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Microsoft Government Politics IT

New York Jumps Into Open Formats Fray 184

cyrusmack writes "Hot on the heels of the bad news regarding the defeat of all open formats bills, New York has become the latest in an area that has seen a flurry of activity already this year. In the article on InfoWorld, it's pretty clear that this bill is significantly watered down from what other states have attempted to do this year. You can bet Microsoft will be there in force, just as it has been elsewhere."
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New York Jumps Into Open Formats Fray

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  • by timmarhy ( 659436 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @12:30AM (#19433709)
    they can't compete based on the quality of their products, that's for sure
    • by epee1221 ( 873140 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @12:43AM (#19433773)
      FUD and disinformation are their primary weapons. Their two weapons are FUD and disinformation, and ruthless efficiency.
      ...
      Their three weapons are FUD, disinformation, and ruthless efficiency ... and pushes for insane extensions to copyright/patent protections.
      There four weapons are....
      Amongst their weapons are...

      Ok, lemme try this again....
      • by ozbird ( 127571 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @01:18AM (#19433977)
        You forgot projectile comfy chairs.
      • One Missing Weapon (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Erris ( 531066 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @01:24AM (#19434001) Homepage Journal

        Cool Stuff that people want.

        The rest is all bullshit. Vendor manipulation, marketing, bogus laws are only needed by a company that lacks product. The harder they try, the weaker they look.

        The tipping point is here. If Dell makes money selling GNU/Linux desktops, it's all over for M$. If they don't, someone else will. Firefox has proved free software to all the "decision makers" M$ usually courts, and it's only a matter of time before they realize Firefox and much more works better outside the M$ cage.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by ozmanjusri ( 601766 )
          If Dell makes money selling GNU/Linux desktops, it's all over for M$. If they don't, someone else will.

          It's already happening where I live.

          Most of the wholesalers and whitebox distributors here are offering budget computers with Ubuntu installed. They're cheaper and perform better than the Windows equivalents.

          Dell can survive without offering a Linux alternative since they pay little or nothing for their Windows licenses, but they risk being swamped by the next wave of boxshifters if they hold back to

        • How is any of this relevant to the State of New York issuing public documents in ODF format?
          • Because public standards are a cornerstone for free software, and state-supported open standards would allow for widespread free software?
            • by CastrTroy ( 595695 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @08:47AM (#19435879)
              Nobody is saying that MS or any other commercial company cannot produce software to read the open formats. The only thing that public standards allows is for people to use free software (or any commercial package) if they choose to. Nobody is forcing anybody to use any specific software. If the government put out everything in MS .Doc, then the only way to properly and reliably read the documents would be with MS Word. However, if they release the documents in ODF, then you could read them in OpenOffice, KOffice, MS Office, WordPerfect, and any other word processor that you might want to use. Sure some word processors don't support it yet, but it's a free and open spec to support, so if there's a market for it, and the choices are support the format or lose customers, then they choice is pretty clear.
          • How is any of this relevant to the State of New York issuing public documents in ODF format?

            Because the only impediment is a company that does not have much to offer, other than men in black [slashdot.org] and other smear masters.

    • by kungfoolery ( 1022787 ) <kaiyoung.pak@gmail.com> on Friday June 08, 2007 @12:50AM (#19433817)
      Open source/format is such a misunderstood term. By extension, it is believed that this means a completely democratic, transparent, and even collegiate collaborative development environment. Increasingly, it means "using this term is one of the best ways we can bring down Microsuck" Ultimately, this may mean more leverage for one or a group of interests--something that is never good for a dye-in-the-wool open source believer.
      • bullshit (Score:5, Interesting)

        by nanosquid ( 1074949 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @01:46AM (#19434115)
        Increasingly, [open formats] means

        "Open formats" is a well-defined term. It means what it has always meant: a format that is unencumbered by copyrights or patents, and is sufficiently well documented to permit interoperable, independent implementations.

        Of course, Microsoft has been trying to muddy the waters by calling their closed, proprietary format "open".

        using this term is one of the best ways we can bring down Microsuck

        Well, yes, in the sense that Microsoft's business model is monopolistic and involves closed formats. If Microsoft adopted open formats themselves, then things would be fine.

        Ultimately, this may mean more leverage for one or a group of interests--something that is never good for a dye-in-the-wool open source believer.

