--On Tuesday, 15 May, 2007 11:27 -0700 Dave Crocker <dcrocker@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > Were we to deprecate every feature in IETF specifications that > get mis-implemented a couple of times over 10 years, I suspect > much of our technology would be deprecated... IMO, and at the risk of again agreeing with Dave, this is the issue for me. If we have inconsistent uses of terminology across documents that are supposed to be using the same, standardized, term, then that is a problem with our review process. If the term is explicitly standardized in one of the documents, that is the definition; things that use the term incorrectly should be candidates for fixing. By contrast, if we consider "misused sometimes" or "ambiguous with other uses" as a sufficient condition for deprecating the term itself, then we have a long list of terms to deprecate in front of us, almost certainly starting with "IP", which refers to several different protocols, a protocol layer, and something that often involves lawyers. I think some warning language about safe and unsafe contexts may be in order for this construction but I expect that everyone who is arguing for deprecating it entirely (or inserting a strong "don't use this" statement) will be making a case for similar language the next time an IPv6 document comes up for review. john _______________________________________________ Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf