ietf
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: [Recentattendees] IETF 100, Singapore -- proposed path forward and request for input

2016-05-22 07:17:49

Hi Ted,

On 22/05/16 11:32, Ted Hardie wrote:
Hi Eliot,

My comments up thread suggested that we start from a set of community
agreed principles and use those to evaluate whether a particular venue did
or did not meet our requirements; the contrast I was aiming for was from
attempting to reason from individuals' reports of their own level of
comfort or concern.

A corollary question is, of course, what those principles ought to be.  I
started with Fred's statement because I believe it is a reasonable
statement to use as a basis for discuss.  I don't agree with all of it (I'd
disagree with the weight given accessibility, for example, which seems less
than it ought to be), but its statements on inclusion seemed to me critical
for any group that aspires to base its legitimacy on its openness.

If I understand you correctly, you see any and all of the principles as
ones we might choose to let slide in order to meet some other goal.   In
that context, I find the phrase "weighting the impact to participants" to
be worrying.  If you naively attempt to do that weighting by assessing the
impact per individual and multiplying it out by the number of individuals
you expect to fall in the class, you can easily end up continually
disadvantaging minority groups.  Doing it fairly by any means will be
difficult.

I personally believe, because of the importance of openness to our basic
operation, principles of inclusiveness should not be part of the meeting
trade-off except in extraordinary circumstances.

I agree with the above, but see a major problem: we have no
way to fairly consider economic inclusiveness that I can see,
and from my POV that far outweighs any other form of lack of
inclusiveness when it comes to affecting the ability of
potential IETF participants to get to meetings.

So even if we do reach consensus that family accompaniment is
a criterion, and figure out how to prioritise that amongst a
set of other criteria (safety, visas etc), there will always be
at least the economic unfairness issue, and maybe others we
didn't consider, that means that the opportunity to go to IETF
face to face meetings can never really be handled fully fairly.

So I think we need to recognise that when you said "difficult"
above, the right word might be impossible.

That said, it seems there are a couple of things that can be
done in the medium term:

- The IAOC could re-consider the criteria it uses for meeting
venue selection and how they ought balance those, get community
feedback on all of that, and then start operating based on the
results of that community feedback.

- We (the IETF) should start working more on a potential
future where we have the option of a virtual alternative for
some of the current IETF f2f meetings. The IESG did chat a
bit about starting work on that at our retreat, early days
though, so don't expect immediate results. Doing this will
be good for lots of reasons (e.g. as a backup) and not just
due to the current discussion.

To be clear: the above should be in addition to, and are
not a replacement for, the IAOC changing to a default-open
mode of operation. Without that overarching change, my
prediction is that initiatives such as the two above may
end up as mired in controversy as IETF-100.

Cheers,
S.




regards,

Ted



On Sun, May 22, 2016 at 5:15 AM, Eliot Lear <lear(_at_)cisco(_dot_)com> wrote:

Ted,

I do not believe that the IAOC used "novelty" as one of their criteria.
My understanding was that this was an attempt to find a venue convenient
to Asian participants as part of the normal meeting cycle that also
happened to be affordable.  Perhaps someone from the IAOC would like to
comment further.  I'd also be curious to know if the number "100" had
any particular import in this process, referring to Jon Peterson's
comments.

Wikipedia indicates that quite a number of countries, including one in
which I believe you resided, do not support parental rights of same sex
couples.  If that is what this is about, there are a number countries we
have already been to that would have caused the LGBT community a problem.

We have had in a problem getting people into our meetings based on their
nationalities.  Certainly the Chinese among us must be having a good
chuckle about this conversation, especially those that were turned down
for their visas by one country or another.  Some of these issues are
simply unavoidable.  Consider the person who is in the process of a visa
renewal in the U.S.  In other cases, the situation is far more
complicated.  Case and point: the last time I went to Russia it required
an exhaustive visa process, which I am given to understand is due to how
Russians are treated by the United States.

There are many places where one can be arrested for saying or printing
certain things.  The laws vary.  This was a serious concern when we went
to one country in particular.  We've made the conscious decision to
weight other values over freedom of speech.  The same has happened less
consciously with freedom of religion, even though that has had at least
some impact on us with many stores being closed on certain days.

Each of these issues is not binary, but rather countries' positions
reside on a spectrum.  Their summation is not a simple ANDing.  Were it
so, we would not have any place to go.  The IAOC needs to consider these
matters, weighting the impact to participants.  On the whole I
sympathize with Stephen's position that the IAOC should be as
transparent as possible in its decision making.  Furthermore, certainly
polling the community for their views is always appropriate if the poll
is well constructed (queue Dave Crocker).

Eliot




Attachment: smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>