| rfc9945v1.txt | rfc9945.txt | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) L. Eggert, Ed. | Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) L. Eggert, Ed. | |||
| Request for Comments: 9945 Mozilla | Request for Comments: 9945 Mozilla | |||
| bcp: 245 E. Lear, Ed. | BCP: 245 E. Lear, Ed. | |||
| Obsoletes: 3683, 3934 Cisco Systems | Obsoletes: 3683, 3934 Cisco Systems | |||
| Updates: 2418, 9245 February 2026 | Updates: 2418, 9245 February 2026 | |||
| Category: Best Current Practice | Category: Best Current Practice | |||
| ISSN: 2070-1721 | ISSN: 2070-1721 | |||
| IETF Community Moderation | IETF Community Moderation | |||
| Abstract | Abstract | |||
| The IETF community will treat people with kindness and grace, but not | The IETF community will treat people with kindness and grace, but not | |||
| skipping to change at line 74 ¶ | skipping to change at line 74 ¶ | |||
| 3.1. Actions That Are Out of Scope | 3.1. Actions That Are Out of Scope | |||
| 3.2. Unsolicited Bulk Messages | 3.2. Unsolicited Bulk Messages | |||
| 4. Moderation Procedures and Transparency | 4. Moderation Procedures and Transparency | |||
| 4.1. Consistency and Conflict Resolution | 4.1. Consistency and Conflict Resolution | |||
| 4.2. Reinstatement | 4.2. Reinstatement | |||
| 5. Relationship to Other IETF Functions | 5. Relationship to Other IETF Functions | |||
| 5.1. Relation to the Ombudsteam | 5.1. Relation to the Ombudsteam | |||
| 5.2. Relation to the IETF LLC | 5.2. Relation to the IETF LLC | |||
| 6. Security Considerations | 6. Security Considerations | |||
| 7. IANA Considerations | 7. IANA Considerations | |||
| 8. Acknowledgments | 8. References | |||
| 9. References | 8.1. Normative References | |||
| 9.1. Normative References | 8.2. Informative References | |||
| 9.2. Informative References | ||||
| Appendix A. Motivation | Appendix A. Motivation | |||
| A.1. Background | A.1. Background | |||
| A.2. Problems with the Previous Approach | A.2. Problems with the Previous Approach | |||
| Appendix B. Non-Normative Examples of Disruptive Behavior | Appendix B. Non-Normative Examples of Disruptive Behavior | |||
| Acknowledgments | ||||
| Authors' Addresses | Authors' Addresses | |||
| 1. Introduction | 1. Introduction | |||
| This memo establishes a policy for the moderation of disruptive | This memo establishes a policy for the moderation of disruptive | |||
| participation across the IETF's various public online contribution | participation across the IETF's various public online contribution | |||
| channels and discussion fora. It creates a moderator team to develop | channels and discussion fora. It creates a moderator team to develop | |||
| procedures and to facilitate their consistent application. | procedures and to facilitate their consistent application. | |||
| This memo obsoletes and updates some prior IETF processes, summarized | This memo obsoletes and updates some prior IETF processes, summarized | |||
| skipping to change at line 104 ¶ | skipping to change at line 104 ¶ | |||
| This memo makes the following changes to existing processes: | This memo makes the following changes to existing processes: | |||
| * Obsoletes [RFC3683] as the "posting rights" (PR) action it defines | * Obsoletes [RFC3683] as the "posting rights" (PR) action it defines | |||
| is replaced by processes defined herein; | is replaced by processes defined herein; | |||
| * Obsoletes [RFC3934] as it replaces working group moderation | * Obsoletes [RFC3934] as it replaces working group moderation | |||
| procedures; | procedures; | |||
| * Obsoletes Section 3 of [RFC9245] and the second paragraph of | * Obsoletes Section 3 of [RFC9245] and the second paragraph of | |||
| Section 4 of [RFC9245], as the moderator team replaces the IETF | Section 4 of [RFC9245], as the IETF moderator team defined in this | |||
| discussion list moderation team. | document replaces the IETF discussion list moderator team. | |||
| * Updates Section 6.1 of [RFC2418], because the moderator team will | * Updates Section 6.1 of [RFC2418], because the moderator team will | |||
| work together with working group chairs to moderate disruptive | work together with working group chairs to moderate disruptive | |||
