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- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!unipalm!uknet!mcsun!sunic!aun.uninett.no!nuug!ifi.uio.no!enag
- From: enag@ifi.uio.no (Erik Naggum)
- Newsgroups: comp.protocols.iso
- Subject: Re: ISO Procedures
- Message-ID: <23312E@erik.naggum.no>
- Date: 20 Aug 92 21:48:29 GMT
- References: <BtA8Jx.EMC@immd4.informatik.uni-erlangen.de>
- Organization: Department of Informatics, University of Oslo, Norway
- Lines: 149
-
- Markus Kuhn <mskuhn@immd4.informatik.uni-erlangen.de> writes:
- |
- | I just read Erik Naggums insights in the position of ISO in this
- | world with great interest, but one question is still open for me:
-
- I'll try to answer these, although I don't know nearly enough about the
- general situation; I know fairly well how a small sector of Information
- Technology (JTC 1) works, so please don't extrapolate this unchecked. I
- also haven't attended any of the big meetings, so that's all second-hand
- stuff.
-
- | Who are the people responsible for technical decisions in the
- | standards making process?
-
- There are three levels of decision-making in ISO: TC, SC, and WG. The
- Technical Committee is responsible for the administrative aspects of
- approving and assigning new work items (WI), overseeing the progress of
- projects, tally votes, and such. This is a mainly political level.
- Meetings are held annually. The Sub-Committee is responsible for
- progressing the working documents through the stages, and oversee the
- WG's. This is intended to be a purely technical level, but practice is
- often otherwise. Inter-WG friction is common at SC level. Plenary
- meetings are held annually or biannually. The lowest level which is
- supposedly technical is the Working Group. WG's do all the work, and
- each handle one or perhaps a few more projects, each having an editor
- and frequently a Special Working Group, at the discretion of the WG.
- SWG's are not really part of the ISO structure, in that there are no
- requirements that you represent anybody at SWG meetings. Each WG has a
- convenor responsible for calling the working group membership to
- meetings, usually four to six times a year. At all levels, the
- decisions are made by delegates from ISO member bodies. They, again,
- are supposed to be selected by the national member body and to bring to
- the floor the decisions of the national parallell committee, if it
- exists. TC's are big enough to almost require their own national
- secretariat handling their paperwork in puny countries like Norway, so I
- assume that national parallell committees exist for TC's and SC's where
- the country is participatory (as opposed to observatory) member. JTC 1
- is huge. There are also really tiny TC's without SC's.
-
- The direct answer to your question is that the delegates from member
- bodies (and liaisons) make the political decisions, and anybody who
- would like to state their opinion can send off their suggestions to the
- project editor for consideration at the next SWG. It helps to be
- present, of course. At the other levels, resolutions are made with a
- more formal procedure. (I have yet to attend any of these meetings
- myself, so this is just things I've heard from the delegates who's been
- there, and from friendly introductions to the hostile environment that
- ISO is said to be from committee peers.)
-
- | How are they selected?
-
- I believe the process is largely based on volunteering and being
- accepted. Sometimes the company volunteers and the delegate is
- "volunteer" in the Army sense of the word. Sometimes, a delegate or
- those he represents completely misunderstands point and start to clamor
- for, e.g. _Irish_, demands and starts a political give-and-take process,
- which is grossly malplaced in the WGs and SWGs. Mostly, however, the
- experts in the WG are conscientious people with a sincere desire to see
- a problem solved on a large scale. Many of them have been struggling
- with similar problems in their academic or business career, and some of
- them may even get to the point of seeing their own inventions reach the
- status of International Standard.
-
- | How is guaranteed, that they represent the creme-de-la-creme of
- | academic and industrial experts?
-
- This is not guaranteed. For instance, JTC 1/SC 18/WG 8/SWG SGML didn't
- have any computer language experts until after SGML was published and
- amended. This shows in the standard, but it's surprisingly sound
- despite this lack of expertise. (Yes, this is being attended to by
- yours truly and others in the quintennial review process. ["Quin-
- tennial" is an ISO term meaning "approximately every six years".])