        Adoption of open formats, in the usual meaning of the word, is not just good for open source, it's good for the industry as a whole (except, of course, for Microsoft).

        What is bad for everybody other than Microsoft is Microsoft's attempts to confuse people about what an open format is. ODF is an open format, OOXML is a closed, proprietary format.

        Open source/format is such a misunderstood term

        Well, yes. Quantum mechanics is also such a misunderstood term. Nevertheless, both "open format" and "quantum mechanics" have important, well defined meanings, and the responsibility is on you to understand and use them correctly.
        • "Open formats" is a well-defined term. It means what it has always meant: a format that is unencumbered by copyrights or patents, and is sufficiently well documented to permit interoperable, independent implementations.

          Do you have evidence to support this? I am not aware of any generally accepted definition of "open format" that prevents copyright, and further would not be surprised if copyright were the mechanism by which any given standards body maintains control of the actual open formats. Also, there

      • by dotlin ( 532442 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @02:11AM (#19434237)

        Open source/format is such a misunderstood term.
        It might be tough for some to understand. However the term single vendor lockin is something that anyone can understand.
      • by edwdig ( 47888 )
        Open source/format is such a misunderstood term. By extension, it is believed that this means a completely democratic, transparent, and even collegiate collaborative development environment.

        Open source tends to mean that. Open formats means well defined data formats, which is far, far more important. Open formats guarantee interoperability and access to your data. Open source can lead to that as well, but it's a rather indirect route to get there.

        Increasingly, it means "using this term is one of the best wa
      • They are different things. Open Formats/Standards are simply interoperability requirements. Do not confuse it with Open Source. And dont confuse Open Source with Free Software. Proponants of Free Software also support Open Source and Open Standards. They have to. But their zeal actually turns off many companies who would otherwise support Open Standards.

        Open Standards, just mean that, Open Standards. Both proprietary software and open software can implement the API and formats. We can not skew the Standar

    • by EraserMouseMan ( 847479 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @01:04AM (#19433897)
      I bet MS already has ODF compatibility ready to put on their website for download if a bill like this were to pass. Plus since 99.9% of the rest of the world still uses .doc format government and everyone else will still have to use MS Office & MS Windows.

      ODF is a great idea. But it is only a tiny step away from propriatary formats.
      • I bet MS already has ODF compatibility ready to put on their website for download if a bill like this were to pass.

        A M$ rep has bragged as much in this very thread [slashdot.org]. If it's true, I wish they would shut up about ODF being harmful to blind people.

        I don't see any reason it would not be true. ODF is a sane standard and everyone else has been able to use it.

        ODF is a great idea. But it is only a tiny step away from propriatary formats.

        The difference between published and non published "standards" is n

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by JonathanR ( 852748 )
        This is exactly the problem. The penetration of .doc files (and the general public's lack of savvy regarding electronic files) form part of the momentum behind the MS monopoly. People still don't transmit "final print" documents as PDF, despite the plethora of open source, freeware & shareware implementations of PDF file creation and viewing utilities.

        ODF (or OOXML) will remain a niche file-format for a long time to come. Unless applications default out-of-the-box to saving in ODF or OOXML, then not
        • by Pxtl ( 151020 )
          Well, the state open-document laws could require that all state software applications be able to use those open-document formats by default. At that point MS has to provide a configuration switch for the admins to be able to set MS Word into ODF-defaulting-mode before rolling it out to their users.

          At that point the ODF format would achieve good penetration within the government organization.
      • by asphaltjesus ( 978804 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @10:22AM (#19436749)
        Mod parent way, way down. It's like I walked into the Steve Ballmer Reality Distortion Field.

        Plus since 99.9% of the rest of the world still uses .doc format government and everyone else will still have to use MS Office & MS Windows.

        What is so evil about this well-crafted statement is it manipulates the reader by doing the "everyone uses it" argument. When your Mom said, "If everyone you knew wanted to jump off a cliff, then I suppose you would jump too." when you wanted to do something justified by referring to your friend's activities. Maintaining closed standards is harmful, like jumping off a cliff.

        The truth is everyone doesn't use it. Look at the standard document format in the American legal system. Most documents published on the web are in PDF and there's a Free (as in speech) pdf generator for every platform. Even windows. http://sourceforge.net/projects/pdfcreator/ [sourceforge.net]

        ODF is a great idea. But it is only a tiny step away from propriatary formats.

