Microsoft
has drawn criticism after proposing to pay a programmer to clean up a
Wikipedia
entry on its
Open
XML technology.
The community behind the user-generated encyclopaedia tries to prevent
entries and edits from parties with a direct interest in advertising a story,
including vendors and public relations firms.
Doug
Mahugh, a technical evangelist for Microsoft's Open XML standard, admitted
in a
Slashdot
comment to contacting Australian standards pundit Rick Jelliffe about the
Wikipedia entry.
"Wikipedia has an entry on Open XML that has a lot of slanted language, and
we'd like them to make it more objective. But we feel that it would be best if a
non-Microsoft person were the source of any corrections. Would you have any
interest or availability to do some of this kind of work?" Mahugh wrote in an
email to Jelliffe.
"Your reputation as a leading voice in the XML community would carry a lot of
credibility, so your name came up in a discussion of the Wikipedia situation
today."
Mahugh added that Microsoft did not need to approve anything he would say. "
Our goal is simply to get more informed voices into the debate ... feel free to
state your own opinion," he wrote.
Jelliffe disclosed the request in a
blog
posting. While he pointed out that he is "hardly the poster boy of Microso
ft partisanship", he declared that he was inclined to accept.
"Fear, uncertainty and doubt enrages me. And Microsoft is certainly not
hiring me to add any pro-Microsoft FUD, just to correct any errors I see," said
Jelliffe. He went on to single out several factual inaccuracies in the posting.
Microsoft's Open XML standard is used in the forthcoming Office 2007. It
competes with the Open Document Format (ODF) backed by vendors including
Adobe,
IBM and
Sun
Microsystems.
The formats determine the way that documents are structured. An open format
ensures that any application can edit and save documents, while a closed
standard could prevent OpenOffice, for instance, from opening a Word document.
ODF is an open standard governed by the
Organization
for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards.
Microsoft's Open XML has been ratified as an open standard by the
European
Computer Manufacturers Association and is currently under review by the
International
Organization for Standardization.
Critics have suggested that Microsoft's standard lacks openness, and the
battle lines are drawn out between backers of Microsoft Office and those who
support OpenOffice.
Microsoft has accused IBM of orchestrating the flow of inaccurate
information.
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