Ted, > I've assumed that it was to tell you it was at Draft Standard when the document > that replaced it was issued. That way you can tell whether the new doc is > a recycle-in-grade, an update to get something to the next step, or a downgrade. > The real meat of the data here, though, is that you should look at 3912 if > you want the current spec. Any other data about an obsolete spec is for > historical interest only. If I'm right, that could be made clearer (by saying > "Status when active:" or some such), but that doesn't really change meat of the > information. I'd strongly suggest some tag to indicate that its no longer active. In many cases, a Standard is marked Obsolete because it has been updated for some reason; often times because of some critical bug or other issues. I don't think the IETF wants to recommend an obsolete standard as something folks should go and implement. John _______________________________________________ Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf