This document defines the policy, functional and security requirements on (qualified) trust services for electronic ledger. This includes requirements to ensure:
-   their provision by one or more trust service providers;
-   the establishment of the origin of data records in the ledger;
-   the unique sequential chronological ordering of data records in the ledger;
-   the recording of data in such a way that any subsequent change to the data is immediately detectable, ensuring their integrity over time.

  • Technical specification
    18 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

This document defines the policy, functional and security requirements on (qualified) trust services for electronic ledger. This includes requirements to ensure:
-   their provision by one or more trust service providers;
-   the establishment of the origin of data records in the ledger;
-   the unique sequential chronological ordering of data records in the ledger;
-   the recording of data in such a way that any subsequent change to the data is immediately detectable, ensuring their integrity over time.

  • Technical specification
    18 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

This document provides use cases and common considerations for use cases analysis for data use in smart cities. In particular, this document includes: a) methods for collecting use cases; b) methods of analysing the collected use cases about data use in smart cities; c) common considerations about data use in smart cities based on the analysis of collected use cases.

  • Technical report
    56 pages
    English language
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IEC 63119-1:2025 establishes a basis for the other parts of IEC 63119, specifying the terms and definitions, general description of the system model, classification, information exchange and security mechanisms for roaming between EV charging service providers (CSPs), charging station operators (CSOs) and clearing house platforms through roaming endpoints. It provides an overview and describes the general requirements of the EV roaming service system. The IEC 63119 series is applicable to high-level communication involved in information exchange/interaction between different CSPs, as well as between a CSP and a CSO with or without a clearing house platform through the roaming endpoint. The IEC 63119 series does not specify the information exchange, either between the charging station (CS) and the charging station operator (CSO), or between the EV and the CS. This second edition cancels and replaces the first edition published in 2019.
This edition includes the following significant technical changes with respect to the previous edition:
a) the scope is expanded to include differentiation between home and visited service provider roles and adds an explicit definition of roaming entity;
b) adds definitions for "home charging service provider (home-CSP)", "visited charging station operator (visited-CSO)", and "charging detail record (CDR)", and expands related terms such as "service" and "roaming entity";
c) introduces abbreviation variants for "home-CSP" and "visited-CSO" in the terminology, aligning with North American and European conventions;
d) updates the communication protocol stack by adopting a newer TLS version (upgraded from 1.2 to 1.3);
e) system architecture and communication interfaces include detailed interactions between home-CSP and visited-CSO;
f) adds a definition for "service" to cover a broader range of applications such as parking and reservation management;
g) adds a distinction between "charging detail record (CDR)" and "service detail record (SDR)" and clarifies their relationship in the terminology;
h) enhances the description of user credential transfer methods in communication interfaces with greater diversity;
i) enhances the description of the mixed mode in the classification of roaming service models, emphasizing improved user experience through faster response times.

  • Standard
    16 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

This document analyses a feasible way to accommodate interoperability elements for the data component of a spatial data infrastructure (SDI) and extend the meta model framework for interoperability (MFI) in securing interoperability among heterogeneous domain information models under the smart city context.
This document:
a)       outlines the interoperability issues for city domain information models;
b)       reviews relevant standards and best practices and examines methodologies or solutions to tackle the interoperability issues;
c)        supposes a use case and provides an example to secure interoperability among different domain information models using model registry;
d)       specifies technical requirements in concern about how to apply the interoperability elements of the meta model framework to support the interoperability of smart city services;
e)       highlights the standardization items to be developed to secure interoperability.