| behavior. | behavior. | |||
| The processes described in this memo are solely applicable to IETF | The processes described in this memo are solely applicable to IETF | |||
| activities, and not to other related organizations, such as the | activities, and not to other related organizations, such as the | |||
| Internet Research Task Force (IRTF), the Internet Architecture Board | Internet Research Task Force (IRTF), the Internet Architecture Board | |||
| (IAB), the RFC Series Working Group (RSWG), the RFC Series Approval | (IAB), the RFC Series Working Group (RSWG), the RFC Series Approval | |||
| Board (RSAB), or the Independent RFC Submission Stream, without their | Board (RSAB), or the Independent RFC Submission Stream, without their | |||
| skipping to change at line 135 ¶ | skipping to change at line 135 ¶ | |||
| list, chat group, or discussion in a collaborative tool such as | list, chat group, or discussion in a collaborative tool such as | |||
| GitHub or GitLab. For example, working group chairs are | GitHub or GitLab. For example, working group chairs are | |||
| administrators of all the public fora that their working groups use, | administrators of all the public fora that their working groups use, | |||
| which typically includes mailing lists and chat groups, but might | which typically includes mailing lists and chat groups, but might | |||
| also include collaborative tools such as GitHub or GitLab. The | also include collaborative tools such as GitHub or GitLab. The | |||
| "owners" of non-WG IETF mailing lists are another example of | "owners" of non-WG IETF mailing lists are another example of | |||
| administrators. | administrators. | |||
| 1.2. General Philosophy | 1.2. General Philosophy | |||
| This cornerstone of this policy is that individuals are responsible | The cornerstone of this policy is that individuals are responsible | |||
| for furthering the goals of the IETF as an organization [RFC3935] in | for furthering the goals of the IETF as an organization [RFC3935] in | |||
| a manner consistent with the policy laid out in [RFC7154]. | a manner consistent with the policy laid out in [RFC7154]. | |||
| Disagreement and diverse points of view within any standards | Disagreement and diverse points of view within any standards | |||
| organization are to be expected and are even healthy. The IETF is an | organization are to be expected and are even healthy. The IETF is an | |||
| open standards organization with a discussion-based rough consensus | open standards organization with a discussion-based rough consensus | |||
| process, a non-normative description of which is in [RFC7282]. | process, a non-normative description of which is in [RFC7282]. | |||
| Engaged, respectful discussion that is within the scope of an IETF | Engaged, respectful discussion that is within the scope of an IETF | |||
| forum should therefore not be considered disruptive, nor should | forum should therefore not be considered disruptive, nor should | |||
| someone be considered disruptive solely because they are outside the | someone be considered disruptive solely because they are outside the | |||
| skipping to change at line 157 ¶ | skipping to change at line 157 ¶ | |||
| disruptive behavior, action must be taken in order to maintain | disruptive behavior, action must be taken in order to maintain | |||
| decorum of the community. | decorum of the community. | |||
| The moderation policy goals are as follows: | The moderation policy goals are as follows: | |||
| * Apply consistent, fair, and timely moderation of communication | * Apply consistent, fair, and timely moderation of communication | |||
| across all public online IETF participation channels and | across all public online IETF participation channels and | |||
| participation fora without regard to a participant's role in the | participation fora without regard to a participant's role in the | |||
| IETF or previous technical contributions; | IETF or previous technical contributions; | |||
| * Ensure appeals are available to address disagreements about | * Ensure that appeals are available to address disagreements about | |||
| moderation actions; | moderation actions; | |||
