--On Thursday, May 31, 2018 08:27 +0200 Patrik Fältström <paf@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 31 May 2018, at 4:56, John C Klensin wrote: > >> So my alternate hypothesis and reason for floating the BOF >> idea starts by assuming that, whether people can find some >> small amount of support or are dumb and/or committed enough >> to do the work anyway, the needed documents can and will be >> written and hence that the problem is getting adequate review >> to convince the IESG and the IETF community that those >> documents have been sufficiently checked and vetted to make >> publication --including as standards track when appropriate >> -- plausible and a reasonable expectation. > > The serious question here is if IETF do have enough competence > in I18N space or if IETF should drop that ball and give to > some other SDO. I think that leads to two other questions that I've at least been hinting at. (1) If that is the right answer, how do we make it? Personally, I don't want to hear it via an announcement that the IEASBG decided, entered into some sort of negotiation, and is telling the community what they have done. (2) Did you have a candidate SDO in mind? Without any disrespect to the SDOs or people involved with them, I think we've seen ample evidence that, e.g., an SDO that is primarily concerned with character coding and closely-related issues is unlikely to be willing and able to understand complex issues with the Internet and Internet protocols and prioritize them in a way we would find acceptable. One clear example of that involves whether identifiers can actually be language-insensitive. Perhaps the answer is actually "no" but, if so, we have made a number of bad protocol decisions that will need to be untangled if things are ever going to work well and I'd be surprised if it would be wise, or the IETF would be willing, to hand those off. Consider the DNS, identifiers for messaging protocols, X.509 certificate identifiers, email addresses, and so on. --On Thursday, May 31, 2018 09:37 -0400 John R Levine <johnl@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I18N needs an unusual combination of computer and linguistic > skills. I would be surprised if there were a lot of any > people anywhere who have them both. I think the list may be longer than that, with both human and artificial interaction design (including UI, but not limited to UI design) high on the list. Given industry trends in user input, especially on mobile platforms, probably speech recognition too. Probably you include those in "computer skills", but I think spelling it out a bit more makes the problem more clear. Maybe it is a strange idea, but, if someone is going to screw up the Internet in this area, I'd rather have it be the IETF than some body whose major concerns in practice are not a better Internet (whether those concerns are a particular technical focus or economics). I could see a "joint development" collaboration between the IETF and some other SDO(s) working together and cross-checking each other's work --not merely cross-area, but cross-SDO-- but that IETF has never been able to pull one of those off before and, AFAIK, has never expressed much interest in doing so. Even if we went that route, we might need a different review mechanism than throwing a spec into the air with an IETF LC and seeing what came down. john