Document: draft-carpenter-rswg-authoring-ethics-02

Section 2 does not establish what I think is the key component of authorship I 
care for: responsibility.

Or, if you prefer: ownership.  And, by implication: endorsement.

In my mind, an author claims responsibility for the contents of a document.  
Every word.

As an example, in the RFC production process (which this document doesn't 
really need to treat in detail), this notion of responsibility is manifest in 
the expectation that authors sign off on the final document.

The text talks about major contributors who request withdrawal of authorship 
status.  The reason they do this is responsibility.  If they can no longer 
stand by the content of the document for any reason (from availability of time 
to a strong disagreement with the direction taken), they can be moved to a 
contributors section.  A contributor has no expectation of responsibility.

This concept of responsibility should affect the rest of the document pretty 
substantially.

Section 3 talks about contributors making smaller contributions, but the 
example of withdrawal in Section 2 and the entirety of Section 4 makes that a 
lie.  Contributors are simply people who made notable contributions to the 
document.  The key difference is that they don't claim ownership of the content 
of the document.

Section 4 would need significant reframing in light of this.  The editor role 
carries a weaker notion of responsibility than an author.  But that 
responsibility still applies.  The implication is that they did not create the 
content of the document, though they are still responsible for what is there.

Section 6 talks about previous versions.  The responsibility razor here is a 
useful tool.  Previous authors who are willing to assume responsibility for the 
new version should be listed as authors.  Those who do not should be listed as 
contributors.  (This is a very clean approach, but there is always room for 
finding mutually-agreeable outcomes, as the draft notes.)

Section 7 says something that is odd in light of this framing: "It goes without 
saying that normally nobody should be listed as an author, contributor or 
editor against their will."  My initial inclination was to say "well, then 
don't say it", but the responsibility razor cuts this statement cleanly as 
well.  A person cannot be forced into authorship or editorship.  However, a 
contributor has only contributed text, a listing as a contributor does not 
imply endorsement.  Inclusion as a contributor is a strictly factual statement.

On that last point, it's probably worth a note saying that a document should 
acknowledge when a contributor strongly disagrees with something in a document. 
 In retrospect, I really wish that I could disendorse much of RFC 6772, despite 
thinking that the small parts I wrote still hold up well.

Section 8 talks about tools, but the responsibility razor cleanly applies to 
the text about plagiarism.  If content has been plagiarized, the authors are 
responsible. The authors might then attempt to hold a contributor responsible, 
but there is limit to how much responsibility can be deflected in these cases.

Thanks,
Martin

-- 
rswg mailing list -- [email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]

Reply via email to