Network Working Group                                     E. Davies, Ed.
Request for Comments: 3774                               Nortel Networks
Category: Informational                                         May 2004


                        IETF Problem Statement

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 (2004).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  This memo summarizes perceived problems in the structure, function,
  and processes of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF).  We are
  attempting to identify these problems, so that they can be addressed
  and corrected by the IETF community.

  The problems have been digested and categorized from an extensive
  discussion which took place on the 'problem-statement' mailing list
  from November 2002 to September 2003.  The problem list has been
  further analyzed in an attempt to determine the root causes at the
  heart of the perceived problems: The result will be used to guide the
  next stage of the process in the Problem Statement working group
  which is to recommend the structures and processes that will carry
  out the corrections.



















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Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction: Issues/Problems in the IETF Process  . . . . . .  2
      1.1.  Consequences of Past Growth  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
      1.2.  The Aim is Improvement, not Finger-pointing  . . . . . .  4
      1.3.  Perceived Problems - Consensus on Solutions  . . . . . .  4
  2.  Root Cause Problems  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
      2.1.  Participants in the IETF do not have a Common
            Understanding of its Mission . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
      2.2.  The IETF does not Consistently use Effective
            Engineering Practices  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
      2.3.  The IETF has Difficulty Handling Large and/or Complex
            Problems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  9
      2.4.  Three Stage Standards Hierarchy not properly Utilized  . 11
      2.5.  The IETF's Workload Exceeds the Number of Fully
            Engaged Participants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
            2.5.1.  Lack of Formal Recognition . . . . . . . . . . . 13
      2.6.  The IETF Management Structure is not Matched to the
            Current Size and Complexity of the IETF  . . . . . . . . 13
            2.6.1.  Span of Authority  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
            2.6.2.  Workload of the IESG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
            2.6.3.  Procedural Blockages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
            2.6.4.  Consequences of Low Throughput in IESG . . . . . 15
            2.6.5.  Avoidance of Procedural Ossification . . . . . . 15
            2.6.6.  Concentration of Influence in Too Few Hands  . . 16
            2.6.7.  Excessive Reliance on Personal Relationships . . 17
            2.6.8.  Difficulty making Technical and Process Appeals. 18
      2.7.  Working Group Dynamics can make Issue Closure Difficult. 18
      2.8.  IETF Participants and Leaders are Inadequately Prepared
            for their Roles  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
  3.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
  4.  Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
  5.  References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
      5.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
      5.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
  6.  Editor's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
  7.  Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

1.  Introduction: Issues/Problems in the IETF Process

  Discussion started in the second half of 2002 has shown that a
  significant number of problems are believed to exist in the way the
  Internet Engineering Taskforce (IETF) operates.  Before attempting to
  change the IETF procedures and rules to deal with these problems, the
  IETF should have a clear, agreed-upon description of what problems we
  are trying to solve.





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  The Problem Statement working group was chartered to create this
  document, which contains a description of the problems, and to use
  this analysis to suggest processes to address the identified
  problems.

  Taken in isolation, this document may appear to be exceedingly
  negative.  The IETF needs to refresh its management and processes to
  address today's challenges, but it should not be forgotten that the
  IETF has produced a large body of high quality work which has lead to
  an extremely successful and pervasive network infrastructure.
  Against this background, we should see the current document as a
  necessary piece of self-criticism leading to renewal and continued
  success.  The discussion of the positive aspects has been
  deliberately confined to the IETF Problem Resolution Processes
  document [5] which considers the core values that the IETF needs to
  maintain whilst correcting the problems that participants perceive as
  affecting the IETF at present.

  The raw material for this document was derived by summarizing the
  extensive discussions which initially took place on the 'wgchairs'
  mailing list and subsequently on the 'problem-statement' mailing list
  from November 2002 through to September 2003, incorporating
  additional input from relevant drafts published during this period
  (see [2], [3] and [4]), and the minutes of recent plenary
  discussions.  This produced a list of perceived problems which were
  classified into a number of related groups using a classification
  suggested by the processes which go on in the IETF.

  This document has digested these perceived problems into a small set
  of root cause issues, and a short list of subsidiary issues which
  appear to be the most pressing items engendered by the root cause.
  This list is set out in Section 2.

  Section 1.1 gives a short explanation of the thinking that has taken
  place in coming to the current view of the root causes.

  The original summary of perceived problems has been posted to the
  Problem Statement Working Group mailing list so that it can be
  referred to in future.  Note that it remains classified according the
  original scheme so that the raw data is available if alternative root
  cause analysis is needed.

1.1.  Consequences of Past Growth

  As the problems of the IETF were examined, it became clear that they
  are neither new nor are they symptoms of a problem which is novel in
  the science of organizations.




