Network Working Group
Internet Architecture Board (IAB) N. ten Oever
Internet-Draft
Request for Comments: 9307 University of Amsterdam
Intended status:
Category: Informational C. Cath
Expires: 1 December 2022
ISSN: 2070-1721 University of Cambridge
M. Kühlewind
Ericsson
C. S. Perkins
University of Glasgow
30 May
August 2022
Report from the IAB Workshop on Analyzing IETF Data (AID), (AID) 2021
draft-iab-aid-workshop-01
Abstract
The 'Show "Show me the numbers: Workshop on Analyzing IETF Data (AID)' (AID)"
workshop was convened by the Internet Architecture Board (IAB) from
November 29 to December 2 2, 2021 and hosted by the IN-SIGHT.it project
at the University of
Amsterdam, Amsterdam; however, it was converted to an online only
online-only event. The workshop was conducted based on organized into two discussion
parts and with a hackathon activity in between. This report summarizes
the workshop's discussion and identifies topics that warrant future
work and consideration.
Note that this document is a report on the proceedings of the
workshop. The views and positions documented in this report are
those of the workshop participants and do not necessarily reflect IAB
views and positions.
Discussion Venues
This note is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.
Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at
https://github.com/intarchboard/workshop-aid.
Status of This Memo
This Internet-Draft document is submitted in full conformance with the
provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Internet-Drafts are working documents not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
published for informational purposes.
This document is a product of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF). Note Architecture Board (IAB)
and represents information that other groups may also distribute
working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list the IAB has deemed valuable to
provide for permanent record. It represents the consensus of current Internet-
Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.
Internet-Drafts the
Internet Architecture Board (IAB). Documents approved for
publication by the IAB are draft documents valid not candidates for a maximum any level of six months Internet
Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 7841.
Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
and how to provide feedback on it may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents obtained at any
time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
This Internet-Draft will expire on 1 December 2022.
https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9307.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. Workshop Scope and Discussion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2.1. Tools, data, Data, and methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Methods
2.2. Observations on affiliation Affiliation and industry control . . . . 4 Industry Control
2.3. Community and diversity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Diversity
2.4. Publications, process, Process, and decision-making . . . . . . . 6 Decision Making
2.5. Environmental Sustainability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3. Hackathon Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
4. Position Papers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
4.1. Tools, data, Data, and methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Methods
4.2. Observations on affiliation Affiliation and industry control . . . . 8 Industry Control
4.3. Community and diversity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Diversity
4.4. Publications, process, Process, and decision-making . . . . . . . 9 Decision Making
4.5. Environmental Sustainability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
5. Workshop participants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
6. Informative References
Appendix A. Data Taxonomy
Appendix B. Program Committee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
7.
Appendix C. Workshop Participants
IAB Members at the Time of Approval
Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
8. Annexes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
8.1. Annex 1 - Data Taxonomy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
1. Introduction
The IETF, as an international Standards Developing Organization
(SDO), hosts a diverse set of data including on about the organization's
history, development, IETF's history and
development, current standardization standardisation activities,
including of Internet protocols protocols,
and its institutions. the institutions that comprise the IETF. A large portion of this
data is publicly available, yet it is underutilized as a tool to
inform the work in the IETF proper or the broader research community that is
focused on topics like Internet governance and trends in ICT standard-setting. information
and communication technologies (ICT) standard setting.
The aim of the IAB "IAB Workshop on Analyzing IETF Data (AID) 2021 2021"
workshop was to study how IETF data is currently used, to understand
what insights can be drawn from that data, and to explore open
questions around how that data may be further used in the future.
These questions can inform a research agenda drawing from IETF data, data
that fosters further collaborative work among interested parties,
ranging from academia and civil society to industry and IETF
leadership.
2. Workshop Scope and Discussion
The workshop was organized with two all-group discussion slots at the
beginning and the end of the workshop. In between between, the workshop
participants organized hacakthon activities, hackathon activities based on topics
identifed
identified during the initial discussion and in submitted position
papers. The follow following topic areas have been were identified and discussed.
2.1. Tools, data, Data, and methods Methods
The IETF holds a wide range of data sources. The main ones used are
the mailinglist archives (https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/), [Mail-Arch], RFCs
(https://www.ietf.org/standards/rfcs/), [IETF-RFCs], and the
datatracker
(https://datatracker.ietf.org/). [Datatracker]. The latter provides information on
participants, authors, meeting proceedings, minutes minutes, and more
(https://notes.ietf.org/iab-aid-datatracker-database-overview#).