  • Technical report
    26 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

IEC 63119-1:2025 establishes a basis for the other parts of IEC 63119, specifying the terms and definitions, general description of the system model, classification, information exchange and security mechanisms for roaming between EV charging service providers (CSPs), charging station operators (CSOs) and clearing house platforms through roaming endpoints. It provides an overview and describes the general requirements of the EV roaming service system. The IEC 63119 series is applicable to high-level communication involved in information exchange/interaction between different CSPs, as well as between a CSP and a CSO with or without a clearing house platform through the roaming endpoint. The IEC 63119 series does not specify the information exchange, either between the charging station (CS) and the charging station operator (CSO), or between the EV and the CS. This second edition cancels and replaces the first edition published in 2019. This edition includes the following significant technical changes with respect to the previous edition: a) the scope is expanded to include differentiation between home and visited service provider roles and adds an explicit definition of roaming entity; b) adds definitions for "home charging service provider (home-CSP)", "visited charging station operator (visited-CSO)", and "charging detail record (CDR)", and expands related terms such as "service" and "roaming entity"; c) introduces abbreviation variants for "home-CSP" and "visited-CSO" in the terminology, aligning with North American and European conventions; d) updates the communication protocol stack by adopting a newer TLS version (upgraded from 1.2 to 1.3); e) system architecture and communication interfaces include detailed interactions between home-CSP and visited-CSO; f) adds a definition for "service" to cover a broader range of applications such as parking and reservation management; g) adds a distinction between "charging detail record (CDR)" and "service detail record (SDR)" and clarifies their relationship in the terminology; h) enhances the description of user credential transfer methods in communication interfaces with greater diversity; i) enhances the description of the mixed mode in the classification of roaming service models, emphasizing improved user experience through faster response times.

  • Standard
    16 pages
    English language
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This document describes the delivery of functional, economic, environmental, social, societal, cultural, intellectual and personal benefits by AI systems as perceived by their stakeholders. The document includes illustrative use cases of AI systems.

  • Technical report
    25 pages
    English language
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IEC 63119-1:2025 establishes a basis for the other parts of IEC 63119, specifying the terms and definitions, general description of the system model, classification, information exchange and security mechanisms for roaming between EV charging service providers (CSPs), charging station operators (CSOs) and clearing house platforms through roaming endpoints. It provides an overview and describes the general requirements of the EV roaming service system. The IEC 63119 series is applicable to high-level communication involved in information exchange/interaction between different CSPs, as well as between a CSP and a CSO with or without a clearing house platform through the roaming endpoint. The IEC 63119 series does not specify the information exchange, either between the charging station (CS) and the charging station operator (CSO), or between the EV and the CS. This second edition cancels and replaces the first edition published in 2019.
This edition includes the following significant technical changes with respect to the previous edition:
a) the scope is expanded to include differentiation between home and visited service provider roles and adds an explicit definition of roaming entity;
b) adds definitions for "home charging service provider (home-CSP)", "visited charging station operator (visited-CSO)", and "charging detail record (CDR)", and expands related terms such as "service" and "roaming entity";
c) introduces abbreviation variants for "home-CSP" and "visited-CSO" in the terminology, aligning with North American and European conventions;
d) updates the communication protocol stack by adopting a newer TLS version (upgraded from 1.2 to 1.3);
e) system architecture and communication interfaces include detailed interactions between home-CSP and visited-CSO;
f) adds a definition for "service" to cover a broader range of applications such as parking and reservation management;
g) adds a distinction between "charging detail record (CDR)" and "service detail record (SDR)" and clarifies their relationship in the terminology;
h) enhances the description of user credential transfer methods in communication interfaces with greater diversity;
i) enhances the description of the mixed mode in the classification of roaming service models, emphasizing improved user experience through faster response times.

  • Standard
    13 pages
    English language
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  • Standard
    30 pages
    English language
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  • Standard
    13 pages
    French language
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  • Standard
    26 pages
    English and French language
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This document analyses a feasible way to accommodate interoperability elements for the data component of a spatial data infrastructure (SDI) and extend the meta model framework for interoperability (MFI) in securing interoperability among heterogeneous domain information models under the smart city context.
This document:
a)       outlines the interoperability issues for city domain information models;
b)       reviews relevant standards and best practices and examines methodologies or solutions to tackle the interoperability issues;
c)        supposes a use case and provides an example to secure interoperability among different domain information models using model registry;
d)       specifies technical requirements in concern about how to apply the interoperability elements of the meta model framework to support the interoperability of smart city services;
e)       highlights the standardization items to be developed to secure interoperability.

