On Sun, 8 May 2005, Sam Hartman wrote:
"Tom" == Tom Lord <lord(_at_)emf(_dot_)net> writes:
Tom> All I mean is that, for higher level protocols, letting
Tom> people do what they will ("the market decides") seems to me
Tom> to be the best option. Yes, using your example, IM protocols
Tom> fragment, interop suffers, there's lots of crap --- so what?
I think our concern is that we have finite resources here in the IETF.
If you want a market decides standards, go set up an industry
consortium or go to a market decides standards body.
The market always decides. And people will always "do what they will".
If you want different standards, you can always go to another standards
body. There are many to choose from.
However, before the market can decide, standards must be chosen, and put
forth. Standardizing what the big vendors want isn't really
"standardization". That's just rubber-stamping a big vendor. Since the
big vendors can create their own defacto standards without the need for
rubber stamps, such groups tend not to last too long.
There may indeed be improvements to the IETF process, but the fundamental
ideas have worked reasonably well, and radical divergence isn't necessary.
It is sign of good health that people are seeking improvements.
--Dean
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