Furthermore
[Data-Overview]. Furthermore, there are statistics for the IETF
websites
(https://www.ietf.org/policies/web-analytics/), [IETF-Statistics], the working group Github repositories,
and the IETF survey data (https://www.ietf.org/blog/ietf-
community-survey-2021/) and there [Survey-Data]. There was discussion about
the utility of download statistics for the RFCs itself themselves from
different repos.
There are is a wide range of tools to analyze this data, data produced by IETF
participants or researchers interestested interested in the work of the IETF. Two
projects that presented their work at the workshop were BigBang (https://bigbang-py.readthedocs.io/en/latest/)
[BigBang] and Sodestream's IETFdata (https://github.com/glasgow-ipl/ietfdata)
library; the [ietfdata] library. The RFC
Prolog Database was described in a submitted paper (see Section Section 4
below). These projects could be used to add provide additional insights to the insight into
existing IETF statistics
(https://www.arkko.com/tools/docstats.html) page [ArkkoStats] and the datatracker statistics (https://datatracker.ietf.org/stats/),
[DatatrackerStats], e.g., related to
gender questions, however, privacy gender-related information. Privacy issues andd implication
and the implications of making such data publicly available were
discussed as well.
The datatracker itself is a community tool that welcomes
contributions, e.g.
contributions; for example, for additions to the existing interfaces
or the statistics page directly (see https://notes.ietf.org/iab-aid-
datatracker-database-overview (https://notes.ietf.org/iab-aid-
datatracker-database-overview)). Instructions directly, see the Datatracker Database
Overview [Data-Overview]. At the time of the workshop, instructions
about how to set up a local development environment can could be found, at the time of the workshop, found at
https://notes.ietf.org/iab-aid-data-resources
(https://notes.ietf.org/iab-aid-data-resources).
IAB AID Workshop Data Resources [DataResources]. Questions or any
discussion about the datatracker and possible enhancements can be issued
sent to tools-discuss@ietf.org.
2.2. Observations on affiliation Affiliation and industry control Industry Control
A large portion of the submitted position papers indicated interest
in researching questions about industry control in the
standardization process (vs. (as opposed to individual contributions in a
personal capacity), where industry control covers both, both a) technical contribution
contributions and the ability to successfully standardize these contribution as
well as
contributions and b) competition on leadership roles. To assess
these question it
has ben discussed to investigate participant's affiliations questions, investigating participant affiliations, including
"indirect" affiliation e.g. affiliations (e.g., by tracking funding and changes in affiliation as
well as the nessecarity
affiliation) was discussed. The need to model company
characteristics or stakeholder groups.
Discussions groups was also discussed.
Discussion about the analysis of IETF data shows that affiliation
dynamics are hard to capture, capture due to the specifics of how the data is
entered but also and because of larger social dynamics. On the side of IETF
data capture, affiliation is an open text field, which field that causes people to
write their affiliation down in different ways
(capitilization, (e.g., capitalization,
space, word seperation, separation, etc). A common data format could contribute
to analyses that compare SDO performance and behavior of actors
inside and across standards bodies. To help this with this, a draft data
model has been was developed during the hackathon portion of the
workshop which workshop; the
data model can be found as Annex 1 - Data Taxonomy. in Appendix A.
Furthermore, there is the issue of mergers and acquisitions mergers, acquisitions, and
subsidiary companies. There is no authorotative authoritative exogenous source of
variation for affiliation changes, so hand-collected and curated data
is used to analyze changes in affiliation over time. While this
approach is imperfect, conclusions can be drawn from the data. For
example, in the case of mergers or acquisition where a small
organizations
organization joins a large organization, this results in a
statistically significant increase in liklihood likelihood of an individual
being put in a working group chair position (see BaronKanevskaia
(https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Baron.pdf)). the document by
Baron and Kanevskaia [LEADERSHIP-POSITIONS]).
2.3. Community and diversity
High interest from the Diversity
The workshop participants was also on were highly interested in using existing
data to better understand who the current IETF community is,
especially is. They
were also interested in terms of diversity, the community's diversity and how to
potentially increase
diversity it and thereby increase inclusivity, e.g. e.g.,
understanding if are there are certain groups or lists factors that "drive people away"
and why. Inclusivity and transparency about the standardization
process are generally important to keep the Internet and its
development process viable. As commented during the workshop
discussion, when measuring and evaluating different angles of diversity
diversity, it is also important to understand the actual goals that
are intended when increasing diversity, e.g. e.g., in order to increase
competence (mainly technical diversity from different companies and
stakeholder groups) or relevance (also regional diversity and
international footprint).