  • Technical report
    26 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

This document analyses a feasible way to accommodate interoperability elements for the data component of a spatial data infrastructure (SDI) and extend the meta model framework for interoperability (MFI) in securing interoperability among heterogeneous domain information models under the smart city context. This document: a) outlines the interoperability issues for city domain information models; b) reviews relevant standards and best practices and examines methodologies or solutions to tackle the interoperability issues; c) supposes a use case and provides an example to secure interoperability among different domain information models using model registry; d) specifies technical requirements in concern about how to apply the interoperability elements of the meta model framework to support the interoperability of smart city services; e) highlights the standardization items to be developed to secure interoperability.

  • Technical report
    18 pages
    English language
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he proposed document will establish a framework for quantification of environmental impact of AI and its long-term sustainability, and
encourage AI developers and users to improve efficiency of AI use. It will also provide a summary of the state of the art of AI technology for direct control and optimisation of energy use in energy systems. The document will provide life-cycle assessment of AI development, deployment and use.
Emissions that are produced directly by combustion of fossil fuels are Scope 1 emissions. These are observed in transport system
and in fossil-fuel energy generators, and the like. AI may help reduce Scope 1 emissions via smart interventions (demand-side response, optimisation of combustion, etc.) Scope 2 are indirect emissions from electricity use, and AI will play a major role in reducing these emissions. Scope 3 are emissions produced during a life cycle of a technology – these emissions are important in assessment of AI solution and will be in scope of this project. Emissions of Scope 4 are the avoided emissions – AI has great potential in quantifying avoided emissions (carbon savings), and the report will address this as well.

  • Technical report
    31 pages
    English language
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This document sets out a review of the current methods and practices (including tools, assets, and conditions of acceptability) for
conformity assessment in respect to, among others, products, services, processes, management systems, organizations, or persons,
as relevant for the development and use of AI systems. It includes an industry horizontal (vertical agnostic) perspective as well as an
industry vertical perspective.
This document focuses only on the process of assessment and gap analysis of conformity. It defines the objects of conformity
related to AI systems and all other related aspects of the process of conformity assessment. The document also reviews to what
extent AI poses specific challenges with respect to assessment of, for example, software engineering, data quality and engineering
processes.
This document takes into account requirements and orientations from policy frameworks such as the EU AI strategy and those from
CEN and CENELEC member countries.
This document is intended for technologists, standards bodies, regulators and interested parties.

  • Technical report
    50 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

he proposed document will establish a framework for quantification of environmental impact of AI and its long-term sustainability, and
encourage AI developers and users to improve efficiency of AI use. It will also provide a summary of the state of the art of AI technology for direct control and optimisation of energy use in energy systems. The document will provide life-cycle assessment of AI development, deployment and use.
Emissions that are produced directly by combustion of fossil fuels are Scope 1 emissions. These are observed in transport system
and in fossil-fuel energy generators, and the like. AI may help reduce Scope 1 emissions via smart interventions (demand-side response, optimisation of combustion, etc.) Scope 2 are indirect emissions from electricity use, and AI will play a major role in reducing these emissions. Scope 3 are emissions produced during a life cycle of a technology – these emissions are important in assessment of AI solution and will be in scope of this project. Emissions of Scope 4 are the avoided emissions – AI has great potential in quantifying avoided emissions (carbon savings), and the report will address this as well.

  • Technical report
    31 pages
    English language
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This document provides an overview on AI-related standards, with a focus on data and data life cycles, to organizations, agencies, enterprises, developers, universities, researchers, focus groups, users, and other stakeholders that are experiencing this era of digital transformation.
It describes links among the many international standards and regulations published or under development, with the aim of promoting a common language, a greater culture of quality, giving an information framework.
It addresses the following areas:
-   data governance;
-   data quality;
-   elements for data, data sets properties to provide unbiased evaluation and information for testing.

