On Thu, Apr 28, 2022 at 09:33:08AM -0700, DraftTracker Mail System wrote: > > Please DO NOT reply to this email. > > I-D: <draft-hsyu-message-fragments-00.txt> > Datatracker URL: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-hsyu-message-fragments/ > > This document now replaces draft-muks-dnsop-message-fragments > draft-hsyu-dnsop-message-fragments instead of draft-hsyu-dnsop-message-fragments This is the second time in recent years that, in a DNS draft I'd primarily authored, I've noticed my name was removed from the list of authors with no prior consultation with the document mostly the same. I understand that we assign co-copyright to the IETF when publishing drafts, but it feels unreasonable that after effort is put in writing a draft, the authorship is completely deleted. In the previous case, I was moved to "Acknowledgements" without consultation, and in this case my name has been deleted fully. New author(s) who want to take over could instead: * Ask to be co-author(s). * Say that they'd leave the original author(s) as-is, but that they would like to have control over the draft's future, and if the old author(s) don't like it, they may ask to be deleted. * If content were significantly modified, they could say "This draft is significantly different from your old draft, and so we'd like to claim full ownership, is that OK?". Instead, what happened with both drafts is akin to taking a book that's mostly written by one author, contributing a few sentences, and deleting the previous authors' names and calling it your own. Mukund
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