        This statement is materially false. No patent encumbrances, no license encumbrances, no distribution encumbrances, and an API that a programmer can _actually_ use. versus Microsoft's API which should win an award for documents that say nothing.

        Microsoft harms everyone who uses a computer by defending their closed document formats. Congratulations, you've blown the truthiness meter up.
    • they can't compete based on the quality of their products, that's for sure
      But that's just it -- they do.

      No one would ever use MS Office, or Visual Studio, or Windows, if there wasn't sufficient quality therein to justify the expense of staying. There are huge flaws and gaping shortcomings, to be sure, but somehow MS still manages to have enough quality over the free alerternatives that they stay in business.

      If you think otherwise, I offer that you may not understand exactly what "quality product" means. A Ford Yarius might be a crappy toy car, but it's weird and efficient enough that it fits an exact niche big enough to earn a profit -- it is a quality product.
      • by munrom ( 853142 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @01:24AM (#19433999)
        It's simple, if we deployed OOo around the site here, and it plays up just a little bit, we get our arses handed to us by management.

        We deploy MSO and it borks up big time, it's all good cause, well I don't really know why, seems management have all the forgiveness for MS products but not for any others
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward
        Microsoft is a convicted monopolist. They didn't compete on the quality of their software, the succeed by excluding the competition.

        Why don't they have office for Linux? Then they could compete on the quality of their Operating System. Oh wait, they don't want to do that. What about making Visual Studios work under Linux?

        What about opening up their formats so you're not locked into them? Oh wait, they don't want competition on quality, they want you to buy their stuff no matter what. That's not necessarily
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by timmarhy ( 659436 )
        *sigh* your exact argument has been been debunked 10000000 times on /. already, but ok i'll bite one more time.

        The only reason no one changes from MS office is due to the low pain threshold users have. The equation is thus - as long as the pain of changing does not exceed the painfulness of using office no change will happen.

        MS has also been CONVICTED of leveraging it's OS to prevent all new comers from challenging. the pain isn't from any failings of other software options, it's interference from MS.

        • by olman ( 127310 )
          *sigh* your exact argument has been been debunked 10000000 times on /. already, but ok i'll bite one more time.

          The only reason no one changes from MS office is due to the low pain threshold users have.


          Saying something 10000000 times does not make it the truth, thought. Then again, sheer volume of people claiming how linux-distro-du-jour is about to replace Windows/OSX as a mainstream desktop OS Real Soon Now seems to show some disconnection from reality in /. crowd.

          I could point out some good examples of t
          • by Fred_A ( 10934 )

            I could point out some good examples of tasks that are easy / straightforward to do in Office but horribly convoluted and cumbersome in OO, but such examples have been provided in such discussions great many times in /. before.

            You could point out examples of the reverse as well. It just points out that they are different products.

            In the environments that I've switched, people seem to like OOo better than MS Office with the exception of a few advanced Excel users.

      • somehow MS still manages to have enough quality over the free alerternatives that they stay in business.

        no, they stay in business because people are familiar with them and have no desire to even comprehend the existence of alternatives.

        If you think otherwise, I offer that you may not understand exactly what "quality product" means.

        WTF? so Internet Explorer's abysmal CSS/W3C complience means it is a quality product? XP and other flavors of windows having the administrator account as default as well as oth

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        No one would ever use MS Office, or Visual Studio, or Windows, if there wasn't sufficient quality therein to justify the expense of staying. There are huge flaws and gaping shortcomings, to be sure, but somehow MS still manages to have enough quality over the free alerternatives that they stay in business.

        According to Sun's CEO [sun.com], pretty much the same seems to be happening with Office suites as happened with Linux on the server OS market. More and more students are using OOo and many of them will be making decisions about which software to deploy in corporations in years to come and MS Office won't always be the neurologically hard-wired default choice like it is today. Whether this will lead to OOo becoming the threat to MS Office, that Linux is to Windows 2003/Vista Server is another story but the presence

      • Please enlighten me as to what a "Ford Yarius" is, exactly. Toyota makes a "Yaris" - is that what you meant to reference? And small economy cars might be viewed as a "crappy toy car" by those who enjoy the luxury of large SUVs and sedans that are just as tank-like as the SUVs, but some people simple cannot afford or do not care to have the luxuries of those types of cars.

