Brussels, June 27, 2007 -- The Foundation for a Free Information
Infrastructure (FFII), said that it was putting up a 2,500 Euro
prize in its fight against Microsoft's attempt to gain
international standardisation for its Office format.
Veteran FFII campaigner Benjamin Henrion, founder of the
noOOXML.org site, explains: "Microsoft is spending millions
on rent-a-crowd support for international certification for its
proprietary Office format, OOXML. But we already have an ISO
standard for word processing, called ODF (Open Document Format).
OOXML is Microsoft's attempt to subvert this existing
standard, to keep its strangle-hold on the world of documents.
It's time for activists across the world to stand up, to
reach out to their national ISO bodies, and to explain why
Microsoft's format is not open, not a standard, and not
XML."
The FFII is putting its money where its mouth is. The team that
makes the best effort to helping the International
Standardization Organisation (ISO) fight off Microsoft's
lobbying stands to win an FFII "Kayak Award",
consisting of 2,500 Euro and the chance to present their campaign
at the FFII's annual conference in November.
FFII president Pieter Hintjens explains: "In July 2005,
before the vote on the Software Patents Directive, a group of
young campaigners took to kayaks, in the waters outside the
Parliament building in Strasbourg. They fought a symbolic battle
with industry lobbyists who had rented a yacht. The Kayak
symbolises individual skill and collective action."
To qualify for nomination for the Kayak Award, a team or
campaigner must show how they made a significant impact on the
ISO process, "to defend ODF and stop Microsoft's
attempts to corrupt the international standards-setting
process", as Henrion puts it. "Anything goes: websites,
letter-writing campaigns, going to meetings, even kayaks."
The deadline for nominations is 31 August, and the award winner
will be announced on 30 September 2007.
There's also a petition against MOOX at the same site. Unfortunately the petition is not configure to allow viewing of all signatures, but it does show a sample of the most recent ones.
MS it acts more like a software companyoperating systems company marketing firmlobbying firm full-blown political movement now than anything else. I bet a dollar amount per quarter can be set on the ongoing damage it is causing by holding back not just the tech sector but any business or agency that uses computers or the network, regardless of whether they're stuck with MS Windows or not.
OpenDocument aka ISO/IEC 26300 (ODF) already has wide industry support, with the exception of MS. So lets's roll with that since there are no technical obstacles for MS fully supporting ODF. Having a universal office format is likely to bring on a similar burst of productivity such as we had in the early days of the WWW.
FFII puts up a prize in fight against Microsoft Office standardisation
Brussels, June 27, 2007 -- The Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure (FFII), said that it was putting up a 2,500 Euro prize in its fight against Microsoft's attempt to gain international standardisation for its Office format.
Veteran FFII campaigner Benjamin Henrion, founder of the noOOXML.org site, explains: "Microsoft is spending millions on rent-a-crowd support for international certification for its proprietary Office format, OOXML. But we already have an ISO standard for word processing, called ODF (Open Document Format). OOXML is Microsoft's attempt to subvert this existing standard, to keep its strangle-hold on the world of documents. It's time for activists across the world to stand up, to reach out to their national ISO bodies, and to explain why Microsoft's format is not open, not a standard, and not XML."
The FFII is putting its money where its mouth is. The team that makes the best effort to helping the International Standardization Organisation (ISO) fight off Microsoft's lobbying stands to win an FFII "Kayak Award", consisting of 2,500 Euro and the chance to present their campaign at the FFII's annual conference in November.
FFII president Pieter Hintjens explains: "In July 2005, before the vote on the Software Patents Directive, a group of young campaigners took to kayaks, in the waters outside the Parliament building in Strasbourg. They fought a symbolic battle with industry lobbyists who had rented a yacht. The Kayak symbolises individual skill and collective action."
To qualify for nomination for the Kayak Award, a team or campaigner must show how they made a significant impact on the ISO process, "to defend ODF and stop Microsoft's attempts to corrupt the international standards-setting process", as Henrion puts it. "Anything goes: websites, letter-writing campaigns, going to meetings, even kayaks."
The deadline for nominations is 31 August, and the award winner will be announced on 30 September 2007.
For more details see http://www.noOOxml.org/kayak .