OASIS Members Form Technical Committee to Advance XML Rights Language

Boston, MA, USA; 2 April 2002 — OASIS, the XML interoperability consortium, today announced its members have formed the OASIS Rights Language Technical Committee to advance a common XML rights language standard for the digital rights management (DRM) marketplace. Their work will provide a universal method for specifying and managing rights associated with all kinds of resources including digital content and web services. The OASIS specification will support a wide variety of business models, expressing both simple and complex rights and promoting interoperability between systems regardless of platform, media type or format. “There is a significant need across many industries for DRM standards to assist institutions in managing their digital assets such as content or web services”, said Hari Reddy of ContentGuard, chair of the OASIS Rights Language Technical Committee. “Our work in establishing a standard rights language will address the need for interoperability between the components and systems that manage the creation, distribution and consumption of digital assets within and across different industries.” ContentGuard intends to submit its eXtensible rights Markup Language(tm) (XrML(tm)) to the 0ASIS Rights Language Technical Committee as a starting point for this work. XrML, recently selected as the base architecture for the MPEG-21 Rights Expression Language, can be used in content-centric as well as service-based business models. “The use of DRM technologies for the distribution of content and services holds great potential, and putting DRM-related standards in place is essential for the success of DRM, ” said Joshua Duhl, an IDC Contributing Analyst. “The contribution of XrML to OASIS is an important step in establishing a standard rights language for DRM.” Members of the OASIS Rights Language Technical Committee include ContentGuard, Hewlett-Packard Company, Microsoft, Reuters, VeriSign Inc., and other OASIS members. Participation remains open to all organizations and individuals interested in advancing a common rights language. Information on joining OASIS can be found on http://www.oasis-open.org/join. “The OASIS Rights Language Technical Committee is an important step towards consistency in the area of rights expression — a key to establishing interoperability for DRM systems and services,” said John Erickson, systems program manager for digital rights management, HP Labs. “HP has been involved in a number of industry initiatives that are crucial to the evolution of DRM and is pleased to be a sponsoring member of this technical committee.” About OASIS OASIS (www.oasis-open.org), a not-for-profit, global consortium, drives the development, convergence and adoption of e-business standards. Members themselves set the OASIS technical agenda, using a lightweight, open process expressly designed to promote industry consensus and unite disparate efforts. OASIS is the home for XML conformance, Web services, security, business transactions, electronic publishing, topic maps and other interoperability specifications development. OASIS has more than 400 corporate and individual members in 100 countries around the world. OASIS and the United Nations jointly sponsor ebXML, a global framework for e-business data exchange. OASIS operates XML.org, a community clearinghouse for XML application schemas, vocabularies and related documents. OASIS hosts The XML Cover Pages, an online reference collection for interoperable markup language standards. For more information: Carol Geyer Director of Communications OASIS carol.geyer@oasis-open.org +1.978.667.5115 x209

OASIS Expands to Include LegalXML

Washington, D.C., 28 March 2002 — Standards group, LegalXML, joined the OASIS interoperability consortium today, in a move that aligns the development of specifications for legal data exchange with the global standards community at-large. By migrating its work to OASIS, LegalXML secures its representation within the consortium known for setting adoptable worldwide standards for electronic business, Web services and security. The alliance brings new resources and international awareness to LegalXML’s work on specifications for electronic court filing, court documents, legal citations, transcripts, criminal justice intelligence systems, and others. “This is an important move for LegalXML,” said James I. Keane, co-chair of the eLawyering Task Force of the American Bar Association Law Practice Management Section. “Operating within OASIS, LegalXML gains close ties to the major global standards-setting bodies. Existing OASIS members, representing some of the largest and most innovative companies in the world, will now be able to actively contribute to the work of LegalXML.” “OASIS has the experience, the technology and the support environment that is essential for the successful development of XML standards,” said Don Bergeron, chair of the LegalXML Steering Committee. “Being in the mainstream of OASIS, LegalXML participants take advantage of a tried-and-true technical process and track record of successful adoption. OASIS provides the infrastructure we need, so we can focus all our energies on developing standardized structures, vocabularies and data exchange tools for the legal community.” Under the new organizational structure, members of LegalXML will join OASIS and be eligible to contribute to all OASIS technical work. Existing OASIS members will have the option to participate in LegalXML without additional membership dues. “In today’s economy, it’s not practical to expect companies to join a multitude of consortia in order to participate in all the relevant standards development being done. OASIS is one organization with many opportunities for involvement,” explained Patrick Gannon, OASIS president and CEO. “LegalXML expands the breadth of our technical agenda in an exciting way. We welcome LegalXML participants to our community of developers and look forward to sharing new approaches, methods, and insights with one another.” Members of the LegalXML Steering Committee within OASIS include Donald Bergeron of Lexis-Nexis, Toby Brown of the Utah State Bar, Rolly Chambers of Smith, Currie & Hancock LLP, John Greacen, Esq. of Grecean Associates, Daniel Greenwood, Esq. of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Jim Keane, Esq. of JKeane.Pro, Eddie O’Brien of Ringtail Solutions, and Dave Roberts of the SEARCH National Consortium for Justice Information and Statistics. OASIS will host open mail lists for public comment on LegalXML technical committees, and completed work will be freely available to the public without licensing or other fees. The LegalXML website will continue to be maintained by OASIS. LegalXML was founded in November 1998 as a non-profit organization to bring legal and technical experts together to create standards for the electronic exchange of legal data. The OASIS LegalXML Member Section will continue this work to serve as an open forum for the legal domain to share ideas and experiences associated with XML and related core standards. LegalXML participants include lawyers, developers, application vendors, government agencies and members of academia. About OASIS OASIS (www.oasis-open.org), a not-for-profit, global consortium, drives the development, convergence and adoption of e-business standards. Members themselves set the OASIS technical agenda, using a lightweight, open process expressly designed to promote industry consensus and unite disparate efforts. OASIS is the home for XML conformance, Web services, security, business transactions, electronic publishing, topic maps and other interoperability specifications development. OASIS has more than 400 corporate and individual members in 100 countries around the world. OASIS and the United Nations jointly sponsor ebXML, a global framework for e-business data exchange. OASIS operates XML.org, a community clearinghouse for XML application schemas, vocabularies and related documents. OASIS hosts The XML Cover Pages, an online reference collection for interoperable markup language standards. For more information: Carol Geyer Director of Communications OASIS carol.geyer@oasis-open.org +1.978.667.5115 x209