| * Balance transparency against both privacy of individuals involved | * Balance transparency against both privacy of individuals involved | |||
| and further disruption to the community; | and further disruption to the community; | |||
| * Allow moderation decisions to be reconsidered; and | * Allow moderation decisions to be reconsidered; and | |||
| * Provide the broadest possible latitude to all people doing | * Provide the broadest possible latitude to all people doing | |||
| moderation, so that they have the flexibility to address a broad | moderation, so that they have the flexibility to address a broad | |||
| range of individuals and circumstances. | range of individuals and circumstances. | |||
| Questions about the processes detailed below should be answered | Questions about the processes detailed below should be answered with | |||
| through the lens of these aims. | these goals in mind. | |||
| The objective is explicitly *not* punishment, but to maintain an | The objective is explicitly *not* punishment, but to maintain an | |||
| open, welcoming, non-hostile environment in which all may participate | open, welcoming, non-hostile environment in which all may participate | |||
| on an equal footing, regardless of their role in the IETF or past | on an equal footing, regardless of their role in the IETF or past | |||
| technical contributions. | technical contributions. | |||
| 2. IETF Moderator Team | 2. IETF Moderator Team | |||
| This memo defines a consistent approach to moderating the IETF's | This memo defines a consistent approach to moderating the IETF's | |||
| various public online fora. A moderator team for the IETF will | various public online fora. A moderator team for the IETF will | |||
| skipping to change at line 199 ¶ | skipping to change at line 199 ¶ | |||
| The IESG appoints and recalls moderators. The moderator team | The IESG appoints and recalls moderators. The moderator team | |||
| initially consists of no fewer than five individuals. The moderator | initially consists of no fewer than five individuals. The moderator | |||
| team may expand or contract based on operational experience. In | team may expand or contract based on operational experience. In | |||
| selecting members, the IESG will take into account geographic | selecting members, the IESG will take into account geographic | |||
| coverage, expected and unexpected absences, and team diversity. | coverage, expected and unexpected absences, and team diversity. | |||
| Because the IESG and IAB are in the appeals chain for moderator team | Because the IESG and IAB are in the appeals chain for moderator team | |||
| decisions (see Section 4.1), the IESG must not appoint a moderator | decisions (see Section 4.1), the IESG must not appoint a moderator | |||
| who is serving on the IESG or IAB. Individuals serving on other | who is serving on the IESG or IAB. Individuals serving on other | |||
| bodies to which the NomCom appoints members, such as the IETF Trust | bodies to which the NomCom appoints members, such as the IETF Trust | |||
| or the LLC Board, as well as LLC staff and contractors, shall also be | or the IETF LLC Board, as well as IETF LLC staff and contractors | |||
| excluded from serving on the moderator team. If a moderator assumes | shall also be excluded from serving on the moderator team. If a | |||
| any such role, they shall step down from the moderator team soon | moderator assumes any such role, they shall step down from the | |||
| after. | moderator team soon after. | |||
| 2.1.1. Team Diversity | 2.1.1. Team Diversity | |||
| Due to the global nature of the IETF, the membership of this team | Due to the global nature of the IETF, the membership of this team | |||
| should reflect a diversity of time zones and other participant | should reflect a diversity of time zones and other participant | |||
| characteristics that lets it operate effectively around the clock and | characteristics that lets it operate effectively around the clock and | |||
| throughout the year. Ideally, the moderators should be able to | throughout the year. Ideally, the moderators should be able to | |||
| respond to issues within a few hours. | respond to issues within a few hours. | |||
