Network Working Group                                  L. Andersson, Ed.
Request for Comments: 4691                                           IAB
Category: Informational                                     October 2006


   Guidelines for Acting as an IETF Liaison to Another Organization

Status of This Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).

Abstract

  Whenever the IETF decides to enter into a liaison relationship with
  another organization, such as a Standards Development Organization
  (SDO), a consortium, or an industrial forum, a liaison manager is
  appointed.  The procedures used by the IAB to establish and maintain
  liaison relationships between the IETF and other organizations are
  described in RFC 4052.  This document expands on the role of liaison
  managers and liaison representatives, giving guidelines on their
  mandate and the expectations, tasks, and responsibilities placed on
  them.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................2
  2. IETF Liaison Relationships ......................................3
     2.1. Related Documents ..........................................3
     2.2. Liaison Managers and Liaison Representatives ...............3
     2.3. Written Communications .....................................4
     2.4. Terminology and Conventions ................................5
  3. Guidelines for Liaison Managers and Representatives .............5
     3.1. Mandate ....................................................6
          3.1.1. Speaking for the IETF ...............................6
     3.2. Expectations ...............................................6
     3.3. Responsibilities ...........................................8
     3.4. Tasks ......................................................9
     3.5. Relationship Management ...................................10
          3.5.1. IETF Consensus Process on Liaison Statements .......10
          3.5.2. Incoming Liaison Statements ........................10
          3.5.3. Ambiguous Incoming Liaison Statements ..............11
          3.5.4. Liaison Managers Representing Peer Organizations ...11



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  4. Security Considerations ........................................12
  5. IANA Considerations ............................................12
  6. Acknowledgements ...............................................12
  7. References .....................................................13
     7.1. Normative References ......................................13
     7.2. Informative References ....................................13

1.  Introduction

  In the course of developing Internet standards, the IETF needs to
  communicate extensively with various other peer organizations,
  including the following:

  o  Standards Development Organizations (SDOs) such as the
     Telecommunication Standardization Sector of the International
     Telecommunication Union (ITU-T) or standardization working groups
     of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (e.g.,
     IEEE 802)

  o  Consortia such as the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)

  o  Industrial forums such as the Global Grid Forum (GGF)

  These organizations are usually concerned with developing related
  standards and technical specifications, so that from time to time
  issues of coordination and mutual interest may arise.  To facilitate
  communications, the IETF, through the Internet Architecture Board
  (IAB), establishes permanent liaison relationships with appropriate
  parts of these organizations according to the processes described in
  RFC 4052 [RFC4052].

  Whenever the IETF decides to enter into a liaison relationship, a
  liaison manager and possibly some liaison representatives are
  appointed by the IAB to act as a channel between the IETF and the
  peer organization, typically in tandem with counterparts appointed by
  the peer organization.

  Sections 2.2, 2.3, and 3 of RFC 4052 briefly set out the basic
  functions of the tasks of liaison managers and representatives.  Over
  time, the number and importance of liaisons have grown, and the
  importance of the personal role of IETF liaison managers and
  representatives in maintaining effective relationships with peer
  organizations has grown concomitantly.  This document supplements
  [RFC4052] by providing guidelines for liaison managers and liaison
  representatives in maintaining communications to peer organizations.






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2.  IETF Liaison Relationships

  A major goal of the IETF is to develop standards for the Internet,
  enabling the development of interoperable implementations.  In order
  to develop Internet standards, it is frequently necessary for the
  IETF to communicate with other organizations that develop standards
  for other types of networks, for Internet applications, or for
  technologies that the Internet uses.

  In some cases, the IETF and peer organizations consider it mutually
  beneficial to have a permanent formal relationship with certain rules
  governing the relationship.  The organizations then enter into a
  "liaison relationship".  At a high level, both sides agree to
  undertake certain responsibilities with respect to each other.  The
  most basic liaison responsibility is to communicate information as
  necessary, and to respond to requests from peer organizations to
  which liaisons are maintained.

  Decisions on IETF liaison relationships are the responsibility of the
  IAB.  This includes whether or not the IETF should have a liaison
  relationship with a particular organization.

2.1.  Related Documents

  The IETF liaison process is specified in several documents.  RFC 4052
  [RFC4052] specifies how the IAB manages the IETF liaison
  relationship; RFC 4053 [RFC4053] specifies how liaison statements
  should be treated.  Organization-specific agreements and documents
  may also be generated in some cases, e.g., RFC 3356 [RFC3356]
  describes the collaboration between the IETF and ITU-T, RFC 3113
  [RFC3113] describes the relationship with the 3rd Generation
  Partnership Project (3GPP), and RFC 3131 [RFC3131] describes the one
  with the Third Generation Partnership Project 2 (3GPP2).

