That was the British use of the term "unlikely".

Stewart

Sent from my iPad

On 28 Mar 2013, at 14:05, "Dave Crocker" <d...@dcrocker.net> wrote:

> 
> 
> On 3/28/2013 6:13 AM, Stewart Bryant wrote:
>> In this particular case the candidate pool would have been tiny,
>> because the criteria would surely have included being experienced
>> with both the ITU process and the IETF liaison process, including
>> knowing and understanding the liaison history. Therefore it
>> seems unlikely that there would be any candidate that the IAB
>> did not already know about.
> 
> 
> Stuart,
> 
> It's important that you used the word "unlikely", since it underscores the 
> legitimacy of the problem being raised: The issue is not that there probably 
> would not have been a better choice, but the lack of certitude about it.
> 
> Further, the rationale you offer essentially is one of efficiency, but open 
> processes rarely stand the scrutiny of 'efficiency' concerns.
> 
> d/
> -- 
> Dave Crocker
> Brandenburg InternetWorking
> bbiw.net

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