Network Working Group                                          T. Hardie
Request for Comments: 3929                                Qualcomm, Inc.
Category: Experimental                                      October 2004


                Alternative Decision Making Processes
             for Consensus-Blocked Decisions in the IETF

Status of this Memo

  This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet
  community.  It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.
  Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.
  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).

Abstract

  This document proposes an experimental set of alternative decision-
  making processes for use in IETF working groups.  There are a small
  number of cases in IETF working groups in which the group has come to
  consensus that a particular decision must be made but cannot agree on
  the decision itself.  This document describes alternative mechanisms
  for reaching a decision in those cases.  This is not meant to provide
  an exhaustive list, but to provide a known set of tools that can be
  used when needed.

1.  Introduction

  Dave Clark's much-quoted credo for the IETF describes "rough
  consensus and running code" as the key criteria for decision making
  in the IETF.  Aside from a pleasing alliteration, these two
  touchstones provide a concise summary of the ideals that guide the
  IETF's decision making.  The first implies an open process in which
  any technical opinion will be heard and any participant's concerns
  addressed; the second implies a recognition that any decision must be
  grounded in solid engineering and the known characteristics of the
  network and its uses.  The aim of the IETF is to make the best
  possible engineering choices and protocol standards for the Internet
  as a whole, and these two principles guide it in making its choices
  and standards.

  In a small number of cases, working groups within the IETF cannot
  reach consensus on a technical decision that must be made in order to
  ensure that an interoperable mechanism or set of standards is



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  available in some sphere.  In most of these cases, there are two or
  more competing proposals at approximately the same level of technical
  maturity, deployment, and specification.  In some cases, working
  groups can achieve consensus to advance multiple proposals and either
  to revisit the question with experience or to build the required
  mechanisms to handle multiple options for the life of the protocol.
  In other cases, however, a working group decides that it must advance
  a single proposal.

  Choosing among proposals can be difficult especially when each is
  optimized for slightly different use cases, as this implies that the
  working group's best choice depends on the participants' views of
  likely future use.  Further problems arise when different proposals
  assign costs in implementation, deployment, or use to different
  groups, as it is a normal human reaction to seek to prevent one's own
  ox from being gored.

  This document proposes a set of experimental mechanisms for use in
  such cases.  To gauge the results of the use of these mechanisms, the
  Last Call issued to the IETF community should note such a mechanism
  is being used and which proposal among the set was chosen.  If and
  when the community becomes satisfied that one or more of these
  methods is useful, it should be documented in a BCP.

  In no way should this experiment or any future BCP for this small
  number of cases take precedence over the IETF's normal mode of
  operation.

2.  Rough Consensus as a baseline approach

  The Conflict Research Consortium at the University of Colorado
  outlines the pros and cons of consensus as follows:

     The advantage of consensus processes is that the resulting
     decision is one that meets the interests of all the parties and
     that everyone can support.  The disadvantage is that developing
     such a decision can be a very slow process, involving many people
     over a long period of time.  There is also a relatively high
     probability of failure.  If a quick decision is needed, the
     consensus approach may not work.  Consensus rule processes also
     tend to favor those that oppose change and want to preserve the
     status quo.  All these people have to do is refuse to support any
     consensus compromises and they will win (at least as long as they
     can delay change) [CONFLICT].







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  Using "rough consensus" as a guideline limits some of the
  disadvantages of consensus processes by ensuring that individuals or
  small factions cannot easily block a decision that otherwise has
  general support.  The touchstone of "running code" can also limit the
  disadvantages of consensus processes by requiring that statements
  opposing particular proposals be technically grounded.

  These limitations do not change the core mechanisms of consensus-
  building, however, and the IETF process continues to require
  individual participants both to use their best engineering judgment
  to select among proposals and to balance their own interests with
  those of the Internet as a whole.  Active participation and a
  willingness to compromise, possibly on key points, are needed.
  Historically, this has worked because a large majority of
  participants have recognized that the Internet's growth and
  enhancement are more important overall than any specific short-term
  advantage.

  In other words, "rough consensus" is sufficient in most cases in the
  IETF to ensure not only that individuals or small groups are heard
  when they raise technical objections, but also that they cannot block
  progress when general agreement has been reached.  This document does
  not suggest changing the usual mechanisms for achieving progress; it
  proposes mechanisms for use when a working group has consensus that
  it must make a decision but cannot make that decision by the usual
  rules.

