Not very appealing: ISO/IEC kicks out appeals
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started by: arebentiarebenti
on: 1218808619|%e %b %Y, %H:%M %Z|agohover
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A rejection means that the ISO 29500 could be published and set into effect unless further complaints are launched. Yet another possibility to study the way ISO works.
Not very appealing: ISO/IEC kicks out appeals
arebentiarebenti 1218808619|%e %b %Y, %H:%M %Z|agohover

Do you know Mr. Frost and Mr. Buck from ISO? Here they are again with "great news" from the International Standards Organisation.
ISO and IEC members give go ahead on ISO/IEC DIS 29500 which is rather about the rejection of the appeals.

"None of the appeals from Brazil, India, South Africa and Venezuela received the support for further processing of two-thirds of the members of the ISO Technical Management Board and IEC Standardization Management Board, as required by ISO/IEC rules governing the work of their joint technical committee ISO/IEC JTC 1, Information technology."

A rejection means that the ISO 29500 could be published and set into effect unless further complaints are launched. We and others discussed before the appeal water down documents and the offensive Bryden interview. From this ISO appeal recommendation document we may get a clue what the voting process was precisely about:

14. The TMB and the SMB may choose one of two options for each appeal:
14.1 Not to process the appeal any further. This is the equivalent of denying the
appeal. If all four are denied, publication of ISO/IEC 29500 may proceed. The NB
concerned may appeal this decision to the Councils.
14.2 Process the appeal further. This has the consequence that a conciliation panel
must be organized. In this event it seems indicated to organize a single
conciliation panel for all the appeals being processed.

So apparently option one was chosen. Additionally the recommendation was:

The processing of the ISO/IEC DIS 29500 project has been conducted in conformity with the ISO/IEC JTC 1 Directives, with decisions determined by the votes expressed by the relevant ISO and IEC national bodies under their own responsibility, and consequently, for the reasons mentioned above, the appeals should not be processed further.

I wonder what the subject of the vote precisely was as recommendation 20 apparently goes further than 14.1 and 14.2.

Just curious, how does the voting work

It is evident to me that the appeal voting is highly vulnerable to manipulation when you have to get a 2/3 majority. The voting was not even on the substance of the appeals but on "further processing" them and I am not aware of any "further processing" formality decision requirement. A 2/3 majority rule always means that one option is favoured in advance. In ISO and national bodies it is common for processing of specifications where the bias is usually towards adoption. Do you need a 2/3 majority for "processing further" the appeal or "rejecting it before consideration"? You get the point. At times you vote until you get the wanted results. A friend of mine was furious about the ISO/IEC decision and asked himself similar questions:

Where is it written that it is needed a support of 2/3 to process an appeal? This could be considered a humiliation for the countries that have summitted the appeals.

Looks like the ISO/IEC procedural rules and their interpretation offer great surprises again. Or as a more devilish commentator suggested

It is an elegant abuse of newly invented rules to justify the abuse of previous rules. You have to admire the way it even sounds democratic…

Or as ISO/IEC words it:

Experiences from the ISO/IEC 29500 process will also provide important input to ISO and IEC and their respective national bodies and national committees in their efforts to continually improve standards development policies and procedures.

or as Mr. Bryden would say:

Some of the negative publicity is quite extreme and as ISO's Secretary General it's not exactly pleasant for me to see ISO vilified, particularly when much of the extreme criticism is based on false assumptions and a lack of understanding of what ISO is and how it works.

We will find out once again. It is a challenging task to carefully study all the details but sure someone would do.

This is not the end

The NB concerned may appeal this decision to the Councils.

I am curious if that would happen. The effects are described by the ISO press release

According to the ISO/IEC rules, DIS 29500 can now proceed to publication as an ISO/IEC International Standard. This is expected to take place within the next few weeks on completion of final processing of the document, and subject to no further appeals against the decision.

