Andrew - 

Interesting take but one that probably isn't supported by the black letter 
reading of the Note Well.  

In general, the Note Well describes the class of things that might be 
contributions, but for them to become actionable contributions, they need to 
make it into the IETF record.  I assume anything I say at the microphone in a 
WG meeting can and will make it to the record - I further assume that anything 
I happen to say to someone sitting next to me in that WG won't unless and until 
one of us gets up and goes to the mike.

Or as Tom Clancy pointed out - "If you don't write it down, it didn't happen".

Or to stretch the analogy further - if I send an email to you and CC the ietf 
or namedroppers list, that's a contribution.  If I send you a private email 
about say PKIX to you as a non-WG chair, that's not a contribution.  If I send 
you a private email about something related to DNSEXT to you as the WG chair, 
it MAY become a contribution if added to the record and you as WG chair may 
choose to add it to the record in some form.

So, no, private conversations even on WG topics, even at the IETF meeting venue 
not in the context of a WG or plenary or other official communications are not 
contributions unless and until added to the record.

Mike



At 01:46 PM 8/11/2010, Andrew Sullivan wrote:
>On Wed, Aug 11, 2010 at 11:30:35AM -0600, Peter Saint-Andre wrote:
>> Contribution". Such statements include oral statements in IETF sessions,
>> as well as written and electronic communications made at any time or
>> place, which are addressed to:
>> 
>>     * Any IETF working group or portion thereof
>
>IETF WGs are made up of their participants.  Participants are so
>defined by their participation in some WG activity such as a meeting,
>or reading the mailing list, or something like that.  So, if you come
>to an IETF meeting and make some side comment about anything that went
>on in a WG meeting to someone else who was somehow participating in
>that WG (say by reading the list or going to the same meeting), then
>your comment is a contribution under my reading.  ("Portion thereof"
>just means "at least one participant", as far as I can tell.  It isn't
>otherwise defined that I can see.)
>
>So it's perhaps not quite true that anything that anyone says in a
>hallway discussion is a contribution; but something like that must be
>pretty close.  The definition of "contribution" is extremely broad, I
>think.
>
>A
>
>-- 
>Andrew Sullivan
>a...@shinkuro.com
>Shinkuro, Inc.
>_______________________________________________
>Ietf mailing list
>Ietf@ietf.org
>https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf


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