OASIS Members Form Technical Committee to Define XML Standard for Biometrics

Boston, MA, USA; 7 March 2002 — OASIS, the interoperability consortium, today announced that its members have formed the OASIS XML Common Biometric Format (XCBF) Technical Committee to provide a standard XML schema for biometrics. XCBF will describe information that verifies identity based on human characteristics such as DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, and hand geometry. XCBF will be used in biometric applications that measure attendance, grant access control to documents or other resources, and facilitate non-repudiation in commerce, particularly over open networks. “Biometrics, in essence ‘what you are,’ are destined to replace ‘what you know’ items, such as PIN numbers, and to augment ‘what you have’ forms of identification, such as cards,” explained Phillip H. Griffin of Griffin Consulting, chair of the OASIS XCBF Technical Committee. “Existing biometric standards use binary encoding formats, which severely limit their use in XML systems and applications. XCBF will provide a standard way for biometric functions to be done using XML.” The charter of the OASIS XCBF Technical Committee is to define a set of XML encodings for the Common Biometric Exchange File Format (CBEFF), which describes data elements necessary to support biometric technologies in a standard way. Universal type definitions will allow biometric data to be validated and exchanged without ambiguity. The exact values specified in CBEFF binary encodings will be used in XCBF XML representations. CBEFF is a draft of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), managed and maintained currently by the National Institute of Standards Technology (NIST). “The message syntax for transferring information across the Internet seems to be focused on XML-based dialects, and biometric information is no different in this respect. What’s critically important is that XCBF meets the American National Standard X9.84 security requirements regarding the authenticity and integrity of biometric data. By basing this XML work on the schema and security mechanisms defined in X9.84, it should be possible for XCBF to meet these requirements,” said Jeff Stapleton of KPMG LLP, chair of the X9F4 working group of the X9 Accredited Standards Committee (ASC) of ANSI. “XCBF is another example of OASIS’ commitment to cross-consortia collaboration,” noted Karl Best, OASIS director of technical operations. “The work at OASIS builds on development from CBEFF and ANSI, bringing our XML expertise to advance a global solution. All processing and security requirements used by this OASIS technical committee will be harmonized with standardization of the XML formats of messages undertaken by ANSI X9F working groups.” Participation in the OASIS XCBF Technical Committee remains open to all organizations and individuals interested in advancing a standard XML schema for biometrics. OASIS will host an open mail list for public comment on XCBF, and completed work will be freely available to the public without licensing or other fees. Information on joining OASIS can be found on http://www.oasis-open.org/join. About OASIS OASIS, a not-for-profit, global consortium, drives the development, convergence and adoption of e-business standards. Members themselves set the OASIS technical agenda, using a lightweight, open process expressly designed to promote industry consensus and unite disparate efforts. OASIS is the home for XML conformance, Web services, security, business transactions, electronic publishing, topic maps and other interoperability specifications development. OASIS has more than 400 corporate and individual members in 100 countries around the world. OASIS and the United Nations jointly sponsor ebXML, a global framework for e-business data exchange. OASIS operates XML.org, a community clearinghouse for XML application schemas, vocabularies and related documents. OASIS hosts The XML Cover Pages, an online reference collection for interoperable markup language standards. For more information: Carol Geyer Director of Communications OASIS www.oasis-open.org carol.geyer@oasis-open.org +1.978.667.5115 x209

