Since there's a single provider of this "specification", which is more or less Google, why even bother calling it a standard? Even more that Google's implementation is not following the published standard, breaking potential competing implementation in so many subtle ways.
Since there's a single provider of this "specification", which is more or less Google, why even bother calling it a standard? Even more that Google's implementation is not following the published standard, breaking potential competing implementation in so many subtle ways.