  • Technical report
    64 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

This document sets out a review of the current methods and practices (including tools, assets, and conditions of acceptability) for
conformity assessment in respect to, among others, products, services, processes, management systems, organizations, or persons,
as relevant for the development and use of AI systems. It includes an industry horizontal (vertical agnostic) perspective as well as an
industry vertical perspective.
This document focuses only on the process of assessment and gap analysis of conformity. It defines the objects of conformity
related to AI systems and all other related aspects of the process of conformity assessment. The document also reviews to what
extent AI poses specific challenges with respect to assessment of, for example, software engineering, data quality and engineering
processes.
This document takes into account requirements and orientations from policy frameworks such as the EU AI strategy and those from
CEN and CENELEC member countries.
This document is intended for technologists, standards bodies, regulators and interested parties.

  • Technical report
    50 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

This document defines the stages and identifies associated actions for data processing throughout the
artificial intelligence (AI) system life cycle, including acquisition, creation, development, deployment,
maintenance and decommissioning. This document does not define specific services, platforms or tools.
This document is applicable to all organizations, regardless of type, size or nature, that use data in the
development and use of AI systems.

  • Standard
    18 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

This document provides an overview on AI-related standards, with a focus on data and data life cycles, to organizations, agencies, enterprises, developers, universities, researchers, focus groups, users, and other stakeholders that are experiencing this era of digital transformation.
It describes links among the many international standards and regulations published or under development, with the aim of promoting a common language, a greater culture of quality, giving an information framework.
It addresses the following areas:
-   data governance;
-   data quality;
-   elements for data, data sets properties to provide unbiased evaluation and information for testing.

  • Technical report
    64 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

This document defines the stages and identifies associated actions for data processing throughout the
artificial intelligence (AI) system life cycle, including acquisition, creation, development, deployment,
maintenance and decommissioning. This document does not define specific services, platforms or tools.
This document is applicable to all organizations, regardless of type, size or nature, that use data in the
development and use of AI systems.

  • Standard
    18 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

IEC 63119-1:2019 establishes a basis for the other parts of IEC 63119, specifying the terms and definitions, general description of the system model, classification, information exchange and security mechanisms for roaming between EV charge service providers (CSP), charging station operators (CSOs) and clearing house platforms through roaming endpoints. It provides an overview and describes the general requirements of the EV roaming service system. IEC 63119 (all parts) is applicable to high-level communication involved in information exchange/interaction between different CSPs, as well as between a CSP and a CSO with or without a clearing house platform through the roaming endpoint. IEC 63119 (all parts) does not specify the information exchange, either between the charging station (CS) and the charging station operator (CSO), or between the EV and the CS.

  • Standard
    17 pages
    English language
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    1 day

This document provides a reference of 41 competences as required and applied at the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) professional work environment, using a common language for competences, skills and proficiency levels that can be understood across Europe.
This document was created for application by:
-   ICT service, user and supply companies,
-   ICT professionals, managers and human resource (HR) departments,
-   vocational education institutions and training bodies including higher education,
-   social partners (trade unions and employer associations), professional associations, accreditation, validation and assessment bodies,
-   market analysts and policy makers,
and other organizations and stakeholders in public and private sectors.

  • Standard
    93 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

IEC 63119-1:2019 establishes a basis for the other parts of IEC 63119, specifying the terms and definitions, general description of the system model, classification, information exchange and security mechanisms for roaming between EV charge service providers (CSP), charging station operators (CSOs) and clearing house platforms through roaming endpoints. It provides an overview and describes the general requirements of the EV roaming service system.
IEC 63119 (all parts) is applicable to high-level communication involved in information exchange/interaction between different CSPs, as well as between a CSP and a CSO with or without a clearing house platform through the roaming endpoint.
IEC 63119 (all parts) does not specify the information exchange, either between the charging station (CS) and the charging station operator (CSO), or between the EV and the CS.