ISO/IEC and OASIS Collaborate on E-Business Standards

Boston, MA, USA; 25 February 2002 — OASIS, the XML interoperability consortium, today announced it has entered into a liaison relationship with the International Organization for Standardization (ISO)/International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) Joint Technical Committee One on Information Technology. The relationship will allow representatives from each group to participate in the standards development work of the other. ISO/IEC JTC1/SC34, the JTC1 subcommittee for Document Description and Processing Languages, has joined OASIS as a contributor, and OASIS has become an ISO/IEC Category A Liaison member. “This is a wonderful opportunity for two organizations with a long history of commitment to structured data to cooperate,” said Dr. James David Mason, chairman of the ISO/IEC JTC1/SC34. “Mutual participation between JTC 1 and OASIS will result in synergistic effects. OASIS already has developed specifications that may be good candidates for JTC 1 standardization. Likewise, there are a number of ways OASIS can support existing ISO/IEC standards.” As examples of current collaborations, Mason points to RELAX NG, an XML schema language that was developed at OASIS and is currently under consideration as an ISO/IEC standard. Conversely, XML Topic Maps, a JTC 1 Standard (ISO/IEC 13250:2000) that provides a model for organizing, retrieving and navigating information resources, is now being advanced within OASIS. “The task of providing interoperable specifications demands cooperation between the international standards-setting bodies. Broadening our collaborative relationship with JTC 1 minimizes the risk of divergent and competitive approaches to standardization and avoids duplication of efforts and confusion among users,” said Karl Best, director of technical operations at OASIS. “Sharing information, OASIS technical committees and JTC 1 working groups can promote convergence where appropriate and advance the interests of the marketplace at-large.” This announcement follows recent news that OASIS has joined in a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on Electronic Business with ISO, IEC, the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), and the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UN/ECE). Working together, the groups plan to increase coordination across many different international programs for more efficient standards development and more rapid adoption in the global marketplace. About OASIS OASIS (www.oasis-open.org), a not-for-profit, global consortium, drives the development, convergence and adoption of e-business standards. Members themselves set the OASIS technical agenda, using a lightweight, open process expressly designed to promote industry consensus and unite disparate efforts. OASIS is the home for XML conformance, Web services, security, business transactions, electronic publishing, topic maps and other interoperability specifications development. OASIS has more than 400 corporate and individual members in 100 countries around the world. OASIS and the United Nations jointly sponsor ebXML, a global framework for e-business data exchange. OASIS operates XML.org, a community clearinghouse for XML application schemas, vocabularies and related documents. OASIS also hosts The XML Cover Pages, an online reference collection for interoperable markup language standards. About ISO Established in 1947, ISO’s mission is to promote the development of standardization and related activities in the world with a view to facilitating the international exchange of goods and services, and to developing cooperation in the spheres of intellectual, scientific, technological and economic activity. About IEC Founded in 1906, the IEC is the global organization that prepares and publishes international standards for all electrical, electronic and related technologies. Its membership consists of more than 60 participating countries, including all the world’s major trading nations and a growing number of industrializing countries. For more information: Carol Geyer Director of Communications OASIS carol.geyer@oasis-open.org

OASIS Expands Topic Maps Development: New Technical Committees Formed to Define Published Subjects for XML Standards and Geography and Languages

Boston, MA, USA; 13 February 2002 — OASIS, the XML interoperability consortium, today announced its members have formed two new technical committees to advance the XML Topic Maps specification (ISO/IEC 13250:2000) for organizing, retrieving and navigating information resources. The OASIS Vocabulary for XML Standards and Technologies (XMLvoc) Technical Committee will define the essential subjects needed to create interchangeable ontologies for the XML domain. The OASIS Published Subjects for Geography and Languages (GeoLang) Technical Committee will define sets of published subjects for languages, countries, and regions. Both new technical committees will advance the topic maps model, which provides a ‘knowledge layer’–independent of the information resources themselves–to capture and manage corporate memory, improve indexing and enable the integration of information that spans multiple, disparate repositories. Applications include subject classification, search and retrieval tools, portals, semantic Web, and knowledge management. According to Debra Logan, senior research analyst at Gartner, “Any enterprise that has invested time and effort in searching for information resources online and needs a way to capture the output of that search will have a use for topic maps. Because the paradigm is powerful, flexible and extensible, topic maps will become a mainstream technology by 2003.” “XMLvoc will provide a reference set of concept and relationship types that will enable common access layers, making it easier to locate all types of information on XML,” explained Dr. H. Holger Rath of empolis, chair of the OASIS XMLvoc Technical Committee. “Our work will allow information providers all over the world to create XML-related topics maps that can be merged and interoperate with one another. XMLvoc also will make it possible to collaboratively develop overarching indexes that improve accessibility to all aspects of XML, its related specifications, the communities that use it, the tools that support it, and the companies that provide services and expertise around it.” Lars Marius Garshol, chair of the OASIS GeoLang Technical Committee, observed, “Languages, countries, and regions are subjects that occur frequently across a wide range of topic maps. GeoLang’s published subjects will establish the foundation for internationalization of topic maps, and ensure that topic maps referring to these key subjects will merge correctly. Our group will update and extend existing topic maps work using code sets defined by recognized standards bodies such as ISO and the United Nations.” Users around the world welcome these development efforts at OASIS. “Topic maps will become an essential part of the added value that commercial publishers apply to their content,” says Ton Schoonderbeek, CTO of Wolters Kluwer – Law, Tax and Business Europe. “Standardized subjects from the various application domains will ensure the return on our investments for topic maps. We greatly appreciate the topic map initiatives for vertical markets.” Members of the new OASIS Topic Maps Technical Committees include consortium sponsors, empolis, Innodata, Reuters, and other OASIS members. Participation remains open to all organizations and individuals interested in advancing the topic maps navigation model. Information on joining OASIS can be found on http://www.oasis-open.org/join. OASIS will host open mail lists for public comment on XMLvoc and GeoLang, and completed work will be freely available to the public without licensing or other fees. “I am looking forward to the outcome of the XMLvoc TC that will result in ontologies becoming interchangeable and robust. These groundbreaking developments are especially important for ontologies in the IT domain of XML standards and technologies,” stated Dr. Stefan Wess, empolis CTO. Dr. H. Holger Rath, empolis Director of R&D and chair of the XMLvoc TC added, “The results of the TC will be a significant step towards global knowledge interchange.” About OASIS OASIS (www.oasis-open.org), a not-for-profit, global consortium, drives the development, convergence and adoption of e-business standards. Members themselves set the OASIS technical agenda, using a lightweight, open process expressly designed to promote industry consensus and unite disparate efforts. OASIS is the home for XML conformance, Web services, security, business transactions, electronic publishing, topic maps and other interoperability specifications development. OASIS has more than 400 corporate and individual members in 100 countries around the world. OASIS and the United Nations jointly sponsor ebXML, a global framework for e-business data exchange. OASIS operates XML.org, a community clearinghouse for XML application schemas, vocabularies and related documents. OASIS also hosts The XML Cover Pages, an online reference collection for interoperable markup language standards. For more information: Carol Geyer Director of Communications OASIS carol.geyer@oasis-open.org +1.978.667.5115 x209