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  The IETF started off as a small, focused organization with a clearly
  defined mission and participants who had been working in this area
  for a significant period of time.  Over the period 1989-1999, the
  IETF grew by a factor of ten or more in terms of number of
  participants, and volume of work in progress.  The effects of this
  growth have been compounded by the extension of the scope of the IETF
  which makes the work much more varied.  Also during this period, the
  Internet has become more complex and the requirements placed on it by
  a far larger user community have changed as the network has come to
  have a pivotal role in many areas of life.

  Many of the problems and symptoms appear to be fundamentally caused
  by the organization failing to fully adapt its management structure
  and processes to its new larger size and the increased complexity of
  the work.  The IETF has also failed to clearly define its future
  mission now that the initial mission has been completed or outgrown.

  These failures are just those that afflict many small organizations
  trying to make the transition from a small organization, which can be
  run informally and where essentially all participants fully share the
  aims, values, and motivations of the leadership, to a medium sized
  organization, where there are too many participants for informal
  leadership and later arrivals either do not fully understand or have
  a different perception of the ethos of the organization.

  Some IETF participants have been aware of these issues for a long
  time.  Records dating back to at least 1992 drew similar conclusions.

1.2.  The Aim is Improvement, not Finger-pointing

  Many of the problems identified in this memo have been remarkably
  persistent over a 15-year period, surviving a number of changes in
  personnel.  We see them as structural problems, not personnel
  problems.  Blame for any of the perceived problems should not be
  directed to any individual.  The sole aim of this review process is
  to identify how the IETF can improve itself so that it knows what it
  is about and becomes fit for that purpose in the shortest possible
  time frame.

1.3.  Perceived Problems - Consensus on Solutions

  The working group participants emphasize that both the long list of
  problems and the root cause issues that were derived from them are
  problems that are believed to exist by a significant constituency,
  either on the mailing list and/or in private discussions.  We also
  note that many of these problems appear to be of long standing, as a





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  very similar list has survived from the discussions in the first
  POISED working group that took place prior to the IETF organizational
  changes approved in 1992.

  We, in line with many contributors to the mailing list, believe that
  it is important to try and identify what appear to be the root causes
  of the perceived problems, but trying to prioritize or assign a
  relative importance to the problems would not be useful: rough
  consensus on an unordered list of real and important root causes will
  be sufficient.  The root causes identified will provide a guide in
  setting up the processes needed to resolve the problems: the
  perceived problems can be viewed as multiple symptoms of the root
  causes which should provide input to those trying to resolve the
  problems in achieving consensus on solutions.

2.  Root Cause Problems

  This section forms the heart of this analysis, and lists the issues
  which we believe lie at the core of the problems.  Apart from the
  first issue which is fundamental, the problems are not necessarily in
  priority order, but they will be seen to be interlinked in various
  ways.

2.1.  Participants in the IETF do not have a Common Understanding of
     its Mission

  The IETF lacks a clearly defined and commonly understood Mission: as
  a result, the goals and priorities for the IETF as a whole and any
  Working Groups (WGs) that are chartered are also unclear.

  The IETF needs to understand its mission in the context of the
  greatly increased scope and complexity of the Internet, and the
  changing requirements of the much larger user community that the
  success of its previous work has engendered.

  The lack of a common mission has many consequences, of which the
  principal ones appear to be:

  o  The IETF is unsure what it is trying to achieve and hence cannot
     know what its optimum internal organization should be to achieve
     its aims.

  o  The IETF cannot determine what its 'scope' should be, and hence
     cannot decide whether a piece of proposed work is either in-scope
     or out-of-scope.

  o  The IETF is unsure who its stakeholders are.  Consequently,
     certain groups of stakeholder, who could otherwise provide



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     important input to the process, have been more or less sidelined
     because it has seemed to these stakeholders that the organization
     does not give due weight to their input.

  o  Working Groups can potentially be hijacked by sectional interests
     to the detriment of the IETF's mission.

  o  The misty vision has inhibited the development of roadmaps that
     would inform the IETF's stakeholders of our longer term
     intentions, as well as restricting the associated architectural
     views to an outline top level view which does not fully reflect
     the developing nature of the Internet.  It would be desirable to
     have roadmaps and architectural views for portions of work which
     extend beyond a single working group:  it may also be the case
     that it is no longer possible to fit the whole Internet within a
     single architecture.

  o  The IETF is unable to determine explicitly what effect it desires
     to have in the marketplace, and is therefore unable to determine
     what requirements of timeliness are appropriate when planning work
     and setting expectations for stakeholders which will further the
     IETF's mission.

  o  The lack of precision regarding our goals leads to WG charters and
     requirements that are poorly thought out and/or not aligned with
     the overall architecture.  The resulting poorly defined charters
     are a major factor in poor quality and/or late deliveries from
     some WGs and the total failure of other WGs.

  o  The IETF needs to avoid focusing on a too-narrow scope of
     technology because this would be likely to blinker the IETF's view
     of 'the good of the Internet', and will harm the long-term goal of
     making the Internet useful to the greatest number stakeholders;
     this argues for allowing a relatively wide range of topics to be
     worked on in the IETF - cross-fertilization has always been one of
     the IETF's strengths.

  An additional barrier to achieving a common understanding is that the
  IETF does not have a recognized forum in which all stakeholders
  participate and in which organization wide consensus might be
  reached.  Plenary meetings during regular IETF meetings allow a large
  cross-section of the community to offer views, but there is not
  generally sufficient time to achieve consensus and there is no single
  mailing list which all stakeholders can be guaranteed to monitor.

  The IETF creates standards and is therefore necessarily a Standards
  Development Organization (SDO), but many participants would like to
  differentiate the IETF and its way of working from the 'conventional'



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  SDOs which emphasize corporate involvement and mandated delegates.
  Externally, the IETF is often classified with these conventional
  SDOs, especially by detractors, because the differentiation in the
  IETF's mission and processes and the rationale for those differences
  are not clear.  This can lead to the IETF being misunderstood by
  other SDOs which can make communications between SDOs less effective,
  harming the IETF's ability to achieve its mission.

2.2.  The IETF does not Consistently use Effective Engineering Practices

  For an organization with 'engineering' in its title and participants
  who are likely to trot out the statement "Trust me, I'm an engineer!"
  when confronted with the need to find a solution to a particularly
  knotty problem, the IETF has, at least in some cases, extremely
  ineffective engineering practices.  Effective engineering practices,
  as used here, covers both the techniques used to derive and verify
  the technical solutions needed, and the management and organizational
  strategies that are commonly accepted to help with the engineering
  process.

  A major symptom of this lack is that WGs do not consistently produce
  timely, high-quality, and predictable output.  As discussed in
  Section 2.1, this problem is exacerbated because the IETF currently
  finds it difficult to determine what is timely, and hence what are
  appropriate deadlines for the delivery of WG output.  Some of the
  contributing problems which interfere with effective engineering in
  WGs include:

  o  Failure to ensure that there is a uniform view in the WG of the
     scope of the WG activity, especially the intended purpose of the
     solution.

  o  Failure to identify the issues that need to be resolved at an
     early stage (before the design is frozen), and/or then to ensure
     that there is a uniform view in the WG of the issues that need to
     be resolved to bring the work to a satisfactory conclusion.

  o  Failure to identify and articulate engineering trade-offs that may
     be needed to meet the deadlines that the WG has set without
     inappropriately reducing the 'fitness for purpose' for the
     intended customers.

  o  Continued refinement of the solution beyond the point at which it
     is adequate to meet the requirements placed on it by the intended
     purpose.






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  The IETF standards engineering process is not set up to deliver
  iterative process improvement.  Particular areas that need
  improvement include:

  o  The charter may not be sufficiently detailed to document the
     process and timeline to be followed by the WG.  Additional
     documents may be needed, such as a roadmap or detailed plans.

  o  Poorly defined success criteria for WGs and individual documents.

  o  Lack of written guidelines or templates for the content of
     documents (as opposed to the overall layout) and matching lists of
     review criteria designed to achieve appropriate quality in output.

  o  Lack of auditing against explicit criteria throughout the
     standards development process.

  o  Lack of review, especially early review, by reviewers who are not
     directly interested members of the WG, and by subject matter
     experts for topics related to, but not necessarily the immediate
     focus of the document.

  o  Lack of documentation about likely problem areas that might arise
     due to interactions with other popular IETF protocols.

  o  Lack of metrics to measure the achievement of the desired quality
     and the performance of both WGs and the whole IETF.

  o  Lack of metrics and 'post mortem' procedures to drive the
     improvement of the standards development and other IETF processes.

  o  Lack of criteria for determining when a piece of work is
     overrunning and/or is unlikely to be concluded successfully,
     either at all or within an acceptable time frame.  Lack of process
     for extending the time frame, adjusting the scope, or terminating
     the work item or the whole Working Group.

  o  Automated tools to support the engineering process are minimal.

  o  Despite its commitment to 'running code', the IETF is not
     proactive in providing ways for developers to verify their
     implementations of IETF standards.

  In addition, IETF processes, and Working Group processes in
  particular, suffer because commonly accepted Project Management
  techniques are not regularly applied to the progress of work in the
  organization.




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  o  Project entry, goal setting, dependency identification,
     coordination, and tracking processes are all either missing or
     implemented less effectively than the norm for commercial
     organizations in related activities.  Dependencies and
     coordination should cover both other WGs within the IETF and any
     outside SDO with which the IETF is collaborating.

  o  Charters regularly fail to set enough milestones with sufficiently
     small granularity at which progress of WGs, individuals, and
     documents can be evaluated.  Also, WGs often do not make more
     detailed work plans to refine the charter plans.

  o  The acceptable deadlines for finishing a piece of work, and the
     criteria used to determine them, are rarely, if ever, documented.
     Also, the estimated time required to complete the work often
     differs widely from the time actually taken.  The combination of
     these factors makes determining the feasibility of delivering
     within the required time frame, and then adjusting the scope of
     the work to fit the time frame requirements, extremely difficult.

