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Gen-ART LC Review of draft-leiba-extended-doc-shepherd-00

2012-10-23 17:06:48
I am the assigned Gen-ART reviewer for this draft. For background on
Gen-ART, please see the FAQ at

<http://wiki.tools.ietf.org/area/gen/trac/wiki/GenArtfaq>.

Please resolve these comments along with any other Last Call comments
you may receive.

Document:  draft-leiba-extended-doc-shepherd-00

Reviewer: Ben Campbell
Review Date: 2012-10-23
IETF LC End Date: 2012-10-23

Summary: I'm not sure what to make of this draft. I think the opinions herein 
are worth capturing, but have mixed feelings about it belong in an 
informational RFC.

Major issues:

-- Process: I share some of the concerns that have been mentioned by others, 
namely that I'm not sure whether an individual opinion paper should be 
published as an informational RFC. OTOH, I'm not sure that it shouldn't. The 
operative words here are "I'm not sure." The opinions contained in the document 
are interesting, and likely of use to the community. I just wonder if another 
publication form might not be more appropriate.

-- Content: It's hard to disagree with most of the activities in general, but 
it seems to me that much of the pre pubreq processes here are just things that 
Chairs should be doing anyway. I guess it doesn't hurt to call all of that 
"shepherding", but I don't think it's the same thing as "having a shepherd" in 
the PROTO sense.  I see the potential value of having continuity of 
responsibility throughout the entire process, but I also see value in the 
flexibility of deferring the shepherd selection until time for the proto 
writeup. (I recognize that you don't necessarily expect the same person to 
shepherd all phases--but if I read correctly you also seem to indicate a 
preference that they do so.)

Minor issues:

-- section 1, 4th paragraph: "It adds to what’s in RFC 4858, intending to 
extend it, not replace it."

Do you intend this to formally update 4858? It doesn't seem like it from the 
rest of the text, but one might infer otherwise from this sentence.

-- section 4, 2nd paragraph: "... What it all boils down to is setting up one 
person who takes responsibility for following the progress of a document from 
Call for Adoption through Publication ..."

The text offers examples of changing the responsible person during the process, 
but also mentions the advantages of continuity. If continuity is the real goal, 
then are the examples that show the role changing over the life of the draft 
are counterproductive?


Nits/editorial comments:

None.

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