OASIS Joins International Alliance of Standards-Setting Bodies for Electronic Business

Geneva, Switzerland and Boston, MA, USA; 11 February 2002 — OASIS, the XML interoperability consortium, joined the four International Standards Organizations in a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on Electronic Business. Founding members of the MoU include the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), and the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UN/ECE). As the newest invited member of the MoU, OASIS adds its resources to the efforts of these international standards-setting bodies to coordinate the development of global standards for electronic business. “We welcome OASIS to the MoU on Electronic Business,” noted Cynthia L. Fuller, Chair of the MoU Management Group. “The consortium’s work with UN/CEFACT on ebXML, the specifications that provide an infrastructure for e-business information exchange, is just one example of the many contributions OASIS continues to make towards interoperability. OASIS members span the globe in a united effort to promote convergence and collaboration, and we look forward to their involvement as active members of the MoU.” “OASIS is honored to be invited to participate in this MoU and contribute to its work in furthering the interoperability of electronic business standards worldwide,” said Patrick Gannon, President and CEO of OASIS. “Working together, we can help to increase coordination across many different international programs for more efficient standards development and more rapid adoption that will benefit the entire global marketplace.” The Electronic Business MoU establishes a coordination mechanism under a unique cooperative model to produce mutually supportive standards required in business transactions (data interchange and interoperability), as well as product design and manufacturing to meet the urgent needs of both industry and end-users. “The purpose of the MoU is to minimize the risk of divergent and competitive approaches to standardization, avoid duplication of efforts and confusion amongst users,” said Houlin Zhao, Director of ITU Telecommunication Standardization Bureau. “Under the MoU’s Management Group, for instance, ITU technical groups will be able to share their agendas with OASIS technical committees to promote convergence where appropriate and advance the interests of the marketplace at-large.” According to Dr. Carol Cosgroves-Sacks, Director, UNECE Trade Division, “Since 1999, OASIS and UN/CEFACT have worked closely together, uniting developers from around the world on ebXML. UN/ECE appreciates the contributions OASIS members bring to the standards process, and we look forward to continuing and broadening our cooperative relationship under the MoU.” ISO Secretary-General, Dr. Lawrence D. Eicher, commented, “Participation from OASIS underscores the role of the Electronic Business MoU as a partnership between the governmental and private sectors. It lays the foundation for a healthy future development of e-commerce to the benefit of all stakeholders.” IEC’s General Secretary, Mr Aharon Amit, added, “We recognize that within electronic business, there is the potential for convergence for all types of data interchange. OASIS joins the MoU in advancing a work program that is tailored to bring all types of information exchange development within a single framework.” About OASIS OASIS (www.oasis-open.org), a not-for-profit, global consortium, drives the development, convergence and adoption of e-business standards. Members themselves set the OASIS technical agenda, using a lightweight, open process expressly designed to promote industry consensus and unite disparate efforts. OASIS is the home for XML conformance, Web services, security, business transactions, electronic publishing, topic maps and other interoperability specifications development. OASIS has more than 400 corporate and individual members in 100 countries around the world. OASIS and the United Nations jointly sponsor ebXML, a global framework for e-business data exchange. OASIS operates XML.org, a community clearinghouse for XML application schemas, vocabularies and related documents. OASIS hosts The XML Cover Pages, an online reference collection for interoperable markup language standards. For more information: Carol Geyer Director of Communications OASIS carol.geyer@oasis-open.org +1.978.667.5115 x209