The discussion on community and diversity spanned from methods that
draw from novel text mining, time series clustering, graph mining mining,
and psycholinguistic approaches to understand the consensus mechanism
to more speculative approaches about what it would take to build a
feminist Internet. The discussion also covered the data needed to
measure who is in the community and how diverse it is.
The discussion highlighted that part of the challenge is defining
what diversity means, means and how to measure it, or as one participant
highlighted to define
highlighted, defining "who the average IETF IETFer is". The question There was
also raised a
question about what to do about missing data or non-participating or
underrepresented communities, like women, individuals from the
African continent continent, and network operators. In terms of how IETF data
is structured, various researchers mentioned that it is hard to track
conversations as because mail threads, threads split, merge merge, and change. The ICANN-
at-large
ICANN-at-large model came up as an example of how to involve relevant
stakeholders in the IETF that are currently not present. Vice versa, Conversely,
it is also interesting for outside communities (especially policy
makers) to get a sense of who the IETF community is and keep them
updated.
The human element of the community and diversity was stressed, in highlighted. In
order to understand the IETF community's diversity diversity, it is important
to talk to people (beyond text analysis) and in analysis). In order to ensure
inclusivity
inclusivity, individual participants must make an effort to, as one
participant recounted, tell them their participation is valuable.
2.4. Publications, process, Process, and decision-making Decision Making
A number of submissions focussed focused on the RFC publication process, on
the development of standards and other RFCs in the IETF, and on how
the IETF makes decisions. This included work on both technical decisions
about the content of the standards, but also on procedural and process
decisions, and on questions around how we can understand, model, and
perhaps improve the standards process. Some of the work considered
what makes a successful RFC, an RFC successful, how are RFCs are used and referenced, and
what we can learn about the importance of a topic by studying the
RFCs, drafts, Internet-Drafts, and email discussion. discussions.
There were three sets of questions to consider in this area. The
first question related to the success and failure of standards, standards and considered
what
considered:
* What makes a successful/good successful and good RFC?
* What makes the process of RFC making RFCs successful? And how
* How are RFCs used and referenced once published?
Discussion considered how to better understand the path from an internet draft
Internet-Draft to an RFC, to see if there are specific factors that
lead to successful development of a draft an Internet-Draft into an RFC.
Participants explored the extent to which this depends on the
seniority and experience of the authors, on the topic and IETF area,
on the extent and scope of mailing list discussion, and other
factors, to understand whether success of a draft an Internet-Draft can be predicted,
predicted and whether interventions can be developed to increase the
likelihood of success for work.
The second question was around focused on decision making.
* How does the IETF make design decisions?
* What are the bottlenecks in effective decision making?
* When is a decision made? And what is the decision?
Difficulties here lie in capturing decisions and the results of
consensus calls early in the process, and understanding the factors
that lead to effective decision making.
Finally, there were questions around regarding what can be learn learned about
protocols by studying IETF publications, processes, and decision
making?
making. For example, are example:
* Are there insights to be gained around how security concerns are
discussed and considered in the development of standards?
* Is it possible to verify correctness of protocols and/or and detect
ambiguities?
* What can be learnt learned by extracting insights from implementations
and activities on implementation efforts?
Answers to these questions will come from analysis of IETF emails,
RFCs and Internet-Drafts, meeting minutes, recordings, Github data,
and external data such as surveys, etc.
2.5. Environmental Sustainability
The final discussion session considered environmental sustainability.
It discussed
Topics included what is the IETF's role with respect to climate change change,
both in terms on of what is the environmental impact of the way the IETF
develops standards, standards and in terms of what is the environmental impact
of the standards the IETF develops? develops.
Discussion started by considering how sustainable are IETF meetings,
focussing meetings are,
focusing on how much CO2 the amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions are IETF
meetings are responsible for and how can we make the IETF more
sustainable. Analysis looked at the home locations of participants,
meeting locations, and carbon footprint of air travel and remote attendance,
attendance to estimate the carbon CO2 costs of an IETF meeting. Initial While the
analysis is ongoing, initial results suggest that the costs of
holding multiple in-person IETF meetings per year are likely
unsustainable in terms of carbon emission, although the analysis is
ongoing.
