On Fri, Dec 02, 2005 at 11:57:43AM -0800, Hallam-Baker, Phillip wrote: > > From: Ted Faber [mailto:faber@xxxxxxx] > > RFCs have authoritative versions for a couple reasons. Some > > are the result of the IETF consensus process and the exact > > wording on which consensus was achieved is important to know. > > There are a significant number of cases where small changes > > in the wording of an RFC or section thereof would not achieve > > consensus. > > Agreed, but I have yet to see an example that would be affected by the > document format. As far as pagination, no. But I didn't get the impression that your analogy was about the illumination, but about the text. For the record, I think an authoritative plain text document with a sufficiently rich character encoding to express authors' names is a reasonable RFC format. I think that generating those from a standard content markup language is a good idea and that the generating markup should be made commonly available to people revising documents. I expect to be driven to saying that again in 6 months. > > > To the extent that the internet community agrees > > to abide by that consensus, the authoritative version is what > > was agreed to. For these RFCs the authority due them stems > > from the consensus process. > > Ah here you make the mistake of thinking that the IETF community is the > Internet community. Perhaps forty years ago, but certainly not today. Point taken. In my message s/Internet community/IETF community/g. That's what I mean. I did not intend for those communities to become conflated. > > The IETF does not make any effort to be representative of the Internet > community. 1) They do too. Hmmm. I would have thought proof by assertion would be more fun. Seriously, you can argue that the IETF is failing to reach the stakeholders it claims to represent, but I think it's disingenuous to say that the group doesn't try to reach them. There are low barriers to entry for interested parties, and concentrated efforts to find and coordinate with other networking standards bodies. Those aren't the actions of a group of ostriches. 2) "Internet community" is a noun that can't meaningfully be used with a definite article anymore. There are lots of Internet communities from webcomics artists through political bloggers and ebay merchants. The question of who makes up the IETF's constituency is a good one, though. I think there are significant numbers of Internet network engineers for whom the body still refelects consensus and who find the working dialogs conducted there valuable. I suspect there are folks who'll argue the opposite. I think most IETF participants think interested and interesting factions are represented, or they'd stop coming. A fair number of entities who are not participants also are interested in what the IETF publishes, even if their level of involvement does not extend to taking part in making the sausage. (By "sausage" I mean "IETF standards documents.") > > > > Now, the IETF consensus process is performed by humans, and > > therefore there will be mistakes. In principle, however, it > > is this process that conveys any authority on an RFC and not > > some imperative handed down from an oligarchy, tyrant, or > > supernatural power. I don't think your analogy to > > the(?) church is particularly illuminating for that reason. > > The analogy is very apt as your equation of the IETF with the Internet > community demonstrates. IETFers behave like cardinals and priests far > too often. Though you've been mislead by my poor substitution (Internet != IETF), my intent was not to indicate that I believe that the IETF speaks for anyone but the IETF. I would have hoped that the rest of my message made that clear, but I'm happy to say it explicitly: IETF standards documents reflect the consensus of the IETF participants at the time of submission to the publication queue. People who believe an IETF standards document represents other things are misinformed. If our only point of contention is that you believe I was misinformed, let me assure you I'm not. > > The lack of a pope does not damage the analogy in any way. The early > church was governed by independent bishops. The papacy was established > after an external authority (the emperor) got tired of their infighting, > doctrinal disputes &ct. Only one of the original four doctors of the > church was Bishop of Rome and the supremacy was never accepted by the > Eastern church. I still don't see how that applies to the IETF, unless it's something to do with all that IETF restructuring that I'm ignoring. -- Ted Faber http://www.isi.edu/~faber PGP: http://www.isi.edu/~faber/pubkeys.asc Unexpected attachment on this mail? See http://www.isi.edu/~faber/FAQ.html#SIG
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