On 10/4/2019 2:31 AM, Stephen Farrell
wrote:
On 04/10/2019 08:51, Christian Huitema wrote:I have heard Brian Carpenter's argument that if there is not an authorship community, there is a readership community. That leaves me skeptical. Clearly, authors and publishers should care about their readership, and I wish we had better ways to assess the impact of our publications. But passive readership does not create a community, no more than me reading ITU publications makes me part of the ITU community. What creates a community is engagement, contributions and sharing.I guess I disagree with you there Christian - ISTM that at the very least, people who read RFCs and write related code that is part of many network stacks, but who do not engage with the IETF or RFC editor at all, do deserve more consideration than you imply. I can see arguments for a bigger set of people deserving consideration but omitting the above example set seems just broken to me.
Sure, but if they don't somehow communicate, how do you know they are there?
And if they do communicate, the question is "with whom"? Where do they send the message saying that they are trying to implement protocol FOO but they don't get what section 3.1.5 of RFC XXXX really means? Slashdot? Stack overflow? Some Reddit group? Actually, it would be very nice if the IETF had a documented feedback channel for such exchanges. That would be a nice way to grow the community.
-- Christian Huitema
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