For your information, based on IESG discussions we’ve made a few small, final edits to the most recent draft version. I plan to approve the document tomorrow Friday.
The link to changes in -13 is below, but the main changes are all clarifications or improved wording. They relate to which counsel was referred to (IETF’s), rules regarding general technology background presentations in plenary, role of the three principles wrt RFC 2026, removal of the “some evidence" text from 4.D that got there by accident, suggestions around standards with multiple distinct parts, recognition of defensive licenses, and uploading general disclosures to the IETF web site.
I want to thank everyone who has contributed to this effort.
(And I know 1.f has a typo that reveals what tools are being used to format this draft :-) )
Jari
Subject: New Version Notification for draft-bradner-rfc3979bis-13.txt
Date: March 8, 2017 at 7:10:09 PM EST
A new version of I-D, draft-bradner-rfc3979bis-13.txt has been successfully submitted by Scott Bradner and posted to the IETF repository. Name: draft-bradner-rfc3979bis Revision: 13 Title: Intellectual Property Rights in IETF Technology Document date: 2017-03-08 Group: Individual Submission Pages: 25 URL: https://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-bradner-rfc3979bis-13.txtStatus: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-bradner-rfc3979bis/Htmlized: https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-bradner-rfc3979bis-13Diff: https://www.ietf.org/rfcdiff?url2=draft-bradner-rfc3979bis-13Abstract: The IETF policies about Intellectual Property Rights (IPR), such as patent rights, relative to technologies developed in the IETF are designed to ensure that IETF working groups and participants have as much information as possible about any IPR constraints on a technical proposal as early as possible in the development process. The policies are intended to benefit the Internet community and the public at large, while respecting the legitimate rights of IPR holders. This document sets out the IETF policies concerning IPR related to technology worked on within the IETF. It also describes the objectives that the policies are designed to meet. This document updates RFC 2026 and, with RFC 5378, replaces Section 10 of RFC 2026. This document also obsoletes RFC 3979 and RFC 4879.
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