Microsoft Opens Up With Five Web Specs

Redmond has made five web specifications available under the Open Web Foundation Agreement.

Microsoft’s has demonstrated its commitment to technology collaboration after it made five web specifications available under the recently penned Open Web Foundation Agreement (OWFa).

Microsoft officials said the five specifications now available under the Open Web Foundation Agreement are: Version 0.9: OAuth WRAP, Simple Web Tokens, the OpenService Format Specification, the WebSlice Format Specification, and the X M L Search Suggestions Format Specification.

The latter three specifications will also remain available under both the Open Specification Promise (OSP) and Creative Commons licenses, Microsoft said.

The Open Web Foundation is an independent non-profit dedicated to the development and protection of open, non-proprietary specifications for web technologies.

In a 17 November post about the Open Web Foundation (OWF) and the OWFa, DeWitt Clinton, an OWF board member and Google software engineer, said:

“The Open Web Foundation was founded to help developer communities collaborate and share technical innovation on the web, bringing to the world of formats and protocols the same successful grassroots approaches established by the open source community. Modelled after the Apache Software Foundation and Creative Commons, the Open Web Foundation seeks to facilitate the creation and implementation of specifications with legal agreements that make such work simple, safe, and sustainable.”

Moreover, Clinton said the OWFa “establishes the copyright and patent rights for a specification, ensuring that downstream consumers may freely implement and reuse the licensed specification without seeking further permission.”

Meanwhile, in a different post, David Rudin, a senior attorney at Microsoft, said:

“I’m a board member of the Open Web Foundation, and I worked with the Foundation’s legal committee to help draft its agreement. I’m excited that we’ve helped establish a legally sound basis for broad participation and adoption of community specifications, which can then transition to formal standardisation, if desired.”

For his part, Clinton said specifications that fall under the OWFa “may include everything from small ad-hoc formats sketched out among friends to large multi-corporation collaborations that ultimately grow into international recognised standards with the help of formal standards setting organisations.”

The following specifications have been committed to the OWFa: