Adam Roach wrote: > You'll note that this work is coming out of GEOPRIV -- where > the "PRIV" part of that name stands for "privacy." That's not more obvious in the "registry" draft. Joe Abley posted a pointer to draft-ietf-simple-rpid-08 for the missing context, and there I found lists of locations and moods. The latter appears to be a list of smileys (without the smileys), and it's clear that the user picks what his or her mood is - a device can't know this, and it better doesn't try to guess the mood of its user. For the locations it's not so clear. Why should a device tell me that I'm in the "cafe" of a "jail" in an "airport", I would know this. And why would I tell my device where it is, all it needs to know is "be quiet" or "make as much noise as you can", different ways to attract my attention depending on where I am. > There are many good use cases in real-time communications > that detail *why* conveying this kind of information is > potentially useful. Going into a tutorial on these basic > topics seems a bit inappropriate on the general list. Maybe the "registry" draft could be integrated into a draft where that's immediately clear, or bound to a list of special purposes where devices need to know why "cycle" and "water" are different - at first glance both could fall into a category "now isn't an optimal time to talk, but it's not impossible". Without context a "location dictionary" as Internet standard appears to be an odd idea. And a list of smileys without the smileys removes the fun - if the moods get their own registry. Bye, Frank _______________________________________________ Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf