--On Friday, January 09, 2015 17:07 -0500 Michael StJohns <mstjohns@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> I'm concerned about information flow in the other direction. >> It has to do with, e.g., liaison participation in actual >> discussions of individual candidates, particularly in ways >> that would expose them to community comments about those >... > Silly me... I assumed that the confidentiality rules covered > this issue. :-) I actually as less concerned about leaks than about another problem. For leaks, I think the confidentiality rules do apply and that, if a liaison decided to break them it is probably no worse than a voting Nomcom member doing so... and we have other problems. See below. >... > The old saw is that "two can keep a secret if one is dead". > With the Nomcom statutorily 10 voting members plus the chair > and past chair that participate in all discussions, I'm not > sure we're ever going to get a guarantee of secrecy with > respect to those discussions. Adding in the 4 liaisons > doesn't - IMO - materially add to the problem. Agreed. >... One place where that old saw leads is something I can best illustrate by example. In the last few years, I've made the observation several times, not always in jest, that one of the advantages of running one's own mail servers on one's own premises is that it acts as a barrier against secret subpoenas. "Klensin, you are required to supply copies of all of Klensin's email and not tell Klensin we asked/told you" fails all sorts of laugh tests in ways that similar instructions to third parties do not. I'm going to pick on the IESG for obvious reasons, but similar issues might apply to the IOAC and some contracts and, with more indirection, to IAB or even ISOC. Suppose the liaison gets unwelcome criticism of one of his (or her) colleagues and/or by implication, most or all of IESG for not spotting and preventing particular behavior. First, the inhibiting effects of the latter are obvious because, directly or indirectly, the liaison him/herself is being criticized. Even without that, there is the concern that the criticism could cause the liaison's future (or even current) behavior toward the person submitting the comment to change in negative ways. Such a change requires no violation of the confidentiality policy because nothing about the Nomcom's discussion has been disclosed to anyone else. The confidentiality rules would not be violated even if the liaison, on some future date, made comments as part of an IESG review of some document that comments from the person who had made comments to the Nomcom should be discounted or that the person didn't have the IETF's or Internet's best interests as priorities. I also want to stress again that the use of "chilling effects" in my first comment about this was very specific. I'm far less concerned about actual bad behavior --within the confidentiality rules or outside them-- than I am about perceptions, appearances, and consequential negative impact on the range of comments and information available to the Nomcom. My concerns about bad behavior aren't zero, but they are less significant. I think avoiding those chilling effects is important enough to make it worth reviewing, and possibly revising, our expectations about Nomcom - Liaison interactions and flow of information back to the Liaisons, not just getting more of those expectations clarified (which I agree with others is also important). > Ultimately, we're trying to program the behavior of humans. > And that's somewhat more difficult than programming the > behavior of cats. True, but I think this is a red herring. I don't think the confidentiality rules need revising or more policing. I don't think anyone needs to be reprogrammed or that doing so is really feasible. I do believe that the perception of information flow back to the liaisons inhibits the NomCom from receiving candid input that it might otherwise receive and find useful. And I believe that situation could be improved by a community decision to isolate liaisons from candidate-specific input from the community and documenting that decision -- a change that would require no [re]programming of humans at all, only some relatively small changes in Nomcom operational procedures. > Maybe we just eliminate the cats and > eliminate the de jure liaison functions but provide a > mechanism for the Nomcom to reach out if necessary to the > origanizations on a more ad hoc basis. Certainly a plausible alternative. best, john