| Team diversity is also important to ensure any participant observing | Team diversity also improves the likelihood that any participant | |||
| disruptive behavior can identify a moderator they feel comfortable | experiencing or observing disruptive behavior can identify a | |||
| contacting. | moderator they feel comfortable contacting. | |||
| 2.2. Training | 2.2. Training | |||
| The IETF is committed to providing and/or funding training for | The IETF is committed to providing and/or funding training for | |||
| administrators and moderators as necessary. The IESG will negotiate | administrators and moderators as necessary. The IESG will negotiate | |||
| any required funding or resources with IETF Administration LLC | any required funding or resources with IETF Administration LLC | |||
| [RFC8711]. | [RFC8711]. | |||
| 3. Scope and Responsibilities | 3. Scope and Responsibilities | |||
| skipping to change at line 242 ¶ | skipping to change at line 242 ¶ | |||
| * *Participants* should always behave in the manner discussed in | * *Participants* should always behave in the manner discussed in | |||
| Section 1.2. They are also encouraged to report disruptive | Section 1.2. They are also encouraged to report disruptive | |||
| behavior directed at them or someone else to an administrator of | behavior directed at them or someone else to an administrator of | |||
| the respective forum *and* the moderators. | the respective forum *and* the moderators. | |||
| * *Administrators* are primarily responsible for managing their fora | * *Administrators* are primarily responsible for managing their fora | |||
| in accordance with procedures developed by the moderators and | in accordance with procedures developed by the moderators and | |||
| approved by the IESG. As such, they shall address reports of | approved by the IESG. As such, they shall address reports of | |||
| disruptive behavior in a timely fashion, apprising moderators of | disruptive behavior in a timely fashion, apprising moderators of | |||
| reports or actions taken. Administrators may amend or rescind | reports or actions taken. Administrators may amend or rescind | |||
| actions, including those taken by members of the moderation team | actions, including those taken by members of the moderator team | |||
| *after* they have consulted with that team. | *after* they have consulted with that team. | |||
| For a working group, chairs are by default the administrators. | For a working group, chairs are by default the administrators. | |||
| They may delegate this responsibility in the same vein as | They may delegate this responsibility in the same vein as | |||
| Section 6.4 of [RFC2418], but they must always accept, | Section 6.4 of [RFC2418], but they must always accept, | |||
| acknowledge, and keep track of complaints of disruptive behavior. | acknowledge, and keep track of complaints of disruptive behavior. | |||
| Forum administrators should perform moderation in a way that | Forum administrators should perform moderation in a way that | |||
| obviates the need for moderator team involvement. | obviates the need for moderator team involvement. | |||
| * *Moderators* are responsible for establishing procedures to | * *Moderators* are responsible for establishing procedures to | |||
| skipping to change at line 401 ¶ | skipping to change at line 401 ¶ | |||
| A suspension of participation privileges imposed prior to this | A suspension of participation privileges imposed prior to this | |||
| process shall be reconsidered only in accordance with the processes | process shall be reconsidered only in accordance with the processes | |||
| in place at the time of the suspension, even if the corresponding RFC | in place at the time of the suspension, even if the corresponding RFC | |||
| has been formally obsoleted. | has been formally obsoleted. | |||
| 5. Relationship to Other IETF Functions | 5. Relationship to Other IETF Functions | |||
| 5.1. Relation to the Ombudsteam | 5.1. Relation to the Ombudsteam | |||
| Administrators and moderators shall complement the efforts of the | Administrators and moderators shall complement the efforts of the | |||
