On Thu, Oct 02, 2014 at 01:09:37PM +0200, Abdussalam Baryun wrote: > I think we should increase the participation fees on companies also. > If company X is authoring 5 IETF-drafts with same individual author, I > [...] That's nice, but often large employers aren't aware of every I-D submitted by their employees. Another problem is that only individuals participate at the IETF. Since there's no membership of any kind, it's difficult to assess an employer a fee for their employees' IETF work. Even if we can address those problems, if we do as you propose you'd find that large employers would start requiring internal approval for I-D submission, which would then cause I-D submission rates to go down, which in turn would be bad because it'd be yet another bar to standardization. > It is ok as it is only 50. However, it should be considered as contribution > fees also. So we should not say registration fees only. Contribution on mailing lists, for example, has been free. Start charging for contribution and that's the end of the IETF as an open organization. Just say NO to such impulses. > There should be a cost for presentation fees. Many participants want to > present and the slots are used without payment that is not fair. I am > paying same amount but some have taken more WG time in presenting. If one > wants to talk or ask that must be free but presenting should not be free > especially if it is marketing for the authors or their companies > activities. Time slots are first-come-first-served. If you have something to present, you'll get to. Again, charging for participation would be suicide for the IETF as it is, leading to disbanding or to a switch to a membership organization, and then the individuals whom you want to subsidize will simply go away or be excluded (because why would deep-pocketed members want to explicitly subsidize shallow-pocketed members who might get in their way??). > Many companies that participate in IETF but pay no money should be paying > in future. As an individual, I have to say that that's a sure way to kill the IETF. No, no, NO, a thousand times NO. Nico --