2.2.  Liaison Managers and Liaison Representatives

  Whenever the IETF enters into a liaison relationship with another
  organization, a liaison manager (often referred to as "the IETF
  liaison") is appointed by the IAB.  This document expands on the
  mandate of and the expectations, tasks, and responsibilities placed
  on the liaison manager by Section 2.2 of RFC 4052.

  In some cases, it may be necessary to have more than one person
  handling the liaison relationship with a given organization.  For
  example, the time commitment required may be too substantial, or the
  technical scope of the liaison relationship may be too broad to be
  handled by a single individual.




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  In such cases, the IAB may appoint one or more liaison
  representatives to supplement the work of the liaison manager by
  managing different aspects of the liaison relationship between the
  IETF and the other organization.

  The value of personal relationships between the IETF liaison manager
  and representatives and members of the peer organization is central
  to the roles.  The IAB will be looking for people who have both a
  good technical understanding of the work being carried out and
  effective personal relationships within the peer organization.
  Ongoing face-to-face interactions between the IETF liaisons and
  members of the peer organization are seen as critical to the
  effective functioning of the role.  These interactions should allow
  the liaisons to keep the IETF abreast, and preferably ahead, of
  matters of mutual interest or potential conflict.  When the liaison
  is working effectively, it should facilitate the IETF and the peer
  organization working synergistically and reduce the chance of
  overlapping or conflicting standards being created.

2.3.  Written Communications

  Aside from the personal contacts between liaisons and the peer
  organization, extensive communication may occur between the IETF and
  the peer organizations through written materials.  Much of this
  communication is through liaison statements that typically contain
  plans, new developments, and time schedules of which one party
  believes that the other party should be aware.

  The liaison manager should be aware of these written communications
  and assist both parties to see that appropriate action is taken in
  relation to liaison statements passing in both directions.

  For example, when a liaison organization, such as ITU-T, needs to
  reference material that is under development in the IETF: the final
  reference in the peer organization's document needs the permanent
  identifier (RFC number) that will be assigned to the Internet Draft
  when it is approved and published.  To meet the publication schedule
  of the peer organization, a liaison statement is often sent to the
  IETF requesting that an RFC number be assigned within the required
  timeframe.  In response, the IETF can provide the RFC number or
  explain why it is not possible to provide this within the timeframe
  requested.

  An alternative situation that involves more specific action by the
  liaison manager also involves requests for this kind of expedited
  action on RFCs.  For example, 3GPP/3GPP2 and the Open Mobile Alliance
  (OMA) provide the IETF with an updated list of dependencies between
  their documents and IETF documents on a monthly basis, indicating



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  what documents are needed and the required timeframe.  In this case,
  the liaison manager tracks the dependency list and, when necessary,
  conveys the request for expedited assignment to the appropriate IETF
  Area Director (AD).

2.4.  Terminology and Conventions

  Terminology relating to IETF liaison procedures is found in
  [RFC4052].  Terms defined below are valid for this document only.

  Liaison manager

  A person appointed to manage an IETF liaison relationship with
  another organization.

  Liaison representative

  A person appointed to manage a certain (sub-)aspect of an IETF
  liaison relationship with another organization.  Since it is only the
  scale of the responsibilities, mandate, and tasks that is different,
  the rest of this document only explicitly mentions liaison managers.

  IETF consensus

  RFC 2026 [RFC2026] and RFC 2418 [RFC2418] discuss the IETF consensus
  process.  In this document, the term "IETF consensus" is used to
  indicate either consensus of the IETF as an organization, an area
  within IETF, or a working group.  There the term "IETF consensus"
  needs to be interpreted in the context in which it is used.

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].

3.  Guidelines for Liaison Managers and Representatives

  Since liaison relationships are intended to be mutually beneficial,
  the IETF liaison to another organization must act as a bi-directional
  communication link between the IETF and the other organization.
  Since the liaison manager has been appointed by the IETF, the liaison
  manager needs to be responsive to the needs and aims of the IETF.

  RFC 4052 lists some of the tasks and expectations relating to liaison
  managers and liaison representatives.  This document expands on their
  mandate, provides more detailed discussion, and describes how the
  role is executed.





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3.1.  Mandate

  The mandate for IETF liaison managers is strictly limited to
  conveying IETF consensus to the liaised organization.  The liaison
  manager MUST NOT on their own initiative send liaison statements to a
  liaised organization on behalf of IETF, or any of its areas and
  working groups.  Liaison statements are only sent following the
  process specified in [RFC4052].  Liaison statements are only sent on
  the initiative of the IETF chair, the IAB chair, IETF Area Directors,
  or IETF working group chairs.

