Kai Henningsen wrote:
touch@xxxxxxx (Joe Touch) wrote on 11.09.04 in <41439AE7.6030703@xxxxxxx>:
Spencer Dawkins wrote:
Dear Harald-the-General-AD,
Can we PLEASE do as Melinda says - change the policy now for new drafts?
That may have a chilling effect on new drafts. I.e., this isn't as simple as "let's just change it now for future stuff".
"Chilling effect" - from *publishing* already-published material that's already copied all over the net?
Authors might wait longer to "publish" IDs, since they'd be officially citable (once they're public, despite any instructions to the contrary in the body). They'd wait longer to submit, to collect sections, etc., rather than turning in half-written things with calls for additional material.
The other, attractive alternative is to bury the ISOC in ID versions, such that previous versions are individually basically useless.
...
How would that effect work on material meant for RFCs, or for working group work (where the list archives are already public forever)?
See above - that's exactly the point. It puts a 'wait, this is going to be published - is it ready for that?' hurdle in the loop, one that the ID process was designed to avoid.
And if it works on some other kind of draft, would we actually care?
IMO, changing the policy would indeed be "making the problem worse".
I have yet to see a coherent argument for that.
I have yet to see a coherent argument for keeping the ID series if it's archived publicly. Why do we need to see the entire process - in public - of editing and revision? And if we do, why do we need two separate series to do this?
Joe
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