  • Standard
    17 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

IEC 63119-1:2019 establishes a basis for the other parts of IEC 63119, specifying the terms and definitions, general description of the system model, classification, information exchange and security mechanisms for roaming between EV charge service providers (CSP), charging station operators (CSOs) and clearing house platforms through roaming endpoints. It provides an overview and describes the general requirements of the EV roaming service system.
IEC 63119 (all parts) is applicable to high-level communication involved in information exchange/interaction between different CSPs, as well as between a CSP and a CSO with or without a clearing house platform through the roaming endpoint.
IEC 63119 (all parts) does not specify the information exchange, either between the charging station (CS) and the charging station operator (CSO), or between the EV and the CS.

  • Standard
    28 pages
    English and French language
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ISO/IEC TR 30109:2015 describes methods to enable access to a personal computing environment via the Internet, with a culturally and linguistically convenient and uniform personal user interface, on different types of hardware.

  • Technical report
    8 pages
    English language
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ISO 17369:2013 provides an integrated approach to facilitating Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX), enabling interoperable implementations within and between systems concerned with the exchange, reporting and dissemination of statistical data and related metadata. ISO 17369:2013 is applicable to any organization that has a need to manage the reporting, exchange and dissemination of its statistical data and related metadata. The information model at the core of ISO 17369:2013 has been developed to support statistics as collected and used by governmental and supra-national statistical organizations, and this model is also applicable to other organizational contexts involving statistical data and related metadata.

  • Standard
    15 pages
    English language
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  • Standard
    18 pages
    Russian language
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The present document provides guidance for the user interaction design of telecommunication devices and services that are likely to become available for large-scale rollout to consumers in the next five to ten years. In particular, the document identifies provisions that have to be made in order to ensure that forthcoming interaction technologies deployed in devices and services will be usable by all users including older people and/or people with disabilities.
The present document lists user interaction technologies likely to be employed in future devices and services in the form of a technology roadmap. For each identified technology, key characteristics specified include:
• user requirements impacted by the technology;
• benefits and accessibility barriers that will result from deployment;
• solutions related to accessibility barriers (both those benefiting disabled users only as well as those being useful for all users in different contexts).
Measures are identified that need to be addressed prior to the large-scale implementation of those technologies in order to ensure their usability by users with the widest range of characteristics.
Within the scope of the document are those interaction technologies that are likely to be used in information and communication products and services and are likely to achieve a mass-market breakthrough between 2010 and 2020.
Interaction technologies that are exclusively used in:
• stand-alone, off-line products and services;
• assistive devices;
• safety and security-related products and services;
are not within the scope of the present document, even though the guidelines may also apply to some of them.
General user interface design issues (e.g. cognitive workload) that affect the usability and accessibility of user interfaces for eServices are also outside of the scope of the present document.
The intended readers of the present document are the designers, manufacturers and suppliers of all ICT products and services that may use new user interaction technologies in their future offerings. Researchers benefit from the present document by integrating its findings into their research at a very early stage.
It is expected that the present document should be utilised in the earliest stages of the planning of a new product or eService to ensure that the measures proposed can be taken into account during all stages of the product design and implementation process. Such usage should ensure that the resulting product or eService is as barrier free in its design as possible.

  • Standard
    175 pages
    English language
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  • Standard
    172 pages
    English language
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  • Guide
    172 pages
    English language
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IEC 62507-1:2010 specifies basic requirements for systems for the identification of objects (such as products, 'items', documents, etc., excluding human individuals). It focuses on assigning identifiers to an object for referencing purposes. It includes recommendations for the human readable presentation of identifiers and its machine readable representation, to be considered when constructing the identifiers and identification numbers and also requirements for the application of identifiers in a computer sensible form in accordance with such systems, and requirements for their interchange.

  • Standard
    59 pages
    English language
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The present document specifies a set of user profile preference and information settings for deployment in ICT services and devices for use by ICT users and suppliers. The present document specifies:
- objects including settings, values and operations;
- a rule definition language for defining functionality such as automatic modification of profiles.
Profile solutions within the scope of the present document are:
- those provided for the primary benefit of the end-user;
- those which the end-user has rights to manage the profile contents;
- those where the end-user has the right to have a dialogue with the information owning stakeholder. Intended readers of the present document are user profile providers, operators, service developers, service providers, device manufacturers, standards developers.

