A group of standards bodies and industry groups has joined
forces to collaborate on a strategy behind future cloud computing
standardization efforts, the Object Management Group announced this
week.
"Rather than one-by-one agreements and developing hundreds of
standards that overlap, we're working together," Richard Soley,
chairman of and CEO of the Object Management Group said Wednesday
during a panel discussion at the National Defense University
Information Resources Management College's Cloud Computing
Symposium.
The group of standards bodies, called "Cloud Standards
Coordination," includes the Organization for the Advancement of
Structured Information Standards, Object Management Group,
Distributed Management Task Force, Storage and Network Industry
Association, Open Grid Forum, Cloud Security Alliance, Open Cloud
Consortium, Cloud Computing Interoperability Forum and the TM
Forum.
The body is looking at standardization in a number of specific
areas, including security, interfaces to
infrastructure-as-a-service, information about deployment such as
resource and component descriptions, management frameworks, data
exchange formats and cloud taxonomies and reference models.
The form and scope of those standards is to be determined, and
Soley said the groups are looking for much more input from both
users and industry. "Standards don't work without heavy
participation by prospective end users of those standards," he
said. To help facilitate that process, the bodies have set up a
wiki to allow community and customer participation in determining
the best paths for standards development.
Community participation, deliberate action, and planning must be
a vital part of any successful standards process, Gartner VP David
Cearley said during the same panel conversation. Otherwise, he
said, cloud standards efforts could fail miserably.
"Standards is one of those things that could absolutely strangle
and kill everything we want to do in cloud computing if we do it
wrong," he said. "We need to make sure that as were approaching
standards, we're approaching standards more as they were approached
in the broader internet, just in time."
Earlier this year, a group of companies and organizations
created the Cloud Computing Manifesto, a group that quickly became
an object lesson on the potential pratfalls of standards efforts,
as several key companies, including Microsoft, Google, and Amazon,
decided not to participate.