Resources
Location:

Running code as part of an open standards policy

Title:Running code as part of an open standards policy (ID: CSD5628)
Author(s):Rajiv C. Shah (University of Illinois at Chicago) and Jay P. Kesan (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
Topics:Open Source Policy, Open Standards
Source:First Monday
Origin:Community Contributions (05/21/2009)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

Governments around the world are considering implementing or even mandating open standards policies. They believe these policies will provide economic, socio–political, and technical benefits. In this article, we analyze the failure of the Massachusetts’s open standards policy as applied to document formats. We argue it failed due to the lack of running code. Running code refers to multiple independent, interoperable implementations of an open standard. With running code, users have choice in their adoption of a software product and consequently economic and technological benefits. We urge governments to incorporate a “running code” requirement when adopting an open standards policy.

View this resource:

 
© Copyright 1999-2009 EDUCAUSE