Two observations:
1) Having been an active participant in the Nomcom working group, it is
amaxing it actually worked. The process took an absurdly long time to
converge on a very small set of changes. Having tried to drive ICAR, which
many people said was important, I again conclude that WGs are just the
wrong tool for this.
2) If we were at the point that we knew that the changes below were what we
wanted, that might be reasonable. But at the moment we have a polarized
community who collectively want multiple incompatible things. And they
want them all now. A working group will not resolve such a situation.
Yours,
Joel
PS: I don't know if Brian's proposal is the right answer. But it is sure
a heck of a lot better than chartering anotehr working group.
At 03:22 PM 9/16/2005, Ted Hardie wrote:
At 1:39 PM -0500 9/16/05, Spencer Dawkins wrote:
>
>While it seems plausible that we could use the same mechanism for
protocol design and for process evolution, my understanding of the
Problem working group's efforts and the subsequent
newtrk/icar/proto/mpowr (and yes, there were others) efforts is that this
approach simply does not work.
Spencer,
"simply does not work" is good rhetoric, but it doesn't fit all
the facts.
Groups like NomCom and IPR have taken on tasks and done them, with community
discussion of their charters and with community discussion as their documents
went through the process. They are process change groups, and they work.
Let's say I put forward a charter like the following:
>WG Name: New Queues (NQ)
>Description of Working Group:
>
>The IETF has too many decisions passing through the same body, the IESG.
>The creation of the IASA and IAD has removed one set of tasks from that
queue,
>but there are a considerable number of others which might be moved.
>
>In order to return the IESG to its historic task of managing working
groups and
>their output, this working group will describe a process by which new
decision
>making queues can come into being. While the process will be general,
the working
>group will fully specify the creation of a process management decision
making
>body. Among other targets for new queues: oversight of registered
values in IANA
>registries; IETF responses to RFC-Editor queries related to RFC-Editor
published documents;
>approval of experimental and informational documents that are not created by
>working groups.
>
>Goals and Milestones:
>
>1st Draft of document describing general queue creation mechanism
>
>1st Draft of document describing process management decision making body
>
>2nd Draft of GQCM
>
>2nd Draft of PMDM
>
>WGLC GQCM
>WGLC PMDM
>
>Publish QGCM
>Publish PMDM
>
>Re-charter to use GQCM for new queues, or close.
Can the IETF community not discuss whether this is the output it
wants
and this is the direction of change it wants in terms of this charter? It
may say "no",
but how to say yes or no to a charter is pretty clear, as is how to
participate in the
group or react to its output. Using an ad hoc mechanism to get from the
existing
process change mechanism to a new one would work well if we had strong
consensus
on where we want to go in process change, but that is the same condition
in which
working groups achieve success as well. If we do not have strong
consensus on the
desired process change, the ad hoc mechanism has far muddier mechanisms by
which it is created, by which people participate, and by which its output
may be
challenged. The most obvious mechanism for the last is for someone to put
forward
an alternate proposal. If there are alternate proposals than those coming
from the design
team, how do you want to decide among them in the absence of a working group?
Sure, we can invent all kinds of mechanisms to handle it that are equally
ad hoc, but
as I said in the Paris plenary, the hard but probably right answer is to
use the
existing mechanism one last time to replace it, then move on. That will
require
a lot of work from the Area Director, the WG Chair, and the community, but
it is
still the right answer.
regards,
Ted Hardie
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