I think we need an explicit prohibition on a member of the IESG being a Working 
Group chair. This does not happen often but it has done in the past and it has 
caused a real problem. Simply prohibiting an AD being chair of a WG in their 
own area is not enough.


The problem with consensus is how you decide to count the undecideds/neutrals. 
In most cases of controversy there will be a small group pro, a small group con 
and the bulk of the WG will be somewhere inbetween. If the breakdown is 
25%/25%/50% a biased chair can effectively decide the outcome by choosing to 
interpret 'no objection' as 'no support' or vice versa.

Consensus is always the preferred basis for decision and usually the best 
basis. There are situations where putting 'consensus' above pragmatics leads to 
a proposal that is never going to be deployed. 

If we are proposing to change the internet infrastructure and do not have the 
support of the ISPs or the core DNS providers or whatever key constituency may 
be required to put a proposal into effect then we need to have a mechanism for 
dealing with that situation.

Another limitation to consensus is where there is a conflict between two 
groups. There may be 100% consensus in group A that approach 1 is best, but 
serious objections from group B. Or as frequently happens there may be a 
dispute in group A as to the likelihood of objection a proposal will receive 
from group B.


The appeals process is not optimal here because it only begins after the 
process failure has occurred. The recall process is unworkable and unless 
someone screws up really bad really early is not going to meaningfully shorten 
a tenure that would otherwise expire anyway.
 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Brian E Carpenter [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: Sunday, May 27, 2007 10:57 AM
> To: Lakshminath Dondeti
> Cc: John C Klensin; IETF Discussion; Jeffrey Hutzelman
> Subject: Re: On the IETF Consensus process
> 
> On 2007-05-26 00:46, Lakshminath Dondeti wrote:
> ...
> 
> > Coming to the fear of retaliation issue (I guess we are 
> talking about 
> > unethical behavior on part of an IESG or IAB member at this 
> point), we 
> > need to find a way to fix that.  On this, we seem to be 
> worse off than 
> > the outside world.  Let's take the US as an example (or we can take 
> > India too; I am sorry, but those are the only two countries I am 
> > somewhat familiar with): there are always checks and balances.
> 
> That's exactly why we have the appeals process, the recall 
> mechanism, and an independent Nomcom. And speaking for myself 
> (and probably
> others) that's why more transparency is always good, as long 
> as it doesn't prevent the IAB and IESG being able to discuss frankly.
> 
> If you can suggest additional checks and balances, please do!
> 
>     Brian
> 
> _______________________________________________
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> Ietf@ietf.org
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