England, Poland, Norway, Denmark, Ireland...
Things are not looking all that bright for the marketing plot called OOXML, which is neither open nor XML. A few days ago we wrote about the developments in Denmark, but news reports were all in Danish [1, 2]. The complaint in Denmark merely joined a pile of other complaints and even court actions against standards bodies, including ISO (implicitly against Microsoft control or abuse of it).
By voting to adopt a standard based on Microsoft's OOXML document format, the Danish national standards body has approved an unknown text against the wishes of the main representatives on its own technical committee, according to a technical committee representative from the Danish city of Aarhus. He has now made a formal complaint to Dansk Standard about the OOXML vote.
The complaint came from Jens Kjellerup, IT manager at the City Executive for Children and Young People in Aarhus, who sat on the Dansk Standard technical committee that assessed adoption of the Microsoft format as an international standard by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).
[...]
He also expressed surprise that in the first vote on OOXML in September, Dansk Standard voted "no with comments," backed by a unanimous vote of its technical committee, and then changed its vote to a "yes" in March -- although the committee this time was full of disagreement.
[...]
He explained, however, that the consequence of complaints may be that the final approval could be delayed.