Jefsey, I'm going to respond to this in the hope of clarifying, but it will be my last response as some of what you have written below persuades me that you aren't trying to listen to what others are saying. --On Monday, 27 December, 2004 06:51 +0100 "JFC (Jefsey) Morfin" <jefsey@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > At 05:36 27/12/2004, John C Klensin wrote: >> --On Monday, 27 December, 2004 03:00 +0100 "JFC (Jefsey) >> Morfin" <jefsey@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> > At last ... This is why the ISOC scheme cannot work. One >> > cannot serve two masters. This rises the question of who has >> > the lead over the Internet R&D (a part from the users). >> >> No, Jefsey, as is often the case, I can't fathom how your >> conclusions relate to what has been said. > > As usual you see the things with your internal IAB/IETF > culture. > When you rise a problem you very often presuppose that this > culture is right. So you have real difficulty to understand > that as > an IAB/IETF customer I first consider if the problem does not > root in that very culture, what is IMHO often the case. Well, I'm not as rooted in that culture as you assume I am. But, be that as it may, this is an IETF list and an IETF discussion. The only reasonable goal of participating in that discussion is to see if we, collectively, can make the IETF work effectively (or, if one prefers, keep it working effectively). I get quite pessimistic about that sometimes, but I obviously have not given up yet. If an when I do give up, and conclude that some other structure would be more useful and effective, I won't pursue it by trying to tune IETF procedures and structures on an IETF list: the people and organizations who would be most likely to want to work on such a replacement are, I believe, pretty much gone already. I'd encourage you to think about that. If you have concluded, as some of your notes lead me to believe that you have, that the IETF has outlived its usefulness and that the best strategy is to let it self-destruct and rot, then the best thing for you to do is to start doing serious work on whatever replacement you think appropriate, your ITU-I ideas or otherwise. Create your own mailing list, make an announcement as to where people with similar assumptions and inclinations can follow you to discuss and advance those ideas, and so on. All you accomplish here is to add noise in an environment in which almost everyone else is trying, in good faith, to tune a strategy and make it work. > Since I know you are quite concerned by multilingualism may > be will you understand this with the example of the RFC 3869. > It is a pure IAB product calling for Govs funding, yet not even > quoting multlingualism while is is the key Govs priority. I didn't write it. I didn't participate in evaluating it. The IAB is entitled to its opinions and perspectives. It is not clear to me that governmental research funding on that topic would add any real value, although it might contribute to Many Fine Lunches and Dinners so, had I been part of the IAB process that produced that document, I might have actually argued for leaving internationalization issues out (or not, I haven't thought much about it). And, while "multilingualism" may be the key priority of some governments, it is clearly not a priority of others. And, more important, few governments actually agree on what the topic is about; many are far more concerned with localization for their languages and character sets, with anyone else's being of lower priority. > First, the comment >> has nothing to do with "the ISOC scheme", it is strictly a >> matter of IETF-IASA leadership relationships and would exist >> no matter what relationship the IASA has to ISOC. > > Again, you only consider your own concerns - and I wander > what you may think I refer to??? When I say "ISOC scheme" > I do not discuss the way you want the IETF to relate with ISOC, > but the very choice of using ISOC to host the IASA. But that is exactly what I was talking about, whether it is "my own concerns" or not. So, to say it again, nothing in my earlier note, nor nothing in Margaret's, has anything to do with the IASA-ISOC relationship. The questions of the structure of the IAOC, and whether the IAOC has a permanent Chair, and what authority that Chair has, all would exist where the IASA was hosted within ISOC or not. And, as others have pointed out, the "hosting within ISOC" question is, for better or worse, settled. You are violating the norms of this community by continuing to introduce it, especially in the absence of any new facts or information. If you want to keep complaining or suggesting alternatives, please take it somewhere else. > As long as IETF is not incorporated with its own BoD the > administrative tasks will relate with two bosses and will be > hosted by a third one. I succeeded for years to be exactly > in that situation: believe me this gives a total autonomy. I > only feared first for my salary rises but I soon discovered > that this too was an auction :-) The community has reached a different conclusion. See above. >> Second, this >> has very little, if anything, to do with "Internet R&D" >> leadership, at least as I understand those terms: insofar as >> anyone in the IETF-linked structures have any leadership role >> there, it is clearly the IAB and not either the standards >> functions of the IETF or any administrative body. > > Never considered that this might be a problem? Sure I've considered it might be a problem. It is no secret that I've never been completely happy with the reorganization of a decade ago, largely because of the number of loose ends it left dangling. But we appear to be muddling through on that front. The IETF has evolved into an engineering and standards organization, not a research and development one and that is probably, IMO, A Good Thing. And deciding that we have to solve every possible real or imagined problem in order to move forward with the administrative restructuring is the path to either paralysis or madness. Since I still hope for a functional IETF, I'm not inclined toward either of those paths. >> And, again, >> this is independent