Possibly, but it is also possible that they do not beleive that the process was observed, they may disagree as to what the consensus was.
If the wg chair is also on the iesg the appeals process is fatally compromised and littigation may be the only realistic prospect for redress. I don't think it is possible to predict which areas are going to be controversy free, some areas such as dns and routing may be intrinsically controversy prone but that is not the point. There needs to be an inflexible rule here. Flexibility is not advantageous. Sent from my GoodLink Wireless Handheld (www.good.com) -----Original Message----- From: Melinda Shore [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, May 31, 2007 12:26 PM Pacific Standard Time To: todd glassey; John C Klensin; Michael Thomas; Hallam-Baker, Phillip Cc: IETF Discussion; Jeffrey Hutzelman Subject: Re: consensus and anonymity On 5/31/07 3:21 PM, "todd glassey" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > i.e. interferring with others initiatives... this is a serious issue since > this is Tortuous Interferrence per se. Actually, Todd, what was I thinking of was people who aren't capable of graciously moving out of the way after they've made their point and "lost." People who threaten lawsuits and whatnot. They really make it extremely difficult to finalize a decision and they poison the decision-making process. Melinda
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