Re: Concerns about Singapore

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On 4/10/2016 1:12 PM, Brian E Carpenter wrote:
I repeat - "where" have the local hosts/laws specified conditions that resulted in the IETF network content access being
>markedly different than that accessible to the random local citizen?
Why is that relevant? The criterion is: can the IETF do its work properly?
Of which a sub-criterion is: will there be clean unfettered Internet at
the meeting site?


A great deal of IETF work gets done away from the meeting site. Having state-imposed restrictions away from the meeting site invites basic productivity limitations.

It also is oddly dissonant with the IETF's general call for open and unfettered access. We risk sounding a tad elitist if it means something like "open and unfettered for us, but we're not concerned about you other folk"...

To offer an intentionally extreme comparison, imagine having a desire that children not be recruited to be soldiers. (Yes, I know, that's a controversial point of view and many reasonable people think it's ok to have children be slaughtered and do slaughtering in war...) But then imagine choosing to go to a country that uses children that way, formally. Is it reasonable to go there with the view that it's ok, as long as they don't recruit any of /our/ children to be solders?

d/

--

  Dave Crocker
  Brandenburg InternetWorking
  bbiw.net




[Index of Archives]     [IETF Annoucements]     [IETF]     [IP Storage]     [Yosemite News]     [Linux SCTP]     [Linux Newbies]     [Fedora Users]