        As for your argument, the truth is that "quality assurance" and "Microsoft" simply don't go together. More often than not, Microsoft

      • If ms-office competes on quality, if it's not just a matter of vendor-lock, then why is msft in such a panic about ODF? BTW: with a free plugin, ms-office works just fine with ODF.

        Also, I think Toyota, not Ford, makes the Yaris.
    • by jkrise ( 535370 )
      open formats win, MS loses..

      But Microsoft's format is known as the "Office Open XML" format... and they're trying to get is ISO certified.... and cronies like Corel and Novell to support it... so they can claim it has 'broad-based' support from other software vendors as well.Besides I believe the OOXML spec is about 7,000 pages long, and has nuggets like "Windows 95 support" inside it, which no one else can figure out.

      The ODF spec isn't very compact either... 4,000 pages; but it has broader support from lo
    • I am sure MS can win from Open Formats as well, The problem is Microsoft makes most of its money threw Windows and Office, The fact the Office runs best on Windows makes sure people upgrade their version of windows and use windows and the fact a lot of your windows applications (3rd party mostly, business apps) need Office, and the documents they are are in office format. Now it may seem like a good idea (for Microsoft) to keep their document closed to keep their strangle hold on their core business. But
  • by flyingfsck ( 986395 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @12:41AM (#19433763)
    The thing is that Free software is not a business. It doesn't matter if Free software is ignored. It doesn't cost more if it is not used. The people who develop it also don't care whether it is used or not.

    However, in the long run, Free software will win out since eventually more people will understand that software itself has no intrinsic value. The value lies in service and support and Free software tends to have lower support costs, since it is usually designed better.
  • ya.. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by wizardforce ( 1005805 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @12:42AM (#19433771) Journal
    The big problem here is that we have politicians deciding the case who are not tech savvy, I mean looking at the last time ODF was killed in bills it isnt comforting when you hear things like this from them:

    But during the ensuing policy debate, Betzold and other politicians quickly felt overwhelmed by the technical jargon presented by each side. "I wouldn't know an open document format if it bit me on the butt,"

    so you have a situation where Microsoft being public relations geniuses are believed by the politicians who in all likeliness dont have much experience outside MS's products. the old it's good enough for us because we're familiar with it still applies as disturbing as that is
    • ... really (Score:3, Insightful)

      by siddesu ( 698447 )
      This is not a problem, this is a hope.

      As software openness becomes a mainstream issue, the political types _will have_ to form an opinion about, and that is good, because at least some of them will start paying attention and hopefully reading online.

      The discussions mean more interest and wider coverage of the topic, and more awareness -- in the politico circles as well as the general public.

      What is hitting the general public now is the first level of awareness -- they start to realize that there is this iss
    • Doesn't matter.... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Joce640k ( 829181 )
      Doesn't matter.

      What's really going on is that they've spotted that simply mentioning "open source" makes Steve Ballmer fly in from wherever he happens to be at the time and offer them a "more competitive pricing structure".

      Office is 90% profit so there's quite a bit of wiggle room.

    • by jimicus ( 737525 )
      I'm not bothered by the politicians not being tech-savvy. What I am bothered by is the implication of the sentence:

      Betzold and other politicians quickly felt overwhelmed by the technical jargon presented by each side. "I wouldn't know an open document format if it bit me on the butt,"

      To me, that says "Nobody's bothered to explain this to me in clear English".

      Yet most of the things we might want politicians to get involved with can be easily explained in clear English. "Open document format - the method th
      • by Xiaran ( 836924 )
        As well as pointing out the potential for level competition with open standards I'd also emphasis the potential for interoperability. I think it would be great if, say I liked MS office, but didnt like using the drawing program... then I could simply use another from someone else. If everyone play nice with each other and uses open formats then I should have no problems.
  • Bias Showing (Score:5, Informative)

    by speaker of the truth ( 1112181 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @12:47AM (#19433795)

    Bills that would have required state agencies to use freely available document formats in Texas, Connecticut, Florida, and Oregon were shot down mainly due to the pro-Microsoft lobby
    Incorrect. They were shot down because of the FUD spread by both IBM and Microsoft.

    From Computer World: [computerworld.com]

    Wyne said, "this really is a battle among large commercial interests" -- a comment that was echoed by other people engaged in the political fighting.

    The other problem, Mathers said, was the jargon-laden disinformation that committee members felt they were being fed by lobbyists for both IBM and Microsoft. Although lobbyists would tell the committee one thing in private, they got cold feet when asked to verify the information publicly under oath.

