Industry collaboration is key to the success of the Internet of Things (IoT). One of the issues is having common data models across the industry. To solve that issue, Open Connectivity Foundation has worked under liaison with Bluetooth SIG, OMA SpecWorks, Zigbee Alliance on One Data Model. The work has progressed in such a way that the conducted work is now made public and the continuation of the work will be conducted in public. OneDM has created a new definition format to convey data models with the end goal of standardizing submitted data models defined by the various organizations so that a single model for a desired feature or purpose can be selected. The developed definition format is called Semantic Definition Format (SDF). SDF has fulfilled requirements from the participating organizations. Learn more about SDF here.
Search Results for: Kostenlose NIST Cybersecurity Framework 2023 Exam vce dumps - neueste D-CSF-SC-23 examcollection Dumps ⚫ Suchen Sie auf ☀ www.itzert.com ️☀️ nach ➤ D-CSF-SC-23 ⮘ und erhalten Sie den kostenlosen Download mühelos ✴D-CSF-SC-23 Prüfungen
OCF and oneDM
Necessary IP Declarations – EnergyManagement:1
Necessary IP Declarations – EnergyManagement:1
Capitalized terms are defined in the UPnP Forum Membership Agreement.
Pursuant to the requirements of section 3.8(a) and 3.8(f) of the UPnP Forum Membership Agreement, the following Members have made the indicated declarations related to Necessary IP that is not the Member’s Member Input that is incorporated in the above named Standardized DCPs and their willingness to license such Necessary IP.
By providing this information, the UPnP Forum makes no representation regarding the accuracy or validity of this information nor its relevance to the UPnP Forum, DCPs, Proposed or Approved DCP Frameworks, test configuration files, Reference Implementations, Reference Implementation test logs, or to UPnP Compliant Devices. Consistent with Section 3.6(a)(D) of the UPnP Forum Membership Agreement, no Member, including Steering Committee representatives and working committee chairs, has undertaken on behalf of the UPnP Forum or its Members, any patent search with respect to the Proposed or Approved DCP Frameworks, Proposed DCPs, Standardized DCPs, Reference Implementations and associated test configuration files.
Members that now discover they have or acquire Necessary IP that is included in this Standardized DCP have a disclosure obligation under Section 3.8(f) and must submit its Declaration through the forms linked below.
UPnP Patent Disclosure Guidelines
Questions or concerns regarding the disclosure processes and guidelines may be referred to the Legal Inquiry Taskforce using this online form.
Declarations
Member: Intel Corporation
Proposed DCP or DCP Framework: EnergyManagement:1
Signatory Name: Scott Lofgren
Title: Program Manager
Address 1: 1900 Prairie City Road
Address 2:
City: Folsom
State: California
Country: USA
Postal Code: 95630
Email: [email protected]
Date and Time stamp: 7/23/2013 11:01 AM
Patent License Option: (ii) RAND terms and conditions
Contributors
The UPnP Forum in no way guarantees the accuracy or completeness of this contributor list and in no way implies any rights for or support from those members listed. Members contributing to this DCP, but not included in the list below should notify the Forum Administrator.
Allegro
AT&T
Awox
Broadcom
CableLabs
Comcast
Intel
LGE
Orange/FT
Samsung
Necessary IP Declarations – DataStore:1
Necessary IP Declarations – DataStore:1
Capitalized terms are defined in the UPnP Forum Membership Agreement.
Pursuant to the requirements of section 3.8(a) and 3.8(f) of the UPnP Forum Membership Agreement, the following Members have made the indicated declarations related to Necessary IP that is not the Member’s Member Input that is incorporated in the above named Standardized DCP and their willingness to license such Necessary IP.