| IETF Ombudsteam [OT], whose focus on anti-harassment and operation | IETF Ombudsteam [OT], whose focus on anti-harassment shall remain | |||
| shall remain unchanged. Administrators and moderators should always | unchanged. Administrators and moderators should always report | |||
| report suspected harassment. They should nonetheless take any | suspected harassment. They should nonetheless take any necessary | |||
| necessary actions regarding disruptive behavior. | actions regarding disruptive behavior. | |||
| 5.2. Relation to the IETF LLC | 5.2. Relation to the IETF LLC | |||
| The Board of Directors of the IETF Administration LLC (IETF LLC) has | The Board of Directors of the IETF Administration LLC (IETF LLC) has | |||
| fiduciary duty for the overall organization, which includes the duty | fiduciary duty for the overall organization, which includes the duty | |||
| to protect the organization from serious legal risk that may arise | to protect the organization from serious legal risk that may arise | |||
| from the behavior of IETF participants. | from the behavior of IETF participants. | |||
| This protection may include the need for the IETF LLC to take | This protection may include the need for the IETF LLC to take | |||
| emergency moderation actions. These emergency actions are expected | emergency moderation actions. These emergency actions are expected | |||
| skipping to change at line 464 ¶ | skipping to change at line 464 ¶ | |||
| is mitigated in eight ways: | is mitigated in eight ways: | |||
| 1. Section 4 requires the moderator team to first establish | 1. Section 4 requires the moderator team to first establish | |||
| procedures that are intended to apply uniformly across the IETF. | procedures that are intended to apply uniformly across the IETF. | |||
| 2. Section 1.2 explicitly states that viewpoints outside the rough | 2. Section 1.2 explicitly states that viewpoints outside the rough | |||
| consensus are not in and of themselves disruptive. | consensus are not in and of themselves disruptive. | |||
| 3. Section 4 provides transparency by requiring that moderation | 3. Section 4 provides transparency by requiring that moderation | |||
| actions that restrict participation privileges be immediately | actions that restrict participation privileges be immediately | |||
| reported to the affected person and to the moderation team, and | reported to the affected person and to the moderator team, and | |||
| periodically reported to the IESG. | periodically reported to the IESG. | |||
| 4. Section 4 also requires that the community be informed in the | 4. Section 4 also requires that the community be informed in the | |||
| case of suspensions lasting longer than 14 days. | case of suspensions lasting longer than 14 days. | |||
| 5. Section 4.1 lays out an appeals process in the case of | 5. Section 4.1 lays out an appeals process in the case of | |||
| disagreements. | disagreements. | |||
| 6. If moderators find that the procedures themselves are leading to | 6. If moderators find that the procedures themselves are leading to | |||
| inappropriate moderation, Section 4 allows them to update those | inappropriate moderation, Section 4 allows them to update those | |||
| skipping to change at line 495 ¶ | skipping to change at line 495 ¶ | |||
| are not set in stone. | are not set in stone. | |||
| Moderation actions are intended to limit the likelihood of disruptive | Moderation actions are intended to limit the likelihood of disruptive | |||
| behavior by a few IETF participants that may discourage participation | behavior by a few IETF participants that may discourage participation | |||
| by other IETF participants. | by other IETF participants. | |||
| 7. IANA Considerations | 7. IANA Considerations | |||
| This document has no IANA actions. | This document has no IANA actions. | |||
| 8. Acknowledgments | 8. References | |||
| This memo is based on two individual Internet-Drafts, draft-ecahc- | ||||
| moderation (https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ecahc-moderation/) | ||||
| authored by Lars Eggert, Alissa Cooper, Jari Arkko, Russ Housley, and | ||||
| Brian E. Carpenter, and draft-lear-bcp83-replacement | ||||
| (https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-lear-bcp83-replacement/) | ||||
