Network Working Group                                    J. Klensin, Ed.
Request for Comments: 4846                                D. Thaler, Ed.
Category: Informational                                        July 2007


              Independent Submissions to the RFC Editor

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 IETF Trust (2007).

Abstract

  There is a long-standing tradition in the Internet community,
  predating the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) by many years,
  of use of the RFC Series to publish materials that are not rooted in
  the IETF standards process and its review and approval mechanisms.
  These documents, known as "Independent Submissions", serve a number
  of important functions for the Internet community, both inside and
  outside of the community of active IETF participants.  This document
  discusses the Independent Submission model and some reasons why it is
  important.  It then describes editorial and processing norms that can
  be used for Independent Submissions as the community goes forward
  into new relationships between the IETF community and its primary
  technical publisher.




















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Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
    1.1.  Terminology Note . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
    1.2.  Context and Philosophical Assumptions  . . . . . . . . . .  4
  2.  The Role of Independent Submissions  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
  3.  Document Submission  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
  4.  The Review Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
    4.1.  Posting of Draft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
    4.2.  Request for Publication  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
    4.3.  Initial RFC Editor Review  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
    4.4.  Review and Evaluation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
    4.5.  Additional Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
    4.6.  Document Rejection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
    4.7.  Final Decision and Notification  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
    4.8.  Final Editing and Publication  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
  5.  Formal IESG Review . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
  6.  The Editorial Review Board . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  9
  7.  Status and Availability of Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
    7.1.  Posted Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
    7.2.  Rejected Documents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
    7.3.  Documents Approved for Publication . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
  8.  Intellectual Property Rights . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
  9.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
  10. Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
  11. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
    11.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
    11.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
  Appendix A.  IAB Members at the Time of Approval . . . . . . . . . 15






















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1.  Introduction

  There is a long-standing tradition in the Internet community,
  predating the IETF by many years, of use of the RFC Series to publish
  materials that are not rooted in the IETF standards process and its
  review and approval mechanisms.  These documents, known as
  "Independent Submissions", serve a number of important functions for
  the Internet community, both inside and outside of the community of
  active IETF participants.  This document discusses the Independent
  Submission model and some reasons why it is important.  It then
  describes editorial and processing norms that can be used for
  Independent Submissions as the community goes forward into new
  relationships between the IETF community and its primary technical
  publisher.

  To understand the perspective of this document, it is important to
  remember that the RFC Editor function predates the creation of the
  IETF.  As of the time of this writing, the RFC Series goes back 38
  years [RFC2555], while the IETF is celebrating its 21st anniversary.
  All of the documents that were published before the IETF was created,
  and for some years thereafter, would be considered Independent
  Submissions today.  As the IETF evolved, the Internet Architecture
  Board (IAB) and then the IETF itself chose to publish IETF documents
  as RFCs while fully understanding that the RFC Editor function was an
  independent publication mechanism.  Other decisions were possible:
  e.g., the IETF could have decided to create its own publication
  series.  It was felt that there was considerable value in continuing
  to publish the IETF work in the same series as the one used to
  publish the basic protocols for the Internet.

1.1.  Terminology Note

  This document describes what have historically been referred to as
  "Independent Submissions".  That term is distinguished from those
  IETF and IAB community documents that originate from formal groups --
  the IAB, IRTF, and IETF Working Groups -- and from submissions
  submitted to the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG) for
  Standards-Track, Informational, or Experimental processing.
  Documents produced by individuals, rather than IETF WGs or others
  IETF-affiliated groups, but submitted for publication via the IESG
  under Area Director sponsorship, are known as "individual
  submissions".

  For convenience and obvious historical reasons, the editor and
  publisher of documents that are not processed through the IETF is
  known below as the "RFC Editor".  The RFC Editor will typically be an
  organization of one or more senior people and associated editorial
  staff, and the term is used collectively below.  That term is not



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  intended to predict the future, either in terms of who does the job
  or what they, or the document series, are called.

1.2.  Context and Philosophical Assumptions

  This document complements the discussion and guidelines in [RFC4714],
  which focuses on Standards-Track documents.  It takes a somewhat
  stronger view than the discussions that led to that document,
  starting from the belief that Independent Submissions are most
  valuable if they are, in fact, independent of the IETF process.  From
  the perspective of the IETF, Independent Submissions are especially
  important as checks on the IETF processes even though such checks are
  not the only, or even a common, reason for them.  That role is
  compromised if IETF-related entities are able to block or deprecate
  such documents to a degree beyond that needed to avoid difficulties
  with the standards process.

2.  The Role of Independent Submissions

  When the RFC Series was fairly new, RFCs were used to publish general
  papers on networking as well as the types of documents we would
  describe as standards today.  Those roles also developed as part of
  the early design and development of the ARPANET, long before anyone
  dreamt of the IETF and when the distinction between, e.g., Standards
  and Informational documents was less precisely drawn.  In more recent
  years, Independent Submissions have become important for multiple
  reasons, some of them relatively new.  They include:


  o  Discussion of Internet-related technologies that are not part of
     the IETF agenda.

  o  Introduction of important new ideas as a bridge publication venue
     between academia and IETF engineering.

  o  Informational discussions of technologies, options, or experience
     with protocols.

  o  Informational publication of vendor-specific protocols.

  o  Critiques and discussions of alternatives to IETF Standards-Track
     protocols.  The potential for such critiques provides an important
     check on the IETF's standards processes and should be seen in that
     light.

  o  Documents considered by IETF Working Groups but not standardized.
     While many documents of this type are still published in the IETF
     document stream (see [RFC4844], Section 5.1.1) as Informational or



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     Experimental RFCs, the Independent Submission path has
     traditionally been open to them as well.  However, because of
     their intimate connection to the IETF Standards Process and WG
     activities and the consequent sensitivity to exact statements of
     relationships and to timing, there is reason to believe that such
     documents should normally be published via the IETF document
     stream.  In any event, these documents are published for the
     historical record.

  o  Satirical materials.

  o  Meeting notes and reports (RFC 21 [RFC0021] is the earliest; RFC
     1109 [RFC1109] is probably the most important).

  o  Editorials (the best example is IEN 137 [IEN137], not an RFC).

  o  Eulogies (RFC 2441 [RFC2441]).

  o  Technical contributions (e.g., RFC 1810 [RFC1810]).

  o  Historically, RFC Editor and, at least prior to the handoff
     between the Informational Sciences Institute (ISI) and the
     Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and
     the June 2000 MOU [RFC2860], Internet Assigned Numbers Authority
     (IANA) Policy Statements (e.g., RFC 2223 [RFC2223] and RFC 1591
     [RFC1591]).

  It should be clear from the list above that, to be effective, the
  review and approval process for Independent Submissions should be
  largely independent of the IETF.  As an important principle that has
  been applied historically, the RFC Editor seeks advice from the IESG
  about possible relationships and conflicts with IETF work.  Any
  submission that constitutes an alternative to, or is in conflict
  with, an IETF Standard or proposal for Standards-Track adoption must
  clearly indicate that relationship.  The IESG may identify such
  conflicts as part of its review.

  The specific procedures to be followed in review are described in
  Section 4 and Section 5.

3.  Document Submission

  Independent Submissions are submitted directly to the RFC Editor.
  They must first be posted as Internet-Drafts (I-Ds), so the
  submission is typically simply a note requesting that the RFC Editor
  consider a particular Internet-Draft for publication.  The process is
  described in [RFC2223].  Further information can be found in the
  working draft of an update of that document [RFC2223BIS].



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  Any document that meets the requirements of this specification, of
  [RFC2223] and its successors, and of any intellectual property or
  other conditions that may be established from time to time, may be
  submitted to the RFC Editor for consideration as an Independent
  Submission.  However, the RFC Editor prefers that documents created
  through IETF processes (e.g., working group output) be considered by
  the IESG and submitted using this path only if a working group or the
  IESG declines to publish it.  In the latter cases, the review process
  will be more efficient if the authors provide a history of
  consideration and reviews of the document at the time of submission.

4.  The Review Process

  In general, the steps in the review process are identified in the
  subsections below.  Any of them may be iterated and, at the
  discretion of the RFC Editor, steps after the first may be taken out
  of order.  In addition, the IESG review, as discussed in Section 5,
  must take place before a final decision is made on whether to publish
  the document.

