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Open specifications

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An Open Specification is a specification created & controlled, in an open & fair process, by an association or a standardization body intending to achieve interoperability and interchangeability. An open specification is not controlled by a single company, individual or by a group with discriminatory membership criteria. Copies of Open Specifications are available free of charge or for a moderate fee and can be implemented under reasonable and non discriminatory licensing (RAND) terms by all interested parties.

Specifications should not be confused with standards.

Many standards and specification are touted as open while falling short in practise. Many formal bodies charge per-copy fees for the document in order to defer the operating costs of the working group. This is rarely seen as negating the open status of the product, although free electronic distribution is usually seen as preferrable.

See also

Open standard for a discussion of what open means.

Open standards are publicly available and implementable standards.