On 03/19/2015 08:01, Eliot Lear wrote: > You asked, Jari. > > The more power you vest in someone the more they should be accountable > to the community. Removing someone from an activity is a pretty > momentous activity. Making ADs unable to function as ADs or WG chairs > unable to function as chairs is a big deal. It may impact peoples' > livelihoods. The same holds for people who are intimidated or harassed > into taking actions they would not otherwise take. The community needs > to be able to hold people accountable for those decisions (or lack thereof). I think this is an important principle to preserve. I don't know that I want to go as far as Mike St. Johns is suggesting, but his position has considerable merit as well. Even in institutions with strict chains of command/authority it is difficult to put meaningful, fair procedures in place to handle harassment. For them to be meaningful and fair in the IETF you have to connect the authority to the community as Eliot is underlining above. -- Ted Faber http://www.isi.edu/~faber PGP: http://www.isi.edu/~faber/pubkeys.asc Unexpected attachment on this mail? See http://www.isi.edu/~faber/FAQ.html#SIG
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