1. Introduction
この節では IETF community moderation の RFC テキストを保持し, disruptive participation, moderator team, procedures, transparency, appeals, reinstatement, Ombudsteam および IETF LLC との関係を扱う.
RFC 原文
1. Introduction
This memo establishes a policy for the moderation of disruptive
participation across the IETF's various public online contribution
channels and discussion fora. It creates a moderator team to develop
procedures and to facilitate their consistent application.
This memo obsoletes and updates some prior IETF processes, summarized
here. Background information is described in more detail in
Appendix A.
This memo makes the following changes to existing processes:
* Obsoletes [RFC3683] as the "posting rights" (PR) action it defines
is replaced by processes defined herein;
* Obsoletes [RFC3934] as it replaces working group moderation
procedures;
* Obsoletes Section 3 of [RFC9245] and the second paragraph of
Section 4 of [RFC9245], as the IETF moderator team defined in this
document replaces the IETF discussion list moderator team.
* Updates Section 6.1 of [RFC2418], because the moderator team will
work together with working group chairs to moderate disruptive
behavior.
The processes described in this memo are solely applicable to IETF
activities, and not to other related organizations, such as the
Internet Research Task Force (IRTF), the Internet Architecture Board
(IAB), the RFC Series Working Group (RSWG), the RFC Series Approval
Board (RSAB), or the Independent RFC Submission Stream, without their
explicit agreement. These changes take effect when the procedures
described in Section 4 have been approved by the IESG.
1.1. Terminology Note
In this document, the term "administrator" refers to the people who
are assigned by the IESG to manage a particular public participation
channel or discussion forum. This memo uses the term "forum" to
refer to any public IETF participation channel, such as a mailing
list, chat group, or discussion in a collaborative tool such as
GitHub or GitLab. For example, working group chairs are
administrators of all the public fora that their working groups use,
which typically includes mailing lists and chat groups, but might
also include collaborative tools such as GitHub or GitLab. The
"owners" of non-WG IETF mailing lists are another example of
administrators.
1.2. General Philosophy
The cornerstone of this policy is that individuals are responsible
for furthering the goals of the IETF as an organization [RFC3935] in
a manner consistent with the policy laid out in [RFC7154].
Disagreement and diverse points of view within any standards
organization are to be expected and are even healthy. The IETF is an
open standards organization with a discussion-based rough consensus
process, a non-normative description of which is in [RFC7282].
Engaged, respectful discussion that is within the scope of an IETF
forum should therefore not be considered disruptive, nor should
someone be considered disruptive solely because they are outside the
rough consensus. However, when someone crosses the line into
disruptive behavior, action must be taken in order to maintain
decorum of the community.
The moderation policy goals are as follows:
* Apply consistent, fair, and timely moderation of communication
across all public online IETF participation channels and
participation fora without regard to a participant's role in the
IETF or previous technical contributions;
* Ensure that appeals are available to address disagreements about
moderation actions;
* Balance transparency against both privacy of individuals involved
and further disruption to the community;
* Allow moderation decisions to be reconsidered; and
* Provide the broadest possible latitude to all people doing
moderation, so that they have the flexibility to address a broad
range of individuals and circumstances.
Questions about the processes detailed below should be answered with
these goals in mind.
The objective is explicitly *not* punishment, but to maintain an
open, welcoming, non-hostile environment in which all may participate
on an equal footing, regardless of their role in the IETF or past
technical contributions.