On Mon, 27 Sep 2004 18:42:18 +0300, John Loughney wrote: > I have heard that there have been some problems with the > Secretariat, I have not been privy to the fact that the IETF > is going to hell in a handbasket. Are things so dire? I have > been much more concerned about other problrms in the IETF, > though I'm feeling rather burnt out on that topic as well.
Based on the management actions being pursued in the IETF: 1. Those "other" problems are well in hand, with no emergency issues, so there does not need to be a focus on them by the IESG. 2. The Secretariat and IANA are responsible for all the other problems. And, yes, that really is an accurate summary of what Harald has been saying over the last year or more.
I apologize for not having followed the debate over the IETF administrative structure as I should have probable done it . Dave's response seems to be the first I find interesting and illuminating (may be I lost others).
Is there a draft/wiki documenting all the IETF problems? How they are addressed or blocked (I read that mail). (Not the drafts presenting solutions).
I asked a few months ago if it was a problem that IANA became a "function" of ICANN. I was responded on the list or privately that it was a real legal/structural problem with interesting quotes from ISOC, IETF, ICANN. But no one (as I do it, but probably for non IETF reason) told me it was also an operational/administrative problem or source of problems?
I also apologize for not having consulted the yearly budgets and reports of IETF, IAB, IESG - first because I do not know where to find them - no link on the polling page to the above draft and to these information. I would also be interested in knowing which of the many partial documents, pages, links IS the IETF legal Charter, to understand what is to be retained or changed, what are the expected deliverables.
In the case some of these links were not provided because they do not exist, should it not be a good idea to start with their writing?
I am engaged for 26 year this August in structuring net oriented global groups. This is a very complex task where there is no good solution today. First because there is no adequate culture yet with an adapted legal solution. As a non-Yankee, with also a large parallel (howver national) experience of Minitel oriented similar structures (it could be a legal obligation) and some international experience in networks and data network policy, I observed that common law and US incorporation cannot fill the the need. There is no problem when there is a structural leadership somewhere. This is why it is OK for international US lead structures, but an immediate problem for multinational open structures. This is the ICANN, this is the ISOC problem. What one the IETF draft calls the "nexus" - underlining it will be read as nexUS by the US law. IETF is the best and quite successful attempt for an US lead to be a global and open effort. Let not kill it.
ICANN as a "bottom-up" effort died. @large as a bottom-up effort died. IETF as an all-together effort survives well. Please let non pick inadequate solutions which will kill it.
The problem in US law is the BoD. US legal structures are designed to get money represented and in control. There is no difference between a profit and a non profit oriented structure, other than revenue sharing or not and an external decision you have to provision for. And the founding document is mainly a description of the BoD organization (read the scenario C draft).
To be able to work an all-together organization must consider the BoD as a service, servicing the secretariat which serves the community. The BoD Chair has NO power on the activity. His job is to make the secretariat budgeted and run. His designation and his policy should be under the control of the Community/Activity Steering Group. I probably created more than 50 non profits (size in this is of no interest - it should be kept small whatever the size of the community being supported - except when administrative members are also sponsors. I use standard articles I simplified to fit the bill. The BoD takes 15 lines over 150. They are built for a non-profit tax exempt structure: a change would need a State court action. People are interested in what they do together, not really in administrativia. Someone has to take care but this does not make him the boss. The home keeper is not the home master.
Since this is a basic feature for any organization servicing a (tier and tier) network should we work on a governance systems RFC first, and then to test it on ourselves?
A last point: I agree 100% with John Klensin. The BoD does not make an organization, a common culture based upon a common education/knowledge makes it. As someone put it an organization where one needs to read 50 mails a day to stay in, is no organization.
jfc
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