  In Section 3.3 and Section 3.4, responsibilities and tasks are listed
  that enable the IETF to obtain the information to correctly interact
  with the liaised organizations and to develop and clearly communicate
  IETF consensus.

3.1.1.  Speaking for the IETF

  The IETF functions based on rough consensus, which means that the
  right to speak for the IETF cannot be delegated.  The liaison manager
  speaks on behalf of the IETF on the subject matter of the liaison,
  but only after making sure that the IETF consensus is understood.
  Some guidelines for understanding IETF consensus are provided above;
  however, the most important requirement is close and detailed
  coordination/consultation with the IETF community.

3.2.  Expectations

  There are certain expectations placed on liaison managers appointed
  by the IETF.  Examples of these expectations are listed below.

  Competences required

     The key competence needed in the liaison manager or representative
     role is effective management of the liaison process according to
     the rules that have been agreed upon.  The liaison acts as a
     representative of the IETF and not an independent voice with
     respect to topics of discussion in the liaison relationship.  The
     liaison must therefore be careful to distinguish his or her own
     views from documented IETF consensus in dealings with the peer
     organization.

     To this end, the liaison manager or representative must be able to
     communicate effectively with members of the peer organization,
     especially in face-to-face situations.  This is important both to
     communicate the IETF's viewpoint and to gather information about
     the issues in the peer organization that the IETF needs to
     understand.



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     In support of the liaison process, a person appointed to act as a
     liaison manager or representative on behalf of the IETF is
     expected to have a good technical understanding of the key issues
     in the subject area, as well as an understanding of the concerns
     important to stakeholders in both organizations.

     An IETF liaison needs to have knowledge of the IETF's consensus
     process in general, as well as the consensus process(es) applying
     to the key issues within the liaison relationship.

     The liaison must also have a good understanding of the processes
     used by the peer organization involved.

  Perspective

     Liaison relationships are designed for the mutual benefit of the
     organizations participating in the liaison.  As such, swift
     information flow in both directions is a firm requirement.  The
     role of an IETF liaison manager is to promote the interests of the
     IETF with respect to all topics within the scope of the liaison
     relationship.  Since the liaison manager "wears an IETF hat", it
     is NOT the task of a liaison manager to promote the interests of
     the liaised organization within the IETF.

  Distance

     A liaison may not be able to maintain the required perspective if
     he or she is closely involved in the outcome of the work in the
     peer organization.  A conflict of interest might arise if the
     liaison is involved in the management of the relevant part of the
     peer organization, has a close technical involvement in the work
     that is the subject of the liaison, or has a close interest in the
     outcome of the work in the peer organization through his or her
     employment.  When appointing an appropriate person to manage a
     liaison relationship, the IAB needs to take into account any
     conflicts of interest that the individual being considered might
     have.  Before a person is appointed to manage a liaison
     relationship, he or she will be asked to explicitly state any
     conflicts of interest.  The IAB will not appoint a person to a
     liaison manager position if there is a strong conflict of
     interest.  For example, an individual with an industry or
     organizational leadership position in an organization would
     typically not be suitable for appointment as an IETF liaison to
     that organization.







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  Commitment and opportunity

     A liaison manager needs to be committed to addressing the issues
     relevant to the liaison relationship.  To handle the job properly,
     it is necessary that the liaison be able to allocate sufficient
     time to the task.

  Timeliness

     It is expected that a liaison manger will make the IETF aware of
     new developments in the subject area in a timely fashion.

3.3.  Responsibilities

  The liaison manager and representatives provide information to the
  IETF community in order to enable the IETF to make decisions based on
  the best possible information regarding the work in the peer
  organization.  In turn, information communicated by the IETF liaison
  to the liaised organization MUST be based on the relevant IETF
  consensus.  The liaison manager works with the liaised organization
  to ensure that communication is clear.  As part of this, the liaison
  must clearly differentiate his or her own independent positions from
  those that represent IETF consensus.

  It is the responsibility of the liaison manager to ensure that the
  liaised organization communicates its requirements to the IETF in a
  timely fashion and that the IETF consensus is clearly understood.
  This is particularly important in situations where the IETF and the
  liaised organization differ substantially in their positions.  In
  this situation, the liaison manager needs to facilitate prompt
  communication so that the IETF and the liaised organization can stay
  in close communication and avoid misunderstandings.

