OpenXML back on fast-track

Groklaw has an article that OpenXML is back on the fast-track for ISO certification, ignoring an usually high number of objections from various countries:

*She* decided? So the objections process is an elaborate waltz with no purpose? Why even have such a process if Microsoft can push its will forward anyway? Are there no standards for standards? Andrew Updegrove addressed that question recently, and his answer was, not so much. What is wrong with this picture?

Groklaw also describes some of the intimidation tactics Microsoft has been using against companies and governmental bodies. It appears that Microsoft is using its power trying to ram OpenXML down ISO’s throat, which provides a back-door into many national and international definitions of Open Standards.

While there will be another vote on the issue, it is not clear whether this will actually amount to much, because it seems that such processes can be ignored by lone decisions of the ISO personnel. This sounds oddly reminiscent of the software patent scandal when the input of the European parliament was entirely discarded.

Any structure with such single points of failure provides unique opportunities for "personal decision improvement," it seems.

We will need to analyse the next steps. Meanwhile it is important to keep spreading the news about why OpenXML is truly a proprietary format

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Netzpolitik-Interview: Sechs Jahre Free Software Foundation Europe

For all Fellows capable of reading German, Netzpolitik.org,a favorit source of news about the social and political issues in the knowledge society, has an interview with me on the occasion of six years Free Software Foundation Europe.

Vor sechs Jahren wurde die Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE) gegründet, die zu meinen Lieblingsorganisationen zählt. Georg Greve, Präsidident der FSFE, hat mir mal für ein Netzpolitik-Interview einige Fragen zur Geschichte und Zweck der Organisation beantwortet. (Es gibt auch schon ein älteres Podcast-Interview mit Georg und unregelmässig schreibt er hier mit)

You can read the full interview here.

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Irony, cynicism or simply “cara de pau”?

Imagine a fox building “fox and chicken can be friends” ads from the feathers of slaughtered chicken. Would this be irony or cynicism, or possibly both? I had the same problem when I saw the following ad:

Microsoft is a convicted monopolist. Their most successful strategy to protect their monopoly and extend it into neighboring markets has been to prevent interoperability through arbitrary modifications of protocols and Open Standards, such as Kerberos.

This is indeed precisely what the interoperability side in the European Commission antitrust investigation and decision is all about. Despite the demands of the European Commission, and in outright disregard of the European Court decision from December 2004, Microsoft has continued to prevent interoperability by not disclosing the necessary protocol information and is instead playing for time.

Even worse, they have meanwhile positioned their proprietary OpenXML format to replace the already existing universal Open Standard for office applications, the Open Document Format (ODF), see "OpenXML wrap-up after D12K" for an overview of the situation. You can read up on Grokdoc why OpenXML is really a proprietary format.

So now pretending to be a model child of interoperability is a bit too much. The best expression I have encountered so far to describe that kind of behaviour is one I came across in Brazil: cara-de-pau.

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FOSDEM followup: Fellowship section on reclaiming “Windows Tax”

During the Q&A session at the end of my keynote at FOSDEM 2007, some people were discussion the issue of the “Windows Tax” on all PCs and laptops: Most vendors will not sell you hardware without Windows licence for fear of not being able to offer any Windows licences in the future.

The only known way to work against that tax at the moment is to ask for reimbursement of the tax from the vendor — a process that is not communicated, documented, or encouraged by the vendors for obvious reasons.

As there is no central repository for that kind of information, I offered FSFE’S Fellowship site for the purpose, and Tim Speetjens from Belgium was so kind to email us his experience to seed this repository.

The repository is located at http://www.fsfe.org/refund and we encourage you to also reclaim your Windows tax and share your experience with others: The section can be edited by all Fellows, and you can also send us your reports by email to fellowship@fsfeurope.org.

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When governments mandate proprietary software

Software is increasingly essential to communicate with our governments, and the choice of that software is a very sensitive issue in a democracy. There is always a danger of undermining the right of the citizens to freely communicate with the government — and that right is obliterated when governments mandate the use of specific proprietary products for that communication.

Not only does this turn governments into agents of monopolisation, it also creates a de-facto two-class society between those that have access to the proprietary solution, and those that do not.

