John,
Regards, BenoitOne reason why a pointer to the surprised acknowledgment was added is for statements such as Thanks to <insert names> for their valuable comments and support on the initial idea of this document --On Friday, May 29, 2015 13:55 -0700 IESG Secretary <iesg-secretary@xxxxxxxx> wrote:The IESG is planning to publish an IESG statement concerning the authorship of Internet drafts. This statement is only focused on the situation where an IETF participant feels he/she has been erroneously listed as an author on a draft. The statement can be seen here: http://trac.tools.ietf.org/group/iesg/trac/wiki/SurprisedAutho rsHi. I hope this does not turn into a long discussion, but I believe the parenthetical note about "surprised acknowledgment" either needs to be removed (since this statement isn't really about it and does not provide a remedy, default or otherwise) or clarified. Acknowledgments raise several issues that have caused controversy in the past. In summary, our IPR policies are usually interpreted as requiring acknowledgment when someone has made a significant Contribution to a document [1]. Those policies are about Contributions, not about whether someone agrees with all, part, or none of the resulting document. Certainly an acknowledgment should not claim endorsement or support for a document that the person involved does not support, but the presumed requirement to acknowledge Contributions may not allow a Contributor to opt out entirely from being acknowledged. My sense is that we have not been consistent about resolution of cases in which people have objected to having their Contributions acknowledged in a document that they do not support. If this statement is going to address the "surprised" acknowledgment issue [2], it is going to be necessary to establish policy in that area, policy that may require opening and either clarifying our fundamental IPR policies and the RFC Editor's interpretation of them or trying to produce a detailed policy on acknowledgments [3]. best, john [1] There have also been controversies associated with people not being acknowledged who think they should be. Those controversies and associated questions do not appear to interact with this proposed statement. [2] I believe that "surprised acknowledgments" are indistinguishable in practice from "unwanted" ones. With both acknowledgments and authorship, if actual editors notify the offended party in advance about what they are going to do and that party objects, the same issues exist whether there is actual surprise or not. [3] Personally, I would discourage the latter in favor of continued reliance on author discretion, discussion within WGs, etc., and application of courtesy and good sense. Trying to formulate a specific policy would probably take us on a tour of ratholes and special cases and end up satisfying no one and leaving other cases unresolved. . |