Effectively it would make a lot of sense for National Bodies to do it.

last edited on 1218808770|%e %b %Y, %H:%M %Z|agohover by arebenti + show more
unfold Not very appealing: ISO/IEC kicks out appeals by arebentiarebenti, 1218808619|%e %b %Y, %H:%M %Z|agohover
Re: Not very appealing: ISO/IEC kicks out appeals
Luc BollenLuc Bollen 1218838783|%e %b %Y, %H:%M %Z|agohover

The JTC1 Directives say this:

11.3 Appeal Against a JTC 1 Decision

11.3.3 The Secretaries-General shall, following whatever consultations they deem appropriate, refer the appeal together with their comments to the TMB/SMB within one month after receipt of the appeal.

11.3.4 The TMB/SMB shall decide whether an appeal shall be further processed or not. If the decision is in favour of proceeding, the Chairmen of the TMB/SMB shall form a conciliation panel (see 9.2).

So,
- the directives do not ask the Secretaries-General to make a recommendation, but only to provide their comments.
- the directives do not indicate how the TMB/SMB have to take their decision.

I was quite surprised to see that the Secretaries-General made a recommendation and imposed a vote to the TMB/SMB (and wrote the ballot text is a quite strange and complex way, more on this later). I thought that the usual way of working at JTC1 was through consensus, as indicated in the directives themselves:

1.2 General Provisions
These Directives are inspired by the principle that the objective in the development of International Standards should be the achievement of consensus between those concerned rather than a decision based on counting votes.

But rather than asking the TMB/SMB to reach a consensus, the Secretaries-General asked them to vote. Is this the usual way of working?

Now, we learn in the press release that the vote required 2/3 support to pass:

None of the appeals from Brazil, India, South Africa and Venezuela received the support for further processing of two-thirds of the members of the ISO Technical Management Board and IEC Standardization Management Board, as required by ISO/IEC rules governing the work of their joint technical committee ISO/IEC JTC 1, Information technology.

Of course, no reference is given to explain which rule requires 2/3 support for the vote to pass, and I found nothing written in the directives about this…

Let's look again at the text of the proposed ballot:

The members of the Technical Management Board are invited to indicate, by replying yes, no or abstention on EITHER a) OR b) for each of the four appeals:
a) not to process the appeal any further: […]
OR
b) to process one or more of the appeals, which would require setting up of a conciliation panel […]

As I understand it, the press release means that option (b) required 2/3 of the votes to pass. It also means that option (a) required only 1/3 of the votes to pass. But who knows exactly ? With no clear written rules, and a ballot that nobody can understand, you may conclude whatever you want…

Like the handling of the contradictions and the handling of the BRM, the handling of the appeals seems to me to be a complete farce…

To allow a minimum of transparency and avoid completely loosing their face, JTC1 should at least publish the reference of the rule requiring 2/3 support, and the total count of Yes, No and Abstention votes for each of option (a) and (b).

unfold Re: Not very appealing: ISO/IEC kicks out appeals by Luc BollenLuc Bollen, 1218838783|%e %b %Y, %H:%M %Z|agohover
Re: Not very appealing: ISO/IEC kicks out appeals
arebentiarebenti 1218881492|%e %b %Y, %H:%M %Z|agohover

Thank you very much, this is quite helpful. ISO's Mr. Bryden said:

Some of the negative publicity is quite extreme and as ISO's Secretary General it's not exactly pleasant for me to see ISO vilified, particularly when much of the extreme criticism is based on false assumptions and a lack of understanding of what ISO is and how it works.

To my great surprise even NB were often not aware of how ISO works according to its procedures.

Procedural unclarity and the lack of raison d'etat in the ranks of ISO leadership contribute to the mess. It is not only that procedures are unclear. To a certain degree they always would be. Perfect rules are utopia.

What matters to me is how rules bias the members to go in a certain direction.

unfold Re: Not very appealing: ISO/IEC kicks out appeals by arebentiarebenti, 1218881492|%e %b %Y, %H:%M %Z|agohover
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