Re: IESG Statement On Oppressive or Exclusionary Language

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Howdy,

On Thu, Jul 23, 2020 at 10:36 AM Michael StJohns <mstjohns@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi -

I support the general goals you've stated below, but I have a few problems with how you're (IESG) suggesting we approach them.  Two in particular:

1) The onus for implementing whatever we end up deciding will be on the RFC Editor and the RPC - that argues that the primary driver of the language effort should be rooted over on the rfc-interest mailing list, and driven by the RSE (or the temporary equivalent) and not as part of the general area.  I'm not sure why this even needs to run past Dispatch?


For what it's worth, I disagree with this.  The primary mode of implementation here for new work will be a change in community practice, not a set of changes implemented at the end of the process by the RSE or RPC.  It also seems to clear to me that it would be valuable for the other streams to consider the same issues, but I don't believe that changing the IETF's practice requires the consensus of the other streams to change. 

To put this in a slightly different way, we're better off if alternatives to terms like master/slave are considered and adopted by the working groups who are building the technologies than if the alternatives are brought forward only after the work is done. 

As a result, I believe BCP and IETF processing is appropriate here, even if the other streams adopt similar conventions.  It may still happen that there are issues flagged late, but I'm guessing it would be at IESG review rather than at the RPC exceptional circumstances. 

regards,

Ted Hardie
 
2) I'm not enamored of the document [1] for a number of reasons: 
  • At least three of the sources  (BrodieGravesGraves, Burgest, Eglash) are  behind paywalls making it difficult for anyone besides the authors to do a meaningful review
  • other sources appear to be paper only - at least there are no on-line references
  • there are few peer-reviewed scholarly papers referenced - it would be helpful to have more to strengthen any arguments rather than depending on popular press opinion pieces (Grewal, Jansens, McClelland)
  • because X, Y and Z did it isn't a great set of arguments for why we should do it (e.g, Drupal, Github, etc)
  • If we're going to get into this, we need to also address "master" as a stand-alone term, not simply in the context of "master/slave" - e.g. "master copy", "mastering a recording", "zone master file", "mastering a skill", "master controller".  I'd *really* like to not have to do this multiple times because we lacked imagination or completeness.
  • the list of master/slave alternatives within the document doesn't really deal with the "controlling entity/controlled entity" pattern.
Later, Mike

On 7/23/2020 12:35 PM, The IESG wrote:
The IESG believes the use of oppressive or exclusionary language is 
harmful.  Such terminology is present in some IETF documents, including 
standards-track RFCs, and has been for many years. It is at odds with 
our objective of creating an inclusive and respectful environment in the 
IETF, and among readers of our documents.

The IESG realizes that the views of the community about this topic are 
not uniform. Determining an actionable policy regarding problematic 
language is an ongoing process. We wanted to highlight that initial 
discussions about this topic are taking place in the general area (a 
draft [1] is slated for discussion in GENDISPATCH [2] at IETF 108).  
Updating terminology in previously published RFCs is a complex endeavor, 
while making adjustments in the language used in our documents in the 
future should be more straightforward. 

The IESG looks forward to hearing more from the community, engaging in 
those discussions, and helping to develop a framework for handling this 
issue going forward.

[1] https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-knodel-terminology/
[2] https://www.ietf.org/proceedings/108/agenda/agenda-108-gendispatch-03

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