Because the IETF is ostensibly about contributions of individuals, many drafts
do not
reflect organisations or corporations accurately - particularly when a draft
advances
an idea that has not been adopted as the corporate party line.
So, billing presenters and adopting a pay-for-play model actually discourages
non-corporate new ideas from being presented at all, and helps collapse the
fiction
that the IETF is not driven by corporate interests.
So, this idea is as unworkable as your
let's-redo-RFC-numbering-as-categories-scheme,
which I see excludes mentions of the April Fools RFCs that you previously tried
to ban.
The numbers of RFCs can be chosen for meaning: IPv6 is RFC2460, RFC2468 is who
do
we appreciate, RFC666 has the warning up front, because you're about to decipher
Padlipsky, RFC1984 is orwellian surveillance, RFC2001 was very important
monolithic
changes to TCP, etc.
Lloyd Wood
http://about.me/lloydwood
________________________________
From: ietf <ietf-bounces(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org> on behalf of Abdussalam Baryun
<abdussalambaryun(_at_)gmail(_dot_)com>
Sent: Friday, 3 October 2014 12:21 AM
To: Christer Holmberg
Cc: Dave Crocker; Chris Griffiths; IETF Discussion
Subject: Re: IETF registration fee increase from 2015
On Thursday, October 2, 2014, Christer Holmberg wrote:
So, we should "punish" people/companies that actually contribute by writing
drafts?????????????????????????????????????????????????
I am sorry to know that you understand increase in cost is a punishment. So do
you think the increase of registration fees is punishing attendees of attending?
I see the cost should increase for who use the time slots of the meeting-time,
so the IETF adopted IDs and presentations. I say no punishment/fess for
individuals but add fees for companies presenting or authoring. I say only
companies that have their name on the IETF drafts or on the presentations.
AB