Complaint from John Klensin against Dean Anderson

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In mail to the IETF list on May 30, 15:04 -0400, John Klensin said:

Indeed, I think it has gone on about long enough.  Harald, of whomever is
responsible for the IETF list, Dean has repeatedly attempted to defame my
character and experience, despite (and after) having been supplied ample
detail to refute his claims, assumptions, and accusations (I will supply
copies of the relevant correspondence to you on request).  That is
against the rules for the IETF list as I understand them.  Would you
please initiate the appropriate action to formally warn him and, if the
practice persists, suspend posting rights?

In mail to the IETF list on May 30, 16:01 -0400, Dean Anderson said:


I think that I am the one being defamed, since you repeated question my
credibility while avoiding the question.

And I also would like to initiate a formal complaint.

The IETF list charter, RFC 3005, says:


Inappropriate postings include:

   - Unsolicited bulk e-mail
   - Discussion of subjects unrelated to IETF policy, meetings,
     activities, or technical concerns
   - Unprofessional commentary, regardless of the general subject
   - Announcements of conferences, events, or activities that are not
     sponsored or endorsed by the Internet Society or IETF.

Looking at the log of messages from Dean Anderson (yes, I have looked at all 64 that were sent by him this month):

- The first message by Dean Anderson that appears to be a reply to John Klensin appears on May 27, 20:15 -0400. It basically disputes John's claims about how email works.

- In his message on May 27, 22:40 -0400, he says:

I think the same about you. It seems this will go nowhere. I'm just trying
to be polite. You've offered absolutely nothing of substance in this
-long- message.
....

That is not the goal of open, standards compliant systems.  The fact is
that these clients are compliant with standards in effect.  If you don't
understand that, then you have no place in a standards organization, like
the IETF.
.....

This is just nonsense. Obviously, you have no operational experience.

- In his message on May 29, 22:02 -0400, he says:



Some people seem to think that having invented or significantly
contributed to something means that the inventor is immune to criticism.
That is called a personality cult. Personality cults usually have few
useful contributions, because they distract the personality.  Maybe that
is what happened to John with SMTP AUTH. I don't know.

- In his message on May 30, 14:09 -0400, he says:


And John has obviously never been involved in a Law Enforcement request.
But I have.  Private emails to him seem to confirm this, or at least he
didn't indicate anything to the contrary.  While he may have been working
on SMTP protocols for 30 years, he obviously hasn't been involved in
trackig abuse of various sorts, and has no idea of whether this is
expensive or difficult.

- In his message on May 30, 18:24 -0400, he says:


What you wrote is rather condencending, while
I have be respectful, if direct.
.....
As I pointed out, previously. You are just
repeating canards, rather than addressing the issue of relevance.

John Klensin's public note that refers specifically to Dean Anderson was sent on May 27 21:29 -0400:


Since this is a response to a note I wrote, I'm going to try to respond
to it.  Then I'm going to go back to deleting your mail without reading
it, because it doesn't appear to me as if you really intend to
participate in this discussion, rather than reciting your set of canards
over and over again.   The opinion of others may differ, of course but,
as far as I am concerned, you are succeeding in losing all credibility.

As moderator, I find Dean Anderson's repeated postings of his erroneous inferences with regard to John Klensin's experience, as well as his blanket statements about the IETF process ("you have no place in the IETF" and "personality cult") to be highly unprofessional.


(I also find his total number of postings excessive, but he has been warned about that already, and seems to have slowed down - only 5 messages over the last 3 days).

John's comment, on the other hand, seems carefully crafted to report only John's opinion on Dean Anderson's postings, not asserting some general truth about Dean. While this style may also easily be abused, it is clearly not as clear a breach of the guideline of professional commentary as Dean's is.

John: Take care.

Dean: You have been warned.

                  Harald Alvestrand
                  speaking as moderator of the IETF list




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