Harald - I would agree that you are right here that the IETF's mission process and in fact operations have fluttered in the breeze but the breeze was caused by whoever was chair at the time's running by or away from the key issue that they as the chair were given the ability because of a very weak charter and very ambiguous processes (may instead of must everywhere) create whatever it is they wanted. The issue is that the wants and mandates of the chair's have changed over the years and so the IETF has changed in response to that. What that tends to indicate is that the IETF is responsive to changes in its management's desires but not in the proletariat's... So then what I suggest is the answer is a more rigidized standards process and in particular a set of unambiguous policies and procedures that are at least modeled if not tested before being released. And that are in and of themselves the same for all they are applied to or around. Todd Glassey ----- Original Message ----- From: "Harald Tveit Alvestrand" <harald@alvestrand.no> To: <john.loughney@nokia.com>; <ietf@ietf.org>; <problem-statement@alvestrand.no> Sent: Sunday, October 26, 2003 9:44 PM Subject: RE: IESG proposed statement on the IETF mission > > > --On 24. oktober 2003 18:07 +0300 john.loughney@nokia.com wrote: > > > Hi Harald, > > > > I'm going to pick on one statement, which other have as well. > > > >> It is important that this is "For the Internet," and does not include > >> everything that happens to use IP. IP is being used in a myriad of > >> real-world applications, such as controlling street lights, but the > >> IETF does not standardize those applications. > > > > I almost feel that this should just be dropped from the statement. My > > reasons being that I have been told by the IESG about protocol > > extensibility is that the IETF wants to have a tighter control over > > protocol > > extensibility, even for extensions thought to be for limited use > > or specific networks (for example, cellular networks). The reason > > being is that once something is out there, it often starts to be used > > in ways which were not originally planned or used outside of its > > original 'limited use' plans. Therefore, in order to ensure proper > > protocol behavior & interoperability, the IESG wants to manage > > extensibility. This has been very true in SIP & Diameter, for example. > > True. Nearly a year ago, we attempted to publish > draft-iesg-vendor-extensions, to describe these problems in more detail - > but we failed to get that finished. > > > > On the other hand, we see a protocol like RADIUS, which the IETF > > has never done a good job at working with or standardizing, being > > developed in 4 or more SDOs, and not in a colaborative manner. This > > makes a big mess with the RADIUS spec, and RADIUS does seem like a > > protocol that has a big effect on the Internet. > > You'll have no disagreement from me that RADIUS is a problem! > > > So, in summary, the IESG has shown not to follow the above paragraph, > > sometimes even for good reasons. I can't think of a way in which > > modify the paragraph to make it any better - because there will always > > be examples of work that the IETF choses to standardize (or not) > > which will violate that part of the mission. Perhaps moving the > > 'for the internet to the previous paragraph is what is needed. > > as I've said before - I don't think we can come up with a mission statement > that retroactively blesses everything we've done well before, or > retroactively curses everything we've done badly. And we do require > flexibility to "do what's right". But without the ability to talk about > what the mission of the IETF ... I think we'll do badly. > > Harald > >