3.  Conditions for use

  In general, working groups should consider using alternate decision-
  making processes when it is clear both that a choice must be made and
  that the choice cannot be made with continued discussion, refinement
  of specifications, and implementation experience.  A guideline for
  determining whether these conditions have been met is included below.

3.1.  There is a clear decision to be reached

  There must be a clear statement of the decision to be reached.  This
  may be in the working group's charter, in requirements documents, or
  in other documents developed by the working group.  Prior to any
  invocation of an alternate decision making process, the Chair(s)
  should confirm with the working group that there is general agreement
  on the decision to be reached.  This should include a specific
  consensus call on whether the working group can advance multiple
  proposals or must select a single proposal for the work item.






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3.2.  Proposals are available in Draft form

  Proposed solutions must be available as Internet-Drafts and must be
  sufficiently specified so that the Chair(s) believe they could be
  published as an IETF specification, possibly with further refinement.
  If the Chair indicates that a proposed solution is insufficiently
  specified, concrete problems must be identified, and a reasonable
  amount of time provided to resolve those problems must be provided.
  Note that if one of the proposed solutions is "do nothing", an
  explicit Draft to that effect must be available; it may, however, be
  produced when the group invokes an alternate decision-making process.

3.3.  The working group has discussed the issue without reaching
     resolution

  Consensus-building requires significant amounts of discussion, and
  there is no general rule for indicating how much discussion a
  technical issue requires before a group should reach consensus.  If
  there is any question about whether the discussion has been
  sufficient, the working group chair(s) should always err on the side
  of allowing discussion to continue.  Before using an alternate
  decision making process, the working group chair(s) should also make
  an explicit call for consensus, summarizing the technical issues and
  the choice to be made.  If new technical points are made during the
  call for consensus, discussion should continue.  If no new points are
  raised, but the group cannot come to consensus, the working group may
  consider using an alternate decision making process.  Under no
  circumstances is the working group required to use an alternate
  decision-making process.

3.4.  There is an explicit working group last call to use an alternate
     method

  In item 3.3 above, it is noted that the Chair(s) should make an
  explicit call for consensus on the technical issues and should
  proceed only after that call has yielded no forward progress.  A
  different Last Call on whether to use an alternate decision-making
  method is required, with a stated period for comments by working
  group members.  This is to indicate that the decision to use an
  alternate method should be taken at least as seriously as the
  decision to advance a document on the standards track.  It also
  provides a clear signal that this is a last moment for participants
  to reconsider their positions.  The decision to use an alternate
  decision making process requires the rough consensus of the working
  group, as determined by the Chair(s).  The choice of which process to
  use may be made in the Last Call or may be the subject of separate
  discussions within the working group.  If the group comes to




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  consensus that an alternative method is required but does not come to
  consensus on the method to use, an external review team (c.f. section
  4.1, below) will be formed.

  In discussions regarding this document, several points have been
  raised about the viability of any mechanism that requires consensus
  to use an alternative to consensus-based decision making.  Some
  individuals have pointed out that groups having trouble achieving
  consensus on a technical matter may have similar problems achieving
  consensus on a procedural matter.  Others have been concerned that
  this will be used as an attempt to end-run around rough consensus.
  These are valid concerns, and they point both to the need to retain
  rough consensus as the baseline mechanism and the need to exercise
  caution when using these alternate methods.  More importantly though,
  they highlight the nature  of these alternatives.  They are primarily
  mechanisms that allow people to recognize the need for compromise in
  a new way, by backing away from entrenched technical positions and by
  putting the technical choice in the hands of the broader community.
  They highlight that the choice for each participant is now between
  achieving a result and failure.

  There is a fundamental tension between the IETF community's desire to
  get the best decision for a particular technical problem and its
  desire to get a decision that has community buy-in in the form of
  rough consensus.  These mechanisms cannot resolve that fundamental
  tension.  They may, however, provide a way forward in some situations
  that might otherwise end in a deadlock or stagnation.


4.  Alternate Methods

  In setting up an alternate method, care must be taken that the
  process by which the decision is reached remains open and focused on
  the best technical choice for the Internet as a whole.  The steps set
  out below provide a straw proposal for four such mechanisms.  These
  systems are relatively heavyweight, partially to highlight the
  gravity of invoking these methods and partially to ensure that the
  IETF community as a whole is alerted to and kept informed of the
  process.  Note that alternate procedures have been used in the past;
  see [RFC3127] for a description of that used in the decision between
  two competing candidate protocols for Authentication, Authorization,
  and Accounting.  By setting out these proposals, this document does
  not intend to limit working group choice but intends to provide a set
  of well-defined processes that obviate the need for reinvention in
  most cases.