  One problem which the IETF does not appear to suffer from is
  excessive bureaucracy, in the sense that transfer of information is
  generally kept to the minimum necessary to accomplish the task.  It
  is important that any changes introduced do not significantly
  increase the bureaucratic load whilst still recording sufficient
  information to allow process improvement.

  Finally, even where the IETF does have Engineering Practices defined,
  there are frequently cases where they are ignored or distorted.  One
  area of particular concern is the tendency for protocols to be
  assessed and issues resolved primarily through static analysis of the
  written specification rather than by practical experiment with
  'running code'.

2.3.  The IETF has Difficulty Handling Large and/or Complex Problems

  The IETF has historically been most successful when dealing with
  tightly focused problems that have few interactions with other parts
  of the total problem solution.  Given that the Internet has become
  more complex, such tightly focused problems are becoming the
  exception.  The IETF does not always seem to be aware of the
  interactions between protocols that are bound to be thrown up by
  deployment in more complex situations and so fails to minimize the
  chances of unwelcome consequences arising unforeseen when a new
  protocol is deployed.  This may be exacerbated by inadequate review
  from outside the WG as suggested in Section 2.2.





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  IETF standardization procedures are optimized for tightly constrained
  working groups and are generally less effective if 'engineering in
  the large' is needed to reach a satisfactory solution.  Engineering
  in the large can encompass many aspects of system design including:

     Architecture
     Frameworks
     Security
     Internationalization

  The IETF has historically standardized protocol components rather
  than complete systems, but as we have learned more about the ways in
  which systems on the Internet interact, design of components needs to
  take into account more and more external constraints, and the
  understanding of these constraints tends to require more engineering
  in the large.

  Part of the cause of this difficulty may be that the formal reporting
  structure of the IETF emphasizes communication between the Internet
  Engineering Steering Group (IESG) through the ADs and the WGs, and
  does not place much reliance on inter-WG communications:

  o  The IETF is not consistently effective at resolving issues that
     cross WG or area boundaries.

  o  The IETF does not possess effective formal mechanisms for inter-WG
     cooperation, coordination, or communication, including the
     handling of dependencies between deliverables and processes
     specified in WG charters.

  o  The IETF does not have an effective means for defining
     architectures and frameworks that will shape the work of multiple
     WGs.

  The IETF also has to work with other SDOs, and the liaison mechanisms
  for coordination and cooperation do not always work efficiently.
  This needs to be remedied because some of the interactions which IETF
  work has to take into account will involve protocols and systems
  standardized by these other SDOs.

  A possible consequence of the need for more engineering in the large
  is that protocol specifications have become larger: as a result they
  now take longer to develop.  Some people perceive that this is
  because the IESG has tended to require protocol specifications to
  specify an entire system, instead of simple component protocols,
  leading to feature bloat and applicability only to a narrow range of
  applications (see also Section 2.4).  On the other hand, others
  believe that the IESG has approved simple component protocols without



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  an adequate understanding of the systems and contexts in which the
  protocols might be used.  These problems appear to be two additional
  aspects of the general problem that the IETF has with handling large
  and/or complex systems.

2.4.  Three Stage Standards Hierarchy not properly Utilized

  The current hierarchy of Proposed, Draft, and Full Standard maturity
  levels for specifications is no longer being used in the way that was
  envisioned when the stratification was originally proposed.  In
  practice, the IETF currently has a one-step standards process that
  subverts the IETF's preference for demonstrating effectiveness
  through running code in multiple interoperable implementations.  This
  compresses the process that previously allowed specifications to
  mature as experience was gained with actual implementations:

  o  Relatively few specifications are now progressed beyond Proposed
     Standard (PS) to Draft Standard (DS) level, and even fewer to Full
     Standard (FS).

  o  It is widely perceived that the IESG has 'raised the (quality)
     bar' that standards have to pass to be accorded a PS status.
     Protocol developers may be required to specify a complete system
     rather than an interface in order for their specification to be
     approved as a PS (see also Section 2.3).

  o  In spite of the apparently higher quality hurdle, implementation
     or deployment experience is still not required, so the IETF's
     guiding principle of 'rough consensus and running code' has less
     of a chance to be effective.

  o  There appears to be a vicious circle in operation where vendors
     tend to deploy protocols that have reached PS as if they were
     ready for full production, rather than accepting that standards at
     the PS level are still under development and could be expected to
     be altered after feature, performance, and interoperability tests
     in limited pilot installations, as was originally intended.  The
     enthusiasm of vendors to achieve a rapid time to market seems to
     have encouraged the IETF in general and the IESG in particular to
     attempt to ensure that specifications at PS are ready for prime
     time, and that subsequent modifications will be minimal as it
     progresses to DS and FS, assuming effort can be found to create
     the necessary applicability and interoperability reports that are
     needed.

  o  The three stage hierarchy is, accordingly, seen to be excessive.





