Lawrence Rosen wrote:
Because Larry - many of those here owe their ongoing $$$ livelihood to
the lie the IETF has become. And so what you are suggesting is
increasing the rolls of the unemployed by adding these individuals who's
whole existence is the IETF. Its also these people in my opinion that
make the IETF the laughingstock its become as you so rights notice that
RFC's and the process for creating standards has degraded into a model
where there really is no standard.
Just my two cents
Todd Glassey
The recent threads about draft-housley-tls-authz have taught me
something I didn't know about IETF, and I don't like what I've learned.
There are, it appears, many types of IETF RFCs, some which are
intended to be called "Internet standards" and others which bear other
embedded labels and descriptions in their boilerplate text that are
merely "experimental" or "informational" or perhaps simply "proposed
standard". One contributor here described the RFC series as "a
repository of technical information [that] will be around when I am no
longer around."
The world is now full of standards organizations that treat their
works as more significant than merely "technical information." Why do
we need IETF for that purpose? If all we need is a repository of
technical information, let's just ask Google and Yahoo to build it for
us. Maybe our Internet standards should instead be created in an
organized body that pays serious attention to the ability of the wide
world to implement those standards without patent encumbrances.
But even if IETF isn't willing to amend its patent policy that far—and
most SDOs still aren't, unfortunately—at the very least we should take
our work seriously. When someone proposes a serious RFC, we should
demand that the water around that RFC be swept for mines—especially
**disclosed** patent mines that any serious sailor would want to
understand first.
If IETF isn't willing to be that serious, maybe we should recommend
that our work go to standards organizations that do care? As far as my
time to volunteer for a better Internet, there are far better ways to
do it than listening here to proposals that are merely "technical
information." At the very least, separate that into a different list
than IETF.org so I know what to ignore!
By the way, many of the same companies and individuals who are
involved here in IETF are also active participants in W3C, OASIS, and
the new Open Web Foundation, all of which organizations pay more
attention to patents and the concept of "open standards" than what
IETF seems to be doing here. So let's not be disingenuous, please.
Almost everyone here has previous experience doing this the right way.
/Larry
Lawrence Rosen
Rosenlaw & Einschlag, a technology law firm (www.rosenlaw.com
<http://www.rosenlaw.com>)
3001 King Ranch Road, Ukiah, CA 95482
707-485-1242 * cell: 707-478-8932 * fax: 707-485-1243
Skype: LawrenceRosen
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