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4.1.  Alternate Method One: External Review Team Formation

  The working group notifies the IETF community that it intends to form
  an external review team by making a public announcement on the IETF-
  announce mailing list.  That announcement should include a summary of
  the issue to be decided and a list of the Internet-Drafts containing
  the alternate proposals.  It should also include the name and
  location of an archived mailing list for the external review team's
  deliberations.

4.1.1.  External Review Team Membership

  External review teams have five members who must meet the same
  eligibility requirements as those set out for a voting member of the
  NomCom [RFC3777].  Explicitly excluded from participation in external
  review teams are all those who have contributed to the relevant
  working group mailing list within the previous twelve months, the
  IESG, the IAB, and the members of an active NomCom.

  Volunteers to serve on the review team send their names to the IETF
  executive director.  Should more than five volunteer, five are
  selected according to the process outlined in [RFC3797].  Note that
  the same rules on affiliation apply here as to the NomCom, to reduce
  the burden on any one organization and to remove any implication of
  "packing" the review team.

  Participants in the working group may actively solicit others to
  volunteer to serve on the review team but, as noted above, they may
  not serve themselves if they have commented on the list within the
  previous twelve months.

4.1.2.  External Review Team Deliberation

  The external review team is alloted one month for deliberations.  Any
  member of the team may extend this allotment by two weeks by
  notifying the relevant working group Chair(s) that the extension will
  be required.

  The team commits to reading the summary provided during the IETF
  announcement and all of the relevant Internet-Drafts.  Members may
  also read the archived mailing list of the working group and may
  solicit clarifications from the document authors, the working group
  chairs, or any other technical experts they choose.  All such
  solicitations and all deliberations among the review team of the
  proposals should take place on the archived mailing list mentioned in
  the IETF announcement.  The team members may, of course, have one-
  on-one discussions with relevant individuals by phone, email, or in
  person, but group deliberations should be on the archived list.



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4.1.3.  Decision Statements

  Each member of the external review team writes a short decision
  statement, limited to one page.  That decision statement contains a
  list of the proposals in preference order.  It may also contain a
  summary of the review team member's analysis of the problem and
  proposed solutions, but this is not required.  These decision
  statements are sent to the archived mailing list, the relevant
  working group chair(s), and the IESG.

4.1.4.  Decision Statement Processing

  The decision statements will be tallied according to "instant-runoff
  voting" rules, also known as "preference voting" rules [VOTE].

4.2.  Alternate Method Two: Mixed Review Team

  This mechanism allows the working group to designate a review team
  that involves those outside the working group and those who have been
  involved in the process within the working group.  Although it may
  appear that having a single representative of each proposal will have
  a null effect on the outcome, this is unlikely, except when there is
  a binary choice, because of the rules for decision-statement
  processing (c.f. 4.1.4.).  As in 4.1, the working group notifies the
  IETF community that it intends to form a mixed review team by making
  a public announcement on the IETF-announce mailing list.  That
  announcement should include a summary of the issue to be decided and
  a list of the Internet-Drafts containing the alternate proposals.  It
  should also include the name and location of an archived mailing list
  for the external review team's deliberations.

4.2.1.  Mixed Review Team Membership

  Mixed review teams are composed of one designated representative of
  each of the proposals, typically the Internet-Draft's principal
  author, and six external members.  Five of the external members are
  selected per 4.1.1. above.  The sixth is designated by the IESG as a
  chair of the group.  Though the primary role of the chair is to
  ensure that the process is followed, she or he may vote and engage in
  the deliberations.

4.2.2.  Mixed Review Team Deliberation

  The review team is alloted one month for its deliberations, and any
  member of the team may extend that allotment by two weeks by
  notifying the review team Chair this the extension will be required.





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  The review team commits to reading the summary provided during the
  IETF announcement and all of the relevant Internet-Drafts.  Members
  may also read the archived mailing list of the working group, and of
  any other technical experts as they see fit.  All such solicitations
  and all deliberations among the review team of the proposals should
  take place on the archived mailing list mentioned in the IETF
  announcement.

4.2.3.  Decision Statements

  As in 4.1.3, above.