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  o  There is no formal bug reporting or tracking system in place for
     IETF specifications.

  o  The periodic review of protocols at PS and DS levels specified in
     [1] are not being carried out, allowing protocols to persist in
     these lower maturity levels for extended periods of time, whereas
     the process would normally expect them to progress or be relegated
     to Historic status.

  o  No individual or body is given the task of 'maintaining' a
     specification after the original WG has closed down.
     Specifications are generally only updated when a need for a new
     version is perceived.  No attempt is normally made to correct bugs
     in the specification (whether they affect operation or not) and
     the specification is not updated to reflect parts of the
     specification that have fallen into disuse or were, in fact, never
     implemented.  This is, in part, because the current procedures
     would require a standard to revert to the PS maturity level, even
     when specification maintenance is carried out.  This occurs even
     if the changes can be demonstrated to have no or minimal effect on
     an existing protocol at the DS or FS level.

2.5.  The IETF's Workload Exceeds the Number of Fully Engaged
     Participants

  There are a number of respects in which IETF participants and
  contributors appear to have become less fully engaged with the IETF
  processes, for example:

  o  Although there may be large attendance at many WG meetings, in
     many cases, 5% or less of the participants have read the drafts
     under discussion or that have a bearing on the decisions to be
     made.

  o  Commitments to write, edit, or review a document are not carried
     out in a timely fashion.

  o  Little or no response is seen when a request for 'last-call'
     review is issued, either at WG or IETF level.

  This might be because contributors have less time available in their
  work schedule during the downturn of the Internet business climate
  between 2001 and 2003.  Yet, this is not the whole story, as there
  were signs of this effect back at the height of the Internet's boom
  in 2000.






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  This problem exacerbates the problems the IETF has had with timely
  delivery and may weaken the authority of IETF specifications if
  decisions are seen to be taken by badly informed participants and
  without widespread review.

2.5.1.  Lack of Formal Recognition

  Beyond RFC Authorship, WG Chair positions, Directorate positions, or
  IESG and Internet Architecture Board (IAB) membership, the IETF does
  not offer formal recognition of contributions to the IETF.  This
  potentially acts as a disincentive to continued engagement and can
  lead to useful and effective participants leaving because they cannot
  obtain any recognition (the only currency the IETF has to pay
  participants), which they use to fuel their own enthusiasm and help
  justify their continued attendance at IETF meetings to cost
  constrained employers.  Note: Using Leadership positions as rewards
  for good work would probably be damaging to the IETF.  This paragraph
  is meant to indicate the need for other types of rewards.

2.6.  The IETF Management Structure is not Matched to the Current Size
     and Complexity of the IETF

  The management and technical review processes currently in place were
  adequate for the older, smaller IETF, but are apparently not scalable
  to the current size of the organization.  The form of the
  organization has not been significantly modified since 1992, since
  when the organization has undergone considerable further growth.  The
  scope of IETF activities has also been extended as the Internet has
  become more complex.

2.6.1.  Span of Authority

  Overt authority in the IETF is concentrated in the small number of
  people sitting on the IESG at that time.  Existing IETF processes
  work to funnel tasks on to this small number of people (primarily the
  Area Directors (ADs) in the IESG).  This concentration slows process
  and puts a very large load of responsibility on the shoulders of
  these people who are required to act as the senior management for
  Working Group (WG) chairs, as well as acting as quality backstops for
  the large number of documents issued by the IETF.  The situation has
  not been helped by the widening of the scope of the IETF, which has
  resulted in somewhat more WGs and a need for a very broad spectrum of
  knowledge within the set of ADs.








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2.6.2.  Workload of the IESG

  With the current structure of the IETF and IESG, the workload imposed
  on each of the ADs is almost certainly well beyond the capabilities
  of a single person.

  The current job description for an AD encompasses at least the
  following tasks:

  o  Interacting with WGs

  o  Understanding network and computer technology in general, and
     their own area in detail

  o  Cross-pollinating between groups

  o  Coordinating with other areas

  o  Potentially, managing their Area Directorate team

  o  Effectively providing technical management, people-management, and
     project supervision for their WGs

  o  Reading (or at least skimming) every formal document which the
     IETF produces, and having an opinion on all of them, as well as
     all the Internet Drafts produced by the WGs in the area, and
     understanding the interactions between all these specifications.

