Re: If Muslims are blocked by the U.S., should the IETF respond?
2017-01-30 14:41:19
On Mon, Jan 30, 2017 at 01:05:37PM -0500, Phillip Hallam-Baker wrote:
To make such a statement is to overlook the fact that the
development of
communications technology is inevitably a political activity.
Of course it is, but just because communications technology can and is
sometimes political doesn't give us a licence to comment on all
political things.
We are a technological organisation (or non-organisation, whatever the
consensus on that may be) and we should focus on technical matters.
Sometimes those matters will have political side effects yes, but the
focus of our work should be technological in my humble opinion.
No matter how any of us may feel about any US policy it would be wildly
inappropriate to confuse the IETF's mission with such discussions. If you
want to object to them, that is fine but it should be done outside of the
IETF. In fact, every single IETF contributor could protest, or indeed
support, any political policy in unison if they wanted, as long as they
don't do it in the IETF's name.
Take a look at the IETF mission statement and you will find that it is
entirely circular in form. The IETF built the Internet and the Internet is
what the IETF builds.
Yes the mission statement is vague but it's clearly about the Internet,
not international travel policy.
The reason that the meeting venue list isn't the appropriate venue is that
we may well get into the part of the story where it is no longer possible
to do business the old way.
Fine, that may happen and if it does that *will* indeed require a
discussion on how to mitigate that, but there's a massive difference
between a problem arising, be it political in nature or otherwise, and
it being addressed, and "making a formal statement" for no reason other
than to make it.
I understand that many people are upset about what seems like an extreme
stance but foreign policy is a complex subject, one that deserves more
than just blanket statements from unrelated organisations. If any of us
truly care about this issue why not take it to a forum that can actually
do some good?
Keep in mind that as far as many politicians are concerned, the IETF is
the same as the IAB is the same as ICANN who supposedly stole the
Internet from the US Department of Commerce last October. Politics
doesn't know about the IETF and the IETF doesn't know about politics,
the two simply don't go well. Any overtly political statement from us
won't help any political cause whatsoever, all it will do is harm our
credibility as an objective technological body.
Look at it this way: when you want to make a new law you go to the
Parliament of your country, when you want to want to uphold the law you
go to the courts of your country. If you go to Parliament to report a
crime, you won't get a result, if you go to the courts to try to make
new legislation, you won't get a result. The same logic applies here: if
you want to make a political change, go to a political organisation,
don't turn to the IETF.
Many Thanks,
Emily
--
Emily Shepherd
Computer Science Graduate, MEng (Hons)
W: https://emilyshepherd.me/
M: +44(0)7575 721 231
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- If Muslims are blocked by the U.S., should the IETF respond?, Dave Burstein
- Re: If Muslims are blocked by the U.S., should the IETF respond?, Warren Kumari
- Re: If Muslims are blocked by the U.S., should the IETF respond?, Phillip Hallam-Baker
- Re: If Muslims are blocked by the U.S., should the IETF respond?,
Emily Shepherd <=
- Re: If Muslims are blocked by the U.S., should the IETF respond?, Phillip Hallam-Baker
- Re: If Muslims are blocked by the U.S., should the IETF respond?, Emily Shepherd
Re: If Muslims are blocked by the U.S., should the IETF respond?, Adam Roach
Re: If Muslims are blocked by the U.S., should the IETF respond?, Jari Arkko
Re: If categories of people are blocked by the U.S., should the IETF respond?, Stephen Farrell
Re: If categories of people are blocked by the U.S., should the IETF respond?, Dave Crocker
Re: If categories of people are blocked by the U.S., should the IETF respond?, George Michaelson
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