FSFLA, FSFE‘s sister organisation in Latin America, has spoken up against such “imposed software” in Brazil, where the tax declaration has to be made electronically with a proprietary program. From FSFLA’s newsletter:

How would you react to headlines such as “Government agency pushes red meat down vegetarian’s throats!” during a (hypothetical?) law-mandated f[e]ast? […] This wouldn’t amount to mere disrespect for legitimate and thoughtful choices (even if you don’t agree with them). It’s government agencies breaking the law so as to force citizens to break the law, against citizens’ own personal legal choices, and in detriment of the citizens themselves. Fewer people feel that strongly about rejecting non-Free Software than about the issues above. But should our thoughtful and legitimate choices be disrespected just because we aren’t that many?

It seems that the continued work has now shown some effect: One of Brazil’s major newspapers has now published an article about the issue in which governmental officials were forced to comment on the situation.

Well done, FSFLA!

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Life after FOSDEM

Last weekend, many of FSFE’s teams descended upon Brussels, Belgium for the 2007 FOSDEM meeting to spend two days between computers, talks and Belgium beer.

There must have been around 20 people from FSFE alone, and we came well-prepared: FSFLA board member and FSFE Fellow Fernanda Weiden had the idea to put the Fellowship mascot on her nails, adding another entry to the "Fellowship everywhere" section:

There were quite a bit of interesting talks during FOSDEM this year, and FSFE’s were among them. Shane Coughlan gave a lightning talk about the Freedom Task Force and I was given the chance to hold the closing keynote, which is also available as video download (327m). Let’s see whether my closing prediction will come out more true than some of the others I referenced:

"Sandwiched between Vista problems, antitrust issues and the global push for Open Standards, Microsoft will increasingly lose the initiative. Free Software will start to cut into the desktop monopoly from which Microsoft has previously excerted force to conquer neighboring markets. Eventually Microsoft will be forced to fundamentally rethink its business model in favor of Free Software."
— Georg Greve, keynote@FOSDEM 2007

Other talks can be found on FOSDEM’s media page. There are also several FOSDEM 2007 pictures that have been uploaded by various people to Flickr.

And finally I’d like to say a word to all the people from FSFE and the FOSDEM team: Thank you very much, you made this an extraordinary event!

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Most people seem to prefer FL

Stefano has been rather curious about Second Life (SL) in his blog, and much of the press seemed to be buzzing about how SL was going to be an economy of its own and how there were millionaires in the making.

Based on my experience of IT as a hype-driven industry of sorts, I was somewhat sceptical about all the promises of Second Life. Seems I wasn’t the only one. The Register now has an article “The phony economics of Second Life” in which the claim of 3.1 million residents is examined with some healthy scepticism:

Typically, there are only around 15,000 clients logged in to Second Life at any one time. In other words, this economy has a population about the size of Ilkeston, Derbyshire, or Troutdale, Oregon. And each business has the prospect of a market of no more than 100 people in one place – a number easily accommodated by a church hall. […] So, from the three million residents who, we are told, are living the dream of a virtual economy, we arrive at a figure of around 3,000 economically active users at any one time – most of whom are turning over only a token sum.

This sounds much more realistic to me, and if anyone was hoping to get rich quick in that Second Life, heed the following statement by Linden Labs, the makers of Second Life:

“Linden Dollars are not money, they are neither funds nor credit for funds. Linden Dollars represent a limited license right to use a feature of the simulated environment. Linden Lab does not offer any right of redemption for any sum of money, or any other guarantee of monetary value, for Linden Dollars.”

The shocking conclusion: Second Life is a game, and a game that some people would even describe as stupendously boring. Which is probably why most people still seem to prefer their “First Life” (FL).

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Fedora removing binary ESRs.

The fact that the protagonist of the popular web-comic “Everybody loves Eric Raymond” has turned his back on Red Hat Fedora in an email seems to have been a major news item, according to linux.com and Heise. Unfortunately, most of these articles ignore the replies, or try to discredit them as not being pragmatic.

While it would be tempting to write an essay about pragmatic not being a synonym for short-sighted or devoid of principles, I think it is more fun to make sure you don’t miss the replies of the Fedora community. If you are into ASCII art, you might enjoy this reply by Christian Iseli:

 +-------------------+ .:::/:/:. | PLEASE DO NOT | :.:::/:/:.: | FEED THE TROLLS | :=.' - - '.=: | | '=( 9 9 /)=' | Thank you, | ( (_) ) | Management | /`-vvv-' +-------------------+ /  | | @@@ / /|,,,,,|  | | @@@ /_// /^ \_ @x@@x@ | | |/ WW( ( ) )WW ||||/ | | | __,, /,,/__ ||/ | | | (______Y______) ///////////\////////////////////// ================================================================== 

