>>(a) The publicly available working documents may not be up-to-date. > >They are up to date for ITU-T members. > >>(b) Most of the ITU's publicly available documents are not free. > >They are available to ITU-T members. In the message I was responding to, you wrote: >>>If I stand up (physically or virtually) in an IETF >>>meeting and say "the ITU-T is doing such and such", you can either believe >>>me or double check with the ITU. My point was that I *cannot* double check. You just confirmed it. You're right that I still can't double-check someone authorized to speak for the ITU; but, if the ITU is careful about whom it authorizes, then such people may wind up building a reputation for trustworthiness--"they're probably right, or the ITU leadership wouldn't've authorized them". And, if they get it wrong, then there's a known person to tie to the rails when the train wreck happens. /==============================================================\ |John Stracke |Principal Engineer | |jstracke@incentivesystems.com |Incentive Systems, Inc. | |http://www.incentivesystems.com |My opinions are my own. | |==============================================================| |No matter how subtle the wizard, a knife in the shoulderblades| |will cramp his style. | \==============================================================/