On 6/16/08 at 10:00 AM +1200, Brian E Carpenter wrote:
I think one can make a case that in some documents, use of
non-RFC2606 names as examples is a purely stylistic matter, and that
in others, it would potentially cause technical confusion.
Please make that case if you would, because the example you give:
In the evaluation record for what became RFC4343
(https://datatracker.ietf.org/idtracker/ballot/1612/) we find:
"Editorial issues:
- the document uses a number of non-example.com/192.0.2.0
addresses/names, but in this case this seems justifiable"
In other words this *was* a judgement call.
...quite specifically said it was an "Editorial issue". Please
explain the circumstance in which it would not be an editorial issue.
Of course, the ballot in this particular case
<https://datatracker.ietf.org/idtracker/ballot/2471/> makes no claims
about "technical confusion". I assume that when no "technical
confusion" exists, you *would* consider such things "an editorial
issue"? (A misplaced comma or the use of the passive *may* cause
"technical confusion", but unless this is called out, the assumption
is always that such things are "editorial issues".)
pr
--
Pete Resnick <http://www.qualcomm.com/~presnick/>
Qualcomm Incorporated
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