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Subject: RE: Representation Types Alternatives


Good idea, Mary Kay. When standards had to be printed and mailed there was a
reason to charge for them, but they can be made available on the web at very
low cost now, so the reason for charging for them no longer exists.

Sally

-----Original Message-----
From: Blantz, Mary Kay [mailto:mblantz@netfish.com]
Sent: Tuesday, April 10, 2001 4:04 PM
To: 'Probert, Sue'; 'tboyle@rosehill.net'
Cc: ebXML-core
Subject: RE: Representation Types Alternatives


Also...

We at X12 have been working on finding a way to make those standards
free.  And we want the same to be true of any XML schema that we
develop.

Sue, maybe we can get several countries together wearing our 
TC 154 hats, and send a proposal to ISO?  

Mary Kay

-----Original Message-----
From: Probert, Sue [mailto:Sue.Probert@commerceone.com]
Sent: Tuesday, April 10, 2001 3:46 PM
To: 'tboyle@rosehill.net'
Cc: ebXML-core
Subject: RE: Representation Types Alternatives


Todd

Until very recently I was in a very similar position as a VSE (Very Small
Enterprise). I agree with you on the principles involved and I reckon it
hurts larger organisations as well. I believe strongly that if we are to
follow standards as respected as ISO then we should be able to arrange with
them to have access to stnadards documents at least to study whilst doing
our work. Most NGOs are open to this approach but in this case even as a
member of ISO TC154 I haven't actually approached ISO on this yet with
respect to our interest in 11179. So, to be fair, we shouldn't criticise
them at this stage. 

All UN/CEFACT documents are available freely and completely free of charge.

Sue

Sue Probert
Director, Document Engineering
Commerce One
Tel: +44 1332 342080
www.commerceone.com


-----Original Message-----
From: Todd Boyle [mailto:tboyle@rosehill.net]
Sent: 10 April 2001 20:44
To: Probert, Sue; 'Blantz, Mary Kay'; rawlins@metronet.com
Cc: 'CRAWFORD, Mark'; ebXML-core
Subject: RE: Representation Types Alternatives


Probert, Sue
> BTW I do not have a copy of 11179 as it is an extensive set of 
> documents which ISO like to be paid for! Like most other ISO docs 
> it is rarely at hand electronically. 

As a small business person I would like to formally protest
these EBXML activities based on copyrighted "standards" which 
cannot be obtained without payment. 

This includes all of ISO, and it apparently includes all of
the X12 dictionary and supporting documents.  This may also
include EDIFACT and X12 MIGs.  Why are NGOs treated better than
software companies? 

It is inappropriate and systematically unfair, especially for
Quasi-governmental organizations like UN/CEFACT, to be setting
standards that individuals and small businesses will be required
to follow, but which cannot be understood without paying for
documentation.  The cost of participating in ebXML and other
bodies is already excessive to small business, resulting in
disenfranchising them from the tradeoffs that are being made.

Further, these pricing policies have the effect of driving away
technical and business domain participation, needed by ebXML.

I'm fully aware standards work has economic costs. But charging
for copies of standards is the wrong way to recover them.

The same situation exists in GAAP reporting: the AICPA and FASB
in the US are private organizations who set rules, which are
then strongly enforced by federal and state regulators.  These
GAAP requirements cost approximately $500 per year to subscribe to.
But if I don't pay this money, it is de-facto impossible to
follow the rules.  As a CPA I can lose my license, and be put in 
prison if I don't obey every word of those rules, even when
preparing financial statements for nonpublicly listed companies.

For your information, the result of this structure is that it
incents the private organization to needlessly churn the rules, 
and to create unnecessarily complex rules, in order to maximize
their own roles and revenue stream.  Many small practitioners 
believe these incentives are a significant problem affecting
the AICPA and FASB.  

It is widely agreed that tax laws are driven by the same dynamic, 
of intentional churn and rule complexity to garner economic gains
for particular industries.  Churn and complexity are common strategic
tools in software companies to defend market positions, and have
been applied by the legal profession in some areas of commercial 
law as well.

Think about it.  The "data standards" industry may have parallels.
What if nobody can even play the game until they are $30,000 invested
in the rules?  Then they have incentives to prevent newcomers from
entering the industry for free.  It's like a cancer.  Actors in
the data standards wars already have enough incentives for complexity!
Now you have permanent standards bodies, requiring churn as their
revenue model.

The key issues are fairness and goodwill, leading to wider adoption,
and simplifying standards by increasing transparency, and reducing 
incentives for churn and complexity.

Respectfully,
Todd BOyle CPA
Kirkland WA





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