Normalisation informatique et marchés de services : le cas du XML


Autoria(s): Vion Antoine; Diaz Pablo; Dudouet François-Xavier; Graz Jean-Christophe; Graz, J.-C. (ed.); Niang, N. (ed.)
Data(s)

01/03/2013

Resumo

Extensible Markup Language (XML) is a generic computing language that provides an outstanding case study of commodification of service standards. The development of this language in the late 1990s marked a shift in computer science as its extensibility let store and share any kind of data. Many office suites software rely on it. The chapter highlights how the largest multinational firms pay special attention to gain a recognised international standard for such a major technological innovation. It argues that standardisation processes affects market structures and can lead to market capture. By examining how a strategic use of standardisation arenas can generate profits, it shows that Microsoft succeeded in making its own technical solution a recognised ISO standard in 2008, while the same arena already adopted two years earlier the open source standard set by IBM and Sun Microsystems. Yet XML standardisation also helped to establish a distinct model of information technology services at the expense of Microsoft monopoly on proprietary software

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_8CFA8E5D4EB4

http://www.pressesdesciencespo.fr/fr/livre/?GCOI=27246100765140&fa=description

isbn:9782724612905

reroid:R007252974

Idioma(s)

fr

Publicador

Paris: Presses de Science Po

Fonte

Services sans frontières : mondialisation, normalisation et régulation de l'économie des services

Palavras-Chave #services; international standards; office suites; computing; XML; globalisation; international economy; multinational corporations; rent; competition
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart

incollection