Re: Enough is Enough.

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Hi Khaled,

There are a large number of repositories which mirror the internet-drafts; some of those are public and some are within organizations. If your intent is to withdraw the work from the IETF, the most effective way forward might be to publish a new version of each draft, noting that the work is not being pursued within the IETF any more.  That will supersede any previous versions and clearly signal your intent.  That also gives you a chance to publish where you will discuss the work, if you will still be carrying on conversations about the proposals.

regards,

Ted Hardie

On Tue, Oct 20, 2020 at 10:01 AM Khaled Omar <eng.khaled.omar@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Dear IETFers,

 

I hope this is my last e-mail with the IETF and I’m not feeling coward to repeat my first request regarding deleting my drafts from the IETF repository.

 

Can anyone tell me whom is the responsible person for deleting drafts from the IETF?

 

P.S. I don’t want to find any BCP or whatever that mention that the original author of the draft has not the right to ask for deleting his drafts as this doesn’t make any sense.

 

I wish you good luck after the deletion and the ideas not being used by the IETF as they have no benefits as many claims.

 

Sorry for any disturbance.

 

Regards,

 

Khaled Omar

 


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