> From: Harald Alvestrand [mailto:harald@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] > Hallam-Baker, Phillip wrote: > > > > The current funding model makes the IETF disproportionately > reliant on > > one single company that currently employs far more ADs and working > > group chairs than any other. It also has a habit of > recruiting through > > the IETF. If that company were to have an unexpected earnings > > shortfall the effect on the IETF could be very significant. > Given that > > it is a growth company and given that setbacks are > inevitable over the > > course of five or ten years there should be a real concern here. > I think you're talking about cisco, and I think the > contribution is between 10 and 15% of total IETF effort, > depending on which metric you use. > > If you were thinking of someone else, my apologies - I've > observed that in a lot of cases, people make oblique > references that not all participants in the IETF will catch; > I believe that naming them unambiguously helps clear > communications (while not naming them when we're discussing > principles helps keep the discussion from being excessively > partisan - so it requires a bit of judgment.) The reason I didn't name them is that the identity of the company concerned is not that relevant. Nor is the problem what they are doing but our reliance on it. If you add in the other major companies in the same sector (and thus likely to share fortunes) the reliance is even greater and increasing. The reason I do not want to go down the trade show route is not because I dislike trade shows, it is because the business model is very strongly affected by the business cycle. The first thing to go in a downturn is training, the next is the trade shows. The likes of COMDEX live for two business cycles at most. Since you have asked for direct talk: Your move to Google is an example of the type of high level influence broking that major industry players can afford. I have no problem with Google making these moves and the IETF is one of the forums where I have been actively encouraging Google participation. Participation is a dilectic experience. I expect the IETF to influence Google to a far greater extent than Google influences the IETF. I expect both influences to be net positive to both sides. The point here is that it is much more expensive for a company to go around hiring key players in an organization than to sponsor a meeting and doing so will inevitably give them far more influence than putting up a table and sticking a banner over it. I think that the fears of undue influence are to say the least overblown. I did actually voice concern about vendors selling 'shiny geek toys' to a vulnerable audience known to be ill equiped to resist. We could probably make some money off a bookshop or two. There are several publishers who have regularly attended IETF to recruit authors. In short there are plenty of ways that a limited exhibition could drive revenue without being an issue.
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