| authored by Eliot Lear, Robert Wilton, Bron Gondwana, and John | ||||
| R. Levine. Robert Sayre authored draft-sayre-modpod-excellent | ||||
| (https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-sayre-modpod-excellent/), | ||||
| which also originated ideas reflected in this work. Pete Resnick | ||||
| provided the basis for how the moderators interact with list/forum | ||||
| leadership. | ||||
| These individuals contributed additional improvements: | ||||
| * Alissa Cooper | ||||
| * Brian Carpenter | ||||
| * Chris Box | ||||
| * Colin Perkins | ||||
| * David Schinazi | ||||
| * Eric Rescorla | ||||
| * Jay Daley | ||||
| * Joel Halpern | ||||
| * John Klensin | ||||
| * John Scudder | ||||
| * Martin Thomson | ||||
| * Melinda Shore | ||||
| * Michael Richardson | ||||
| * Nick Hilliard | ||||
| * Pete Resnick | ||||
| * Rich Salz | ||||
| * Robert Sayre | ||||
| * Russ Housley | ||||
| * Sean Turner | ||||
| * Simon Josefsson | ||||
| * Stephen Farrell | ||||
| * Ted Lemon | ||||
| * Tim Bray | ||||
| N.B., acknowledgment should not be taken as endorsement by the | ||||
| individuals named above. | ||||
| 9. References | ||||
| 9.1. Normative References | 8.1. Normative References | |||
| [BCP10] Best Current Practice 10, | [BCP10] Best Current Practice 10, | |||
| <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/bcp10>. | <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/bcp10>. | |||
| At the time of writing, this BCP comprises the following: | At the time of writing, this BCP comprises the following: | |||
| Kucherawy, M., Ed., Hinden, R., Ed., and J. Livingood, | Kucherawy, M., Ed., Hinden, R., Ed., and J. Livingood, | |||
| Ed., "IAB, IESG, IETF Trust, and IETF LLC Selection, | Ed., "IAB, IESG, IETF Trust, and IETF LLC Selection, | |||
| Confirmation, and Recall Process: Operation of the IETF | Confirmation, and Recall Process: Operation of the IETF | |||
| Nominating and Recall Committees", BCP 10, RFC 8713, | Nominating and Recall Committees", BCP 10, RFC 8713, | |||
| DOI 10.17487/RFC8713, February 2020, | DOI 10.17487/RFC8713, February 2020, | |||
| skipping to change at line 604 ¶ | skipping to change at line 539 ¶ | |||
| [RFC7776] Resnick, P. and A. Farrel, "IETF Anti-Harassment | [RFC7776] Resnick, P. and A. Farrel, "IETF Anti-Harassment | |||
| Procedures", BCP 25, RFC 7776, DOI 10.17487/RFC7776, March | Procedures", BCP 25, RFC 7776, DOI 10.17487/RFC7776, March | |||
| 2016, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7776>. | 2016, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7776>. | |||
| [RFC8711] Haberman, B., Hall, J., and J. Livingood, "Structure of | [RFC8711] Haberman, B., Hall, J., and J. Livingood, "Structure of | |||
| the IETF Administrative Support Activity, Version 2.0", | the IETF Administrative Support Activity, Version 2.0", | |||
| BCP 101, RFC 8711, DOI 10.17487/RFC8711, February 2020, | BCP 101, RFC 8711, DOI 10.17487/RFC8711, February 2020, | |||
| <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8711>. | <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8711>. | |||
| 9.2. Informative References | 8.2. Informative References | |||
| [AHP] IESG, "IETF Anti-Harassment Policy", 3 November 2013, | [AHP] IESG, "IETF Anti-Harassment Policy", 3 November 2013, | |||
| <https://www.ietf.org/about/groups/iesg/statements/anti- | <https://www.ietf.org/about/groups/iesg/statements/anti- | |||
| harassment-policy/>. | harassment-policy/>. | |||
| [DP] IESG, "IESG Statement on Disruptive Posting", 17 February | [DP] IESG, "IESG Statement on Disruptive Posting", 17 February | |||
| 2006, <https://www.ietf.org/about/groups/iesg/statements/ | 2006, <https://www.ietf.org/about/groups/iesg/statements/ | |||
| disruptive-posting/>. | disruptive-posting/>. | |||
| [IESG-SPAM] | [IESG-SPAM] | |||
| skipping to change at line 680 ¶ | skipping to change at line 615 ¶ | |||
| IESG statement [DP] clarifies that the IESG tasks list administrators | IESG statement [DP] clarifies that the IESG tasks list administrators | |||
| with moderation. And the IETF list for general discussions has, | with moderation. And the IETF list for general discussions has, | |||