4.1.  Posting of Draft

  The author(s) or editor(s) of a document post it as an Internet-
  Draft.

4.2.  Request for Publication

  After the normal opportunity for community review and feedback
  provided by the submission of the I-D and the I-D repository
  announcement thereof, the author or editor sends a request for
  consideration for publication to the RFC Editor at
  [email protected].  That request should note any community
  discussion or reviews of the document that have occurred before
  submission, as well as the desired document category (Informational
  or Experimental, as discussed in RFC 2026 [RFC2026], Section 4.2).

  If the document requires any IANA allocations, authors should take
  care to check the assignment policy for the relevant namespace, since
  some assignment policies (e.g., "IETF Consensus") cannot be used by
  Independent Submissions.  See RFC 2434 [RFC2434] for more
  information.

4.3.  Initial RFC Editor Review

  RFC Editor staff performs an initial check on the document to
  determine whether there are obvious issues or problems and to decide
  on the sequencing of other steps.




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  At any time during the process, the RFC Editor may make general
  and/or specific suggestions to the author on how to improve the
  editorial quality of the document and note any specific violations of
  the rules.  The author will be expected to make the suggested
  updates, submit a new version, and inform the RFC Editor.  This may
  be repeated as often as necessary to obtain an acceptable editorial
  quality.

4.4.  Review and Evaluation

  The RFC Editor arranges for one or more reviews of the document.
  This may include Editorial Board (see Section 6) reviews or reviews
  by others.  Unsolicited reviews from parties independent of the
  author are welcome at any time.

  At minimum, the author of every document shall receive a written
  summary of the review(s).  Reviewer anonymity is discussed in
  Section 7.  The RFC Editor may also share reviews with the Editorial
  Board.

  An author rebuttal to some aspect of a review, followed by a healthy
  technical dialog among the author and the reviewer(s), is fully
  appropriate.  Consensus followed by document revision is the desired
  outcome.

  The RFC Editor is expected to consider all competent reviews
  carefully, and in the absence of some unusual circumstance, a
  preponderance of favorable reviews should lead to publication.

4.5.  Additional Reviews

  If the author is dissatisfied with one or more review(s), the author
  may request that the RFC Editor solicit additional reviews.  In
  exceptional circumstances, the author may request that the IAB review
  the document.  Such requests to the IAB, and any reviews the IAB
  chooses to perform, will occur according to procedures of the IAB's
  choosing.  The IAB is not required to initiate a review or comply
  with a request for one: a request to the IAB for a review is not an
  appeal process.

4.6.  Document Rejection

  If any stage of the review process just described leads to the
  conclusion that the document is not publishable, the RFC Editor may
  reject the document.  Such rejection would normally be based on the
  conclusion that the submission does not meet the technical or
  editorial standards of the RFC Series or is not relevant to the areas
  that the series covers.



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  If a document is rejected by the RFC Editor, the author may request
  an additional review from the IAB, as described below, but the IAB is
  not obligated to perform that review, nor is the RFC Editor obligated
  to publish it, even with a favorable IAB review.

4.7.  Final Decision and Notification

  In all cases, the ultimate decision to publish or not publish, and
  with what text, rests with the RFC Editor.

  The RFC Editor will communicate the final decision to the author and
  the Editorial Board.  For a rejection, there will be a summary of the
  reason(s) for the action.

  Information about any IESG-requested publication delay or request to
  not publish a document will be posted to the RFC Editor Web site to
  supplement document status information.

4.8.  Final Editing and Publication

  Once a document is approved for publication, it is handled in a
  fashion similar to other RFCs, with principles about priorities
  worked out with the IAB as appropriate.

5.  Formal IESG Review

  At an appropriate time in the review process, normally after the RFC
  Editor has made a tentative decision to publish, the document is
  forwarded to the IESG for evaluation with a relatively short timeout.
  If the nature of the document persuades the RFC Editor or the IESG
  that the interests of the community or efficiency in the publication
  process would be better served by a different schedule, then that
  schedule should be followed.  For example, if it appears to the RFC
  Editor that it is likely that the IESG will wish to take the document
  over and assign it to a working group, it may be better to ask for
  the IESG review prior to incurring the delays associated with other
  reviews or significant editorial work.

