On 5/9/12 1:51 AM, Brian E Carpenter wrote:
Any IETF participant can call for sanctions to be applied to anyone they believe has violated the IETF's IPR policy. This can be done by sending email to the appropriate IETF mailing list.That seems reasonable, but publishing such a belief without having the wording checked by a libel lawyer might be risky. I think the draft should state that a call for sanctions should be based on factual evidence and not on "belief". How aboutAny IETF participant can call for sanctions to be applied to anyone shown to have violated the IETF's IPR policy. This can be done by sending email to the appropriate IETF mailing list, including a a short summary of the relevant facts and events.
Shown how and by whom? I think you're conflating two things here. Any participant can *call* for sanctions to be applied to anyone they believe has violated the policy. No libel in saying that I believe you have violated the policy. The sanctions ought not be applied until the chair/AD/whoever reasonably determines that the policy has in fact been violated. But that's not what the sentence above is talking about. I don't want participants to think that they can't bring up the issue of violation without some sort of "burden of proof". Can we figure out some words that express both things?
pr -- Pete Resnick<http://www.qualcomm.com/~presnick/> Qualcomm Incorporated - Direct phone: (858)651-4478, Fax: (858)651-1102
