Re: draft-housley-iesg-rfc3932bis and the optional/mandatory nature of IESG notes

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On 9/9/09 11:09 AM, "Robert Elz" <kre@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

>     Date:        Wed, 9 Sep 2009 09:53:42 -0400
>     From:        "Polk, William T." <william.polk@xxxxxxxx>
>     Message-ID:  <C6CD2BA6.1483B%tim.polk@xxxxxxxx>
> 
>   | IMHO, the RFC series (as comprised by the four document streams) is not
>   | similar to IEEE Transactions on Networking or the NY Times.  I am not sure
>   | that there is really a close analog out there.
> 
> It is an independent publisher publishing material submitted to it - the
> NY Times analogy isn't close, as they create much of their own material,
> which neither IEEE Transactions, nor the RFC editor do (or not much of,
> indexes and stuff like that excepted), but aside from that, there shouldn't
> be a lot of difference.

Yes, but everything that IEEE Transactions produces is similar in nature.
It is all personal submissions.  My point is that the RFC series is shared
by different communities with different submission policies.  I don't think
the analogy fits.  There is a completely different balancing act required.

> 
>   | The better question is, if IEEE was distributing the output of the IETF in
>   | its series of standards publications
> 
> You're operating under the mistaken impression that the RFC series is
> IETF standards - it isn't - some of he RFCs are IETF standards, others
> are other IETF publications, and others have nothing to do with the IETF
> at all.   It is just a document series that the IETF happens to use as
> a place to publish its output.
> 
> If there was a document series and publisher that was exclusively for
> IETF standards, then we wouldn't be publishing anything else there at all,
> and the question of notes would be irrelevant - that would be closer to the
> way IEEE and ISO standards are published - but that is not what the RFC
> series is now, or ever has been.
> 

I am not suggesting that the RFC series is IETF standards only, or should
be.  The streams coexist because they all provide services to the same
community.

>   | And are we really helping anyone by not clarifying the relationship
> between
>   | the document and other RFCs?  Shouldn't we provide this information as a
>   | service to the reader?
> 
> Many times that is reasonable, probably, and no-one is suggesting that
> the RFC editor always refuse to publish IESG notes (though some of us
> don't believe the IESG should very often, if at all, request one) - the
> question isn't what happens when an IESG note is appropriate, the question
> is what happens when it isn't - and who gets to decide.
> 

I believe that when a requested IESG note is not appropriate, the RFC Editor
will push back and the IETF community will support that position.  If the
IESG is appropriate, but the RFC Editor pushes back, I believe the community
will make the right decision there.  Essentially, I trust that the IETF
community will ensure that the IESG does not abuse their position.  The
energy on this thread would seem to support my expectations...

Tim

> kre
> 
> 

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