Tom, That analysis is shocking and documents a significant breach of RFC 2418 (BCP 25) Section 3.1. I think the IESG needs to toughen up on this. "Interim meetings are subject to the same rules for advance notification, reporting, open participation, and process, which apply to other working group meetings. All working group sessions (including those held outside of the IETF meetings) shall be reported by making minutes available. These minutes should include the agenda for the session, an account of the discussion including any decisions made, and a list of attendees. The Working Group Chair is responsible for insuring that session minutes are written and distributed,..." Brian On 16/02/2015 02:57, t.p. wrote: > There has been a marked increase in the number of interim meetings. > Using > http://www.ietf.org/meeting/interim/proceedings.html > as a guide, there were > 18 in 2011 > 35 in 2012 > 45 in 2013 > 84 in 2014 > 13 in January 2015 alone. > > With them comes a change in the way of working, perhaps rendering some > of our practices historic. > > Of the 84 meetings listed for 2014, 21 left no other trace on the IETF > web site, no Agenda, no Minutes, no Proceedings. Perhaps the WG > provided no materials, perhaps they did not happen; sometimes a > cancellation notice is apparent in the WG List Archives, other times > not. > > Of the 63 that have left a trace, 6 produced no Minutes but did produce > slides or recordings and so presumably happened. > > Of the 57 that produced Minutes, 18 produced no Agenda while in 13 > cases, the Minutes contained no list of Attendees (goodbye Blue > Sheets?). > > Only 26 meetings left a complete record, of Agenda, Minutes and > Attendees. > > The meetings encompassed 30 Working Groups, of which 16 met once, 14 > more than once, with one WG meeting 8 times. > > What is more subjective is that, with Virtual Interims, increasingly the > only kind, there is a tendency for the WG Mailing List to no longer > provide a record of discussions, choices, consensus. For example, they > may make greater use of github so that the minutes record a discussion > of options 1, 2 and 3 for Issue 29 with no indication of what the issue > or options are; a while later, they may record an update to option 3 so > it would now seem impossible to know what was discussed at the earlier > meeting. > > Even with the better minutes, they never give the same sense as posts to > a mailing list of who was or was not in favour and how strong their view > was. > > Of course, we still have WG Last Calls on the list but if at a future > date, an AD or GenArt reviewer wants to look back and see what options > were discussed and how rough the consensus was, well, it may be > impossible. > > A post in another thread recently said > >> I do think that the increased significance of meetings >> in IETF participation (and here, I'm not talking about >> things like nomcom but about significance to our technical >> work) is a problem, both because it tends to marginalize >> people who can't come to meetings and because it slows >> work down. > > Well, I disagree about slowing the work down but certainly agree with > the marginalisation, that WGs holding multiple Interims may tend to > develop an in-crowd of those that can participate with the world at > large only seeing the end result without knowing how it was arrived at > by whom. > > Tom Petch > >