Introduction
OASIS forms more Web service standards while proposing security, e-commerce standards, while targeting There are also many efforts in the public domain and specific application markets.
OASIS is known in its management transparency and workflow. OASIS members have set up the technical agenda to promote the industries through simple workflows, and unify different perspectives. All of Oasis will be recognized by public voting, and management is responsible and is not subject to other factors. Both the OASIS Council and the Technical Advisory Committee are produced by democratic elections for a term of 2 years. Oasis leadership is due to personal abilities rather than funding, corporate background or special appointment.
Development History
OASIS was originally established in Non-SGML open organization in 1993. It was initially committed to promoting the development of product interoperability architecture on behalf of users and product providers, and supporting standard generalized markers (StandardGeneralizedMarkUplanguage). In 1998, the official name of the organization to replace OASIS open organization to represent their work in the field of technology has been extended to the range of Extensible Markup Language (XML) and related standards beyond. Since its inception, OASIS has developed into a more than 600 organizations from over 100 countries, the company, the number of participants more than 5,000 international organizations.
OASIS now has the most widely accepted XML and Web services standards two information portal, CoverPages and XML.org. OASIS's Member Branch includes CGMopen, DCML, LEGALXML, PKI, and UDDI. By the end of August 2010, there were two hundred and sixty-six hundred of organizations, groups, universities, research institutes and companies such as IBM and Microsoft. The standards driven by Oasis include access and identity policy security, format control, and data input output content, directory pools, directory, and registry standards, and service-oriented architectural methods and models, network management and service quality, and interoperability.