Discussion also considered to what CO2 emission.
The extent are to which climate impacts are considered in during the
development and standardization of Internet
protocols? It reviewed the text of protocols was discussed.
RFCs and Internet-Drafts of active working group
drafts, looking groups were reviewed for
relevant keywords to highlight the extent to which climate change,
energy efficiency, and related topics are were considered in the design
of Internet protocols, to show protocols. This review revealed the limited extent to
which these topics have been considered. Ongoing work There is
considering meeting minutes and mail archives, ongoing work to
get a fuller
picture, picture by reviewing meeting minutes and mail archives
as well, but initial results show only limited consideration of these
important issues.
3. Hackathon Report
The middle two days of the workshop were organized as a hackathon.
The aims of the hackathon were to 1) acquaint people with the
different data sources and analysis methods, 2) seek to answer some
of the questions that came up during presentations on the first day
of the workshop, and 3) foster collaboration among researchers to
grow a community of IETF data researchers.
At the end of Day 1, the plenary presentation day, people were
invited to divide themselves in into groups who selected and select their own
respective facilitators. All groups had their own work space and
could use their own communication methods and channels, or use IETF's
gather.town. channels. Furthermore,
daily check-ins were organized during the two hackathon days. At On the
final day day, the hackathon groups presented their work in a plenary
session.
The objectives of the hackathon, according
According to the co-chairs, the objectives of the hackathon have been
met, and the output significantly exceeded expectations. It allowed for
more interaction then than academic conferences and produced some actual
research results by people who had not collaborated before the
workshop.
Future workshops that choose to integrate a hackathon could consider
to ask
asking participants to submit groups, issues, issues and questions beforehand
(potentially as part of the positions paper position papers or the sign-up process)
to facilitate the formation of groups.
4. Position Papers
4.1. Tools, data, Data, and methods Methods
Sebastian Benthall Using Benthall, "Using Complex Systems Analysis to Identify
Organizational Interventions (https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-
uploads/2021/11/Benthall.pdf) Interventions" [COMPLEX-SYSTEMS]
Stephen McQuistin, McQuistin and Colin Perkins The Perkins, "The ietfdata Library
(https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/McQuistin.pdf) Library"
[ietfdata-Library]
Marc Petit-Huguenin The Petit-Huguenin, "The RFC Prolog Database (https://www.iab.org/wp-
content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Petit-Huguenin.txt) Database" [PROLOG-DATABASE]
Jari Arkko Observations Arkko, "Observations about IETF process measurements
(https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Arkko.pdf) measurements"
[MEASURING-IETF-PROCESSES]
4.2. Observations on affiliation Affiliation and industry control Industry Control
Justus Baron, Baron and Olia Kanevskaia Competition Kanevskaia, "Competition for Leadership
Positions in Standards Development Organizations (https://www.iab.org/wp-content/
IAB-uploads/2021/11/Baron.pdf) Organizations"
[LEADERSHIP-POSITIONS]
Nick Doty Analyzing Doty, "Analyzing IETF Data: Changing affiliations
(https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Doty.pdf) affiliations"
[ANALYZING-AFFILIATIONS]
Don Le Le, "Analysing IETF Data Position Paper (https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-
uploads/2021/11/Le.pdf) Paper" [ANALYSING-IETF]
Elizaveta Yachmeneva Research Proposal (https://www.iab.org/wp-
content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Yachmeneva.pdf) Yachmeneva, "Research Proposal" [RESEARCH-PROPOSAL]
4.3. Community and diversity Diversity
Priyanka Sinha, Michael Ackermann, Pabitra Mitra, Arvind Singh, and
Amit Kumar Agrawal Characterizing Agrawal, "Characterizing the IETF through its consensus
mechanisms (https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/
Sinha.pdf)
mechanisms" [CONSENSUS-MECHANISMS]
Mallory Knodel Would Knodel, "Would feminists have built a better internet?
(https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Knodel.pdf) internet?"
[FEMINIST-INTERNET]
Wes Hardaker, Hardaker and Genevieve Bartlett Identifying Bartlett, "Identifying temporal trends in
IETF
participation (https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/
Hardaker.pdf) participation" [TEMPORAL-TRENDS]
Lars Eggert Who Eggert, "Who is the Average IETF Participant?
(https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Eggert.pdf) Participant?"
