History
The XSF was originally called the Jabber Software Foundation (JSF). The Jabber Software Foundation was originally established to provide an independent, non-profit, legal entity to support the development community around Jabber technologies (and later XMPP). Originally its main focus was on developing JOSL, theProcess
Members of the XSF vote on acceptance of new members, a technical Council, and a Board of Directors. However, membership is not required to publish, view, or comment on the standards that it promulgates. The unit of work at the XSF is the XMPP Extension Protocol (XEP); XEP-0001 specifies the process for XEPs to be accepted by the community. Most of the work of the XSF takes place on the XMPP Extension Discussion List, the mpp:[email protected]?join jdevand the mpp:[email protected]?join xsf chat roomOrganization
Board of Directors
The Board of Directors of the XMPP Standards Foundation oversees the business affairs of the organization. As elected by the XSF membership, the Board of Directors for 2020-2021 consists of the following individuals: * Ralph Meijer ( XSF Chair) *Dave Cridland *Ralph Meijer * * * * Severino Ferrer de la Peñita *Arc Riley *Matthew WildCouncil
The XMPP Council is the technical steering group that approves XMPP Extension Protocols, as governed by thMembers
There are currently 66 elected members of the XSF.Emeritus Members
The following individuals are emeritus members of the XMPP Standards Foundation: * Ryan Eatmon * Peter Millard (deceased) * Jeremie Miller * Julian Missig * Thomas Muldowney * Dave SmithXEPs
One of the most important outputs of the XSF is a series of "XEPs", or XMPP Extension Protocols, auxiliary protocols defining additional features. Some have chosen to pronounce "XEP" as if it were spelled "JEP", rather than "ZEP", in order to keep with a sense of tradition. Some XEPs of note include: * Data Forms * Service Discovery * Multi-User Chat * Publish-Subscribe * XHTML-IM * Entity Capabilities * Bidirectional-streams Over Synchronous HTTP (BOSH) * Jingle * Serverless MessagingXMPP Summit
The XSF biannually holds a XMPP Summit where software and protocol developers from all around the world meet and share ideas and discuss topics around the XMPP protocol and the XEPs. In winter it takes place around the FOSDEM event in Brussels, Belgium and in summer it takes place around the RealtimeConf event in Portland, USA. These meetings are open to anyone and focus on discussing both technical and non-technical issues that the XSF members wish to discuss with no costs attached for the participants. However the XSF is open to donations. The first XMPP Summit took place on July 24 and 25, 2006, in Portland.References
External links
* {{DEFAULTSORT:XMPP Standards Foundation Instant messaging Standards organizations in the United States Free and open-source software organizations Organizations based in Denver XMPP