Re: [sig-policy] Policy SIG meeting yesterday
Several points.
Decision of consensus should be chair's descretion to some extent.
If someone has objection or questions about consensus, he/she should
make objection right away, not one day after the meeting.
Otherwise, meeting itself would not make sense.
This is my understanding.
Second, I have some sympathy with you about personal attack to you.
I don't want to see such ugly fight at the meeting.
On the other hand, also we don't want to see the same proposal with
the same way of logic/explanation are repeated. I expect proposals
in the second time or later to be more carefully considered.
# I may misunderstand, but I thought you proposed almost same as previously.
Hope policy SIG to be better place for fruitful discussion than ever.
Regards,
Takashi Arano
At 18:03 07/03/02, JORDI PALET MARTINEZ wrote:
>Hi all,
>
>Regarding the Policy SIG yesterday and more specifically proposal 042, after
>getting some more feedback from some other folks and also sleeping on it,
>I've to raise some concerns.
>
>I know measuring consensus is not easy, but clearly consensus is not
>unanimity and there was a clear superior number of people in favor than
>opposing the proposal.
>
>Furthermore, there were no negative comments in the mail exploder since it
>was presented.
>
>So, with all the respect, I think the achievement of consensus for this
>policy should be reconsidered. Otherwise, we could also think that the
>consensus in previous meetings, for other policy proposals (not naming any
>in particular), has also never reached, as always there were comments and
>votes against, and the consensus was declared when a similar proportion of
>people was in favor vs. against.
>
>Moreover, in my opinion, yesterday the personal and unpleasant attacks that
>a single participant launched against me (not the proposals) created a clear
>situation of breach of the process and some folks may have been predisposed
>against the proponent, and thus influenced some which may have decided not
>to vote at all, or even voting against the proposals as a way to vote
>"against" the proponent, which is not the intent of the process.
>
>I expect that this kind of situation is not allowed in future meetings,
>hopefully. I think I was very kind in front of the attacks received, and
>under other situations, such as using my own native language instead of
>English, could have taken a very different reaction and become even more
>rude that the attacker itself, which I not did also in order to respect the
>rest of participants and try to play a fair game despite the situation.
>
>It is clear that, all kind of respectful critics to discuss any proposal
>merits are part of the process, are needed and welcome, and I fully support
>them. However unpleasant comments as we had yesterday which even reached to
>the point of not allowing the presenter to continue defending the proposal.
>
>This has also a very negative impact towards the process and the people
>participating, which under this kind of pressure could consider that is not
>worth to invest the time in submitting a proposal and defending it, as they
>can be "freely" attacked, specially in regions where because cultural
>reasons, difficulties with the language, or any other reasons, participants
>are typically shy and not precisely prone to speak up. I think it is a clear
>manipulation of the process.
>
>I also want to clarify the reason I had 4 proposals, as this was part of the
>attack. Before the previous meeting I submitted a single proposal, and it
>seems that it was considered complex to understand and to decide about it,
>so following staff recommendations, I decided to split it in several, in
>order to help the people to read them one by one and consider each part as a
>simpler piece.
>
>Also, part of the attack was about the waste of time, and in fact I think we
>used about 60% of the time that was originally allocated for this. It was
>not my intend to ask anyone to waste their time, but more on the other way,
>facilitate all to understand the proposal and take a position about it, and
>this is part of the process.
>
>I believe that the most important think in this process is not to discourage
>people, and what happened yesterday is clearly doing so. The process is not
>set for or to allow attack people presenting, otherwise we are measuring the
>presenter merits, not the proposal ones.
>
>And last, but not least, in my humble opinion, delaying a proposal that in
>my opinion reached consensus can be actually considered as a real "denial of
>service" attack to the process and it means that all spend our time in
>discussing it again when it is not really needed and acting unfairly among
>different proposals.
>
>Regards,
>Jordi
>
>
>
>
>
>
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荒野高志 (株)インテック・ネットコア
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