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[anti-abuse-wg] About "consensus" and "voting"...
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Randy Bush
randy at psg.com
Mon May 11 13:47:57 CEST 2020
brian, excuse my continuing to rant. if i write a long message, it can not be good :) as with spam, you have a delete key. i think we all dislike spam and other forms of network abuse. but this is the only working group whose goal is negative, to stop something. even the wg's name is composed of two negative words. when i said: > for a large segment of the community, and that which was pretty much > the original population, there is an underlying physics and shared > experience of moving packets, routing, circuits, bgp, ixen, ... that > gives us a common experience and understanding. underlying that culture is the imperative to see that packets get to the desired destination. routing, internet exchanges, dns, even ipv6 :) it's a culture built on cooperation at its very core: bgp, exchanges, dns replication, ... in order that packets go where they need to go. so there will be a reflexive dislike of things which propose to stop packets from getting to where they were intended to go. proposals to break routing, rescind address allocations, etc. evoke reactions similar to proposals for capital punishment. they seem extreme and go against ingrained cultural norms. but many of the citizens of the anti-abuse wg perceive that there is a war. as the general community dislikes 'abuse', there is emotional desire that the anti-abuse warriors will 'win'. but wars escalate. and what was at first defensive often becomes offensive. and the tools of the defenders become hard to tell from those of the attackers. e.g., to a router geek, rescinding an address allocation may 'feel' similar to a route hijack and therefore invoke a negative response. the upside is that the anti-abuse wg gets significantly higher attendance :) but this is no longer our mothers' internet. how does a pacifistic culture of cooperation deal with anti-cultural behavior? darned if i know, my daughter was the political scientist. back to consensus and voting given the cultural tensions above, it is likely that there will be issues where agreement is either very long in coming or not reached at all. other than patience, how do we deal with that? historically, it has been what dave clark said a few decades back, about when ripe formed We reject: kings, presidents and voting. We believe in: rough consensus and running code. when the ietf went through its ever ongoing omphaloskepsis on decision making, pete resnik produced a rather nice document, rfc 7282. to move from that to a win/lose voting system will be very hard in a cooperative consensus based culture. how do you motivate such a radical change? sad to say words such as 'democracy' ring hollow in today's world. we the abused should be careful not to grow up to be abusers. randy
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