> From: Scott Brim <swb@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > If this memorial wiki page could be open to anyone who ever contributed > to any I* and for whom there was at least one person who wanted to > contribute the information, then fine. Then it turns into (effectively) a phone book - and I don't know too many people who read phone books. Not that I object to the creation of such a construct - far from it, I expect that historians in decades to come would probably find it valuable and interesting. I'm not sure too many others, would, though (at least, in its entirety - for individual people they already know, they might find it good). So it's not a replacement for a Hall of Fame, which people might read, or scan through, in its entirety. (Steve Coya, for instance, I would like to see memorialized in an IETF HoF. He did a great deal for us, but people who joined recently will have no idea who he was.) > If not, then it would be yet another situation where there will be a > line between the in-crowd and the out-crowd. Every award ever devised is, implicitly, a line between the 'betters' and the 'lessers'. So you're saying we should get rid of them all - the Nobels, the EU's Sakharov Prize (for which I have a soft spot because the first one went to one of my great heroes, Anatoly Marchenko), etc, etc? (And no, I'm not ignoring the difficulties in picking honorees, in any system. Maybe that difficulty makes it too much trouble to have an IETF HoF. But that's a different point entirely from the ethical wholesomeness of having honorees at all.) Noel