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*Baltimore, MD - April 24, 2017* - The National Information Standards
Organization (NISO) announces the release of a draft version of NISO
Z39.102-201x, STS: Standards Tag Suite
<http://www.niso.org/apps/group_public/download.php/17788/NISO_Z39.102-201x_STS_Standards_Tag_Suite.pdf>,
for public comment. STS provides a common XML format that standards
developers, publishers, and distributors can use to publish and exchange
full-text content and metadata of standards. It is expected that this
"standard for standards" will be published in the fall as an XML document
marked up in the STS standard after comments on the draft version are
addressed and it is approved by NISO Voting Members and by ANSI, the
American National Standards Institute.

"Before STS, there were several DTDs used for tagging standard-type
information. This variation impeded interoperability across standards and
inhibited collaboration between our organizations," said ASME Director of
Publishing Technologies, Robert Wheeler, co-chair of NISO's STS Working
Group. ASME joined other associations, standards development organizations,
and government entities in creating this new work that builds upon an
existing, heavily used standard for journal publishers, ANSI/NISO
Z39.96-2015, JATS: Journal Article Tag Suite and the International
Organization for Standardization's (ISO) version of STS.

Users of JATS will be immediately familiar with the STS model. "In many
ways, the body content of articles is very much like standards content. The
core structural components are the same, though the metadata is different,"
explained the Working Group's other co-chair, Bruce Rosenblum, CEO of
Inera, Inc., in a recent teleconference discussion on STS
<http://www.niso.org/news/events/2017/telecon/MP3_recording_-_Open_Teleconference_-_NISO_STS_-_April_10_2017.mp3>.
"This draft is an important milestone following a great effort by members
of the two groups involved in this work over the past 18 months, the
steering <http://www.niso.org/workrooms/sts/steering_roster/> and the technical
working group <http://www.niso.org/workrooms/sts/tech_roster/>," further
commented Rosenblum. NISO Executive Director Todd Carpenter also
appreciates the synergy between JATS and STS. "Many standards publishing
associations have robust journals programs," he noted. "Having those
systems aligned is a win for those associations, and we expect that the two
standards will evolve in lockstep in the future as well. Like all of our
standards, these will be maintained so that changes and expansion of needs
are catered for."

Adoption of STS will offer significant benefits at every step of standards
development and use, Wheeler and Rosenblum remarked. Different groups will
be able to co-publish standards much more easily, and the advantages
continue through to distribution. "When everyone had proprietary models,
that often meant that you were locking your XML into a proprietary
distribution channel," said Rosenblum. "When the community coalesces around
a standard, it opens up a lot more opportunities and flexibility for small
and medium-sized publishers."

The NISO STS proposed standard is open for public comment from April 24,
2017 to May 24, 2017. The proposed standard, in PDF form, is available from
NISO at http://www.niso.org/workrooms/sts/. All input is welcome. To
comment, please go to http://www.niso.org/workrooms/sts/ and follow the
described steps.

*About NISO*
NISO, based in Baltimore, Maryland, fosters the development and maintenance
of standards that facilitate the creation, persistent management, and
effective interchange of information so that it can be trusted for use in
research and learning. To fulfill this mission, NISO engages libraries,
publishers, information aggregators, and other organizations that support
learning, research, and scholarship through the creation, organization,
management, and curation of knowledge. NISO works with intersecting
communities of interest and across the entire lifecycle of information
standards. NISO is a not-for-profit association accredited by the American
National Standards Institute (ANSI). For more information, visit the NISO
website <http://www.niso.org/>.

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