India's Continued Fight for Standards and Against OOXML
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2008-04-14 04:30:49 UTC
- Modified: 2008-04-14 04:30:49 UTC
OOXML is not a standard, it's shenanigans
An
open letter which was prepared for demonstration purposes in India has just stretched and leaped beyond the boundaries of the Internet.
This letter presents a complaint about vote-rigging by Microsoft and its close allies and it was put up for display in various physical places. Activities are also being organised to
promote OpenDocument format and Free software.
The Candle light vigil demands India to appeal ISO approval of ooxml based on its comments and no vote. We also demands the Department of IT to draft a clear national policy for the use of Free standards for data storage.
This programme is planned as a starting point for various events & awareness campaigns on Document freedom.
What happened (and
continues to happen) over there is a disgraceful shame. One must never forget to point this out a textbook classic that demonstrates political, corporate, charity-twisting misconduct. Advocacy whose emphasis are the positives (openness, freedom, choice) is truly grand but without the mentioning of its detractors (cheating, lying, bribery and bullying) it might suffer from lack of impact on an observer's mind.
The story about
Microsoft's behaviour in India won't be forgotten any time soon (you can look back at old posts for credible details). Microsoft gave its watchers a great deal of ammunition to be used in months to come. It's not a case of being anti-Microsoft or anti-America. That's just how Microsoft wishes to characterise it, but it really is a case against corruption.
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"The government is not trying to destroy Microsoft, it’s simply seeking to compel Microsoft to obey the law. It’s quite revealing that Mr. Gates equates the two."
--Government official