Thanks, S. Inline On Sun, Aug 09, 2020 at 03:03:02PM -0700, S Moonesamy wrote: > Hi Toerless, > At 10:13 AM 09-08-2020, Toerless Eckert wrote: > > Who is "your" ? Anybody who learned (american ?) english before the age of 6 ? > > > > Btw.: I disagree. Any choices beyond ubiquitously recognized reasonably > > good american english is probably an IETF community choice, and not > > one of a subset defined by upbringing. > > Here are two sentences from a RFC: > > "For example, a poor person in a Third World country might keep the money > in each mail message, regardless of whether it is spam". > > "Assuming cheap labor in a poor country can be obtained for about > 60 cents per hour, and assuming a Turing test of a 30-second duration, > this is about 0.50 cents per test and thus 0.50 cents per message to > send an IM spam." > > The sentence is proper US English as it went through the publication > process. Anyone discussing those sentences at that point in time would be > rebuked. I took a look at the last-call mailing list. There isn't much > activity there except for the sponsored reviews. I doubt that anyone would > flag those sentences. I was primarily thinking about the the fact that the whole community should be able to claim to have a say in the policies, eve if they are non-native english speaker. I fully agree that the execution of the policies through just current feedback to last-call mailing list would just result in randomn subsets of the community getting involved, and primarily native english speakers. Hence i think the policy should be to ensure that there is a neutral, community selected set of language experts that executive the community desired policy. I was recommending a nomcom style election process for them as one possible way to achieve this. I could perfectly think of pairs of native english speakers in the community that would cancel each others extreme views of lanugage out, thinking it could result in good compromise language.... > > In reality, i think the policies and how to interpret them will simply be > > made by a combination of IETF leadership the minority that is able to > > most cohesively voice their opinion. Aka: the usual IETF min/max way: > > minimum effort by the people with privilege vs. maximum effort by > > others to overturn those decisions. > > I see it a bit differently. Sometimes, an opinion which might look > convincing at first glance does not carry much weight if you (used in > general terms) look at the facts. The policies are usually based on input > from less than 1% of the "community". The breadth, in terms of > participation, is quite narrow. IMHO not much different from what i was saying. I just took the means of gaming the process also into account. Aka: selective aggregation of received opinions from the list, moving decisions to different forums than email where the weight of pro/con would be known different, etc. pp. Cheers Toerless > Regards, > S. Moonesamy