-
- | Is everything organized more in a democratic or aristocratic way?
-
- The Internet standardization process is meritocratic, while I believe
- the ISO process is much more democratic. I wish to stress that I think
- democracy in anything resembling intellectual efforts is a major
- obstacle to getting good solutions. Some project editors, however, can
- have a major impact on the selection process, and it's often up to their
- lack of diplomatic skills to get things past the political bozos. This
- could indicate an aristocratic model.
-
- | If it is intended to be a democratic process, how can highly
- | motivated independent people (e.g. like me ;-) have influence on the
- | standardisation process without being employed in the marketing
- | department of a huge company?
-
- Sell your car and buy a mountain bike, sell your house and rent a small
- apartment, sell your stereo system and buy a CD walkman, skip the
- expensive dinners with your date and eat at McDonald's.... Seriously,
- you should contact your national member body, request to receive working
- documents, which will usually leave you with at least one arm and one
- leg, and show up at national parallel committees for starters. It helps
- to know what you're talking about _before_ you go there. Oh, I forgot,
- you need a fireplace in your apartment, so you can reduce the heating
- bill by burning useless ISO documents. The savings doesn't quite add up
- to the cost of the fuel, though. If you're lucky, some political body
- which is gullible enough to think that International Standards can help
- your local industry get an edge or at least give some prestige, will
- have a budget dedicated to covering travel costs to committee meetings
- in, e.g. the Seychelles or Cape Verde.
-
- Sorry, I shouldn't joke about this. It's serious stuff, but I have
- received so many rejections for my applications for covering my travel
- costs that I would like to use my meager wealth for one-way tickets to
- Antarctica for the dweebs who first promised tons of geld for us IT
- geeks and then redirect them, after we've made the reservations and
- booked the tickets, to some stupid "Health, Safety and Environment"
- bullshit. What's "health, safety and the environment" without
- information technology standards, huh? Are they gonna rely on Word
- Perfect for their document interchange needs, huh? Huh? Well, it seems
- I'm getting carried away.
-
- The direct answer is that it would definitely help to be employed in the
- marketing department of a huge company. Or to have a wealthy uncle or
- something suffering from senile dementia. Or rob a bank in the name of
- the Future of Information Technology. Or get yourself known as an
- expert available for occasional assignments where the best experts of
- the PC market have given up, write a few articles, sell you car and buy
- a mountain bike, sell your house... Hmmm, I already mentioned that.
-
- | Is it really a democratic process if my hobby of reading ISO
- | documents is nearly as expensive for a student as drug abuse (as
- | Erik Naggum wrote a few weeks ago :-)?
-
- As I mentioned, ISO haven't really realized that students and our likes
- would like to get access to their standards, and the national member
- bodies aren't likely to be able to function as libraries with reading
- rooms. (Office spaces costs too much to allow a few students free space
- to suck up information from already overpriced standards.) This may
- change, though, and maybe a nearby University sports an important figure
- in the field you wish to join. I know this University does, but I first
- heard of him through an ISO connection in Canada, even though he works
- approximately 200 feet from where I'm typing this.
-
- Most of the time, ISO people are overly delighted to share their
- knowledge and to find other people interested in what they're doing.
- They frequently write books and articles, and try to reach more people
- to take part in the most important work in the world since the Romans
- built aquaducts. I'm not saying they're lonely, just that being one in
- approximately 4 million tends to increase your enthusiasm for other
- people with similarly narrow interests.
-
- If I don't send this now, I'll edit out all the cynical parts and all
- this typing would be wasted. Hope somebody find it useful, anyhow.
-
- Best regards,
- </Erik>
- --
- Erik Naggum | ISO 8879 SGML | +47 295 0313
- | ISO 10744 HyTime |
- <erik@naggum.no> | ISO 10646 UCS | Memento, terrigena.
- <enag@ifi.uio.no> | ISO 9899 C | Memento, vita brevis.
-