  Given the number of WGs which are now active, the increasing
  complexity of both the work being undertaken and the technology in
  general, together with the volume of documents being produced, makes
  it clear that only superhumans can be expected to do this job well.
  To make matters worse, these tasks are, in theory, a 'part time'
  occupation.  ADs will normally have a conventional job, with the IETF
  activities as just one part of their job specification.  This view
  has been reinforced by recent resignations from the IESG, citing the
  size of the workload as a primary factor.  The IETF also has no
  mechanisms to nominate a temporary replacement or an assistant should
  an AD be incapacitated wholly or partially for a period.

  The malign effects of this overload include:

  o  Wear on the IESG:  The IESG members are overworked which is bad
     for their health, humor, and home life, and may also result in
     conflicts with their employers if the IETF work impacts the IESG
     member's performance of their 'day job'.





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  o  Unhappiness in the IETF:  IETF stakeholders perceive that IESG
     members are responding slowly, are not fully up-to-date with their
     technology, fail to pro-actively manage problems in their WGs, and
     are unable to keep communication channels with other groups open.

  o  Recruiting shrinkage: The number of people who can imagine taking
     on an IESG post is steadily decreasing.  It is largely limited to
     people who work for large companies who can afford to send IESG
     members to the IETF for the duration of their appointments.  In
     the current business climate, fewer companies are able to justify
     the preemption of an important engineering and business resource
     for a significant period of time, and are more likely to put
     forward 'standards professionals' than their best engineers.

2.6.3.  Procedural Blockages

  The current procedural rules combined with the management and quality
  roles of the ADs can lead to situations where WGs or document authors
  believe that one or two ADs are deliberately blocking the progress of
  a WG document without good reason or public justification.  Appeal
  processes in these circumstances are limited and the only sanction
  that could be applied to the relevant ADs is recall, which has almost
  always been seen to be out of scale with the apparent offense and
  hence almost never invoked.  This perception of invulnerability has
  led to a view that the IESG in general and the ADs in particular are
  insufficiently accountable for their actions to their WGs and the
  IETF at large, although the recent introduction of the Internet Draft
  Tracker tool makes it easier to determine if and how a document has
  become blocked, and hence to take appropriate steps to release it.

2.6.4.  Consequences of Low Throughput in IESG

  If documents are inappropriately (or even accidentally) delayed or
  blocked as a result of IESG (in)action, this can cause much
  frustration inside the organization, a perception of disunity seen
  from outside the organization, and delay of standards, possibly to
  the point where they are too late to match market requirements: work
  which has been properly authorized as being within the scope of the
  IETF and properly quality checked during development, should almost
  never come up against such a blockage.

  Delay in authorizing a BOF or chartering a new WG can delay the start
  of the process with similar effects.

  It also appears that IESG delays are sometimes used to excuse what is
  actually slow work in WGs.





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2.6.5.  Avoidance of Procedural Ossification

  The systems and processes used by the IETF are generally designed
  around having firm general principles and considerable IESG
  discretion within those principles.  It appears that the IETF is
  showing a disturbing tendency to turn IESG 'rules of convenience'
  into rigid strictures that cannot be violated or deviated from.

  Up to now, IETF discussions of procedures have been driven by a model
  in which the procedural BCPs construct a framework for doing work,
  but the details of the framework are left for the IESG to fill in.
  When issues or crises have arisen, the IETF has generally avoided
  making specific procedural changes to compensate, instead realizing
  that we could not anticipate all cases and that 'fighting the last
  war' is not a good way to proceed.

  This can only continue to work if the participants continue to trust
  the IESG to act fairly in filling in the details and making
  appropriate exceptions, without a great deal of debate, when it is
  clearly desirable.  At present, the IETF appears to have lost sight
  of this flexibility, and is entangling itself in procedures that
  evolve from organizational conveniences into encumbrances.

2.6.6.  Concentration of Influence in Too Few Hands

  Until the last couple of years, successive IETF Nominating Committees
  have chosen to give heavy weighting to continuity of IESG and IAB
  membership.  Thus, the IETF appeared to have created an affinity
  group system which tended to re-select the same leaders from a
  limited pool of people who had proved competent and committed in the
  past.

  Members of this affinity group tend to talk more freely to each other
  and former members of the affinity group - this may be because the
  affinity group has also come to share a cultural outlook which
  matches the dominant cultural ethos of the IETF (North American,
  English speaking).  Newcomers to the organization and others outside
  the affinity group are reluctant to challenge the apparent authority
  of the extended affinity group during debates and consequently
  influence remains concentrated in a relatively small group of people.

  This reluctance may also be exacerbated if participants come from a
  different cultural background than the dominant one.  Such
  participants also tend to find it more difficult to follow the rapid
  and colloquial speaking style of native English speakers, and may
  consequently be effectively excluded from the discussion, even if
  maximum assistance is available by such means as real time Jabber
  logs and extensive text on presentation slides.  Even on mailing



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  lists, people from other cultures may be reluctant to be as
  forthright as is often the case in discussions between North
  Americans; also, a person whose first language is not English may be
  daunted by the volume of mail that can occur on some mailing lists
  and the use of colloquialisms or euphemisms may cause
  misunderstandings if correspondents are not aware of the problem.