OASIS ebXML Registry Technical Committee Approves Updated Specs

Boston, MA, USA; 30 January 2002 — The OASIS ebXML Registry Technical Committee announced its approval of the ebXML Registry Services Specification v2.0 and the ebXML Registry Information Model v2.0. Both are updated versions of specifications originally developed under the ebXML Initiative, jointly sponsored by OASIS and the United Nations Centre for Trade Facilitation and Electronic Business (UN/CEFACT). The new versions of the specifications have advanced under the OASIS technical process and have been submitted to the OASIS membership at-large for consideration as OASIS Standards. The OASIS membership will vote on the ebXML Registry specifications in April 2002. The use of registries facilitates business-to-business and intra-enterprise transactions by enabling a manageable method of discovering and connecting with partners, and exchanging business data. ebXML Registry specifications provide a set of services that allow information to be shared between interested parties, enabling prospective trading partners to find one another and conduct business. The shared information, which may include company profiles as well as industry-specific messages, vocabularies and other data, is maintained as objects in a repository and managed by the ebXML Registry Services, defined in the new versions of the specifications. “The goal of our technical committee at OASIS has been to communicate the functionality of ebXML Registry Services to software developers and specify the interface for Registry clients,” explained Kathryn Breininger of Boeing, chair of the OASIS ebXML Registry Technical Committee. “We wanted to provide a basis for future support of more complete ebXML Registry requirements.” In addition to defining the interface to the ebXML Registry Services, the ebXML Registry Services Specification also identifies message definitions and XML schema. A separate document, the ebXML Registry Information Model, provides information on the types of metadata that are stored in the registry as well as the relationships among the various metadata classes. Karl Best, director of technical operations at OASIS, emphasized that the revised ebXML Registry specifications were designed to be compatible with other ebXML specifications. “ebXML is a modular suite of specifications that enables enterprises of any size and in any geographical location to conduct business over the Internet. In addition to the defining and registering business processes through an ebXML Registry, other ebXML specifications provide companies with a standard method to exchange business messages, conduct trading relationships, and communicate data in common terms.” The two revised specifications have been approved by the members of the OASIS ebXML Registry Technical Committee, which include Boeing, Fujitsu, IONA, Logistics Management Institute, NIST, Sterling Commerce, Sun Microsystems, Vitria Technology, webMethods, and others. The specifications are now under review by the entire membership of OASIS; voting on OASIS Standards will be held in April 2002. About OASIS OASIS (www.oasis-open.org), a not-for-profit, global consortium, drives the development, convergence and adoption of e-business standards. Members themselves set the OASIS technical agenda, using a lightweight, open process expressly designed to promote industry consensus and unite disparate efforts. OASIS is the home for XML conformance, Web services, security, business transactions, electronic publishing, topic maps and other interoperability specifications development. OASIS has more than 400 corporate and individual members in 100 countries around the world. OASIS and the United Nations jointly sponsor ebXML, a global framework for e-business data exchange. OASIS operates XML.org, a community clearinghouse for XML application schemas, vocabularies and related documents. OASIS hosts The XML Cover Pages, an online reference collection for interoperable markup language standards. For more information: Carol Geyer Director of Communications OASIS www.oasis-open.org carol.geyer@oasis-open.org +1.978.667.5115 x209

OASIS Members Form Technical Committee to Develop Web Services Standard for Remote Portals

Boston, MA, USA; 28 January 2002 — OASIS, the XML interoperability consortium, today announced its members have formed the OASIS Web Services for Remote Portals (WSRP) Technical Committee to create an XML and Web services standard that will allow the plug-n-play of visual, user-facing Web services with portals or other intermediary Web applications. These WSRP services will enable businesses to provide content or applications in a form that does not require any manual or application-specific adaptation by consuming portals and applications. “Once a WSRP service has been published to a public directory, portal administrators will be able to locate and dynamically integrate it with just a few mouse clicks,” explained Thomas Schaeck of IBM, chair of the OASIS WSRP Technical Committee. “WSRP will enable distributed portal systems where portals share portlets as visual, user-facing Web services for integration with other portals.” WSRP will allow remote portlet Web services to be implemented in a variety of ways, including Java/J2EE and Microsoft’s .NET platform. WSRP services will be built on standard technologies including SOAP, UDDI, and WSDL. “To ensure reuse and compatibility, the OASIS WSRP Technical Committee will work closely with other OASIS Web services initiatives, especially the OASIS Web Services Interactive Applications (WSIA) Technical Committee,” said Karl Best, director of technical operations for OASIS. He noted that the group also plans to harmonize WSRP with existing Web application programming models (e.g., Portals/Portlets) and the work of the W3C (e.g., XForms, DOM, XML Events, XPath, XLink, XML Component API task force). “A fundamental operating principal of OASIS is to enable convergence and avoid overlap whenever possible,” added Best. Members of the OASIS WSRP Technical Committee include consortium sponsors, Bowstreet, Divine, Documentum, Epicentric, Factiva, Fujitsu, Hewlett-Packard Company, IBM, Interwoven, IONA, Oracle Corp., Plumtree Software, Reed Elsevier, Reuters, SilverStream Software, Sun Microsystems, and other OASIS members. Participation remains open to all organizations and individuals interested in advancing Web services for remote portals. Information on joining OASIS can be found on http://www.oasis-open.org/join. OASIS will host an open mail list for public comment on WSRP, and completed work will be freely available to the public without licensing or other fees. Industry Support for WSRP “The WSRP initiative promises to enable Web services to be easily consumed by portals, while promoting interoperability among all platforms,” said Brian Pearson, Web Services Architect, Bowstreet. “Documentum sees Web services as an integral component in the evolution of enterprise content management,” said Una Kearns, XML architect for Documentum (NASDAQ: DCTM) and member of the board of directors for OASIS. “Standardizing the mechanism for plug-n-play integration of user-facing Web services into portals is key to our overall vision. This will enable developers to easily incorporate content management capabilities in applications and deliver content through a variety of channels–reducing the total cost and time necessary to integrate and deploy Web and portal infrastructures. We are delighted to work with our partners and other industry leaders, under OASIS, to further this important area of work.” “The OASIS WSRP effort confirms our belief that standards-based, XML integration technologies are the future of the portal market,” said Ed Anuff, chief strategy officer of Epicentric. “WSRP validates our vision of dynamic, plug and play integration between portals and back-end applications via portlets, and will offer significant benefits to customers and ISVs attempting to lower the cost of portal integration across vendor platforms.” “Fujitsu will actively participate in the OASIS WSRP Technical Committee, as this standardization effort will promote an open standard in the portal market, while providing a standard framework for connecting portal server and Web services,” said Mr. Mitsuhiro Hashimoto, General Manager of Application Server Software Division, Software Group, Fujitsu Limited (TSE:6702). “Fujitsu’s portal server, INTERSTAGE PortalWorks, will support the future standard, which will enable it to become an integration platform for Web Services from multiple providers, beyond simply providing a front-end delivery channel for these services.” “The ability to extend applications as Web services through a standardized remote portal interface will simplify application delivery and increase scalability. The OASIS WSRP will provide a means for portal applications to be deployed transparently to many different vendor portals,” said Michael Karasick, CTO of IBM’s Pervasive Computing Division. “The time is ripe for defining standard interfaces for portals to make use of Web services,”” said Jack Jia, CTO of Interwoven, Inc (Nasdaq: IWOV). “WSRP will make it easier and cheaper for our customers to migrate, manage, tag and deliver business-critical content through their portals.” “As a long-time strong supporter of open standards, Oracle is pleased to participate in the OASIS WSRP Technical Committee,” said Marco Tilli, Vice President of Portal and Hosted Tools at Oracle Corp. “The ability to access remote portlets via Web Services will play an important role in transforming the way content and applications are integrated into portals.” “Plumtree is committed to the development of the WSRP standard in order to help portal customers integrate new applications and services into the portal quickly and easily, increasing the value of their software investments,” said Plumtree CEO, John Kunze. “Plumtree has been at the forefront of Web services development long before the term became an industry buzz word, and we hope our experience will contribute to the creation of a standard that promotes greater interoperability between portal technologies, in order to help the market grow.” “The work of the OASIS WSRP TC is a critical first step in defining the ways in which Web services are exposed to the end user, accelerating the potential for shared portlets or components and enabling a broader channel distribution of these services,” said Jeffrey Broberg, vice president of research and development, eBusiness Solutions for SilverStream Software, Inc. (Nasdaq: SSSW). “SilverStream is committed to providing our customers with standards-based products that offer the highest levels of choice and flexibility, and we’re pleased to be working with the OASIS WSRP TC on this project.” About OASIS OASIS (www.oasis-open.org), a not-for-profit, global consortium, drives the development, convergence and adoption of e-business standards. Members themselves set the OASIS technical agenda, using a lightweight, open process expressly designed to promote industry consensus and unite disparate efforts. OASIS is the home for XML conformance, Web services, security, business transactions, electronic publishing, topic maps and other interoperability specifications development. OASIS has more than 400 corporate and individual members in 100 countries around the world. OASIS and the United Nations jointly sponsor ebXML, a global framework for e-business data exchange. OASIS operates XML.org, a community clearinghouse for XML application schemas, vocabularies and related documents. OASIS also hosts The XML Cover Pages, an online reference collection for interoperable markup language standards. For more information: Carol Geyer Director of Communications OASIS carol.geyer@oasis-open.org +1.978.667.5115 x209