of any links to ISOC or the absence of >> them. And... >> >> > 1. may be it is the time to remember the IRTF and its Chair: >> > this would transform a praxis into a triumvirate. >> >> Except that there is no ambiguity of relationships with the >> IRTF leadership, and it was that ambiguity which Margaret and >> I were addressing. The IRTF Chair is appointed by the IAB and >> essentially serves at the IAB's pleasure. > > This is exactly what, as an IETF/IAB/IRTF customer > I think "urgent" to reconsider for a long .... First, while you keep categorizing yourself as a "customer", it is not clear to me that is true. Second, as a customer, if you are not happy with the structure or performance of your supplier, maybe it is time you go elsewhere and find a supplier you find more satisfactory. The IETF has other customers who seem less unhappy with the product and who aren't urging the types of changes you are. And many of them are far more clearly "customers", in the sense that they are implementing IETF standards and selling (or otherwise distributing) products based on them. I haven't seen you doing that lately. >> > 2. rather then creating a dominance, why not to organize a >> > conflict arbitration, for example by your ICANN BoD >> > position. If there is a conflict, you are the first >> > embarrassed. >> >> First, because ICANN has absolutely nothing to do with this >> and the only value of dragging them into it would be to add >> considerable confusion about roles and relationships. > > You see the things again from your IAB/IETF point of view. > ICANN has nothing to do with this. What has to do is that this > position is the only IAB/IETF "liaison" with the external > world. Well, it is not the only one. Please see the IAB web page and elsewhere. > There is not even an IAB/IETF member at the WGIG. Whether or not that statement is true (I don't know what an "IETF member" is), why should there be? To the best of my knowledge, they didn't offer such a position and we didn't ask for one. The IETF doesn't do "Internet Governance" (whatever that is). I note that there is no formal ISO, or ETSI, or W3C, presence at the WGIG either. >> To put >> it mildly, I don't favor such confusion. You may, of course, >> disagree. Second, my "ICANN BoD position" is a liaison one >> only. > > Yes. And if there is an internal conflict there will be a long > internal delay with an e-mailing logorhea as only consequence. > You will be the only one to have to document it outside and > this way may be to see it in a different perspective, with > probably other kinds of advices. But I would not have to "document it outside", whatever that means. Nor would I expect the IETF to take any advice on this subject that comes from the ICANN direction. > The "liaison" being someone > usually chosen for his experience, common sense and IAB/IETF > good knowledge and trust, it could be the best internal and > external facilitator we could have in case of difficulties. > The experience of your current tenure shows it. If that is a complement, then thanks. But part of my role is to help preserve precisely the boundaries -- e.g., ICANN doesn't meddle in IETF's standards or administrative structures; IETF stays out of the "governance" business -- that you are either assuming don't exist or that I should be tearing down. Sorry, but that doesn't appear to be what the IAB wants. And, if they start wanting it, they would need to find someone else to do it because I think it would be a mistake for all concerned. >> I'm appointed by the IAB, serve at their pleasure, and >> feel obligated to follow any instructions I get from them >> when I am acting in that capacity. So injecting me, or future >> occupants of that role, into this situation would essentially >> just give the IAB the controlling vote. > > Here, I do not understand. You say IAB as the leadership, > anyway. Only in the context of my relationship with ICANN. > The concern you rise and I share is not that at the end of the > day non one decides, but that it takes time and hurts. > In what I suggest there is no vote but arbitration and > reasonable advices. In a less conflicting situation due to the > restored weight of IRTF. You are trying to "restore" a situation that never existed. The IRTF has been organizationally subsidiary to the IAB throughout the entire history of its existence. As I trust you have observed, we rarely make decisions around here by taking votes, but try to reach consensus somehow. If things get to voting, the consensus process (whether it includes formal arbitration and advice or not) has already failed. In that context, what you are asking for is, essentially "more trying to seek consensus". I think that is great, but the outcome isn't swift decision-making. If you need swift decision-making, you most efficiently want a dictator, whether you call that individual an arbitrator or not. I don't want that job and I would be afraid of anyone who did. >> It would not provide a >> basis for impartial arbitration, but would, in your language, >> just be a different way to "create a dominance". > > You will not change that someone has eventually to take a > decision. We only want to avoid conflicts. There only a need > for decision facilitation. Simplest is an IETF BoD, smoother > an experienced and open minded selected facilitator. See above comments about decisions that have already been made. > BTW I do not understand why you rise the question if you think > the IAB Chair has the con. Please try to read what I wrote before telling me what I think. I have said: * The IRTF is subsidiary to the IAB, and the IAB selected the IRTF leadership. * It is not clear whether the IAB Chair and IETF Chair are peers or if one has, somehow, more authority than the other, independent of the topic (each has some responsibilities and authority the other does not). * It would be my preference that the IAOC Chair be defined in a way that would avoid laying the foundation for any new power ambiguities and struggles None of those implies in any way that the "IAB Chair has the con". best, john _______________________________________________ Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf