--Senior Microsoft Rep about OOXML
Rules altered in OOXML standardization process
Rules changed on the fly to meet five-day deadline to discuss concerns with specification; final vote due in 30 days
The four options presented were:
* Option 1: Submitter's responses (Ecma's) are all automatically approved. * Option 2: Anything not discussed is not approved. * Option 3: Neutral third-party (ITTF) decides which Ecma responses are accepted * Option 4: Voting (approve + disapprove) must be at least 9 votes. Abstentions not counted.
We were told that these options are not in the Directives and that were are given these choices because ITTF "needs to act in the best interests of the IEC". I don't quite get it, but there appears to be some concern over what the press would think if the BRM did not handle all of the comments. One NB requested to speak and asked, "I wonder what the press would think about arbitrarily changed procedures?". No response. I thought to myself, why wasn't ITTF thinking about the 'best interests" of JTC1 when they allowed a 6,045 page Fast Track submission, or ignored all those contradiction submissions, or decided to schedule a 5-day BRM to handle 3,522 NB comments. Isn't it a bit late to start worrying about what the press will think?
We break for lunch.
After lunch and after more discussion, the meeting adopted a variation of option 4, by removing the vote minimum. I believe in this vote the BRM and ITTF exceeded its authority and violated the consensus principles described in JTC1 Directives.
Unrecoverable Application Error or UAE or BSOD to the nonsense ooxml stuff. So, some of the stuff was hand-waved through. But the end is here. We have to expose all the underhanded, manipulations that MS has done everywhere to buy votes. I am glad that the EU is investigating.