| mostly for historic reasons, a team of moderators that are not list | mostly for historic reasons, a team of moderators that are not list | |||
| administrators and operate by a different set of processes [RFC9245]. | administrators and operate by a different set of processes [RFC9245]. | |||
| Note that the term "moderation" can refer both to _preemptive_ | Note that the term "moderation" can refer both to _preemptive_ | |||
| moderation, where administrators review attempted participation | moderation, where administrators review attempted participation | |||
| before it occurs (such as reviewing messages to a mailing list), and | before it occurs (such as reviewing messages to a mailing list), and | |||
| _reactive_ moderation, where administrators intervene after | _reactive_ moderation, where administrators intervene after | |||
| disruptive participation has occurred. Historically, the IETF has | disruptive participation has occurred. Historically, the IETF has | |||
| mainly practiced reactive moderation, with a spectrum from gentle | mainly practiced reactive moderation, employing actions ranging from | |||
| reminders on- and off-list, all the way to suspension of posting | gentle reminders on- and off-list, all the way to suspension of | |||
| rights and other ways of participating or communicating. It is up to | posting rights and other ways of participating or communicating. It | |||
| the moderators and administrators to decide which mix of preemptive | is up to the moderators and administrators to decide which mix of | |||
| and reactive moderation to employ as part of their procedures. | preemptive and reactive moderation to employ as part of their | |||
| procedures. | ||||
| In addition, [RFC3683] defines a process for revoking an individual's | In addition, [RFC3683] defines a process for revoking an individual's | |||
| posting rights to IETF mailing lists following a community Last Call | posting rights to IETF mailing lists following a community Last Call | |||
| of a "posting rights" action (PR-action) proposed by the IESG, often | of a "posting rights" action (PR-action) proposed by the IESG, often | |||
| in response to complaints from the community. | in response to complaints from the community. | |||
| Experience and community input suggests that an evolution of the | Experience and community input suggests that an evolution of the | |||
| existing processes is necessary. | existing processes is necessary. | |||
| A.2. Problems with the Previous Approach | A.2. Problems with the Previous Approach | |||
| skipping to change at line 733 ¶ | skipping to change at line 669 ¶ | |||
| * For a given mailing list, participants may not feel comfortable | * For a given mailing list, participants may not feel comfortable | |||
| reporting disruptive behavior to a chair or list administrator, | reporting disruptive behavior to a chair or list administrator, | |||
| for various reasons. For mailing lists not associated with | for various reasons. For mailing lists not associated with | |||
| working groups, list administrators are not even publicly | working groups, list administrators are not even publicly | |||
| identified -- they can only be contacted through an anonymous | identified -- they can only be contacted through an anonymous | |||
| alias address. This exacerbates the problem, because participants | alias address. This exacerbates the problem, because participants | |||
| may not be comfortable reporting disruptive behavior to an | may not be comfortable reporting disruptive behavior to an | |||
| anonymous party. | anonymous party. | |||
| * The IETF offers participation not only through in-person meetings | * Moderation processes have been defined for only two channels of | |||
| and mailing lists, which are the two channels of participation for | participation in the IETF: in-person meetings and mailing lists. | |||
| which moderation processes are currently defined. IETF business | However, IETF business now happens in a number of fora (e.g., chat | |||
| also happens in chat groups, remote meeting participation systems, | groups, remote meeting participation systems, virtual meetings, | |||