  • Standard
    58 pages
    English language
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  • Standard
    58 pages
    English language
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  • Standardization document
    58 pages
    English language
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Specifies principles and methods to define metadata for the management of documents associated with objects throughout their life cycle; This cycle generally covers a range from the conceptual idea of a document to its deletion. The established principles and methods are basic for all document management systems. This part is intended as a general basic standard in all application fields and provides the framework applicable for part 2. International Standard 82045 is primarily intended as a resource for the use in computerised systems such as Electronic Document Management Systems (EDMS) or Product Data Management Systems (PDMS) for the management, retrieval, storage and selection and archiving of documents, and as a basis for the exchange of documents.

  • Standard
    37 pages
    English language
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IEC 82045-1:2001 Specifies principles, methods and information models to define metadata for the management of documents associated with objects throughout their life cycle; this cycle generally covers a range from the conceptual idea of a document to its deletion. The established principles and methods are basic for all document management systems. Is intended as a general basic standard in all application fields and provides the framework applicable for part 2. Is primarily intended as a resource for use in computerised systems such as Electronic Document Management Systems (EDMS) or Product Data Management Systems (PDMS) for the management, retrieval, storage and selection and archiving of documents, and as a basis for the exchange of documents.

  • Standard
    67 pages
    English and French language
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This part of ISO/IEC 13238 enables the bulk transfer of all or part of the data contained in an Information Resource Dictionary (IRD) or in an Information Resource Dictionary Definition conforming to ISO/IEC 10728:1993 IRDS Services Interface. This part of ISO/IEC 13238 defines a format for such a transfer and also services to generate the export file and services to import the file. These services are additional to the existing services defined in the IRDS Services Interface. This version of this part of ISO/IEC 13238 defines a limited set of Export and Import services. It is expected that implementations will also provide more sophisticated services based on the use of the Transfer File structure defined in this part of ISO/IEC 13238. The physical way in which the transfer takes place is outside the scope of this part of ISO/IEC 13238. Each transfer may be effected in one of several ways including the physical transfer of the data using a transportable storage device.

  • Standard
    149 pages
    English language
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Replaces the wording of some clauses and subclauses of ISO/IEC 10728:1993 and adds a new annex E.

  • Standard
    15 pages
    English language
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Contains a great number of amendments and additions; Information Resource Dictionary System (IRDS) services interface; ADA language binding.

  • Standard
    20 pages
    English language
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The services interface specified gives any program full access to all IRDS services. Defines the semantics of this interface, and also specifies the language bindings for ISO Pascal (ISO 7185). Language bindings for other ISO standard programming languages are provided as separate standards. Makes no assumptions about an implementation environment, and assumes no specific run-time or compile time interfaces. Details of the IRDS series of standards are to be found in ISO/IEC 10027.

  • Standard
    108 pages
    English language
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This document describes common capabilities, requirements and a supporting information model for logging of events in AI systems.
This document is designed to be used with a risk management system.

  • Draft
    26 pages
    English language
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    1 day

This document defines a framework for assessing the quality of data governance and data management practices for participants in data spaces. It specifies the core principles, processes, and assessment elements that enable organizations to manage, monitor, and improve their data governance and data management practices.
The framework comprises two components:
• Process Reference Model: Defines key processes for data governance and data product management of data space participants, including its fundamental principles, structure, detailed process definitions, links to broader data governance, and required implementation measures.
• Process Assessment Framework: Outlines a model to evaluate process capability by establishing six distinct quality levels expressed in terms of capability levels, describing the corresponding profiles and guiding the systematic assessment.
This standard is aimed at supporting data governance and data management professionals, IT managers, quality assurance officers, and regulatory bodies.
This standard is applicable to organizations of all types and sizes.

