On 9/15/14 2:56 PM, Mary Barnes wrote:
On Mon, Sep 15, 2014 at 4:46 PM, Dave Crocker <dhc@xxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:dhc@xxxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote: On 9/15/2014 2:45 PM, Brian E Carpenter wrote: > The worst case, which is not a fantasy, is that 5 large companies encourage > their staff to volunteer, so we end up with 5 pairs of large-company > staff and nobody from the rest of the community. But (as Mike seems to > imply) if we put in rules to make this impossible, we'd be even further > from "each eligible volunteer is equally likely to be selected." > So this does need clarity of intent, one way or the other. Make it max 1 per company. Real and substantial diversity is essential. If we cannot get an adequate nomcom on that basis, we've got bigger problems and nomcom selection isn't the place to try to solve it. [MB] I totally agree with Dave. I think that also helps in that people that are from bigger companies often have the most people that are willing and more importantly able to fill the positions. Thus, this also reduces the potential appearance of bias in terms of voting members favoring nominees from their own companies. [/MB]
Are y'all talking about the input to the nomcom process, or the output? I don't see anything wrong with more than one candidate per company putting their name in the hat, but it's probably reasonable to limit the number of qualified applicants that go into the final selection process.
OTOH, how do you define "a company" in this scenario? Take any of the large multinationals .... is it fair to eliminate a candidate because there is another qualified candidate who happens to work at the same "company," even though they are in different business units, different states, different countries, or even different continents?
I totally agree with the need to avoid capture of the IETF leadership, but the problem is a lot harder to solve than you might think. It may be worthwhile for our folks who are interested in this topic to have a chat with the ICANN folks about policies and methodology that are in place there, as avoiding industry capture has been an important part of their working process since day 1, and a lot of thought has gone into it.
Doug