Thank you Deb.

For point 1, I think everyone appreciates the clarification that good faith 
participants have nothing to worry about. A blanket warning to everyone does 
not make it obvious after all.

For 2, I agree new participants should read the rules. I also believe veterans, 
chairs and ADs should re-read the same.

For 3, I appreciate that you are giving warnings to people in private. That 
said, between July 6 and this morning, how many private warnings were issued?

Thanks again Deb.

Sincerely,
Andrew


> On Jul 7, 2026, at 10:37 AM, Deb Cooley <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I will only engage on a couple of points:  
> 
> 1.  Obviously those participants who have been contributing in good faith 
> have nothing to worry about.    
> 
> 2.  The new participants should read the rules prior to posting, this warning 
> will help them understand what is expected.
> 
> 3.  If you were privately warned, others might have been as well.  There is 
> literally no way for you to tell who has been warned privately and who has 
> not. 
> 
> Deb
> 
> On Tue, Jul 7, 2026 at 1:14 PM Andrew Lee <[email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>> Dear Deb,
>> 
>>> On Jul 7, 2026, at 8:55 AM, Deb Cooley <[email protected] 
>>> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>> 
>>> This is a public warning to the entire TLS working group, in accordance 
>>> with RFC 3934 Section 2 [0].
>>> 
>> 
>> Thank you for the public reminder. I have a few observations.
>> 
>> 1. Joseph Salowey issued me an off-list warning on July 6. He characterized 
>> my response to Paul Wouters as a "mischaracterization" of the IAB's findings.
>> 2. I asked him to explain how a direct quote constitutes a 
>> mischaracterization. He could not.
>> 3. He then pivoted the basis to "personal attack." I asked him to retract 
>> the warning as selectively applied and shared more clear counter examples. 
>> He did not respond.
>> 
>> This public warning appeared only after Joseph could not justify why Paul, 
>> Uri, and Filippo received no warnings for disruptive and poor conduct. When 
>> pressed, he went silent. This message is the response to a question he could 
>> not answer.
>> 
>> It appears the warning was never about conduct but instead, silence.
>> 
>> When I asked for clarification, I was met with none. When I asked for 
>> retraction, I was met with none. Instead, the only response was this public 
>> escalation.
>> 
>> Deb, to be clear, issuing a blanket warning to the entire list, including 
>> participants who have done nothing wrong, to avoid confronting the specific 
>> individuals who actually violated conduct norms is itself extremely poor 
>> moderation at best. It punishes everyone to avoid addressing the few, and, 
>> worse, chills legitimate participation across the board.
>> 
>> Your bullet points map directly to Joseph's failed private warning.
>> 
>>> *not using people's words out of context
>> 
>> I directly quoted the IAB's text: "did not accurately describe the record." 
>> That is not out of context.
>> 
>> It's fact.
>> 
>>> *not participating in ad hominum attacks (veiled or unveiled)
>> ^ (sic)
>> 
>> Uri Blumenthal called PhD holders and full professors, and even the EU's 
>> Team Leader for Post-Quantum Cryptography, "crypto-wannabes who are now 
>> flooding this list."
>> 
>> No warning.
>> 
>>> *not sending multiple responses in quick succession
>> 
>> Participants on both sides have posted multiple messages throughout this 
>> WGLC. This standard has never previously been cited or enforced. Further, 
>> this warning starves debate during a WGLC; whether that's intentional or not 
>> doesn't matter.
>> 
>>> *no personal attacks, keep it professional
>> 
>> Paul Wouters accused participants of "consensus manipulation," dismissed 
>> them as "social media influencers," and claimed "infinite" appeals. No 
>> warning.
>> 
>> And here, specifically, let me be explicit about the contrast.
>> 
>> 1. Paul, a former AD who the IAB found "did not accurately describe the 
>> record," accused participants of consensus manipulation on a public mailing 
>> list while the person he was attacking was gagged and unable to respond 
>> within a meaningful timeframe.
>> 
>> 2. Uri, an MS holder at a defense-funded lab, called PhD holders and full 
>> professors "crypto-wannabes."
>> 
>> 3. Filippo openly threatened to flood the vote with his social media 
>> followers.
>> 
>> Any one of these should have resulted in a warning or moderation, yet none 
>> did.
>> 
>> The only person who received a warning was the one who cited the IAB's own 
>> record to correct false statements.
>> 
>>> We expect people to be considerate and courteous on this list.  
>>> 
>>> If we see further violations, we will, at our discretion, put that person 
>>> on a 30 day posting hold (where the chairs will review posts before 
>>> publishing to the list).
>>> 
>>> Deb Cooley 
>>> Sec AD
>>> 
>>> [0] While RFC9945 does obsolete RFC3934, Section 4 of RFC9945 states that 
>>> “[u]ntil those procedures and criteria [of RFC9945] are established, all 
>>> previous processes referenced in Section 1 [to include RFC3934] shall 
>>> remain in effect.
>>> 
>>> [1] https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/tls/cEUcbe27qZUBnapkDMExOmHC5I4/
>> 
>> I called these out, and instead of addressing them, you are now warning the 
>> entire list.
>> 
>> You are the AD I identified in my pending IESG appeal as having prejudged 
>> the moderation issue by publicly stating on-list "I have seen no bias from 
>> my chairs" before any appeal was filed. The IESG has accepted that appeal. 
>> You are now issuing conduct warnings in the same dispute you were identified 
>> as compromised in.
>> 
>> Further, you acknowledge RFC 9945 obsoletes RFC 3934 but rely on a 
>> transition clause to continue under the old authority. The protections of 
>> RFC 9945, specifically Section 1.2 stating that "viewpoints outside the 
>> rough consensus are not in and of themselves disruptive" and Section 6 
>> warning against "the potential abuse of the moderation procedures by 
>> moderators, working group chairs, and potentially others that could lead to 
>> censorship of legitimate participation," exist precisely because the old 
>> authority was insufficient.
>> 
>> To be clear, whether the transition clause permits the old procedures does 
>> not answer whether using them is consistent with the principles the IETF 
>> adopted four months ago.
>> 
>> I am formally requesting that Joseph retract the off-list warning. I am 
>> formally requesting that conduct standards be applied uniformly regardless 
>> of position on this draft. And I am noting for the record that issuing a 
>> blanket warning to an entire working group to cover for selective 
>> enforcement is not a substitute for fair moderation.
>> 
>> Finally, I reject this blanket warning on behalf of every participant in 
>> this working group who contributed in good faith and did nothing wrong.
>> 
>> They do not deserve to be warned because you could not bring yourself to 
>> address the individuals who actually violated conduct norms. A warning 
>> directed at everyone is accountability directed at no one.
>> 
>> I am requesting that the IESG consider this exchange as supplementary 
>> evidence in connection with my pending appeal accepted on or about July 2, 
>> 2026.
>> 
>> Very firmly,
>> Andrew
>> 
>> 

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