OASIS Members Form Technical Committee to Develop Localization Interchange File Format

Boston, MA, USA; 22 January 2002 — OASIS, the XML interoperability consortium, today announced its members have formed the OASIS XML Localization Interchange File Format (XLIFF) Technical Committee to advance a specification for multi-lingual data exchange. XLIFF will allow any software provider to produce a single interchange format that can be delivered to and understood by any localization service provider. Supporting the entire localization process, XLIFF will be product independent, open enough to allow the development of tools compatible with an implementer’s own proprietary data formats and company culture. “Currently, software companies deliver resources to localization service providers in a number of disparate file formats. In the case of uncommon or nonstandard file formats, either the company or the service provider has to supply a method for the file to be localized. For a software company with many uncommon or nonstandard files, this requirement becomes a major obstacle,” explained Tony Jewtushenko of Oracle, chair of the OASIS XLIFF Technical Committee. “XLIFF will address this situation, streamlining the task of interchanging files through an accepted standard.” Jewtushenko explained, “With our standard, a publisher will be able to use a filter to convert their native file format to an XLIFF file, which will be sent to a localization vendor for translation. When the file is returned, it will be converted back to its original format. This adds considerable value to those who publish software in international markets by making the localization process more robust and efficient.” Initial development of XLIFF was begun by an independent group of localization experts who plan to submit their work to the new OASIS technical committee. Many existing XML formats such as UIML, OpenTag and Translation Memory Exchange (TMX) were used as points of reference in building XLIFF. Yves Savourel, author of ‘XML Internationalization and Localization,’ applauded the consolidation under OASIS, saying, “The creation of an OASIS Technical Committee for XLIFF is good news for our industry. XLIFF brings the promise of much greater interoperability between the tools used by customers and providers of localization services. This should lead to more efficient and less costly processes.” Members of the OASIS XLIFF Technical Committee include consortium sponsors, Commerce One, Hewlett-Packard Company, IBM, Novell, Oracle, SAP, Sun Microsystems, Xerox, and other OASIS members. Participation remains open to all organizations and individuals interested in advancing localization. Information on joining OASIS can be found on http://www.oasis-open.org/join. OASIS will host an open mail list for public comment on XLIFF, and completed work will be freely available to the public without licensing or other fees. About OASIS OASIS (www.oasis-open.org), a not-for-profit, global consortium, drives the development, convergence and adoption of e-business standards. Members themselves set the OASIS technical agenda, using a lightweight, open process expressly designed to promote industry consensus and unite disparate efforts. OASIS is the home for XML conformance, Web services, security, business transactions, electronic publishing, topic maps and other interoperability specifications development. OASIS has more than 400 corporate and individual members in 100 countries around the world. OASIS and the United Nations jointly sponsor ebXML, a global framework for e-business data exchange. OASIS operates XML.org, a community clearinghouse for XML application schemas, vocabularies and related documents. OASIS hosts The XML Cover Pages, an online reference collection for interoperable markup language standards. For more information: Carol Geyer Director of Communications OASIS carol.geyer@oasis-open.org +1.978.667.5115 x209

