Hi,
In reading this thread several thoughts have come to mind:
- for several years I have not been able to attend an IETF mtg in person, yet
always join in some of the sessions remotely. Is our remote attendance recorded
as well, or its it only in the chat archive? I have noticed that not all of us
give our real names when we sign in (I generally do but that is beside the
point.) This would also apply to those who are at the physical mtg but who time
share between sessions.
- when I used to come to the physical meetings, I often noticed people who came
to the mtg who did not sign the blue / pink sheets. And does everyone who comes
in late actually find the sheet and sign it?
- does everyone sign their real name? do we know if anyone has ever signed the
name of someone else? How often has Minnie Mouse attended an IETF WG mtg.
- I thought the comment about taking pictures to record the identities of those
who read documents was interesting. For those who are recognizable this its
indeed a good record, but what about for others? Also a statement was made that
no one could complain about this because of the note well - but that only
references "written, audio and video records of meetings may be made and may be
available to the public" - nothing about still photography. Perhaps the video
feature of the phone should be used in the future.
So it seems that the records are probably partial, and unreliable. They are
also not verified. Are they really useful?
In thinking about why such records are kept, I sort of understand the various
IPR reasons, but wonder, whether given the unreliability of the information, it
really would be accepted as evidence. Has ever ever been a case where these
blue sheet records were accepted as evidence?
If not, are there other good reasons for the blue sheets? I mean they are a
quaint historical relic and that has value for any organization, but is there a
function they reliably serve?
avri
Fernando Gont <fernando(_at_)gont(_dot_)com(_dot_)ar> wrote:
On 04/24/2012 03:40 AM, Brian E Carpenter wrote:
* What about the case in which the same person must be in two
meetings
that overlap? (e.g., I've *presented* at overlapping meeting) What
should they do in that that case? Sign all the corresponding blue
sheets? Sign none?
I think you should sign both; however, your name will be in the
minutes as
a presenter, so your presence is part of the public record.
What about folks that are interested in being present in the discussion
of documents in overlapping meetings? (e.g., one document being
rpesented by some folks at the beginning of one meeting, and some other
doc being presented at the end of some other meeting?).
Thanks,
--
Fernando Gont
e-mail: fernando(_at_)gont(_dot_)com(_dot_)ar ||
fgont(_at_)si6networks(_dot_)com
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