The
Swedish
Standards Institute (SIS) has invalidated this week's ballot on the proposed
Office Open XML standard, eliminating one vote in favour of the standard
currently being evaluated by the International Standards Organization (ISO).
The SIS said that it had received information that one of its members had
cast more than one vote, invalidating the entire election.
As a result, the group will not be able to weigh in on the ISO procedure that
seeks to establish Office Open XML as an open standard, as the deadline for
votes to be registered passes on 2 September.
The Swedish election sparked widespread controversy earlier this week when
the SIS approved Office Open XML. The standard competes with the Open Document
Format backed by
IBM,
Sun
Microsystems and most
open
source advocates.
A day before the meeting earlier this week, more than 20 companies suddenly
paid a $1,300 membership fee that allowed them to vote. The large number of
companies joining the SIS at the last minute raised suspicions.
The Office Open XML documentation is nearly 6,000 pages long, making it
doubtful that the new members studied the proposed standard in detail.
Doubts were further raised when an email emerged in which
Microsoft
offered its partners "marketing contributions" if they joined the organisation
and voted on the Office Open XML issue.
In a
blog
posting on Wednesday, Microsoft's director of corporate standards, Jason
Matusow, admitted that two messages were sent, but stressed that the company
immediately flagged them as a violation of company policy.
Microsoft called the two recipients asking them to ignore the message, and
informed the SIS.
"Instructions from corporate to our regional teams around the world
throughout this process have been to completely adhere to the rules of the
national standards bodies, and that any party wishing to take part in the
national standards body is directly responsible for paying any related fees,"
Matusow stated.
"This means partners must decide whether to participate and vote based on
their own determination as to the importance of this standard to their business.
"To say it more directly, offers to pay standards participation fees are
totally inconsistent with our internal policy."
Matusow pointed out that
IBM had lobbied
Swedish business partners to vote against the standard.
He also argued that companies joining SIS at the last minute is within the
rules of the standards body, and that proponents, and opponents such as
Google,
joined.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article