4.2.4.  Decision Statement Processing

  As in 4.1.4, above.

4.3.  Alternate Method Three: Qualified Short-Straw Selection

  As in 4.1 and 4.2, the working group notifies the IETF community that
  it plans to use an alternate decision mechanism by making a public
  announcement on the IETF-announce mailing list.  That announcement
  should include a summary of the issue to be decided and a list of the
  Internet-Drafts containing the alternate proposals.

  In this method, a single working group participant is selected to
  make the decision.  Any individual who has contributed to the working
  group in the twelve months prior to the working group Last Call on
  the technical question (c.f. 3.3, above) may volunteer to serve as
  the decision maker.  Individuals may qualify as participants by
  having made a public statement on the working group mailing list, by
  serving as an author for an Internet-Draft under consideration by the
  working group, or by making a minuted comment in a public meeting of
  the working group.  The Chair(s) may not volunteer. Each qualified
  volunteer sends her or his name to the working group chair and the
  IETF Executive Director within three weeks of the announcement sent
  to the IETF-announce mailing list.  The IETF Executive Director then
  uses the selection procedures described in [RFC3797] to select a
  single volunteer from the list.  That volunteer decides the issue by
  naming the Internet-Draft containing the selected proposal in an
  email to the relevant working group chair, the working mailing list,
  and the IESG.

4.4.  Alternate Method Four: Random Assignment

  Among the small number of cases for which consensus is not an
  appropriate method of decision-making are an even smaller number for
  which the decision involves no technical points at all and a need to
  select among options randomly.  The IDN working group, as an example,



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  needed to designate a specific DNS prefix.  As the decision involved
  early access to a scarce resource, a random selection was required.
  In such cases, a working group may ask IANA to make a random
  assignment from among a set of clearly delineated values.  Under such
  circumstances, IANA will be guided by [RFC3797] in its selection
  procedures.  Under extraordinary circumstances, the working group
  may, with the approval of the IESG, ask IANA to select among a pool
  of Internet-Drafts in this way.

5.  Appeals

  The technical decisions made by these processes may be appealed
  according to the same rules as any other working group decision, with
  the explicit caveat that the working group's consensus to use an
  alternate method stands in for the working group's consensus on the
  technical issue.

6.  Security Considerations

  The risk in moving to a system such as this is that it shifts the
  basis of decision making within the IETF.  In providing these
  mechanisms, it is hoped that certain decisions that may be
  intractable under consensus rules may be reached under the rules set
  out here.  The risk, of course, is that forcing the evaluation to
  occur under these rules may allow individuals to game the system.

7.  IANA Considerations

  Section 4.3 may require the IANA to make random selections among a
  known set of alternates.

8.  References

8.1.  Normative References

  [RFC3797]  Eastlake, D., "Publicly Verifiable Nomination Committee
             (NomCom) Random Selection", RFC 3797, June 2004.

  [RFC3777]  Galvin, J., Ed. "IAB and IESG Selection, Confirmation, and
             Recall Process: Operation of the Nominating and Recall
             Committees", BCP 10, RFC 3777, June 2004.

8.2.  Informative References

  [RFC3127]  Mitton, D., StJohns, M., Barkley, S., Nelson, D., Patil,
             B., Stevens, M., and B. Wolff, "Authentication,
             Authorization, and Accounting: Protocol Evaluation", RFC
             3127, June 2001.



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  [VOTE]     Center for Democracy and Voting. "Frequently Asked
             Questions about IRV", http://www.fairvote.org/irv/faq.htm.

  [CONFLICT] International Online Training Program on Intractable
             Conflict,"Consensus Rule Processes", Conflict Research
             Consortium, University of Colorado, USA.
             http://www.colorado.edu/conflict/peace/treatment/
             consenpr.htm

10.  Acknowledgements

  The author would like to acknowledge the contributions and
  challenging exchanges of those who reviewed this document, among them
  John Klensin, Dave Crocker, Pete Resnick, Spencer Dawkins, Scott
  Bradner, Joel Halpern, Avri Dora, Melinda Shore, Harald Alvestrand,
  Alex Simonelis, Keith Moore, Brian Carpenter, and Alex Rousskov.

11.  Author's Address

  Ted Hardie
  Qualcomm, Inc.
  675 Campbell Technology Parkway
  Suite 200
  Campbell, CA U.S.A.

  EMail: [email protected]

























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Full Copyright Statement

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Acknowledgement

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







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