  The IESG evaluation is not a technical one.  Instead, it covers the
  issues listed in RFC 3932 [RFC3932] or its successors, presumably
  from the perspective outlined above in Section 1.2.  That is, the
  evaluation should focus exclusively on conflicts or confusion with
  IETF process and attempts to subvert ("end run") working group
  activities.

  At the time the document is forwarded to the IESG, the RFC Editor
  posts an indication on its Web site that the document is under IESG
  review and that comments on conflicts can be sent to the IESG with



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  copies to the RFC Editor.  Additional mechanisms may be developed
  from time to time to inform a community that a document is entering
  formal prepublication review.  Comments not directly related to IETF
  procedures or conflicts may be sent directly to the author(s) and RFC
  Editor.

  In addition to the IESG review for conflict with IETF work,
  individuals in the IESG or in the broader IETF community are free to
  review a draft and, if they have comments of any kind --including the
  extreme case of believing that the proposal is damaging to the
  Internet as a whole-- these comments should be directed to the
  author(s) and the RFC Editor.

  If the IESG, after completing its review, identifies issues, it may
  recommend explanatory or qualifying text for the RFC Editor to
  include in the document if it is published.

  If the IESG concludes that publication of the document should be
  delayed for a reasonable period of time because its untimely
  publication could cause confusion or other harm with proposals under
  consideration for standardization, the RFC Editor will grant that
  request.  The current agreement between the RFC Editor and the IESG
  on requested delays is expected to continue.  That agreement permits
  the IESG to ask for a delay of up to six months and, if necessary, to
  renew that request twice, for a total possible delay of 18 months.

  If the IESG concludes that the document should not be published as an
  RFC, it will request that the RFC Editor not publish and provide
  appropriate justification for that request.  The RFC Editor will
  consider the request to not publish the document.

  The RFC Editor or the author may request that the IAB review the
  IESG's request to delay or not publish the document and request that
  the IAB provide an additional opinion.  Such a request will be made
  public via the RFC Editor Web site.  As with the IESG review itself,
  the IAB's opinion, if any, will be advisory.  And, as with author
  requests for an IAB technical review (see Section 4.5), the IAB is
  not obligated to perform this type of review and may decline the
  request.

6.  The Editorial Review Board

  The RFC Editor appoints and maintains the Editorial Review Board,
  which, much like the editorial boards of professional journals and
  publishers, provides the RFC Editor with both advice and reviews of
  particular proposed publications and general and strategic policy
  advice.  The membership list of the Editorial Review Board is public
  and can be found at http://www.rfc-editor.org/edboard.html.



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  Editorial Board members serve at the pleasure of the RFC Editor.
  From time to time, the RFC Editor will solicit suggestions for new
  appointees from the IAB and other sources and will seek IAB comments
  on those to be appointed.  The RFC Editor will also solicit IAB
  comments on the effectiveness of the review process and the quality
  of documents being published and criteria applied.  However, to
  ensure the independence of the Independent Submission process, the
  final decision to appoint (or not appoint) Editorial Board members
  rests with the RFC Editor.

7.  Status and Availability of Reviews

  The RFC Editor will conduct the reviews discussed above with the
  intent of balancing fairness to authors, transparency of the review
  process to the general community, protection of reviewers from
  possible retaliation or undue pressure, and the interest of the
  community in having any significant dissents from published documents
  available to the community with the same degree of scrutiny that the
  original documents received.  To this end, reviews and information
  about reviewers will be made public under the following
  circumstances.  In special cases in which other considerations apply,
  the RFC Editor may adopt special provisions after reviewing the
  circumstances and proposed action with the IAB.

  Any reviewer participating in the process outlined in this document
  does so on the condition of giving consent to handling of the reviews
  as outlined in this section.  In special cases, individual
  arrangements may be worked out in advance with the RFC Editor.

  As described in Section 4.4, all reviews will be shared with the
  document authors (with possible editing to remove any extreme
  language).  The names of the reviewers will normally accompany these
  reviews, but reviewers will be granted anonymity upon request to the
  RFC Editor.  The RFC Editor will in any case forward any author
  rebuttal messages to the reviewer.