OASIS Invites Submissions for XSLT/XPath Conformance Test Suite

Boston, MA, USA; 7 January 2002 — OASIS, the XML interoperability consortium, issued an open invitation for public input on the creation of its XSLT/XPath Conformance Test Suite. XSLT and XPath are W3C Recommendations that provide the ability to define a set of rules to transform XML data into a variety of presentation styles, such as human readable reports (HTML) or other XML vocabularies. Organizations and individuals that have created test files for XSLT processors are encouraged to submit their work to the OASIS XSLT/XPath Conformance Technical Committee, which plans to corroborate submissions and publish an amalgam test suite for public use. Formal submissions from both IBM/Lotus and Microsoft have already been received by the OASIS XSLT Technical Committee. “As the number of XSLT processors continues to increase, the need for interoperability and conformance becomes absolutely critical,” observed G. Ken Holman of Crane Softwrights Ltd., chair of the OASIS XSLT/XPath Conformance Technical Committee. “We’re opening our conformance work to the entire industry, so we can be sure our test suite incorporates all the valid work that’s being done in this area. Our goal is to integrate disparate test-set contributions from companies and individuals around the world into a comprehensive XSLT/XPath Conformance Test Suite.” “By increasing the probability of successful interoperability, conformance tests provide developers and users with higher levels of confidence in product quality. Although conformance tests are not a guarantee for interoperability, they are an essential step towards achieving the goal,” said Karl Best, director of technical operations for OASIS. “The work of the OASIS XSLT/XPath Conformance Technical Committee brings the industry together through an open process in an effort to produce one global test suite for the community at-large.” Benefits of the OASIS XSLT/XPath Conformance work extend beyond XSLT and XPath. Holman explained, “Throughout the development of our catalogue, submission and validation process, the OASIS XSLT/XPath Conformance Technical Committee worked to abstract aspects of XSLT and XPath away from the base modules. This resulted in the creation of a generic framework for accepting and validating submissions and building collections of test files. We anticipate our work being of use to developers of other conformance tests –both inside and outside OASIS.” To conform to the OASIS framework, submitters must catalogue their test file collections according to OASIS published document models, and they must employ available validation processes that utilize XSLT and XPath. Complete submission guidelines are posted on http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/xslt/. The OASIS XSLT/XPath Technical Committee adheres to the W3C interpretation of ambiguous or unclear areas of the specifications and does not compete with the W3C in any way on matters pertaining to interpretation of the specifications. About OASIS OASIS (www.oasis-open.org), a not-for-profit, global consortium, drives the development, convergence, and adoption of e-business standards. Members themselves set the OASIS technical agenda, using a lightweight, open process expressly designed to promote industry consensus and unite disparate efforts. OASIS is the home for XML conformance, Web services, security, business transactions, electronic publishing, topic maps and other interoperability specifications development. OASIS has more than 400 corporate and individual members in 100 countries around the world. OASIS and the United Nations jointly sponsor ebXML, a global framework for e-business data exchange. OASIS operates XML.org, a community clearinghouse for XML application schemas, vocabularies and related documents. OASIS hosts The XML Cover Pages, an online reference collection for interoperable markup language standards. For more information: Carol Geyer Director of Communications OASIS carol.geyer@oasis-open.org +1.978.667.5115 x209

XML Standards Converge at OASIS

Boston, MA, USA; 19 December 2001–The trend to consolidate XML standards development strengthened in 2001 as independent industry groups and vendors alike chose to migrate their work to OASIS, the XML interoperability consortium. Citing the need for wider adoption and international participation, the groups and companies expressed confidence that the open OASIS technical process offered the strongest potential for advancing their specifications. In Web services, independent efforts from WSUI.Org and WSXL from IBM joined to advance the OASIS Web Services Component Model specification. In the security space, AuthXML and S2ML combined their efforts to produce one universally accepted OASIS standard, SAML. BEA Systems chose to submit their XOCP specification to the consortium and help start the OASIS Business Transaction Protocol (BTP) Technical Committee. XML schema languages, TREX and RELAX, combined their work into RELAX NG at OASIS. Commerce One submitted its xCBL XML business document library to OASIS as a starting point for work on the Universal Business Language. MSI Solutions contributed their CRML customer relationship specification to the OASIS Customer Information Quality Technical Committee. TopicMaps.Org moved development of its ISO standard for navigating information to OASIS. The new OASIS Provisioning Services Technical Committee is evaluating contributions from the XRPM Working Group, the ADpr Initiative and developers of ITML. “We realize it is difficult for most companies to track–let alone fund participation–in all the relevant standards work that’s happening,” said Patrick Gannon, president and CEO of OASIS. “By pursuing convergence and offering a home for advancing standards created externally, OASIS gives companies the opportunity to contribute to the broadest possible range of significant work through one membership in OASIS.” “By bringing specifications to OASIS, industry groups significantly broaden global support for their work,” added Colin Evans of Intel Corporation, chair of the OASIS Board of Directors. “The real increase in the breadth and depth of technical committees shows that OASIS is rapidly becoming the central location for XML convergence planning.” Many developers choose to work within OASIS in order to take advantage of close liaison activities with the consortium’s other technical committees. “Having separate groups for security information exchange and for security policy definition allows the two distinct, but overlapping communities of interest to focus their efforts on a managable set of concerns,” explained Carlisle Adams of Entrust and Hal Lockhart of Entegrity, co-chairs of the OASIS eXtensible Access Control Markup Language (XACML) Technical Committee. “Because both technical committees are at OASIS, we are better able to coordinate our efforts, employ common terminology and make use of each other’s work.” OASIS’ connection with other major standards bodies also attracts developers. Jon Bosak of Sun Microsystems, chair of the OASIS Universal Business Language Technical Committee and organizer of the working group that created XML, said, “The OASIS technical process gives us the open and democratic standards framework needed for credibility among businesses large and small, and its close working relationship with UN/CEFACT, maintainers of the international EDIFACT standard for EDI, makes OASIS the obvious choice for UBL.” “One significant advantage of migrating development to OASIS is the consortium’s reputation and international standing. The OASIS technical process is widely regarded as an open, reliable, proven method of development in which everyone has a voice,” said Ed Anuff of Epicentric, a founder of WSUI.Org, which contributed its Web Services User Interface standard to the OASIS Web Services Component Model (WSCM) Technical Committee. “A specification that has been developed within OASIS has a much greater chance of achieving widespread adoption.” In addition to accepting submissions of externally produced specifications, OASIS offers other avenues of consortia cooperation, including joint development, fast-tracked specification approval and shared resources. About OASIS OASIS, a not-for-profit, global consortium, drives the development, convergence and adoption of e-business standards. Members themselves set the OASIS technical agenda, using a lightweight, open process expressly designed to promote industry consensus and unite disparate efforts. OASIS is the home for XML conformance, Web services, security, business transactions, electronic publishing, topic maps and other interoperability specifications development. OASIS has more than 400 corporate and individual members in 100 countries around the world. OASIS and the United Nations jointly sponsor ebXML, a global framework for e-business data exchange. OASIS operates XML.org, a community clearinghouse for XML application schemas, vocabularies and related documents. OASIS hosts The XML Cover Pages, an online reference collection for interoperable markup language standards. For more information: Carol Geyer Director of Communications OASIS carol.geyer@oasis-open.org +1.978.667.5115 x209

