The Inquirer on MS-OOXML and ODF

The Inquirer has an interesting opinion piece called "Microsoft twists and turns over ODF" in which they pick up on the MS-OOXML conversion hoax:

The problem is that if Robertson and Paoli’s early claim is correct would be theoretically impossible to convert a plane into a car? If Open XML is so complex it would be a bugger to convert into something as simple as ODF. Unless they have got it all wrong of course.

And link to the six questions about MS-OOXML that are meanwhile available in eight languages. If you want to add more, please check this page on how to get involved in FSFE’s translation effort. FSFE will continue to offer information on

as deep links for the time being, because the topic is still not as widely discussed as it should be. Only yesterday did I have a journalist from a well-known news agency tell me about fearing the topic might be too "technical" for their readers. Formats and protocols are like languages. And formats for office applications concern virtually every computer user and every citizen of every government that makes use of software. So practically everyone who could read this. That ought to be a large enough potential readership to publish something.

In a democracy it is the responsibility of the media to oversee the government, analyse their work and criticise when democratic principles are being thrown overboard — which unfortunately happens all too often when there is no public scrutiny. A sad example was recently delivered by the Swiss standardisation body for e-government (eCH), which in an act of anticipatory obedience approved MS-OOXML as an Open Standard for Switzerland with a description that reads like it was written by Microsoft’s spin-doctors, including the obviously false claim of free implementability across vendors and platforms.

Microsoft certainly has huge advertising budgets, and it is known that they like to wave this fact in front of publishers to get friendlier treatment. So stories about their barely concealed manipulation of UN processes or US state governments usually have a hard time gaining traction in mainstream media.

The BBC and The Inquirer have now given some coverage to this issue, but most journalists are still unaware of the significance of what is going on. So we will need to make them aware. Help us spread the word.

Here are two things you can do easily:

  1. Email the newspapers and journalists you may know and ask them to have a look at

    As well as

    Because unlike MS-OOXML, the Open Document Format (ODF) has support from a large group of independent and competing vendors and implementations.

  2. Put this banner on your web page and use it to link to the six questions on MS-OOXML that are still unanswered:


    <a href="http://fsfeurope.org/documents/msooxml-questions" border="0"><img src="http://fsfeurope.org/graphics/msooxml_small.png" /></a>

About Georg Greve

Georg Greve is a technologist and entrepreneur. Background as a software developer and physicist. Head of product development and Chairman at Vereign AG. Founding president of the Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE). Previously president and CEO at Kolab Systems AG, a Swiss Open Source ISV. In 2009 Georg was awarded the Federal Cross of Merit on Ribbon by the Federal Republic of Germany for his contributions to Open Source and Open Standards.
This entry was posted in Uncategorized and tagged , . Bookmark the permalink.