I wrote:

An organization with a limited scope (telecommunications) should not control a standard with a much broader scope (timekeeping).

Poul-Henning Kamp writes:

50 years ago, I might have agreed with you (NB: cheap claim, I'm not that old).

But in the networked global village of this age, I do not: timekeeping is very much a telecoms issue.

A global village implies global citizens. People have complex needs that place more stringent timekeeping requirements of all sorts now than 50 years ago. Telecommunication issues are only part of that - an important part, but limited in scope. Timekeeping requirements will only broaden moving forward into the future.

The issue is general purpose civil timekeeping, not some wonky issue about a technical timescale. The diverse requirements of civilians are preeminent. In any event, the specific needs of telecommunications infrastructure are not necessarily at odds with the more general needs of civilians. Systems engineering provides tools for accommodating both.

The ITU proposal is simply a bad proposal. Improve the proposal. Seek consensus before voting on the next one.

Rob

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