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Re: IETF Endowment update

2016-07-15 00:09:47
Hi,

On Jul 14, 2016, at 8:06 PM, John Levine <johnl(_at_)taugh(_dot_)com> wrote:

Regarding the concern that John Klensin raised about Internet organizations 
that have too much money, I
cannot imagine this endowmwnr being that successful.  However, if it were, I 
would argue for reduced
meeting fees to encourage the broadest possible participation in 
face-to-face meetings.

The IETF gets about 1/3 of its income from meeting fees.  If, as seems
likely, we have more people coming electronically and fewer in person,
we're going to need to replace the revenue since to a first
approximation if we meet in person at all the costs are independent of
the number of people that show up.  So either there's a death spiral
of in-person meeting fees, we try to charge people who attend
remotely, or we find the money somewhere else.  I see this as the
obvious candidate for somewhere else.

Thanks John— this is very close to one of my main reasons for supporting the 
endowment. 

If we want to support diversity of participation and input to the IETF, we 
can’t do it only by having an ever-longer list of places where we have physical 
meetings. It’s expensive in many ways— time, money, tradeoffs among multiple 
values we care about. The pressures to clarify and evolve how we handle 
outreach, diversity, venue selection, and other aspects of making the IETF look 
like “the internet” are important. But I do think a sustainable IETF has to get 
better at the tools and practices to do distributed work more effectively.

Working group chairs, the tools team, the secretariat, and everyone else 
involved in making this whole endeavor go— which is to say all of us— are 
putting a lot of effort into such improvements. IMO we’ve got the will to do 
it. But it’s also going to cost money to get better at it— and getting better 
at it may, as John points out, also undercut the current funding sources.

In short— if we’re going to get better at distributed work, and cope 
effectively with the pressures on the IETF to change the purposes and 
priorities for its physical meetings, it seems to me that we need to separate 
our funding model from our ability to implement new working methods.

My other reason for supporting the endowment is a more philosophical one. For 
any organization, diversity of funding sources is good. Currently the IETF is 
significantly dependent on one organization (ISOC) and one industry (domain 
names). Some avenues to funding that other SDOs use aren’t really open to us— 
on principle if nothing else: for example, an endowment may be controversial, 
but I’d expect (and hope!) that charging for RFCs would be a complete 
non-starter.

Helping to assure diverse funding for the IETF is another way in which ISOC has 
helped the IETF and will continue to do so. Thank you Kathy and the ISOC Board.


Suzanne
(speaking for myself)



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