Why open standards are extremely beneficial to end users
Whenever I talk to other technology users — including CTOs, CSOs and ICT managers, who in theory should have a certain level of expertise — I realise that most of them never consider standards when using applications, devices or websites.
Users just want everything to work, but they don’t realise the fundamental role that standards, especially open standards, play in making this happen. Open standards actually offer users a significant advantage over the proprietary solutions they use every day.
An open standard is a publicly available set of rules that govern how technology works. Anyone can use, develop or improve them. Examples include HTML for websites, USB for devices and PDF for documents. (And of course, the Open Document Format – ODF – as used by LibreOffice.) These are not owned by any company, and therefore benefit end users.
That’s why they’re important to you.
1. You are not tied in
Open standards reduce vendor lock-in. This means that users are not forced to use a single product or ecosystem from a single company to have control over their data and tools.
For example, documents saved in an open format can be managed with multiple applications. If you change your device or software, your files will still work. You can choose the best solution for you, rather than being forced to use what the supplier provides.
It’s easy to take this freedom for granted until it’s gone. Just ask the Windows 10 users who had to abandon working software and PCs due to Microsoft’s business strategies.
2. Better compatibility between devices and applications
Open standards enable different products to work together more seamlessly. For example, your phone can connect to any laptop, your browser can open any website and your headphones can connect to any device. None of this is accidental. It is the result of open, shared standards.
For end users, this means fewer headaches and less time spent troubleshooting or wondering why something ‘should work’ but doesn’t.
3. More competition and better products
When standards are open, more companies can use them. This increases competition.
Competition leads to better prices, more advanced features, and much faster growth. Instead of handcuffing users with proprietary formats, companies must earn their trust.
As users, you benefit from greater choice and improved quality throughout the entire value chain.
4. Longer data life
Proprietary formats can disappear. Companies may change direction, discontinue products or go out of business. Ask the Windows 10 users mentioned earlier for more information.
Open standards tend to last much longer because they are not tied to the business strategies of a single company. Even after decades, data stored in an open format remains accessible, convertible and preservable.
This is important if users want their photos, documents or work to survive for longer than the lifespan of a single product.
5. Better accessibility
Open standards are often designed with accessibility in mind or to facilitate the proper functioning of accessibility tools.
Screen readers, alternative input devices and assistive software all rely on consistent, documented rules. When standards are open, developers and accessibility experts can test, improve and adapt them.
The result is technology that works better for more users.
6. Greater transparency and trust
With open standards, the rules are visible. Anyone can examine, test and report on them.
This transparency helps to identify security issues earlier and reduces the risk of behaviour that only benefits one supplier going unnoticed. While open does not automatically mean secure, it does mean fewer black boxes.
Over time, this increases users’ trust in the technology.
7. A healthier technology ecosystem
Open standards encourage collaboration and combat fragmentation between products because developers can focus on improvements rather than reinventing the basics or figuring out how to work around closed systems.
A healthier ecosystem means faster innovation and fewer dead ends for users. Things evolve, but they don’t break all the time or at the whim of vendors who rely on planned obsolescence.
Summary
In short, open standards are not flashy and are rarely directly visible to users, but they quietly influence the reliability, flexibility and fairness of the technologies we use every day.
When standards are open, users have more control and choice and experience fewer surprises. And in the long run, these are significant advantages.













