"It is perhaps no surprise that Minnesota, a blue state like Massachusetts and heir to the political traditions of the Prairie Populists, should be the situs of a bill to require 'open data formats.' In spirit, this is a good thing, as it indicates a broadening appeal for open document format standards that, if missing, would be worrisome. But is the bill as submitted an encouraging signal that a bandwagon effect is taking hold, or a step towards standards Babel, and a leap backwards? The question is a serious one for a variety of reasons, and cuts to the heart of why standards exist.
"Clearly, the definition of an 'open standard' contained in the Minnesota bill includes many of the attributes that make a standard useful, such as requirements intended to prevent 'lock-in' by a single proprietary vendor..."