Decades of data investment have been undermined by a fundamental flaw: the meaning of critical business metrics remains siloed across disparate tools. The release of the v1.0 Open Semantic Interchange (OSI) Specification, backed by an unprecedented coalition including Salesforce, Snowflake, and dbt Labs, aims to finally resolve this semantic drift. This new universal standard establishes a metrics-as-code foundation, decoupling core business logic from the specific analytics platforms that consume it.
The industry has long accepted that every BI and analytics tool requires its own definition layer, leading to inconsistent reporting and organizational distrust—a phenomenon leaders call "metric drift." This fragmentation is no longer sustainable, especially as data consumption shifts from human-driven dashboards to autonomous AI agents. According to the announcement, customers are demanding a vendor-neutral "universal translator" that ensures definitions like "revenue" are governed centrally and understood identically across the entire data ecosystem. The OSI standardizes the semantic layer itself, moving the definition of truth upstream into a single, version-controlled source.