On 17/09/2013 11:19, Melinda Shore wrote:
On 9/16/13 1:02 PM, Yoav Nir wrote:
If we use ORCID instead of email, we get less strong authentication.
That's not its job - it's there to distinguish between authors
with similar names.
Fair enough, but adding a public key to the record would enable
authentication too.
As I understand the proposal the intent is
to have it provide additional information, not supplant anything.
There is currently no identifier that provides that kind of
discrimination.
I wonder about that, but this is certainly a decent option. I can
see it being especially valuable for people who change their name but
want to keep a unified publication history. Also for people who've published
under legitimate variants (B Carpenter, B E Carpenter, Brian Carpenter
and Brian E Carpenter have all published, and
brian(_dot_)e(_dot_)carpenter(_at_)gmail(_dot_)com
asserts that they are all the same person, except for the ones that aren't).
I don't see any real downside to allowing
people who have ORCIDs to put them in IETF documents.
Agreed.
Brian
I'm not
sure there's a lot of demand for them (this is the first time
it's come up, as far as I know) but I don't see a problem with
plopping one more piece of information - one that has a unique
function - into our docs.
Melinda