--On Thursday, July 02, 2015 14:51 +0100 Alexey Melnikov <alexey.melnikov@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> Too late. The decision was made and implemented before the >> IAB asked for a final review of these document. So, whether >> assigning DOIs to the RFC Series is a good idea or a bad one, >> whether the format chosen for the DOI suffix is optimal or >> not, etc., the discussion is essentially OBE. At least as >> the IAB has chosen to structure things, it needed to occur >> with the RFC Editor and/or RSOC [1] many months ago. > > The discussion with RFC Editor and RSOC has occurred. IAB > asked to put the document on hold until after DOI were > implemented by RFC Editor. This project just completed. Yes, I know all of that except that IAB decided to hold the document --and the community review outside the RSOC and RFC Editor -- until the DOIs were implemented and deployed. To be very clear: (1) If anyone thinks it is worthwhile for the community to have reviewed this idea, either in the large ("should we be doing this at all?") or the small ("should we use a DOI suffix that contains alphabetical characters and that requires parsing if there is ever more than one relevant series?"), then it is much too late to have either discussion. If anyone believes that not allowing that community review represents bad judgment that is serious enough, the remedies are discussions with the Nomcom, calls for resignation, and/or recall petitions, not debates about those aspects of this document that assume the action has not already been taken. (2) There may be circumstances in which "act first, apologize later if needed" is an appropriate strategy. If that is what the IAB intended here, then the call for comments should be clear that the decisions have already been made and deployed and should identify just what sorts of comments the IAB is actually interested in or would find helpful. Even now, I think it would be helpful if the IAB were to issue a revised/updated call for comments that makes the circumstances clear. Of course, if someone believes that the IAB (or RSOC, or RFC Series Editor) applied the "act first, apologize later" policy inappropriately here, see above. john