[AVERAGE-PARTICIPANT]
Emanuele Tarantino, Justus Baron, Bernhard Ganglmair, Nicola Persico,
and Timothy Simcoe Representation Simcoe, "Representation is Not Sufficient for Selecting
Gender
Diversity (https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/
Tarantino.pdf) Diversity" [GENDER-DIVERSITY]
4.4. Publications, process, Process, and decision-making Decision Making
Michael Welzl, Carsten Griwodz, and Safiqul Islam Understanding Islam, "Understanding
Internet Protocol Design Decisions (https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-
uploads/2021/11/Welzl.pdf) Decisions" [DESIGN-DECISIONS]
Ignacio Castro et al Characterising al., "Characterising the IETF through the lens of
RFC
deployment (https://dl.acm.org/doi/abs/10.1145/3487552.3487821) deployment" [RFC-DEPLOYMENT]
Carsten Griwodz, Safiqul Islam, and Michael Welzl The Welzl, "The Impact of
Continuity (https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/
Griwodz.pdf)
Continuity" [CONTINUITY]
Paul Hoffman RFCs Change (https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-
uploads/2021/11/Hoffman.pdf) Hoffman, "RFCs Change" [RFCs-CHANGE]
Xue Li, Sara Magliacane, and Paul Groth The Groth, "The Challenges of
Cross-Document Coreference Resolution in Email (https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-
uploads/2021/11/Groth.pdf) Email"
[CROSS-DOC-COREFERENCE]
Amelia Andersdotter Project Andersdotter, "Project in time series analysis: e-mailing lists
(https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Andersdotter.pdf)
lists" [E-MAILING-LISTS]
Mark McFadden McFadden, "A Position Paper (https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-
uploads/2021/11/McFadden.pdf) by Mark McFadden" [POSITION-PAPER]
4.5. Environmental Sustainability
Christoph Becker Towards Becker, "Towards Environmental Sustainability with the IETF
(https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Becker.pdf)
IETF" [ENVIRONMENTAL]
Daniel Migault CO2eq: Migault, "CO2eq: Estimating Meetings' Air Flight CO2
Equivalent Emissions: An Illustrative Example with IETF meetings
(https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Migault.pdf) meetings"
[CO2eq]
5. Workshop participants
Bernhard Ganglmair, Carsten Griwodz, Christoph Becker, Colin Perkins,
Corinne Cath, Daniel Migault, Don Le, Effy Xue Li, Elizaveta
Yachmeneva, Francois Ortolan, Greg Wood, Ignacio Castro, Jari Arkko,
Justus Baron, Karen O'Donoghue, Lars Eggert, Mallory Knodel, Marc
Petit-Huguenin, Mark McFadden, Michael Welzl, Mirja Kuehlewind, Nick Informative References
[ANALYSING-IETF]
Article 19, "Analysing IETF Position Paper",
<https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/
Le.pdf>.
[ANALYZING-AFFILIATIONS]
Doty, Niels ten Oever, Priyanka N., "Analyzing IETF Data: Changing affiliations",
September 2021, <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-
uploads/2021/11/Doty.pdf>.
[ArkkoStats]
"Document Statistics",
<https://www.arkko.com/tools/docstats.html>.
[AVERAGE-PARTICIPANT]
Eggert, L., "Who is the Average IETF Participant?",
November 2021, <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-
uploads/2021/11/Eggert.pdf>.
[BigBang] BigBang, "Welcome to BigBang’s documentation!",
<https://bigbang-py.readthedocs.io/en/latest/>.
[CO2eq] Migault, D., "CO2eq: Estimating Meetings' Air Flight CO2
Equivalent Emissions: An Illustrative Example with IETF
meeting", <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-
uploads/2021/11/Migault.pdf>.
[COMPLEX-SYSTEMS]
Benthall, S., "Using Complex Systems Analysis to Identify
Organizational Interventions", 2021, <https://www.iab.org/
wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Benthall.pdf>.
[CONSENSUS-MECHANISMS]
Sinha, Safiqul P., Ackermann, M., Mitra, P., Singh, A., and A.
Kumar Agrawal, "Characterizing the IETF through its
consensus mechanisms", <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/
IAB-uploads/2021/11/Sinha.pdf>.
[CONTINUITY]
Griwodz, C., Islam, Sebastian
Benthall, Stephen McQuistin, Wes Hardaker, S., and Zhenbin Li.
