in031008
L2/03-272
August 1, 2003
INCITS
CONTRIBUTION TO ANSI CONCERNING THE AVAILABILITY OF ISO
CODES
FROM: INCITS Executive
Board
SUBJECT: Availability of ISO Codes
INCITS
wishes to express its concern over recent positions taken by ANSI and by the ISO
CPSG with respect to ISO 3166, ISO 4217 and ISO 639, in particular ISO 3166,
Country Codes. In brief, the issue is whether ANSI or other ISO national
bodies, or ISO itself, should charge royalty fees for the use of the standard,
in addition to a standard copyright fee for purchase or reproduction of the
standard. In ANSI's on-line newsletter for May 2003, ANSI reported that:
"The CPSG also discussed the ISO 3166 country codes, ISO 4217
currencycodes, and ISO 639 language codes and proposed clarifications for
their distribution. Noting the necessity for a number of ISO standards
to be published as databases, the CPSG asked that the Secretary General
recommend a consideration of the publciation of some ISO standards as such,
and promoted studying related pricing, delivery, and maintenance
issues.
"CPSG Recommendation: CPSG considered the ambiguity between
reproducing of data elements from ISO 3166, 4217 and 6349 for the purpose of
implementation and for commercial exploitation and proposed the following
clarifications:
- The reproduction of the full standard shall follow the normal copyright
rules
- No copyright fee shall be charged for the reproduction of the 2 digit
codes of ISO 3166, 4217 and 639 lists in books, magazines, acadeic work and
for internal use by companies, institutes and organization
- Software developers or commercial resellers requesting permission to
embed ISO codes in their products for resale will be asked to purchase each
code in electronic format and pay either an annual fee or a one time fee and
any applicable maintenance fees required (to be further discussed with CPSG
by correspondence)"
The final point has been amplified by
ANSI in a summary on use of the ISO codes as:
"Companies who develop software products for sale to other parties
are adding value to their products by including the data elements from an ISO
Code in proper applications ...via the sale of the product the developing
company is not only being compensated for its direct efforts to incorporate
the ISO Codes in apropriate locations but it is also being compensated for
trhe value the ISO Codes have added to its product. The ISO community should
also be compensated for providing the intellectual property required to
incorporate the value-added features into the product."
While
this raises many debatable issues, INCITS' overriding concern is that this
represents a radical departure from established practice with respect to
standards. We are not concerned here with the fees collected by many
standards setting organizations for purchasing copies of standards.
Rather, the proposal being discussed would in effect place a charge
upon implementing a standard by enforcing a fee associated with each copy
of a product built according to or incorporating the standard. In essence,
therefore, this charges users of a standard, be they direct (in the case of
manufacturers) or indirect (in the case of product consumers) to actually use
the standard.
In INCITS' opinion this would constitute a strong
disincentive for manufacturers, large consumers and consumer groups to
develop standards within standards organizations which might adopt this process
or to subsequently make use of the standards in their products and services.
Standards participants, whether manufacturers, consumers, government
agencies or other entities, bring their own information to the standards
development process so that they can share in the resultant standard. In
other words, standards participants have the expectation that in exchange for
their "valuable and volunteer" contributions, they will be able to "use" the
fruits of their consensus-building process without further hindrance.
In
the Information Technology industry, where many consortia and alternative
standards-setting models to the formal standards development process already
flourish, INCITS believes that the imposition of such usage fees would be likely
to drive participation in standards development away from organizations which
implement them. At the very least standards participants would probably adjust
their priorities for involvement as a result.
Accordingly, INCITS
requests the ANSI ICO Council to
- Adopt a position that fees for using the contents of standards, as opposed
to fees for the purchase of the standards themselves, is inappropriate
- Ensure that ANSI does not go forward with such a policy
- Take this issue forward to ISO Council in the strongest possible terms to
dissuade ISO and its members from this approach and from ISO policy