  A further instance of the problems of concentration of influence
  potentially occurs when, from time to time, ADs have acted as WG
  chairs: conflict of interest might well arise in discussions between
  the IESG and any WG with an AD as its chair.  Whilst care is usually
  taken to have a newly selected AD vacate any WG chair positions which
  might be held in his or her own area, the conflict can arise on the
  occasions when an AD has been used as the chair of a WG because it is
  clearly the right (or only possible) solution for the WG from an
  engineering and know-how position.  Furthermore, given the known
  problem of workload for IESG members, there must be doubts as to
  whether an AD can or ought to be taking on this extra load.

2.6.7.  Excessive Reliance on Personal Relationships

  The IETF is an intensely personal and individualistic organization.
  Its fundamental structure is based on individuals as actors, rather
  than countries, organizations, or companies as in most other SDOs.

  This is also reflected in how the IETF gets its work done: the NOMCOM
  process, the WG Chair selection processes, and the activities of WGs
  are all reliant on personal knowledge of the capabilities of other
  individuals and an understanding built on experience of what they can
  be expected to deliver, given that there are almost no sanctions that
  can be applied beyond not asking them to do a similar task again.
  The relationship works best when it is two way - the person being
  asked to perform a task needs to be able to rely on the behavior of
  the person doing the asking.

  In essence, the IETF is built on a particular kind of one-to-one
  personal trust relationship.  This is a very powerful model but it
  does not scale well because this trust is not transitive.  Just
  because you trust one person, it does not mean that you trust (i.e.,
  know the capabilities of and can rely on) all the people that person
  trusts in turn.

  The disruption caused when one set of relationships has to be
  replaced by another is clearest when an AD is replaced.  The IETF
  does not keep personnel records or written plans, and formal process
  documentation is very sparse, so that incoming ADs have little
  information on which to base new relationships with WG chairs or
  Directorate members not already known to them.



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  A new AD has to build or bring along his or her set of trusted
  individuals.  The AD will tend to prefer individuals from this set as
  WG chairs, unless there is a suitable outsider who was part of the
  team that brought the WG idea to the IETF.  This tends to limit the
  AD's field of choice, particularly when asking for a 'stabilizing',
  'advising', or 'process' chair to work with an enthusiastic newcomer
  in a difficult area.  A breakdown of an established relationship
  (such as between an AD and a WG chair) can be very damaging to the
  work of the IETF, and it may not be immediately obvious to outsiders.

  Another consequence of the reliance on personal relationships is that
  the IETF has very little institutional 'memory' outside the memories
  of the people in the process at a given time.  This makes it more
  likely that failures will be repeated and makes process improvement
  more difficult (see Section 2.2).

2.6.8.  Difficulty making Technical and Process Appeals

  When an individual thinks that the process has produced a result that
  is harmful to the Internet or thinks that IETF processes have not
  been adhered to, there is no mechanism to aid that individual in
  seeking to change that result.

2.7.  Working Group Dynamics can make Issue Closure Difficult

  The IETF appears to be poor at making timely and reasonable decisions
  that can be guaranteed to be adhered to during the remainder of a
  process or until shown to be incorrect.

  The problems documented in this section are probably consequences of
  the non-hierarchical organization of the IETF and the volunteer
  status of most participants.  The enforcement measures available in a
  more conventional hierarchical corporate environment are mostly not
  available here, and it is unlikely that application of some well-
  known procedure or practice will fix these problems.

  Participants are frequently allowed to re-open previously closed
  issues just to replay parts of the previous discussion without
  introducing new material.  This may be either because the decision
  has not been clearly documented, or it may be a maneuver to try to
  get a decision changed because the participant did not concur with
  the consensus originally.  In either case, revisiting decisions stops
  the process from moving forward, and in the worst cases, can
  completely derail a working group.  On the other hand, the decision
  making process must allow discussions to be re-opened if significant
  new information comes to light or additional experience is gained
  which appears to justify alternative conclusions for a closed issue.




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  One cause that can lead to legitimate attempts to re-open an
  apparently closed issue is the occurrence of 'consensus by
  exhaustion'.  The consensus process can be subverted by off-topic or
  overly dogmatic mail storms which can lead to the exclusion of
  knowledgeable participants who are unable to devote the time needed
  to counter the mail storm.  The consequence may be an
  unrepresentative and unsatisfactory consensus which will tend to be
  re-opened, often leading to repeat discussions.  Mailing lists, which
  are at the heart of the IETF WG process, are becoming increasingly
  ineffective at resolving issues and achieving consensus because of
  this phenomenon.

