De facto standard

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

A de facto standard is a standard (formal or informal) that has achieved a dominant and accepted position. It is usually a product, process, system, or technical standard that has achieved status informally by public acceptance, market forces (such as early entrance to the market), and has persisted by tradition. De facto is a Latin phrase meaning "concerning the fact" or "in practice", and is used in opposition to de jure (ordained by law).

In social sciences, a de facto standard is a usual solution to a coordination problem.[1] The choice of a de facto standard is the better choice for situations in which all parties can realize mutual gains, but only by making mutually consistent decisions.[1]

Other types of standards include voluntary consensus technical standards (which are developed by standards organizations), legally binding (or de jure) standards published or required by a governmental body, and mandatory standards developed or chosen by an independent organization or corporation.[2]

[edit] Examples

Well-known and illustrative examples:

  • The driver's seat side in a country.
  • The QWERTY system was one of several options for the layout of letters on a typewriter (later keyboard) keys. It became a de facto standard because, once people learned the QWERTY layout, they did not want to re-learn a different system.
  • When VHS format for videotape recording was introduced, other formats were available. Many believed that the rival Beta system was superior from a technical point of view. However, the VHS format won the format war due to superior marketing tactics by its proponents. The market could not support two competing formats, so Beta was withdrawn.
  • The use of the AA battery (not AAA or another old proposed standards for low voltage and small size bateries).
  • The 12.7 mm spacing of the rollers in a bicycle chain.
  • Computer file formats:
  • Masculine buttonholes on left, buttons on right; feminine vice-versa.
  • The IBM PC format which used MS-DOS and MS Windows operating systems gained a large share of the personal computer market, despite some technical deficiencies and other viable alternatives being available. There is a formal technical standard for Windows written by Microsoft to document their software development and production, but its status as a de facto standard has to do with customer acceptance and market dominance.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Edna Ullmann-Margalit: The Emergence of Norms, Oxford Un. Press, 1977. (or Clarendon Press 1978)
  2. ^ National Research Council. ”Standards, Conformity Assessment, and Trade”, 1995, National Academy Press, ISBN 0-309-05236X
  3. ^ ISO 19005-1:2005 - Document management - Electronic document file format for long-term preservation - Part 1: Use of PDF 1.4 (PDF/A-1)
  4. ^ ISO/DIS 32000 - Document management - Portable document format - PDF 1.7
  5. ^ Adobe - Release PDF for Industry Standardization FAQ
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