And this one by Christian Nolte is quoting ESR back at himself. But my favorite reply is clearly that of Alan Cox, who once more confirms his reputation as a straight shooter:

 On Wed, Feb 21, 2007 at 03:03:50AM -0500, Eric S. Raymond wrote: > * Failure to address the problem of proprietary multimedia formats with > any attitude other than blank denial. That would be because we believe in Free Software and doing the right thing (a practice you appear to have given up on). Maybe it is time the term "open source" also did the decent thing and died out with you. > I'm not expecting Ubuntu to be perfect, but I am now certain it will > be enough better to compensate me for the fact that I need to learn > a new set of administration tools. I'm sure they will be delighted to have you Alan -- "That was said by Eric Raymond who belongs to another movement" - Richard Stallman 

Fedora has been taking very important steps towards becoming a fully Free Software distribution by removing its proprietary components and ESR. This is setting an example that other distributions will hopefully follow.

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Heading for FOSDEM 2007

Next weekend, one of the world’s most interesting Free Software conferences, the FOSDEM in Brussels, Belgium, will once more open the Free Software conference year.

As every year, FSFE will participate with several people, a booth, as well as some special announcement and talks. We hope that many people will join us for this event, which should be fun.

Meanwhile, FOSDEM just put up my speaker’s interview.

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The ‘Ow’ starts now

Today is the day when Microsoft Vista starts shipping, and this operating system may indeed turn out to be quite painful for governments, companies and users around the world.

The main problem is not the graphical user interface. If you are interested in those you might be interested in the Technology Review article “Uninspiring Vista — How Microsoft’s long-awaited operating system disappointed a stubborn fan” by a self-declared Microsoft champion who concludes on purely technological grounds:

Ironically, playing around with Vista for more than a month has done what years of experience and exhortations from Mac-loving friends could not: it has converted me into a Mac fan.

It is the underlying technology strategy and its consequences that will be a severe source of pain. Central in this is the one feature that has truly been perfected in Windows Vista, the mass-incapacitation of users, also known as Digital Restrictions Management (DRM). DRM brings with it severe political issues, as I also explained in earlier posts. But of course the cost is not only political, there is also a financial cost to DRM, which Peter Gutmann calculated in his essay “A Cost Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection.”

But it doesn’t end there. As the European Committee for Interoperable Systems (ECIS) points out in a 26 January media release : “With Vista Microsoft continues its illegal practices.”.

Not only is Microsoft trying to impose its own proprietary OpenXML format in order to marginalise the existing true multi-vendor Open and ISO-certified Standard, the Open Document Format (ODF) — please follow these links for more information: [1][2][3][4]. You should also read the analysis of Cory Doctorow: ” How Vista Lets Microsoft Lock Users In

Largely unnoticed due to the discussion around the OpenXML attack on ODF, Microsoft also introduced a new markup language in Vista, called “XAML.” This language seems designed to attack the existing Open Standard HTML and is ground-up dependent on Windows.

If companies started using this language in their intranet, they would no longer be able to run heterogenous environments and will be locked into Windows much more effectively than before — at a high price in finances and freedom to make the necessary business decisions. This will be bad for those companies, but others should be able to take their place.

But if the internet providers were to start using this markup language for their pages, it will no longer be possible to access those pages with anything but Microsoft Windows. Governments using XAML will force their entire population and economy into dependence on the Windows monopoly, and if it spreads far enough, it could mean the end of the multi-platform heterogenous environment that is the internet.

People who do not use Microsoft Windows might find themselves unable to communicate with their governments, to fill out tax declarations, to access news sites and do shopping online. The whole internet will truly have become a “Microsoft Network” — similar to the one shipped with previous versions of Windows that was abandoned for internet support because it did not raise sufficient interest.

In essence, XAML is Microsofts attempt to deliver on the statement made by Steve Ballmer towards the German Manager Magazin in 2005:

“We needed the first years to conquer the PC and those following to be ahead in the server business. In the upcoming years we’ll conquer the Internet.”

Seeing the internet replaced by a single-vendor controlled proprietary network would indeed be painful — and that ‘Ow’ starts with Vista. But you can also choose this moment to end your pain. As the FSFE pointed out in its press release today, there is another Vista message:

Upgrade to GNU/Linux now!

Such a migration will be no more expensive than migrating to Vista. It will also provide vendor independence, control over your own infrastructure, true support of Open Standards, which will ensure your ability to read your own files in the future and with the application of your choosing, and much, much more.

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