  A single vocal individual or small group can be a particular
  challenge to WG progress and the authority of the chair.  The IETF
  does not have a strategy for dealing effectively with an individual
  who is inhibiting progress, whilst ensuring that an individual who
  has a genuine reason for revisiting a decision is allowed to get his
  or her point across.

2.8.  IETF Participants and Leaders are Inadequately Prepared for
     their Roles

  Participants and leaders at all levels in the IETF need to be taught
  the principles of the organization (Mission and Architecture(s)) and
  trained in carrying out the processes, which they have to use in
  developing specifications, etc.

  Part of the reason for the lack of training in the principles of the
  organization is that there is not currently an explicit formulation
  of these principles that is generally agreed upon by all
  stakeholders.  Section 2.1 identifies that this shortage is a major
  problem.

  The IETF currently has voluntary and inconsistent processes for
  educating its participants, which may be why significant numbers of
  participants seem to fail to conform to the proper principles when
  working in the IETF context.

  The people in authority have generally been steeped in the principles
  of the IETF (as they see them) and first-time non-compliance by newer
  participants is sometimes treated as an opportunity for abuse rather
  than recognition of a training failure.

  The IETF culture of openness also tends to tolerate participants who,
  whilst understanding the principles of the IETF, disagree with them
  and actively ignore them.  This can be confusing for newer
  participants, but they need to be made aware that the IETF does not
  exclude such people.  The IETF does not currently have a strategy for



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  dealing with the conflicts that can result from participants who
  disagree with the principles of the organization.

  Lack of training, compounded with the perceived concentration of
  influence in the affinity group documented in Section 2.6.6, can lead
  to newcomers being ignored during discussions, consequently being
  ineffective, either in their own eyes or their employers.  This may
  result in their departure from the IETF.

  In addition, some participants are not aware of the problems that
  participants, who do not have English as their first language, may
  have with rapid speaking and the use of colloquialisms in both spoken
  and written communication.  They are also not always aware of the
  possible cultural nuances that may make full participation more
  difficult for those who do not share the same outlook.

3.  Security Considerations

  This document does not, of itself, have security implications, but it
  may have identified problems which raise security considerations for
  other work.  Any such implications should be considered in the
  companion document which will be produced setting out how the IETF
  should set about solving the identified problems.

4.  Acknowledgements

  Apart from the contributions of all those who provided input on the
  problem statement mailing list, the final reduction of the problems
  was especially assisted by the following people:

     Rob Austein <[email protected]>
     Marc Blanchet <[email protected]>
     Dave Crocker <[email protected]>
     Spencer Dawkins <[email protected]>
     Avri Doria <[email protected]> (WG co-chair)
     Jeanette Hoffmann <[email protected]>
     Melinda Shore <[email protected]> (WG co-chair)
     Margaret Wasserman <[email protected]>

  Special thanks are due to Margaret Wasserman for extensive reviewing
  of and contributions to the wording of Section 2.

  The early part of the reduction of the problem statement mailing list
  input was done by Harald Alvestrand and the latter part by Elwyn
  Davies and the team acknowledged above.  In total, there were
  approximately 750 extensive and thoughtful contributions (some making





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  several points).  The thread was started by a call for volunteers in
  helping draft a problem statement, but quickly turned into a
  discussion of what the problems were.

  In addition to the editorial team, the following people have provided
  additional input and useful feedback on earlier versions of this
  document: Harald Alvestrand, Randy Bush, Brian Carpenter, James
  Kempf, John Klensin, John Loughney, Keith Moore.

5.  References

5.1.  Normative References

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

5.2.  Informative References

  [2]  Huston, G. and M. Rose, "A Proposal to Improve IETF
       Productivity", Work in Progress.

  [3]  Blanchet, M., "Suggestions to Streamline the IETF Process", Work
       in Progress.

  [4]  Hardie, T., "Working Groups and their Stuckees", Work in
       Progress.

  [5]  Davies, E. and J. Hofmann, Eds., "IETF Problem Resolution
       Processes", Work in Progress.

6.  Editor's Address

  Elwyn B. Davies
  Nortel Networks
  Harlow Laboratories
  London Road
  Harlow, Essex  CM17 9NA
  UK

  Phone: +44 1279 405 498
  EMail: [email protected]










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7.  Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).  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 AND THE
  INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR
  IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF
  THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
  WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Intellectual Property

  The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
  Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed
  to pertain to the implementation or use of the technology
  described in this document or the extent to which any license
  under such rights might or might not be available; nor does it
  represent that it has made any independent effort to identify any
  such rights.  Information on the procedures with respect to
  rights in RFC documents can be found in BCP 78 and BCP 79.

  Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
  assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an
  attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use
  of such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this
  specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository
  at http://www.ietf.org/ipr.

  The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention
  any copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other
  proprietary rights that may cover technology that may be required
  to implement this standard.  Please address the information to the
  IETF at [email protected].

Acknowledgement

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









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