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		<title>Digital Standards Organization publishes &quot;standards for standards&quot;</title>
		<link>http://www.digistan.org/forum/t-147224/digital-standards-organization-publishes-standards-for-standards</link>
		<description>Posts in the discussion thread &quot;Digital Standards Organization publishes &quot;standards for standards&quot;&quot; - Digistan has published its first &quot;standard for standards&quot;, the Consensus-oriented specification system. or COSS.</description>
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		<lastBuildDate>Thu, 29 Jul 2010 21:48:22 +0000</lastBuildDate>
		
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				<guid>http://www.digistan.org/forum/t-147224#post-798855</guid>
				<title>Re: Digital Standards Organization publishes &quot;standards for standards&quot;</title>
				<link>http://www.digistan.org/forum/t-147224/digital-standards-organization-publishes-standards-for-standards#post-798855</link>
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				<pubDate>Wed, 02 Jun 2010 09:46:36 +0000</pubDate>
				<wikidot:authorName>Orpheus1</wikidot:authorName>				<wikidot:authorUserId>423848</wikidot:authorUserId>				<content:encoded>
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						 <p><a href="http://www.jobs-jena.net">http://www.jobs-jena.net</a></p> 
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				<guid>http://www.digistan.org/forum/t-147224#post-449726</guid>
				<title>Digital Standards Organization publishes &quot;standards for standards&quot;</title>
				<link>http://www.digistan.org/forum/t-147224/digital-standards-organization-publishes-standards-for-standards#post-449726</link>
				<description></description>
				<pubDate>Wed, 15 Apr 2009 13:24:30 +0000</pubDate>
				<wikidot:authorName>pieterh</wikidot:authorName>				<wikidot:authorUserId>99</wikidot:authorUserId>				<content:encoded>
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						 <p>In 2007, the Digistan workgroup started designing a framework for grass-roots development of free and open digital standards. Today Digistan publishes its first specification, <a href="http://www.digistan.org/spec:1">COSS</a>, and a <a href="http://spec.digistan.org">reference implementation</a> in the form of a pre-configured wiki.</p> <p>Digistan founding member Alberto Barrionuevo explains the reasons for COSS: <em>we wanted to offer small teams a fast, cheap, and flexible way to develop their specifications into free and open standards. Setting up a foundation is an important step in a software standard's history, but it's a large step that most small teams can't make.</em></p> <p>COSS is a fully-distributed peer-to-peer model. André Rebentisch, who helped build the Digital Standards Organization and COSS, says: <em>each contributor makes a unilateral grant, allowing others to use their work under specific conditions. Those conditions include the right to branch and merge, which is radical for specifications but a much appreciated freedom in the free software community.</em></p> <p>The COSS lifecycle defines a specification as a contract between designers, implementers, and users. The weight of the contract depends on where the specification is, in its lifecycle: from <strong>raw</strong>, to <strong>draft</strong>, to <strong>stable</strong>, <strong>legacy</strong>, and through to <strong>retired</strong>. COSS editor Pieter Hintjens concludes, <em>this model allows for experimentation, and standardization, which are normally opposed to each other.</em></p> <p>Digistan has developed a reference specification, a web site that acts as a template for projects. One such project has already started, the <a href="http://www.restms.org">RestMS</a> specification for web messaging.</p> 
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