Re: Old directions in social media.

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Hannes, I have to disagree about what it takes to participate in cross-area discussions.

As an example, I have problems with something currently being discussed in the DMM group (whether I am in the rough or the predominating side remains to be seen. That is not the point of this comment.

If I had to go through the discussion on the git issues tracker to figure out what was being said and why, it would be MUCH harder to appropriately participate in the discussions.

Yours,
Joel

PS: While I do not typically participate in dmm, I do follow it, and am at least somewhat knowledgeable about the space. The ability to follow it on the emial list is important to me.

On 1/6/2021 10:56 AM, Hannes Tschofenig wrote:
Keith,

for cross area reviews all you need are IETF drafts. I doubt that reviewers are interested in digging through the Github issues, PRs, and mailing list discussions.

Regarding "resolving tussles we encourage them, and we produce more and more standards that lack coherence with one another." Note my mail on that topic, see https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/ietf/YWTxZEik6gqGod9d5KbAdqNbh3g/
Moving all discussions from Github to the mailing list will have no impact on this issue.

Ciao
Hannes

-----Original Message-----
From: ietf <ietf-bounces@xxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of Keith Moore
Sent: Wednesday, January 6, 2021 1:58 PM
To: ietf@xxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: Old directions in social media.

On 1/6/21 2:56 AM, Hannes Tschofenig wrote:

The good thing is that there is no real problem here. In most working groups a limited number of people actively participate. Those people know how to contribute. For those who just browse through groups from time to time it got more difficult to see where the center of attention currently is.

I would claim that what you describe *is* a real problem.   IETF works best when it benefits from a wide range of input, including "cross-area"
input and input from generalists.   When working groups consist of a small number of people who do whatever they want in their narrow areas of concern, groups have a greater tendency to work at cross-purposes with one another.

And I would claim that we've been seeing the unfortunate results of that for many years now, so that instead of resolving tussles we encourage them, and we produce more and more standards that lack coherence with one another.

Keith


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