--On Thursday, October 27, 2022 10:39 -0500 Pete Resnick <resnick@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 27 Oct 2022, at 8:58, John C Klensin wrote: > >> ... if he >> is forced off mailing lists until he demonstrates that he has >> stopped the problem behavior, he has no opportunity to make >> that demonstration, amounting to a lifetime ban. Moreover, >> at least from my point of view, it hurts the community by >> depriving us of the widest possible diversity of perspectives >> on our actual technical work. > > Revocation of posting rights does not require that we never > see posts from this person. Yes, it does permit (but not > require) any chair or list moderator to simply bit-bucket > posts. However, it would also permit a chair to check the > "moderation" bit for the mailing list and require chair > approval of posts before the message went to the list, and in > particular it would allow them to do so without giving a > formal public warning or limiting them to 30 days or requiring > consultation with their AD. Without the posting rights > revocation, a chair simply cannot do that. In this particular > case, given that we have someone who does contribute valuably > to technical discussions, I would hope that chairs would not > simply blindly block posts, but rather do the moderation until > such time that there is a demonstration that postings can be > made without reverting to earlier behavior. Yes, that does > mean more work for chairs. Yes, that does mean that if the > behavior returns, chairs will have to read rude messages and > then explain why those messages were not allowed on the list. > Yes, this does require chairs to be fair and judicious. But at > least it allows for these things to happen without the > constant return to the "warning, ask AD, suspend for 30" cycle. Pete, Completely agreed for all mailing lists other than those called out in the PR-action Last Call notice. If what you are saying is "let's force him off the enumerated set of mailing lists and then see what happens with other lists to which he might contribute", I can see some sense in that... Except that at least one of those lists --the ietf@xxxxxxxx one-- is something we at least used to tell people was important for full participation in the IETF. And, again, unlike my understanding of Brian's note, I am not suggesting the IESG decide the PR-action is unjustified. That could, if inappropriate postings continue, lead to what you warn against above. Instead, I am suggesting that they pragmatically postpone making a decision for some extended period to see how things develop. If one or more chairs/moderators encounter problems, they consult ADs, the IESG puts the PR-action on the agenda for their next meeting (or even conducts a quick email vote since the situation would, at that point, presumably be clear), and move forward. Their approving the PR-action at that time would presumably preempt any additional waiting or consultation periods, accomplishing what I infer is your goal from the above. Borrowing a bit from Ted's more recent note, my concern is not being nice to Dan, it is finding the right balance going forward, emphasizing protecting the community from disruptive behavior but also preserving the full range of useful contributions and perspectives and doing so without punishing prior inappropriate behavior if, indeed, it has stopped. best, john -- last-call mailing list last-call@xxxxxxxx https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/last-call