  Nothing in this section or the subsections below precludes private
  communications between reviewers, the Editorial Board, and the RFC
  Editor; such communications will remain confidential.

7.1.  Posted Reviews

  Once a final accept or reject decision has been made on a document,
  the RFC Editor may choose to post the full set of reviews (and author
  rebuttals, if any) associated with a document, if doing so would be
  in the best interest of the community.  The author may request
  earlier posting of reviews and rebuttals, to inspire additional
  unsolicited reviews, for example.  The names of the reviewers will



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  accompany their reviews, except for a reviewer who requested
  anonymity.

  The author will be notified in advance of the intent to post the
  final reviews.  The author may then request that the document be
  withdrawn and the reviews kept private.  However, such an author
  request must be timely, generally within 14 days of the notification
  of intent to post.

7.2.  Rejected Documents

  If the RFC Editor rejects a document, the author has the following
  options for recourse.

  o  Request one or more additional reviews (Section 4.5) followed by a
     reconsideration.

  o  Request an IAB review (Section 4.5, Section 4.6) followed by a
     reconsideration.

  o  Request that the reviews be published on the RFC Editor Web site.

7.3.  Documents Approved for Publication

  In considering whether to make review materials public for documents
  accepted for publication, the RFC Editor is expected to note that the
  best way to comment on or dissent from an RFC is generally another
  RFC; that reviews critical of a document are not themselves reviewed;
  that the review and refutation process is necessarily fragmentary;
  and that a reviewer who feels strongly about a subject about which a
  review has already been written often would not need to do
  significant additional work to produce an RFC-format document from
  that review.

8.  Intellectual Property Rights

  The following material was extracted from the relevant sections of
  BCP 78 [RFC3978] [RFC4748] in order to get all Independent Submission
  information for technical publications produced under the auspices of
  the IETF, the IETF Administrative Support Activity (IASA) or the IETF
  Trust, or the Internet Society (ISOC) into a single place and to
  initialize the process of separating discussions of Independent
  Submissions from those about Standards-Track or other IETF documents.
  Note that the text that follows uses the term "RFC Editor
  Contribution" to describe the same type of document referred to as an
  "Independent Submission" elsewhere in this document.  The RFC Editor





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  may change these provisions from time to time after obtaining the
  advice and consent of the IETF Trust in the RFC Editor's capacity as
  the formal publisher of RFCs.

  By submission of an RFC Editor Contribution, each person actually
  submitting the RFC Editor Contribution, and each named co-
  Contributor, is deemed to agree to the following terms and
  conditions, and to grant the following rights, on his or her own
  behalf and on behalf of the organization the Contributor represents
  or is sponsored by (if any) when submitting the RFC Editor
  Contribution.

  a.  For Internet-Drafts that are expected to be submitted as RFC
      Editor Contributions: To the extent that an RFC Editor
      Contribution or any portion thereof is protected by copyright and
      other rights of authorship, the Contributor, and each named co-
      Contributor, and the organization he or she represents or is
      sponsored by (if any) grant an irrevocable, non-exclusive,
      royalty-free, world-wide right and license to the IETF Trust and
      the IETF under all intellectual property rights in the RFC Editor
      Contribution for at least the life of the Internet-Draft, to
      copy, publish, display, and distribute the RFC Editor
      Contribution as an Internet-Draft.

  b.  For an RFC Editor Contribution submitted for publication as an
      RFC, and to the extent described above, the Contributor, each
      named co-Contributor, and the organizations represented above
      grant the same license to those organizations and to the
      community as a whole to copy, publish, display, and distribute
      the RFC Editor Contribution irrevocably and in perpetuity and,
      also irrevocably and in perpetuity, grant the rights listed below
      to those organizations and entities and to the community:

      A.  to prepare or allow the preparation of translations of the
          RFC into languages other than English,

      B.  unless explicitly disallowed in the notices contained in an
          RFC Editor Contribution, to prepare derivative works (other
          than translations) that are based on or incorporate all or
          part of the RFC Editor Contribution, or comment upon it.  The
          license to such derivative works shall not grant the IETF
          Trust, the IETF, or other party preparing a derivative work
          any more rights than the license to the original RFC Editor
          Contribution, and

      C.  to reproduce any trademarks, service marks, or trade names
          that are included in the RFC Editor Contribution solely in
          connection with the reproduction, distribution, or



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          publication of the RFC Editor Contribution and derivative
          works thereof as permitted by this paragraph.  Any entity
          reproducing RFC Editor Contributions will, as a condition of
          permission of such reproduction, preserve trademark and
          service mark identifiers used by the Contributor of the RFC
          Editor Contribution, including (TM) and (R) where
          appropriate.

      D.  The Contributor grants the IETF Trust and the IETF,
          permission to reference the name(s) and address(es) of the
          Contributor(s) and of the organization(s) s/he represents or
          is sponsored by (if any).

9.  Security Considerations

  This document specifies an RFC Editor (and, indirectly, IETF)
  administrative and publication procedure.  It has no specific
  security implications.

10.  Acknowledgments

  Special thanks are due to Bob Hinden and Craig Partridge, who made
  several suggestions for improved text in earlier versions of this
  document, and to Stewart Bryant, Scott Bradner, Brian Carpenter, Vint
  Cerf, Leslie Daigle, and Olaf Kolkman, who made a number of useful
  suggestions about the organization and content of subsequent
  versions.  We also express our appreciation to the IETF and Scott
  Bradner, Editor, for the material extracted from BCP 78 [RFC3978] and
  used in Section 8.

11.  References

11.1.  Normative References

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

  [RFC2223]     Postel, J. and J. Reynolds, "Instructions to RFC
                Authors", RFC 2223, October 1997.

  [RFC3932]     Alvestrand, H., "The IESG and RFC Editor Documents:
                Procedures", BCP 92, RFC 3932, October 2004.

  [RFC3978]     Bradner, S., "IETF Rights in Contributions", BCP 78,
                RFC 3978, March 2005.

  [RFC4748]     Bradner, S., "RFC 3978 Update to Recognize the IETF
                Trust", BCP 78, RFC 4748, October 2006.



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11.2.  Informative References

  [IEN137]      Cohen, D., "On Holy Wars and a Plea for Peace",
                IEN 137, April 1980,
                <ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/ien/ien137.txt>.

  [RFC0021]     Cerf, V., "Network meeting", RFC 21, October 1969.

  [RFC1109]     Cerf, V., "Report of the second Ad Hoc Network
                Management Review Group", RFC 1109, August 1989.

  [RFC1591]     Postel, J., "Domain Name System Structure and
                Delegation", RFC 1591, March 1994.

  [RFC1810]     Touch, J., "Report on MD5 Performance", RFC 1810,
                June 1995.

  [RFC2223BIS]  Reynolds, J., Ed. and R. Braden, Ed., "Instructions to
                Request for Comments (RFC) Authors", Work in Progress,
                August 2004.

  [RFC2434]     Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing
                an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26,
                RFC 2434, October 1998.

  [RFC2441]     Cohen, D., "Working with Jon Tribute delivered at UCLA,
                October 30, 1998", RFC 2441, November 1998.

  [RFC2555]     Braden, R., Reynolds, J., Crocker, S., Cerf, V.,
                Feinler, J., and C. Anderson, "30 Years of RFCs",
                RFC 2555, April 1999.

  [RFC2860]     Carpenter, B., Baker, F., and M. Roberts, "Memorandum
                of Understanding Concerning the Technical Work of the
                Internet Assigned Numbers Authority", RFC 2860,
                June 2000.

  [RFC4714]     Mankin, A. and S. Hayes, "Requirements for IETF
                Technical Publication Service", RFC 4714, October 2006.

  [RFC4844]     Daigle, L., Ed. and IAB, "The RFC Series and RFC
                Editor", RFC 4844, July 2007.









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Appendix A.  IAB Members at the Time of Approval

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

Authors' Addresses

  John C Klensin (editor)
  1770 Massachusetts Ave, #322
  Cambridge, MA  02140
  USA

  Phone: +1 617 491 5735
  EMail: [email protected]


  Dave Thaler (editor)
  One Microsoft Way
  Redmond, WA  98052
  USA

  Phone: +1 425 703 8835
  EMail: [email protected]

















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Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).

  This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
  contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
  retain all their rights.

  This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
  OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE IETF TRUST AND
  THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS
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Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.







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