Simon Josefsson wrote:
Brian E Carpenter <brc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
Simon Josefsson wrote:
"Marshall Eubanks" <tme@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
On Thu, 14 Jul 2005 18:08:45 +0200
Simon Josefsson <jas@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Brian E Carpenter <brc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
We propose that, for an initial period of 6 months, a member of
the community will be added to regular IESG meetings as a "recording
secretary" who will write narrative minutes of the discussions,
which will be posted publicly after IESG review for accuracy.
Sounds useful to me. How about actually recording the discussion too?
And publishing them as OGG or MP3. Editing out personnel discussion
would still be possible. All for the sake of transparency and
accountability.
My experience is that recordings tend to shut some people up.
My experience is that recordings tend to make people focus on facts,
rather than trying to win a discussion or furthering their own agenda.
If the IESG meetings are intended as service to the community, from
experts, that seem to be a good thing.
Plus, if they exist, they are subject to subpoena.
Is that a problem? Not purely a rhetorical question.
The two points are linked. The IESG gets to make some decisions about
people. "X is a lousy WG chair, but Y is the only plausible replacement,
and she works for Z so would have a commercial interest in the
outcome. So we have to put up with X." I think people wouldn't say that
on a call that was being recorded for posterity, precisely because it might
be sub poenaed.
Whereas the narrative minutes would say
"The IESG discussed the Foobar WG and agreed with the AD's proposal to
continue with the current WG chair."
The logical conclusion to that problem is to edit out those parts of
the recording before making it public. Editing audio is roughly as
difficult as writing down narrative minutes these days. That
filtering and editing process is required when writing minutes too, so
it is not like an entirely new process is required. Listeners would
have to listen to the recording and read the minutes to get the
complete publicly available information.
I'm sorry, I *really* don't think this would be practical. Editing written
notes is much easier and quicker then editing audio, and can be done
anywhere the scribe's laptop can be opened.
This would be one bridge too far for me.
Brian
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