Dear Michael;
What follows is purely my opinion.
On Sep 20, 2009, at 1:18 PM, Michael StJohns wrote:
Steve -
Some 15 years ago, the IETF had a plenary session on the NSA's
CLIPPER chip initiative. That was a hot topic of the time and was a
great example of open discussion.
That discussion could not be had at an IETF in the PRC.
I do not agree with this and the following assertions about what
cannot be discussed in our technical meetings.
These were all technical discussions and, while they may have
political or other implications, is there
any Internet technology for which that is not the case ? The basic
engineering design of the Internet has fairly
profound political implications.
I have not censored my technical discussions in the past for political
reasons and do not intend to do
so in the future. I would be opposed to any meeting location that
required such technical censorship. Politeness and respect towards the
Host, yes, of course. Censorship of technical discussions, pre or
otherwise, no.
I do not feel that we will be technically censored in any Chinese IETF
meeting and would certainly not have supported going forward with
this, even to this extent, if I did feel that way.
I recognize that this is ultimately a judgement call, and others may
differ, but that is my opinion.
Regards
Marshall
We've had various discussions on P2P systems and their ability to
evade government restrictions.
That discussion could not be had at an IETF in the PRC.
We've had discussions on E164 and whether or not the owner of
E164.ARPA could allocate a country code for Taiwan.
That discussion could not be had at an IETF in the PRC.
I'm not sure what the hot topics will be at the time of a PRC
meeting and whether or not they might be offensive to the PRC
government - there may be none or they may be non-offensive.
The question I'd like us to consider: Is it in the best interests
of the IETF to pre-censor ourselves as the price of holding a
meeting in a specific venue?
I don't know the answer to that question.
If the answer is yes - let's do it... but it feels like we're losing
something that's critical to the IETF.
At 12:53 PM 9/20/2009, Steve Crocker wrote:
I don't think the IETF, either as a whole, in any of its working
groups, or as individuals, need feel inhibited about having the same
sorts of discussions in Beijing that it would have anywhere else.
Run the experiment and get some data. Survey attendees afterwards
and
find out what everyone felt. (My prediction: There will be more
discussion about the usual problems of not enough cookies, location
of
restaurants, connectivity, etc.)
Steve
On Sep 20, 2009, at 12:37 PM, Michael StJohns wrote:
Hi Steve -
To paraphrase, you believe we should accept constraints upon the
topics that can be raised at the meeting (stick to the center) as
the cost of doing business in China. And the reason for that is to
maintain the relevance of the IETF?
I'm finding this argument not well constructed.
I agree that engagement is good, but the IETF is about individuals
and we engage better at a personal level than IETF to country.
That can be accomplished at any venue - and possibly better at a
venue without excessive constraints on discussion.
I'd be happy to have a WG meeting in the PRC - on topics other than
those common to the security area, but I remain concerned about
prior restraint for the IETF as a whole as a price of holding a
meeting there.
At 03:55 PM 9/19/2009, Steve Crocker wrote:
The choice is between engaging and not engaging. Engaging is
better.
Not engaging isn't constructive. The Internet and the IETF are all
about engaging, expanding, communicating and being open. Much of
this
dialog has been worried about possible extreme situations. Let's
focus on the center. More than a billion people live in China and
their use of the Internet is expanding rapidly. They are building
much of the technology and contributing technically. It's to
everyone's advantage to have comfortable, constructive interaction.
Our first slogan was "Networks Bring People Together."
If you prefer to focus on the negatives, here's my analysis:
If we don't go to China, we have charted a downhill course and the
rest of the world will come together without us. The IETF will
lose
relevance.
This construction is black and white and somewhat irrelevant. The
IETF not meeting at this time in China is unlikely to make the rest
of the world "come together without us". Nor will us going to the
meeting be the sole reason for the world coming together with us.
If we do go to China and something bad happens, the consequences
will
be much worse for China than for the IETF. The work of the IETF
will
suffer a bit, but we'll recover quickly enough. However, China's
quest for engagement with the rest of the world will be hurt more
seriously.
There's bad and there's BAD. I'm mostly concerned not about the
whole IETF being kicked out of the hotel/PRC, but in individuals
being sequestered or removed for speech that in any other IETF venue
would be relevant and on-topic for the technical discussion. That
(fear of) prior restraint has a strong possibility of adversely
affecting the IETF by limiting discussion and constraining the free
flow of ideas. And that - free flow of ideas- not "engagement" - is
the strength of the IETF.
Bottom line: We should go to China with a positive attitude. We're
robust enough to deal with any consequences. If we don't go to
China,
however, we have weakened ourselves.
Bottom line - we should be the IETF and find venues that will accept
us for ourselves.
_______________________
Hmm.. I was going to stop there, but let's ask the meta question:
What is the maximum set of constraints you think we should accept on
the IETF as the price of holding a meeting? For example, would it
be acceptable to go somewhere where a class of IETF participant were
treated as 2nd class citizens and possibly segregated? Would it be
acceptable to go somewhere where ALL presentations had to be vetted
and approved by the local government? Etc?
Its all about slippery slopes - if we accept constraints other than
those we impose upon ourselves, we weaken ourselves.
Mike
Steve
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