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In my book, a standard isn't open if you have to pay $$ to obtain/use it.

That is, ISO standards aren't open.

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@encthenet in fact, I'd argue that even Amazon's shitty is an since there are multiple drop-in reimplemetations and unlike say , doesn't even try to ban those.

Cuz |s and |s are critical.

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@mikolaj @encthenet You know, there's controversy within the ISO over them charging for their documents.

But every time they take steps away from that they walk it back.

So pro-tip: The ISO mostly republishes these standards from other organizations. You can usually find them published freely online at the organizations who actually wrote these standards!

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@kkarhan

I'd have to look/think closer to make a decision on that. I *GUESS* S3 (HTTP) is fully documented and it is free to access/read, so at first glance is an .

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@alcinnz @mikolaj @encthenet if you think ISO is bad, consider IEC - which is paid too but also half fr*nch

tbh I don't understand how they think a paywalled standard purporting to improve interpretability does that when every vendor implements it based on reverse engineering and guesswork
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@encthenet Case in point, only & solutions survive, and those must inherently be & ...

The few exceptions are either old legacy shit and/or have only worse-licensed competitiors.

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@alcinnz @mikolaj Sometimes, but I can't find it for TIFF-EP. Yes, TIFF-EP is based upon TIFF 6.0, but it from what I can see, it extended TIFF 6.0, and I can't seem to find the root standard for TIFF-EP. No one ever mentions where it came from.

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@alcinnz @mikolaj

I'd have less issue w/ them if they had programs for OSS devs to obtain them for free. It'd still suck, but it'd effectively be free, as pretty much anyone could claim to be an OSS dev.

But as it stands, ISO is actually impeding standards by locking them behind paywalls. They definitely are only "helping" companies.

ISO isn't much better than journal publishers, like Elsevier.

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@encthenet @alcinnz @mikolaj They are IMHO substantially worse than Elsevier. They use the same unpaid/tax financed writers, but charge for the resulting document approach, but where Elsevier at least has licenses that cover an entire org, ISO licenses are only per individual. So in the end, ISO standards are so inaccessible that they fail at being a standard at all, even in a commercial setting.

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@encthenet @alcinnz @mikolaj I.e. even if you work for a big company, you will not be easily and readily able to access an ISO standard, to say nothing about Open Source devs. And this is not even for purely financial reasons, but also because their individual licenses approach requires one hell of a license management system, that pretty much no other type of commercial info requires.

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@encthenet @alcinnz @mikolaj compare that to NIST where you'll not only get a free standard, but usually also a set of free symbolic pictures to go with it, so that you can use it for your slide decks.

Like my favorite illustration for post quantum cryptography schemes, yours for the very cheap price of a credit to the author N. Hanacek:
https://www.nist.gov/image/post-quantum-cryptography-algorithms

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@kkarhan @encthenet This misses the whole point of why we have companies like ISO. Their job as the standard organization is to make a fair forum for discussion of the standard. Else it can very easily end up being more biased towards some specific cases than it would have been otherwise. "Amazon's shitty #S3 #API" is only put into the world to serve the needs of Amazon, they don't need to care for how anyone else wants it to be which is the thing that Standard.

That said I still think they should be free of charge. @twitter@jonsneyers one of the JPEG XL authors would also agree with that, and they are actually trying to make a difference in that space. https://www.theregister.com/2021/07/31/iso_paywall_battle/
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@erk @encthenet Well, whilst , , & Co. only take existing standards and reward them with their blessing, I think they should mandate those to be truly open.

For example I'd cnsider the acceptance of to be the biggest Mistake of ISO since not only did they already accepted as superior option, but at >6.000 (!!!) pages "specification" it's practically impossible to implement OOXML by anyone but .

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@kkarhan @encthenet
That one is a bit of an outlier, so much in fact that there is a whole Wikipedia about it https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standardization_of_Office_Open_XML

But the standard of OOXML is actually free to access through ECMA-376, but even then I would not consider it a very open standard because of the process of which it was created.

https://www.ecma-international.org/publications-and-standards/standards/ecma-376/
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@erk @encthenet I'd also not consider it an "open standard" since it basically relies on multiple, non- technologies, some even by - to be used.

In fact, the reference implementation is and there are no 100% feature-complete alternatives.

It only exists to undermine and sabotage it's deserved market dominance.

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@erk

@kkarhan

Except that there are other forums that produce standards that are open/free. I've participated in an OASIS standard. In checking to see if ecma made all their standards free, I came across this:
https://www.nist.gov/standardsgov/standards-organizations-offer-free-access-their-standards

Quite a few orgs making their standards free (though a number of the ones on that list have limitations).

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@erk

@kkarhan

Also, requiring people/companies to pay doubly ensures that not everyone's voice is heard. It's already time consuming enough, but having to pay thousands of dollars for the honor of spending your free time to try to fight against corporations isn't something most OSS people want to do.

There's a reason most RFCs are corporate sponsored.

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@encthenet @kkarhan I am not sure where the disagreement is because I fully agree with you. Standards should be free to access. The question should then be what does ISO bring to the table that these other organizations does not and why does people/companies choose them over the ones that have free to access standards.

Also companies would probably also want standards that are free to access and it is probably those that need to lobby ISO and the national bodies into making the changes that are needed.

For example Adobe, Apryse and Foxit are sponsoring access to the PDF standard https://pdfa.org/sponsored-standards/

I hope that examples like this is only the start and that we will see ISO to rework how it works in the coming years.
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@erk @kkarhan @encthenet while s3 is bad, at least Amazon isn't intentionally breaking support with 3rd party providers like minio is
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@charlotte @erk @encthenet EXACTLY!

has a vested interest to act a bit more longterm.
Unlike 's https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embrace%2C_extend%2C_and_extinguish#Examples_by_Microsoft ] they want to become the de-facto standard, as they already dominate and making shit easier on their platform will only work if it isn't exclusive.

Even if that means Microsoft ( ), , and even can do the same...

It also fixes a lot of issues has...

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@kkarhan @erk @encthenet MS also lobbied that vote heavily. It was not made as a technical decision at ISO.

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@davidwmaxwell @erk @encthenet OFC not.

Why else would they've agreed on >6.000 pages of within less than half the time it took for [ ~ 1.000 pages]...

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