    That undermined the credibility of each side, but it particularly damaged the position of ODF proponents.
    Perhaps this time round IBM will keep its mouth shut and the government will be able to see this isn't a battle for commercial gain, but a battle for information freedom and the rights of the people to view what its government has to say.
    • From the InfoWorld article:

      both [sides] have been criticized for promoting their own commercial interests. IBM uses ODF as a file format for its Lotus Notes 8 software, and Sun uses it in its StarOffice productivity suite. Key Microsoft rival Google also supports ODF in its Google Docs & Spreadsheets online application.

      They left out KDE, Gnome, Correl .... and the rest of the world. How can anyone see this as anything but M$ pushing it's next format despite unified opposition from everyone else in t

    • Perhaps this time round IBM will keep its mouth shut and the government will be able to see this isn't a battle for commercial gain ...

      What exactly did the IBM representative not follow though on? Unless you know, you should not repeat the smear. M$ is well known for lying with and without oath, but most of us expect more from IBM.

      In any case, IBM and everyone besides M$ should come to the aid of ODF. Legislators want to see professionals who can talk about money more than they want to see idealis

      • What exactly did the IBM representative not follow though on? Unless you know, you should not repeat the smear. M$ is well known for lying with and without oath, but most of us expect more from IBM.

        Well if you had bothered to look it up IBM were caught lying about the ODF project in Massachusetts.

        " That undermined the credibility of each side, but it particularly damaged the position of ODF proponents. After Wyne testified publicly that in Massachusetts, only a handful of computers had thus far been con

    • But really can you look yourself in the face and say this isn't a battle for commercial gain between Microsoft and Sun/IBM/Google?

      The differences between the licensing of OpenXML and ODF is really about hair splitting about the only differences I can discern are, one was written by Microsoft and the other by Sun.

      At the moment I would say Microsoft is almost looking like the party that is playing the most fairly. Read this...

      http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2007/may0 7/05-20UOFODFPR.mspx?rss_fdn=Pre [microsoft.com]
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        I support ODF and support the government using it. The fact that some other companies might benefit from it is incidental. If OpenXML was truly open and Microsoft willingly gave control of it to a standards comittee and actually followed the standards developed for it, I might support OpenXML. As it is, the standards for OpenXML have been obfusticated in 6,000 pages of waffle and actually has parts of it that are simply not in those specifications.

        where is the corresponding support for OpenXML in OpenOffice and Google's online Office suite?

        Since when have the complete specifications been made avail

        • Well it seems like I'm answering my own question...

          http://www.infoworld.com/article/06/12/04/HNnovell openxml_1.html [infoworld.com]

          Novell is supplying openxml support for OpenOffice.

          Datavis already seems to provide support for OpenXML

          http://www.dataviz.com/ [dataviz.com]

          So I guess some people have managed to decipher Microsoft's documentation.
          • So I guess some people have managed to decipher Microsoft's documentation.

            That's being a bit deceptive.

            Novell is a Microsoft technology partner and has access to Microsoft's documentation. Dataviz is a Gold Certified partner to Microsoft and in any event, provides file conversion software for PDAs and only needs to implement a small subset of the document formats.

            Why be disingenuous? Don't you have a valid argument to present?

            • You have information that says Novell has access to "secret" documentation regarding OpenXML?

              I think it is your argument that is disingenuous and lacks all validity. You're in denial that Microsoft could possibly open up it's Office formats in the same way that Sun has done with Star Office. This is exactly what they have done.

              Docx documents are simply zip files containing simple xml files, it's not even half as complicated as people are implying. Creating docx documents is actually quite simple...

              http:/ [msdn.com]
              • You have information that says Novell has access to "secret" documentation regarding OpenXML?

                It's been discussed ad nauseum here and in thousands of other forums all over the web. They're forming a joint research facility, for christ's sake! Would they need to do that if they were only relying on public information?

                it's not even half as complicated as people are implying.

