--On Thursday, 21 July, 2005 13:59 -0400 Sam Hartman <hartmans-ietf@xxxxxxx> wrote: > John> and without any prejudice from the IESG > John> review. > > If you mean that the IESG should treat the process fairly, I > agree. If you mean that the IESG should not express an opinion > I disagree. I am not opposed to the IESG expressing opinions. However, I think the IESG needs to be _extremely_ careful --both internally and in public-- to not reach a conclusion on one of these things and lock it in, especially if that conclusion is reached without significant community input. This is, to me, part of the judge and jury issue that Brian mentioned some time ago. If you have the opinion that pursuing something through an IETF process would be a bad idea, you are, IMO, welcome to say so. But you are then, again IMO, absolutely obligated to facilitate such an effort procedurally if it is proposed to see if IETF support is really out there... possibly even facilitating it more strongly than if you had not expressed a collective opinion. If, by contract, you (collectively) discourage someone from pursuing something that the IESG concluded that it didn't like sufficiently to approve it during the IETG review cycle, and then use the IESG's considerable procedural discretion to block an effort by the requestors to get IETF review or to starve such a review for resources, then you set up the appearance of an abuse of authority and, perhaps worse, create a situation in which an attempt to get IETF review of an allocation request must be managed by either intimidation or appeal (or by repetitive discussions on the IETF list :-( ). Several people have observed of late that they would prefer to see IESG service viewed as rather more like jury duty with its sense of short-term obligations to the community, rather than as a role similar to either career judicial appointments or of anointed kings. It seems to me that, to some extent, this is another aspect of that distinction. Yes, it is reasonable that the IESG be able to make quick affirmative decisions when those are clearly in order because it saves everyone time. But, when we get to the point where something requires community consensus, I believe that you are obligated to take on that "jury" role, soliciting community input as fairly as possible and then interpreting it equally fairly, without letting your personal or collective prior views intrude except insofar as they inform the questions you ask of the community. If, instead or in addition to that jury-role, you start influencing the community process by controlling resources or input to support your prior opinions, then we are at high risk. And, if I were forced to choose between a fair, open, and balanced community process if one is initiated and the IESG expressing an opinion, I would suggest that the IESG should not even be permitted to _have_ an opinion and that anyone on the IESG who expresses one should recuse him or herself from all further discussions on the matter. But I don't think we need to make that choice: I think you folks are more than capable of having and expressing opinions and then coordinating a fair and balanced process. The issue may well have had more to do with how the opinion was expressed than what was intended, but the statement about the Roberts allocation request that started these threads seemed to go a bit over the line in that regard and I think we are now in the process of the community clarifying what it wants and expects. > John> even "no, and we recommend that you go away and not > pursue John> this" should not be options unless there > really is evidence John> of community consensus. > > Strongly disagreed. See above. I have no problem with your saying the above if you are _absolutely_ sure, and can convince onlookers, that, if the applicant then goes ahead and tries to pursue it, the IESG will do absolutely nothing to block that course of action, even by passive resistance. Put differently, if you make a statement that strong, I believe you actually take on more responsibility for facilitating an effort to pursue the request with the community than you would have had if you didn't have an opinion on the subject of whether it should be pursued (note "didn't have" not just "didn't express"). When the IESG (or its members) get to say * no, we won't approve this. * you can pursue it with the community but we recommend that you not do that. And * if you do pursue it, we will (or may) starve you for resources or anything that sounds vaguely like that, then the IESG is essentially making final decisions not declining one particular type of approval option. And I don't think that is acceptable, even if somehow thinly disguisted. > I agree that your draft addresses most of these issues. It > happens to do so in a manner I believe I disagree with and > hope to convince the community is at least significantly > wrong. However I do agree that if the community approves of > your draft, it would establish the criteria I'm asking for. Clarity about where we disagree is always progress. > Next week before getting on the plane I have catching up on > newtrk and reading your document scheduled. I will make > detailed comments. I will look forward to them. john _______________________________________________ Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf