SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Integrating IT >> Middleware - Utilities

Microsoft slams secret cloud manifesto

Microsoft slams secret cloud manifesto

By:  Dan Nystedt Martyn Williams and Elizabeth Montalbano  On: 25 Mar 2009 For: IDG News Service (New York Bureau)(NA) Creator

Microsoft claims a document offering guidelines for cloud-computing interoperability was developed without its input

Microsoft is criticizing the drafting of what it has characterized as a secret "Cloud Manifesto" that sets guidelines for interoperability among cloud-computing networks.

In a blog posting attributed to Steven Martin, Microsoft spilled the beans on a document it said has been drafted privately and that it was asked to sign without revisions.

"Very recently we were privately shown a copy of the document, warned that it was a secret, and told that it must be signed 'as is,' without modifications or additional input," according to the post.

While the company fully supports the concept of drafting guidelines for interoperability in cloud computing, Microsoft said it was "admittedly disappointed by the lack of openness in the development" of the document.

"To ensure that the work on such a project is open, transparent and complete, we feel strongly that any 'manifesto' should be created, from its inception, through an open mechanism like a Wiki, for public debate and comment, all available through a Creative Commons license," Martin wrote in the post. "After all, what we are really seeking are ideas that have been broadly developed, meet a test of open, logical review and reflect principles on which the broad community agrees. This would help avoid biases toward one technology over another, and expand the opportunities for innovation."

Historically when there are emerging industrywide trends in computing, companies building the technology to support them will get together and try to decide on certain agreed-upon technology and/or business-process standards to make things work smoothly.

These processes inevitably leave some people out of the early development process, said Steven O'Grady, an analyst with RedMonk.

"This is historically how standards evolve, how technical movements develop," he said. "It's generally a coalition of certain parties that have mutual interests. Unfortunately, they tend to be exclusionary."

Microsoft itself has been a part of one of these very public coalitions. The development of a set of technology specifications for interoperability of certain business processes under the umbrella Web Services, shortened to "WS," was largely overseen and driven by Microsoft and IBM, with other vendors feeling left out of that process.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 1164   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Dan Nystedt  Martyn Williams and Elizabeth Montalbano Dan Nystedt Martyn Williams and Elizabeth Montalbano is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

Canadian cloud manifesto author surprised by Microsoft protest
Canadian cloud manifesto author surprised by Microsoft protestContrary to Microsoft's claims of being shut out, Microsoft was among the first companies to review the document, says Reuven Cohen of Enomaly. The Open Cloud Manifesto will be released on Monday
Year In Review: Jumping on the cloud computing bandwagon
Year In Review: Jumping on the cloud computing bandwagon2008 may have been a year of hype for cloud computing vendors announcing offerings of their own, and enterprise IT shops creating their private version. But, it wasn't without security and privacy concerns from industry observers
Enterprise IT shops embrace private clouds
Enterprise IT shops embrace private clouds The IT shops of companies such as Bechtel, Deutsche Bank, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch and BT are increasingly embracing the notion of modeling their infrastructure after public service providers such as Amazon and Google
Inside next week's Cloud Computing Conference in Toronto
we’ve published so much about how (and whether) to do cloud computing that it should have been easier t
blog comments powered by Disqus