                It doesn't matter how complicated or otherwise it is. Nobody can implement the specification without emulating Microsoft products. B

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by belmolis ( 702863 )

        You mistakenly present the situation as symmetric. It isn't. We only need one document standard, and we already have it. ODF is already an ISO standard and implemented by numerous products from a variety of sources. OOXML, on the other hand, is a Johnnie-come-lately, and is not a standard in any real sense. It is not an ISO standard and is not in use by anyone other than Microsoft. Furthermore, since it is not truly open, it simply doesn't meet the criteria. Thus, if Microsoft decides that it wants to join

      • It simply isn't true that this is just a commercial dispute between Sun and Microsoft. ODF was developed by the Open Document Foundation based on work by Sun and standardized by OASIS. The members of the OASIS technical committee are listed here [oasis-open.org]. You'll notice that they include not only people from Sun, IBM, and the Open Document Foundation, but representatives from Adobe, Novell, Duke University, the Royal National Institute for the Blind, Intel, Ars Aperta, and others.

  • Just once (Score:5, Insightful)

    by blindseer ( 891256 ) <blindseer.earthlink@net> on Friday June 08, 2007 @01:02AM (#19433879)
    Microsoft probably realizes, which is why they fight so hard, that open formats have to win only one battle to win the war. Once open formats get a foot in the door it will only be a matter of time for open formats spread. Having a populous state like New York, California, or Texas will only make the switch happen more quickly in federal and neighboring state governments.

    The advantage of using Microsoft is in economies of scale, and network effects. The same advantage will make open formats spread very quickly once established in one state to other states.

    Microsoft is very afraid. They should be. Office is one of their few products that has the distinction of actually turning a profit. A move to open formats would force them to compete on price, support, and features, something that they haven't had to do for a very long time.
  • States' rights (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 08, 2007 @01:43AM (#19434093)


    State: Hi I like open formats because they're an open standard, owned by the world community. They're less risky, more durable, and extensible. And open.

    Lobbyist: Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa... whoa... whoa there buddy. You don't know what you're talking about. Microsoft Office format documents are used by 90% of the corporate world. Plus, Microsoft is huge. And has lots of money.

    State: Who are you?

    Lobbyist: Hi I'm Microsoft.

    State: Oh, hi. Can I have some money?

    Lobbyist: Sure

    State: I like Microsoft Office.

  • by techno-vampire ( 666512 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @02:18AM (#19434271) Homepage
    All your format are belong to us!
  • Bill #A08961 (Score:2, Informative)

    by Takichi ( 1053302 )
    The bill basically initiates a study into vendor neutrality and interoperability. It states that the study will be completed by January 15, 2008. It says nothing about actually doing anything with the study, so nothing may actually change.

    Still, it's better than nothing. So all you registered voters in New York, consider writing your state assemblymen and senators.
    NYS Assembly Members [state.ny.us]
    NYS Senate Members [state.ny.us]
    • It seems to me that this bill is about establishing the principles used to decide what formats to use. It does not try to mandate some specific format so there is no "that one is no good" argument that Microsoft (or anyone else) can use. "We are being unfairly excluded" does not fly either - the state is just working out what it needs from a document format.

      The question of whether or not Microsoft products meet the needs is for later.

      "You should not be thinking about your real needs, you should just buy o

    • vendor neutrality and interoperability

      When you are with a bunch of the government sales people, uttering that phrase would make you look like a complete ass hass.
  • Hm, taking a step back, does it strike anyone else as odd, from a social and cultural perspective, that the entity whose profits depend on the result, i.e. the entity which could not be more biased, has a say and an ear in matters like this at all?

    Shouldn't there be an instant "sorry, we're not listening to you, you are too much involved to be a reliable source" rejection? Yes, I know lobbying doesn't work that way. I'm wondering what this says about our society. Something like truth being less important th
  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @07:27AM (#19435445) Journal
    Now it is almost clear to all the politicians. You got a never ending source of campaign money in Microsoft. I expect it will become almost a ritual. Every year, every state a band of legislators will send up balloons about ODF, and dutifully Microsoft will send its minions and tons of money. At some point MSFT will balk and that is the day real ODF legislation will emerge.
  • by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Friday June 08, 2007 @08:16AM (#19435663) Journal
    While we're on the subject of open formats, the UK government released a statement yesterday [number-10.gov.uk] on their use over here. Not definitive, but it sounds like they are putting the final decision in the hands of people who have a vested interest in open formats.
  • is there a site where you can see who Micro$oft is lobbying?

    it would be nice to see who isn't on the take next time i vote.
  • It's a shame that Microsoft can no longer compete in the marketplace, but has to turn to backroom lobbying in order to stifle the wants of the consumers and sell its products.

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