  • Draft
    85 pages
    English language
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    1 day

This document specifies the evaluation of computer vision systems, in the sense of measuring the quality of a system’s results to
assess its functional suitability. It provides a definition of evaluation methods for those systems, together with guidance on how to
select, implement and interpret those evaluation methods. This document covers quantitative metrics as well as other evaluation
methods. It includes requirements on the implementation of the described metrics, and further requirements on the technical
resources involved in the evaluation process.

  • Draft
    56 pages
    English language
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This document specifies the requirements and provides guidance for the definition, implementation, maintenance and improvement of a quality management system for organizations that provide AI systems.
This document is intended to support the organization in meeting applicable regulatory requirements.

  • Draft
    56 pages
    English language
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    1 day

This document provides a systematized framework for the competencies of AI ethicists, categorizing them into knowledge, skills and attitudes related to the specific activities and tasks of the role. It identifies requirements and recommendations necessary for individuals to effectively perform as AI ethicists. These competencies encompass a strong understanding of European values and fundamental rights, further enhancing the knowledge, skills and attitudes required for this profession.
The document aims to foster a shared understanding of the essential concepts and principles inherent to the AI ethicist role. It illustrates a clear, uniform approach to the integral components of this profession.
Moreover, the document outlines how the role of AI ethicists can be seamlessly integrated into a wide variety of organizations. These include, but are not limited to, commercial enterprises, governmental agencies and non-profit organizations.

  • Draft
    26 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

This document specifies the evaluation of computer vision systems, in the sense of measuring the quality of a system’s results to
assess its functional suitability. It provides a definition of evaluation methods for those systems, together with guidance on how to
select, implement and interpret those evaluation methods. This document covers quantitative metrics as well as other evaluation
methods. It includes requirements on the implementation of the described metrics, and further requirements on the technical
resources involved in the evaluation process.

  • Draft
    56 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

This document defines a framework for assessing the quality of data governance and data management practices for participants in data spaces. It specifies the core principles, processes, and assessment elements that enable organizations to manage, monitor, and improve their data governance and data management practices.
The framework comprises two components:
• Process Reference Model: Defines key processes for data governance and data product management of data space participants, including its fundamental principles, structure, detailed process definitions, links to broader data governance, and required implementation measures.
• Process Assessment Framework: Outlines a model to evaluate process capability by establishing six distinct quality levels expressed in terms of capability levels, describing the corresponding profiles and guiding the systematic assessment.
This standard is aimed at supporting data governance and data management professionals, IT managers, quality assurance officers, and regulatory bodies.
This standard is applicable to organizations of all types and sizes.

  • Draft
    85 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

This document describes common capabilities, requirements and a supporting information model for logging of events in AI systems.
This document is designed to be used with a risk management system.

  • Draft
    26 pages
    English language
    e-Library read for
    1 day

This document specifies the requirements and provides guidance for the definition, implementation, maintenance and improvement of a quality management system for organizations that provide AI systems.
This document is intended to support the organization in meeting applicable regulatory requirements.

  • Draft
    56 pages
    English language
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This document provides a systematized framework for the competencies of AI ethicists, categorizing them into knowledge, skills and attitudes related to the specific activities and tasks of the role. It identifies requirements and recommendations necessary for individuals to effectively perform as AI ethicists. These competencies encompass a strong understanding of European values and fundamental rights, further enhancing the knowledge, skills and attitudes required for this profession.
The document aims to foster a shared understanding of the essential concepts and principles inherent to the AI ethicist role. It illustrates a clear, uniform approach to the integral components of this profession.
Moreover, the document outlines how the role of AI ethicists can be seamlessly integrated into a wide variety of organizations. These include, but are not limited to, commercial enterprises, governmental agencies and non-profit organizations.

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This document describes the characteristics that impact machine learning model training efficiency and then provides the optimization approaches that apply to these characteristics. This document provides AI providers and AI producers with a set of characteristics and the related optimizations that they can use to enhance their machine learning model training efficiency. AI providers and AI producers can also use this information to evaluate different machine learning model training approaches. This document does not specify any training accelerating mechanisms provided and implemented within machine learning computing device defined in ISO /IEC TR 17903 and its library.

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