OASIS Technical Committee Adopts CRML XML Standard for Defining Customer Relationships

Boston, MA, USA; 17 December 2001 — The OASIS Customer Information Quality (CIQ) Technical Committee announced that it has accepted the submission of CRML, the XML vocabulary specification that defines customer relationships. Originally developed by MSI Business Solutions Pty. Ltd., CRML provides an open, application- and vendor-independent method for describing any type of customer relationship. The OASIS CIQ Technical Committee plans to adopt CRML into its family of customer information specifications including xCIL and xNAL, which define unique customer characteristics. “Up until now, the OASIS CIQ Technical Committee has concentrated on defining standards to describe characteristics of a customer, such as name, address, phone number, email, etc. Now with CRML, we are able to describe relationships between customers from a business and personal point of view,” said Ram Kumar of MSI, chair of the OASIS CIQ Technical Committee. “Because CRML uses xCIL and xNAL as the basis for its vocabulary, it provides the third and final specification needed to identify all aspects of customer information.” Under the CRML standard, a customer can be a person or an organization. CRML accommodates complex customer relationships including person-to-person, person-to-business, and business-to-business. “The rapid adoption of e-business has created a new world of interoperability between organizations, systems, processes, platforms, tools and, most importantly, data, ” commented George Langley, director and founder of MSI Business Solutions Pty. Ltd., a sponsor member of OASIS. “To ensure reliability and success, it is necessary to define standards that enable interoperability of data before we even start to think about how other entities can interoperate. A standard way of defining customer relationships and customer information is essential for interoperability to occur. CRML is a major step towards achieving this, and we are confident that migrating its development to OASIS will result in the widest possible adoption of the standard.” “OASIS welcomes this submission from MSI, ” noted Karl Best, director of technical operations for OASIS. “We applaud the growing trend for vendors and industry groups to transfer their XML development efforts to OASIS. We offer a centralized, vendor-neutral forum where developers can collaborate and reach consensus on the use of standards through an open process.” Industry Support for CRML “CRML extends the capabilities of the OASIS CIQ Technical Committee beyond standardizing the description of a customer’s characteristics to include their business and personal relationships. By enabling the capture of non-address customer data, such as communication devices, email, personal details, etc., CRML may enhance the value of ebXML as a robust standard, ” says Marcus Goncalves, CTO of Virtual Access Networks. “As a member of this OASIS technical committee, I’m pleased with the results we achieved. CRML not only helps improve the interoperability of XML-based data and applications–mainly eCRM and Web services–it can also enhance UDDI’s directory services functionality by providing a global standard for name and address data.” David R.R. Webber of XML Global, another member of the OASIS CIQ Technical Committee agreed, adding, “We intend to keep CRML as a separate but related standard to xCIL and xNAL. By doing this, we see CRML fitting into ebXML and possibly other areas such as UDDI and W3C work.” About OASIS OASIS (www.oasis-open.org) is the XML interoperability consortium, advancing collaboration, convergence and adoption of open specifications for structured information exchange. Members themselves set the OASIS technical agenda, using a lightweight, open process expressly designed to promote industry consensus and unite disparate efforts. OASIS is the home for XML conformance, web services, security, business transactions, electronic publishing, topic maps and other interoperability specifications development. OASIS has more than 400 corporate and individual members in 100 countries around the world. OASIS and the United Nations jointly sponsor ebXML, a global framework for electronic business data exchange. OASIS operates XML.org, a community clearinghouse for XML application schemas, vocabularies and related documents. OASIS hosts The XML Cover Pages, an online reference collection for interoperable markup language standards. For more information: Carol Geyer Director of Communications OASIS carol.geyer@oasis-open.org +1.978.667.5115 x209

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