Mirko Vogt added the comment:

Just to clarify my problem - then I'll just happily use 
datetime.now(tzutc()).isoformat()

 - There is datetime.now() which is supposed to be used (no utcnow() anymore)
 - datetime.now() might return a naive object, when no TZ is specified
 - *However* also the naive variant implements the class isoformat() which is 
described as "Return a string representing the date in ISO 8601 format"
 - ISO 8601 can and should be understood such as the TZ-designator is required 
(I think we agreed on that).
 - However isoformat() called on a naive object returns a string with no TZ 
designator

I would at least suggesting adding a note for isoformat() about being called on 
naive datetime objects.

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Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org>
<http://bugs.python.org/issue23332>
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