--On Monday, June 4, 2018 13:10 -0500 Adam Roach <adam@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > John -- > > Thanks for helping me to understand your concerns. For > clarification: you do not presume that the long-term result of > this discussion will be using ietf@xxxxxxxx as a forum for all > i18n-related conversations from this point forward, do you? Absolutely not. To take that question and the answer a tad further, I think it would make sense to try to consolidate all general discussions about i18n issues --distinguished from the details of particular protocols-- onto a single list. In other words, I'd far prefer to move questions of Unicode properties, case handling, and normalization; character confusion and other characteristics of particular characters (including whether they are "troublesome"); and whether some piece of protocol work or updating should be switched to use non-ASCII characters at all onto a single list rather than having to deal with those issues separately on the IDNA, PRECIS, maybe EAI/IMA, languages, and other lists. Maybe issues and clarifications that are closely bound to one of those protocol groups should stay on separate lists but maybe not: again, there seems to be too little committed expertise around and anything that can be done that reduces the degree to which those people have to do redundant work, the less likely more of them will to just walk away in frustration (see Andrew Sullivan's comment about "yet another list" for a slightly different perspective on this). The distinction about the discussion I'm trying to have, and for which I proposed the BOF, is a matter of procedure --how we get something done in the IETF or decide that we cannot do it or don't care enough to go to the effort, not a matter of i18n substances. There might be edge cases but I think that, in general, the boundary is clear. If the result of the discussions for which the BOF was requested led to the creation of something Directorate- or Task Force-like then a separate mailing list would certainly be in order for that activity. > I'm happy that we had a burst of high-volume traffic on the > general mailing list, both from the perspective of ensuring > that subscribers to that list are well aware of the effort and > from the perspective of providing a data point for a level of > interest in the topic. That level of interest will not be > ignored. ok > All of that said, it is the position of the ART area directors > that this discussion would benefit from having its own > dedicated forum, and that the IETF general mailing list would > benefit from a relocation of the conversation as well. I > further note that establishment of a dedicated mailing list > for even non-working-group-forming BOFs is commonplace, to the > point of effectively being standard operating procedure. I continue to believe that procedural pre-BOF (or other strategy-forming discussions) belong on the IETF list, as mentioned above and in the earlier note. I also agree with Andrew that isolating this discussion onto yet another "little list" is likely to reduce rather than increase quality participation. However, I thought earlier today about whether I would appeal a decision to force things onto a separate list and have decided against doing so. I think you can assume, especially in the light of your comment above about level of interest, that, were the BOF proposal to be rejected (or the BOF forced into an unacceptable slot) on the basis of insufficient discussion on the new list, someone would appeal that decision, but I assume and hope things won't get there. best, john