Deb,

Moving [1] to a separate thread, per your request. 

You're right about several things: chairs keep their own lives and opinions, 
there is no requirement for separate identities, and the guidelines for conduct 
carry no machinery for policing what anyone does on a personal platform. I am 
not asking you to monitor anyone's account.

I do want to push back, with respect, on one part of the principle as stated, 
that what a chair does on a personal platform is, for that reason alone, none 
of the IETF's concern. I don't think that can be the rule, and the cleanest way 
to see it is the limiting case: if a chair posted an overt racial slur about 
participants in this group, none of us would say "personal platform, not our 
business." What makes such a post the IETF's concern is not where it was typed; 
it is its effect on the environment for the people in this group, and its 
bearing on whether that person can still hold a role that depends on their 
trust. Location is not the test. Effect, and the requirements of the role, are. 
I am not equating a "go work at Whole Foods" jab with an overt slur, I raise 
the extreme only to locate the line, because once we agree the line is not 
"personal platform = off-limits," what remains is the proportionate question 
actually in front of us.

Furthermore, on a personal note, I absolutely feel less safe participating in 
the TLS WG if I know that I stand to be publicly ridiculed with the chairs 
endorsing statements that I leave cryptography and go find other work (or worse 
kinds of personal attacks; I can think of a few), if I post something that they 
disagree with. There is no question in my mind that I would at this point 
actively and strongly discourage all of my Lebanese students from ever 
participating in the TLS WG.

And at its far lesser magnitude, there is a different question here: not 
whether the chair is entitled to a personal opinion (they plainly are) but 
whether a chair who publicly endorses ridicule of a participant in an active 
dispute can be seen to rule impartially on that participant's draft, and on any 
FATT review requests originating from them. RFC 2418 makes working group chairs 
accountable to the responsible AD and charges them with managing the group's 
business fairly and even-handedly. The impartiality of the chair is not a 
personal matter; it is a property of the role, and it is the one thing the role 
cannot function without.

So I am not asking for any sanction, and certainly not for removal. I am asking 
you, as the AD who appoints and oversees the chairs, to weigh two proportionate 
things:

1. Whether the appearance of impartiality has been affected enough that recusal 
of the chair concerned from procedural rulings on 
draft-usama-tls-risks-of-mlkem (and from any FATT requests originating with the 
same author) is warranted, so that those calls are visibly made by someone with 
no stake in how the author has been characterized.

2. A brief acknowledgment to the group that endorsing personal attacks on 
contributors is inconsistent with the neutrality the chair role requires 
independent of platform, and without anyone needing to monitor personal 
accounts.

If the chair concerned chose, on her own, to reconsider the public endorsement, 
I think that would go a long way toward restoring confidence. But I take your 
point that that is hers to decide, not something to be compelled through the 
conduct guidelines.

[1] https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/tls/hmZH_Rkibo55nS62hQeo3Lx-TqQ/

Nadim Kobeissi
Symbolic Software • https://symbolic.software

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