"Julian" == Julian Reschke <julian(_dot_)reschke(_at_)gmx(_dot_)de>
writes:
Julian> Marshall Eubanks wrote:
>> ... This message is to announce that the IETF Trustees have
>> adopted on a new version of the Trust Legal Provisions (TLP), to
>> be effective 28 December, 2009. The Grace period for
>> old-boilerplate will begin on that date, and last through 1
>> February, 2010. ...
Julian> So, unless xml2rfc gets updated in time, people using that
Julian> tool won't be able to submit Internet Drafts after February
Julian> 1 without additional post-processing? Why the early cut-over
Julian> date, compared to the last change (which had a 2+ month
Julian> transition period)????
I'd like to take this a step further: why do we need to update our
boiler plate at all? It's my understanding that the incoming rights
have not been changed at all here; that should and I think does require
a BCP.
The trust is updating what rights they give others outside the IETF
process. I guess Ic can see why that might affect the boiler plate the
RFC editor uses. However, I don't understand why I as an internet draft
author should have to join the boiler plate of the month club. I
thought one reason we set up the inbound vs outbound split was to avoid
exactly this sort of mess.
--Sam
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