Re: Posting and disclaimer (was Re: "Early rebid" (was Re: letters from Ted & Alissa))

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On 7/4/2019 10:23 AM, Andrew Sullivan wrote:
Hi Mike,

For the record, I'm not exactly sure which hat I'm wearing at the
moment, but this message does contain a reference to an Internet
Society policy.
That's fine.

On Thu, Jul 04, 2019 at 09:20:46AM -0400, Michael StJohns wrote:
It's pretty hard to not take the above with a grain of salt. You're not just
an ISOC employee, but the president and CEO and as such have a lot of sway
over the funding ISOC provides to the IETF.
Ok.  So, there are two possibilities:

1.  I continue to participate as an individual sometimes, in which
case I make the above disclaimer.  (See below for why.)

2.  I don't participate as an individual.


There's sort of a 2' where you can participate as an individual in technical matters, but you refrain from posting to the various types of existential and behavioral discussion we've had recently, because it's a *lot* easier differentiating Andrew the CEO from Andrew the IC in the technical situation.   My preference is for 2, but I could live with 2'

Basically, you as CEO hold a lot of our purse strings, and also appoint the Nomcom chair and manage the ISOC's part of the appeals process.  Posting something that makes one side or the other on a discussion perceive that you're not an honest broker for a balanced view would tend to reduce your moral authority and possibly the legitimacy of some of the decisions, or so I would think.  Not saying we're there yet, but it's better to avoid the problem than have to come up with a cure later.  As of this point you might have to recuse yourself from any of the subjects on which you've commented if they become part of an appeals process.

If it were me, I'd assume that for the next two years (or until contract termination), posting as an individual is probably not actually posting as an individual and constrain my postings appropriately.


Are you advocating (2)?  I can see an argument for it, but it's not
entirely in keeping with the IETF traditions.  (Of course, those
traditions are not timeless, and there might be good reasons to change
them.)

I can't remember Lynn or Cathy making a "not speaking for" statement in the
time they were in your job, but this is the third from you in last day or
so.
It was one of the "new rules" we adopted for Internet Society staff.
I announced them in March:
https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/ietf/Ugu6O_5tCnNzTUmVzIuhNFKPzbE.
I'm not surprised that Lynn or Kathy didn't make such statements,
since they weren't operating under those rules.

Nope - that wasn't it.  I feel confident that Lynn would have tagged something she said with this if she needed differentiation, but she mostly stayed out of the internals of what we were.  I would assume that Cathy, not being brought up in the community, probably didn't say anything that would have been inappropriate for the CEO/President to say.

In any event, I've had my say and hopefully you understand the reasons.  We're in a new era where for the first time the ISOC president was once in the trenches of the IETF. That's going to have some growing pains and probably some new more explicit boundaries.

Later, Mike



Best regards,

A





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