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Germany committing to ODF and open document standards

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Germany committing to ODF and open document standards - The Document Foundation Blog

21 comments
  • I hope they keep it this time, I'm tired of seeing these, and then "oh, MS gave us a great deal soooo"

    • I think they were always on a smaller scale. With this one, I'm somewhat hopeful that it'll stick, and be a long term effort.

      committee consisting of representatives of Germany’s federal government and the state governments

    • LiMux

      MS didn't just give Munich a better deal, they actively went out of their way to sabotage this perfectly feasable & already working project in several ways.

      And iirc similar things happened in other places in Germany / EU.

  • Machine translation of the linked German article:

    Decision 2025/06

    The IT planning council finds that open exchange formats are necessary for the nationwide cooperation and welcomes the decision of the Digital Minister Conference. Open formats and open interfaces are an important building block for the necessary transformation process of public administration in Germany on the way to more digital sovereignty and innovations.

    The IT planning council is committed to ensuring that open formats such as the Open Document Format (ODF) are increasingly being used in public administration and will become the standard for document exchange by 2027. He commissioned the standardization board with the implementation.

    The IT planning council also recognizes that the exchange of documents by e-mail is no longer up to date for the preparation and follow-up of conferences for the preparation and follow-up. He commissioned the Fitko to present a concept for providing a collaboration solution up to the 48th session.

    This is a big thing actually. Although the phrasing still sounds a bit vague to my ears: "The IT planning council is committed to ensuring that open formats (...) will become the standard for document exchange by 2027" is not the same as "Open formats will become the standard for document exchange by 2027"...

21 comments