Supporters of the
Open
Document Format (ODF) took to the streets yesterday in celebration of
Document Freedom Day
2008.
Events in more than 60 countries were designed to promote open documents and
standards. Teams were equipped with flags, T-shirts and stickers to raise
awareness of the ODF.
"We are very happy about the response and activities that teams around the
world have scheduled," said Ivan Jelic, coordinator of the programme.
"Activities range from local speeches and information events to prizes for
governmental bodies that adopted good policies in the field of document freedom
and open standards."
Google, which has long been a backer of the ODF standard and an advocate of
open formats, was among the companies supporting the event.
"When you save a document, you need to be sure that the information in it
will be accessible tomorrow, a month from now, 10 years from now," wrote Google
open source programmes manager Zaheda Bhorat in a
blog
posting.
"How and where you choose to access your documents should not make a
difference. This is what Document Freedom Day is about."
The event is the latest chapter in the bitter fight over open document
standards. ODF and its backers, which include IBM and Sun Microsystems, have
been engaged in a bitter feud with Microsoft and its
OpenXML
format.
The two camps are fighting over control of a new class of open documents and
the clients that come with it.
Government organisations around the world have begun mandating that employees
switch to an open format that can be shared across various agencies and
localities.
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