"There are a few countries in which process issues are being raised,"
said Jason Matusow, a Microsoft employee who blogs about interoperability and
standards.
Count Norway among them: Members of a standards committee there have asked
the country's Ministry of Trade and Industry to investigate the voting process.
They want to know how the country came to register a vote approving adoption
of the draft standard when a majority of committee members were against.
Related reading
- ISO
adopts OOXML format as international standard
IDG News Service
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