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The OASIS CGM Open Member Section
works to make Web graphics standards easy to adopt and practical
to use in real world, open systems applications. CGM Open began
its affiliation with OASIS in 1999.
"When we formed our organization, we patterned
our operations on the OASIS by-laws and open process, so becoming
an OASIS Member Section was an easy transition for us. Today, we
maintain control over our technical agenda and our budget. We use
our Member Section funds to contract a program manager who coordinates
a lot of the 'heavy lifting' that keeps us on track. OASIS gives
us the support we need to focus on our mission and not on the administrative,
day-to-day operations of running an organization."--Dieter Weidenbrueck of PTC, chair of the
OASIS CGM Open Steering Committee
The OASIS Changfeng Open Standards Lab (COSL) Member Section serves as a focal point in Asia for discussions of SOA-related open standards technology and implementation, End-to-End Resource Planning (EERP), and other relevant issues.
The OASIS eGovernment Member Section (eGov MS) serves as a focal point for discussions of governmental and public administration requirements for e-business standardization.
The OASIS Emergency Interoperability (EI) Member Section accelerates the development, adoption, application, and implementation of emergency interoperability and communications standards and related work.
The OASIS Identity and
Trusted Infrastructure (IDtrust) Member Section promotes greater
understanding and adoption of standards-based identity and trusted
infrastructure technologies, policies, and practices. It was formed
in 2003 when the PKI Forum reorganized within OASIS. The group broadened
its scope in 2007 under the new name of IDtrust.
"We operated as an independent organization
for four years before becoming an OASIS Member Section. Many of
our original members were employed by companies that were already
involved in OASIS, so joint membership offered a tremendous savings
in dues and legal reviews of IPR policies and membership agreements.
Still, the main reason we came to OASIS was because it was the nexus
for important Web services security standards. As an OASIS Member
Section, we have an inside track. We learn from and educate other
people working on related standards, such as SAML, WS-Security,
and XACML. The connections we have here are invaluable."--June Leung, chair of the OASIS IDtrust
Steering Committee
The OASIS LegalXML Member Section
unites legal and technical experts in a common forum to create standards
for the electronic exchange of legal data. It was formed in 2002,
when LegalXML reorganized within OASIS.
"The OASIS technical process provides a framework
for government agencies, vendors, lawyers, and technicians to develop
standards that provide not only the technical underpinnings of electronic
legal applications, but also to take into account the traditional
working environments that are affected and the needs of professionals
as they embrace new disciplines such as e-discovery. Being a part
of OASIS also enables LegalXML to draw upon the talent of the many
OASIS technical committees whose varied works span a host of disciplines,
requirements, and needs." --John Messing of the American Bar Association,
chair of the OASIS LegalXML Steering Committee
The OASIS Open Composite
Services Architecture (CSA) Member Section advances open standards
that simplify SOA application development. This group oversees the
further development and adoption of the Service Component Architecture
(SCA) and Service Data Objects (SDO) families of specifications.
This work began as a private effort by a group of vendors and was
contributed to OASIS in 2007.
"Sometimes, a small group of stakeholders
can jump start an initiative very quickly and effectively. Then
it becomes advantageous to open up that work to the entire community
under the sanctions of a well-respected process. From the outset,
our intention was to advance the SCA and SDO specifications to an
appropriate point and then hand them off to an open standards body--and
that's exactly what we did. Open CSA allows our work to benefit
from a broader range of input and from association with the OASIS
reputation for neutrality and inclusiveness." - Jeff Mischkinsky of Oracle, chair of the
OASIS Open CSA Steering Committee
For more information on OASIS Member Sections, contact member-services@oasis-open.org.
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