On 07/16/2013 10:15 AM, Nick Daly wrote:
On Tue, Jul 16, 2013 at 1:04 AM, Jonathan Wilkes<[email protected]> wrote:
On 07/15/2013 11:45 PM, Catherine Roy wrote:
As a member of the HTML working group and the Restricted Media community group, my experience is that discussions within these groups surrounding the EME draft have been extremely frustrating. The same scenario as with Jeff Jaffe's blog post has happened there. The whole thing has been rather unreal and this recent post[1] from a Restricted Media mailing list member sums up
my feelings about how futile the whole exercice has been.

[1]
http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-restrictedmedia/2013Jul/0190.html
It seems like there are two fronts-- one, which you address by jettisoning EME in freedomhtml, and another which is to keep member organizations from standardizing software/hardware on EME. Is there any way for the current
members of all the working groups to put pressure on the WC3?
Is there any point to messaging the draft's editors directly?

http://www.w3.org/TR/encrypted-media/

If you delivered a thousand copies of the Hollyweb petition a day, you
could do it for nearly a month before running out of individual
signers [2].  That'd be nearly 75k letters between all 3 drafters.

Well...
The three draft editors aren't elected officials; one of them works for
the W3C member organization that would probably reap the most benefits
from hooks for DRM standardized across the web.  I doubt any
amount of emails to an employee of that company is going to convince
the company to stop developing the cheapest way for them to sustain
their current business model.

What do the working group members from all current (and past) working groups have to say about the EME draft? Has there been an effort to get all of their input on whether EME should be part of the web, or a poll of whether they support
it or not?

While I'm happy to see so many people signed the FSF petition, a statement of objection specifically from a large portion of working group members would be more powerful. They are the ones doing the work of actually making and testing the standards, and their numbers include outside experts who may not be affiliated with a member organization and could more easily speak out. The W3C staff/administration is miniscule by comparison, and depends on those folks to do the work so I doubt they want
to risk alienating them.

-Jonathan

2:http://www.defectivebydesign.org/oscar-awarded-w3c-in-the-hollyweb
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