By providing this information, the UPnP Forum makes no representation regarding the accuracy or validity of this information nor its relevance to the UPnP Forum, DCPs, Proposed or Approved DCP Frameworks, test configuration files, Reference Implementations, Reference Implementation test logs, or to UPnP Compliant Devices. Consistent with Section 3.6(a)(D) of the UPnP Forum Membership Agreement, no Member, including Steering Committee representatives and working committee chairs, has undertaken on behalf of the UPnP Forum or its Members, any patent search with respect to the Proposed or Approved DCP Frameworks, Proposed DCPs, Standardized DCPs, Reference Implementations and associated test configuration files.
Members that now discover they have or acquire Necessary IP that is included in this Standardized DCP have a disclosure obligation under Section 3.8(f) and must submit its Declaration through the forms linked below.
UPnP Patent Disclosure Guidelines
Questions or concerns regarding the disclosure processes and guidelines may be referred to the Legal Inquiry Taskforce using this online form.
Declarations
Member: Intel Corporation
Proposed DCP or DCP Framework: DataStore:1
Signatory Name: Scott Lofgren
Title: Program Manager
Address 1: 1900 Prairie City Road
Address 2:
City: Folsom
State: California
Country: USA
Postal Code: 95630
Email: [email protected]
Date and Time stamp: 7/23/2013 11:09 AM
Patent License Option: (ii) RAND terms and conditions
Contributors
The UPnP Forum in no way guarantees the accuracy or completeness of this contributor list and in no way implies any rights for or support from those members listed. Members contributing to this DCP, but not included in the list below should notify the Forum Administrator.
CableLabs
LGE
Samsung Electronics
Signove
TP Vision
OCF publishes Matter bridge to strengthen smart home interoperability
5th June 2024: The Open Connectivity Foundation (OCF) published an update to its Secure IP Device Framework to bridge with the Matter device ecosystem. The update enables OCF and Matter devices to coexist and interact within the same smart home, strengthening interoperability, enhancing the user experience and improving return on investment for the homeowner.
“Full smart home and building automation has always been our priority, and is only possible through interoperability,” comments Brian Bishop, OCF President. “The explosion in IoT innovation, frameworks, regulations and more has created fragmentation, making interoperability a challenge. Bridging different ecosystems is a key step in addressing this, enabling Matter devices to be onboarded and managed within an OCF smart home network, and vice versa. This gives consumers and installers the choice, flexibility, and enhanced smart home experience they crave.”
The OCF-Matter bridge is composed of derived models that map connections between the two standards, enabling the devices to speak the same language and appear on the same network. This development is also relevant to support the convergence between residential and commercial buildings as infrastructure projects adopt unified building management systems and work towards cognitive buildings.
“The Connectivity Standards Alliance is proud to see initiatives like this as a result of the efforts from our mutual members,” said Tobin Richardson, President & CEO, Connectivity Standards Alliance. “The announcement of the OCF-Matter Bridge exemplifies our shared commitment to reducing barriers to interoperability and enabling opportunities for connectivity and innovation across diverse devices and platforms.”
Learn more about how OCF is enabling secure IoT interoperability in smart homes, buildings and cities.
Full details on the OCF-Matter specification can also be found here.
About Open Connectivity Foundation
The Open Connectivity Foundation (OCF) is a global, member-driven technical standards development organization. Its 500+ members are working to enable trust, interoperability, and secure communication between IP-connected IoT devices and services. It does this by fostering collaboration between stakeholders across the IoT ecosystem to deliver the freely-available ISO/IEC specifications, including the Secure IP Device Framework, its open-source reference implementation, and an industry-recognized certification program. This enables innovative new secure use cases and user experiences, reduces development costs, integration complexity and time to market, and simplifies regulatory compliance to IoT security and privacy baselines.
OCF members work across the enterprise layers of infrastructure, applications, and data. They collaborate to co-create and deploy systems in an open and standardized way, enabling devices to communicate over IP, regardless of form factor, operating system, service provider, transport technology, or ecosystem.
The vertical-agnostic technology has already seen significant adoption in the smart home sector and is now enabling the transition to secure, intelligent, Building Automation Systems (BAS) based on IP connectivity networks.
OCF website | IoTivity open-source implementation | Twitter | LinkedIn | YouTube | WeChat | News & blog