BECTA is interested to find out whether the software giant
has withheld information from its competitors on purpose. The issue is even
more interesting since it is possible that some improper influence has been
exerted over the International Standard Organization (ISO) to accept OOXML as a
standard together with the older Open Document Format, a file format that was
developed by Sun Microsystems and that has its full specifications made public.
The British commission has asserted that because of
Microsoft products’ lack of interoperability, the British Educational System is
paying more money on software products than it should. In 2005, the same
commission published a study according to which British primary schools could
save up to half their costs if they would choose open source software products,
and give up the proprietary ones.
Another issue raised by the commission is the way Microsoft
licenses its products to the schools. The company’s policy is that all
computers in a campus must have Microsoft license. BECTA has considered this an
anticompetitive practice.
According to the Associated Press, Microsoft’s spokeswoman Anne-Sophie de Brancion stated that “Microsoft is deeply committed to education and interoperability”, and that the company has started to develop tools that will enable Office to work better with files in ODF.