  The liaison manager and representatives are responsible for clearly
  and correctly communicating the IETF consensus position to the
  liaised organization.  This includes, when specifically instructed,
  carrying any messages from the IETF to the peer organization.
  Generally, these communications "represent the IETF", and therefore
  due care and consensus must be applied in their construction.

  The liaison manager and representatives are responsible for ensuring
  that relevant information originating from the liaised organization,
  or other information coming to the attention of the liaison, reaches
  the correct destination within the IETF, in a timely and effective
  way.






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3.4.  Tasks

  Examples of tasks performed by the liaison manager are provided
  below.  Depending on the nature of the liaised organization, the task
  may vary in frequency and relative importance.

  1.  Attend relevant meetings and participate in conference calls and
      mailing lists within the liaised organization to gather
      information relevant to the liaison relationship.  Note
      developments of interest for onward communication to the IETF.
      Communicate the point of view of the IETF consensus to the peer
      organization.

  2.  Communicate information relevant to the liaison relationship to
      the relevant part of the IETF either by written reports or
      verbally; this may involve briefings with a team of IETFers
      involved in the liaised organization and other interested parties
      within the IETF, e.g., working group chairs and ADs.

  3.  Understand the concerns of both the IETF and the peer
      organization, while ensuring that interests of the IETF are
      maintained; where there appear to be problems to solve or
      conflicts between approaches, work with both parties to encourage
      engineers from both organizations to collaborate on solving the
      problem and facilitate the development of engineering solutions
      in the appropriate organization.

  4.  Prepare reports giving updates on developments in the peer
      organization as requested by the IAB or other interested parties
      in the IETF.  The target for these updates (e.g., the IAB, an AD,
      a WG) will typically be identified upon establishment of the
      liaison relationship and/or the appointment of the liaison
      manager.

  5.  Oversee delivery of liaison statements addressed to the IETF.
      This includes ensuring that liaison statements are delivered to
      the appropriate destination within the IETF, as well as
      shepherding the timely creation of responses by the IETF.

  6.  Work with the liaised organization to ensure that the IETF's
      liaison statements are appropriately directed and responded to in
      a timely fashion.  To accomplish this, the liaison needs to build
      a contact network.

  7.  Communicate and coordinate with other IETF liaison managers where
      the activities of two or more liaised organizations overlap.





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  8.  Assist with the preparation of IETF liaison statements based on
      IETF consensus.

  9.  From time to time, liaison managers and liaison representatives
      will have to report to the IETF on the status of the liaison
      relationship.  For this purpose, they will need to keep track of
      outstanding issues on behalf of the IETF.  The frequency of the
      reports and the recipients of the reports within the IETF will be
      decided when the liaison relationship is set up and may be
      changed at any time by an IAB decision.  IAB or other parties
      within the IETF may probe for liaison reports as needed or at
      regular intervals.

3.5.  Relationship Management

  Liaison managers will be involved in activities for which they are
  not directly responsible, but that might greatly benefit from their
  expertise.  Some of these activities are outlined below.

3.5.1.  IETF Consensus Process on Liaison Statements

  Liaison statements and other messages sent to a liaised organization
  should be based on rough consensus within the IETF or one of its
  working groups or areas.  Though the liaison manager is not
  responsible for determining consensus, it is important that the
  liaison manager participate in the process and makes his or her
  expertise and knowledge available.

  How consensus is arrived at may vary according to the circumstances.
  Some issues are new, and in these cases an open discussion on a
  mailing list should be undertaken.  For some issues, consensus has
  already been arrived at or the liaison statement is a mere statement
  of facts (e.g., to inform the liaised organization that an IETF Last
  Call had started on a document it had previously expressed interest
  in) and in these cases the liaison statement can be written and sent
  (such as by a working group chair), possibly involving the liaison
  manager.

3.5.2.  Incoming Liaison Statements

  When the IETF receives a liaison statement or other communication
  from an organization with which it has a liaison relationship that
  includes a request for a response to the communication, the IETF is
  committed to providing a timely response.  This means that the IETF
  will respond within the time requested and provide information as
  accurately as possible.  This commitment has been one of the key
  discussion points in the past, such as within the (g)mpls change
  process [GMPLS].



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  This commitment does not mean that the IETF will uncritically accept
  the content in the incoming liaison statement.  To the extent that
  the liaison contains requirements on IETF technology or protocols,
  they will be taken into consideration based on their technical merit.

3.5.3.  Ambiguous Incoming Liaison Statements

  Sometimes the IETF, an IETF area, or an IETF working group receives
  liaison statements from a liaised organization that are sent to the
  wrong destination.  At other times, the liaison statement is sent to
  working groups that are not chartered to do the work that the liaison
  statement addresses.  In some cases, it might be the situation that
  no working group is chartered to do the work.