| virtual meetings, wikis, GitHub repositories, and more. How | wikis, and GitHub repositories). Procedures for moderating | |||
| disruptive behavior is moderated in these fora is currently | disruptive behavior in these fora are currently undefined. | |||
| undefined. | ||||
| Appendix B. Non-Normative Examples of Disruptive Behavior | Appendix B. Non-Normative Examples of Disruptive Behavior | |||
| The list below describes some types of disruptive behavior, but it is | The list below describes some types of disruptive behavior, but it is | |||
| non-exhaustive. | non-exhaustive. | |||
| * Discussion of subjects unrelated to a forum's charter or scope; | * Discussion of subjects unrelated to a forum's charter or scope; | |||
| * Uncivil commentary, regardless of the general subject; | * Uncivil commentary, regardless of the general subject; | |||
| skipping to change at line 767 ¶ | skipping to change at line 702 ¶ | |||
| * "Sealioning", where a participant makes incessant requests for | * "Sealioning", where a participant makes incessant requests for | |||
| evidence or data, even while remaining superficially polite. | evidence or data, even while remaining superficially polite. | |||
| These items are examples. Moderators and administrators may take | These items are examples. Moderators and administrators may take | |||
| moderation actions for many other cases. | moderation actions for many other cases. | |||
| The moderator team's task consists of subjective judgment calls. | The moderator team's task consists of subjective judgment calls. | |||
| Behaviors not listed here might require moderation, and it is not | Behaviors not listed here might require moderation, and it is not | |||
| possible to write a complete list of all such behaviors. | possible to write a complete list of all such behaviors. | |||
| Acknowledgments | ||||
| This memo is based on two individual Internet-Drafts, draft-ecahc- | ||||
| moderation (https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ecahc-moderation/) | ||||
| authored by Lars Eggert, Alissa Cooper, Jari Arkko, Russ Housley, and | ||||
| Brian E. Carpenter, and draft-lear-bcp83-replacement | ||||
| (https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-lear-bcp83-replacement/) | ||||
| authored by Eliot Lear, Robert Wilton, Bron Gondwana, and John | ||||
| R. Levine. Robert Sayre authored draft-sayre-modpod-excellent | ||||
| (https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-sayre-modpod-excellent/), | ||||
| which also originated ideas reflected in this work. Pete Resnick | ||||
| provided the basis for how the moderators interact with list/forum | ||||
| leadership. | ||||
| These individuals contributed additional improvements: | ||||
| * Alissa Cooper | ||||
| * Brian Carpenter | ||||
| * Chris Box | ||||
| * Colin Perkins | ||||
| * David Schinazi | ||||
| * Deb Cooley | ||||
| * Dhruv Dhody | ||||
| * Eric Rescorla | ||||
| * Éric Vyncke | ||||
| * Erik Kline | ||||
| * Harald Alvestrand | ||||
| * Jay Daley | ||||
| * Joel Halpern | ||||
| * John Klensin | ||||
| * John Scudder | ||||
| * Lisa Dusseault | ||||
| * Martin Thomson | ||||
| * Melinda Shore | ||||
| * Michael Richardson | ||||
| * Mike Bishop | ||||
| * Mohamed Boucadair | ||||
| * Murray Kucherawy | ||||
| * Nick Hilliard | ||||
| * Orie Steele | ||||
| * Paul Hoffman | ||||
| * Paul Wouters | ||||
| * Pete Resnick | ||||
| * Rich Salz | ||||
| * Robert Sayre | ||||
| * Robert Sparks | ||||
| * Roman Danyliw | ||||
| * Russ Housley | ||||
| * Sean Turner | ||||
| * Simon Josefsson | ||||
| * Stephen Farrell | ||||
| * Ted Lemon | ||||
| * Tim Bray | ||||
| N.B., acknowledgment should not be taken as endorsement by the | ||||
| individuals named above. | ||||
| Authors' Addresses | Authors' Addresses | |||
| Lars Eggert (editor) | Lars Eggert (editor) | |||
| Mozilla | Mozilla | |||
| Stenbergintie 12 B | Stenbergintie 12 B | |||
| FI-02700 Kauniainen | FI-02700 Kauniainen | |||
| Finland | Finland | |||
| Email: lars@eggert.org | Email: lars@eggert.org | |||
| URI: https://eggert.org/ | URI: https://eggert.org/ | |||
| End of changes. 18 change blocks. | ||||
| 104 lines changed or deleted | 132 lines changed or added | |||
This html diff was produced by rfcdiff 1.48. | ||||