  In such cases, the liaison manager should assist in finding the
  appropriate recipient within the IETF that might respond to the
  incoming liaison statement.  Sometimes this might require that the
  intended response is made available for review on one of the IETF
  mailing lists.

3.5.4.  Liaison Managers Representing Peer Organizations

  Liaised organizations may appoint a person to act as a liaison
  manager for "their side" of the relationship.  This is the person
  that will speak authoritatively, within the IETF, on the activities
  performed by the other organization.  The other organization needs to
  make this person known to the IETF.  This person might request a slot
  on a working group agenda to discuss developments and plans of the
  liaised organization.

  Opinions expressed by a liaison mangers of other SDOs, other than
  reports on work within the liaised organization, are given equal
  weight with opinions expressed by other working group participants.
  RFC 3356 [RFC3356] describes this in the context of the relationship
  between the IETF and the ITU-T; however, the same model is applicable
  to all other organizations with which the IETF has a liaison
  relationship.

  The mandates of liaison managers from other organizations are
  recognized by the IETF to the extent needed to understand the
  information received from the liaison manager.  In all other respects
  he or she participates in IETF activities under the same conditions
  and rules as any other IETF participant.  It is important that the
  IETF liaison manager understands the extent to which the peer liaison
  manager is mandated or delegated to speak on behalf of the peer
  organization, and to inform the relevant part of the IETF if the peer
  liaison manager appears to be stepping outside the role or stance
  given to him or her by the peer organization.



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  IETF liaison managers should work to include the liaison manager from
  the liaised organization within their contact network, and to
  understand the positions being communicated by the peer liaison
  manager.

4.  Security Considerations

  This document does not specify any protocol or "bits on the wire".
  However, since interaction with other standards-making organizations
  often relates to security, the liaison manager can assist with
  security-related issues, resulting in improved security for Internet
  protocols.

5.  IANA Considerations

  There are no requests to the IANA herein.  Note that the liaison
  manager very often has to understand and convey questions regarding
  IETF namespaces managed by IANA.

6.  Acknowledgements

  This document was developed as part of a conversation regarding the
  requirements on IETF liaison managers and representatives.  Several
  IAB members have significantly contributed to the document.  Also,
  the document has been improved thanks to suggestions and review from
  Allison Mankin, Dave Meyer, and Leslie Daigle.

  A special thanks to Bernard Aboba, who, based on his experience as a
  liaison manager, has made many useful comments on the subject matter.
  Elwyn Davies and Bernard Aboba have both spent time correcting
  language and grammar.

  Members of the IAB at the time of approval of this document were the
  following:

  Bernard Aboba
  Loa Andersson
  Brian Carpenter
  Leslie Daigle
  Elwyn Davies
  Kevin Fall
  Olaf Kolkman
  Kurtis Lindqvist
  David Meyer
  Dave Oran
  Eric Rescorla
  Dave Thaler
  Lixia Zhang



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7.  References

7.1.  Normative References

  [RFC2026]  Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process -- Revision
             3", BCP 9, RFC 2026, October 1996.

  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [RFC2418]  Bradner, S., "IETF Working Group Guidelines and
             Procedures", BCP 25, RFC 2418, September 1998.

  [RFC4052]  Daigle, L. and Internet Architecture Board, "IAB Processes
             for Management of IETF Liaison Relationships", BCP 102,
             RFC 4052, April 2005.

7.2.  Informative References

  [GMPLS]    Andersson, L., "MPLS and GMPLS Change Process", Work in
             Progress, December 2005.

  [RFC3113]  Rosenbrock, K., Sanmugam, R., Bradner, S., and J. Klensin,
             "3GPP-IETF Standardization Collaboration", RFC 3113, June
             2001.

  [RFC3131]  Bradner, S., Calhoun, P., Cuschieri, H., Dennett, S.,
             Flynn, G., Lipford, M., and M. McPheters, "3GPP2-IETF
             Standardization Collaboration", RFC 3131, June 2001.

  [RFC3356]  Fishman, G. and S. Bradner, "Internet Engineering Task
             Force and International Telecommunication Union -
             Telecommunications Standardization Sector Collaboration
             Guidelines", RFC 3356, August 2002.

  [RFC4053]  Trowbridge, S., Bradner, S., and F. Baker, "Procedures for
             Handling Liaison Statements to and from the IETF", BCP
             103, RFC 4053, April 2005.

Editor's Address

  Loa Andersson
  IAB

  EMail: [email protected]






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RFC 4691                   Liaison Guidelines               October 2006


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