6. Program Committee
The workshop Program Committee members were Niels ten Oever (chair,
University M. Welzl, "The Impact of Amsterdam), Colin Perkins (chair, IRTF, University
Continuity", <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-
uploads/2021/11/Griwodz.pdf>.
[CROSS-DOC-COREFERENCE]
Li, X., Magliacane, S., and P. Groth, "The Challenges of
Glasgow), Corinne Cath (chair, Oxford
Cross-Document Coreference Resolution in Email",
<https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/
Groth.pdf>.
[Data-Overview]
"Datatracker Database Overview", for the IAB AID Workshop,
<https://notes.ietf.org/iab-aid-datatracker-database-
overview#>.
[DataResources]
"IAB AID Workshop Data Resources",
<https://notes.ietf.org/iab-aid-data-resources#>.
[Datatracker]
IETF, "Datatracker", <https://datatracker.ietf.org/>.
[DatatrackerStats]
IETF, "Statistics", <https://datatracker.ietf.org/stats/>.
[DESIGN-DECISIONS]
Welzl, M., Griwodz, C., and S. Islam, "Understanding
Internet Institute), Mirja
Kuehlewind (IAB, Ericsson), Zhenbin Li (IAB, Huawei), Protocol Design Decisions", <https://www.iab.org/
wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Welzl.pdf>.
[E-MAILING-LISTS]
Andersdotter, A., "Project in time series analysis:
e-mailing lists", May 2018, <https://www.iab.org/wp-
content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Andersdotter.pdf>.
[ENVIRONMENTAL]
Becker, C., "Towards Environmental Sustainability with the
IETF", <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-
uploads/2021/11/Becker.pdf>.
[FEMINIST-INTERNET]
Knodel, M., "Would feminists have built a better
internet?", September 2021, <https://www.iab.org/wp-
content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Knodel.pdf>.
[GENDER-DIVERSITY]
Baron, J., Ganglmair, B., Persico, N., Simcoe, T., and Wes
Hardaker (IAB, USC/ISI).
7. Acknowledgments
The Program Committee wishes to extend its thanks to Cindy Morgan E.
Tarantino, "Representation is Not Sufficient for
logistics support Selecting
Gender Diversity", August 2021, <https://www.iab.org/wp-
content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Tarantino.pdf>.
[IETF-RFCs]
IETF, "RFCs", <https://www.ietf.org/standards/rfcs/>.
[IETF-Statistics]
IETF, "Web analytics",
<https://www.ietf.org/policies/web-analytics/>.
[ietfdata] "IETF Data", Internet Protocols Laboratory, commit
c53bf15, August 2022,
<https://github.com/glasgow-ipl/ietfdata>.
[ietfdata-Library]
McQuistin, S. and to Kate Pundyk C. Perkins, "The ietfdata Library",
<https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/
McQuistin.pdf>.
[LEADERSHIP-POSITIONS]
Baron, J. and O. Kanevskaia, "Competition for notetaking.
Efforts put Leadership
Positions in this workshop by Niels ten Oever was made possible
through funding from Standards Development Organizations", October
2021, <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/
Baron.pdf>.
[Mail-Arch]
IETF, "Mail Archive",
<https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/>.
[MEASURING-IETF-PROCESSES]
Arkko, J., "Observations about IETF process measurements",
<https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/
Arkko.pdf>.
[POSITION-PAPER]
McFadden, M., "A Position Paper", <https://www.iab.org/wp-
content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/McFadden.pdf>.
[PROLOG-DATABASE]
Huguenin, P., "The RFC Prolog Database", September 2021,
<https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Petit-
Huguenin.txt>.
[RESEARCH-PROPOSAL]
Yachmeneva, E., "Research Proposal", <https://www.iab.org/
wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/Yachmeneva.pdf>.
[RFC-DEPLOYMENT]
Castro, I., Healey, P., Iqbal, W., Karan, M., Khare, P.,
McQuistin, S., Perkins, C., Purver, M., Qadir, J., and G.
Tyson, "Characterising the Dutch Research Council (NWO) IETF through grant
MVI.19.032 as part of the programme 'Maatschappelijk Verantwoord
Innoveren (MVI)'.
We would like to thank the Ford Foundation for their support that
made participation lens of Corinne Cath, Kate Pundyk, RFC
deployment", November 2021,
<https://dl.acm.org/doi/abs/10.1145/3487552.3487821>.
[RFCs-CHANGE]
Hoffman, P., "RFCs Change", September 2021,
<https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/
Hoffman.pdf>.
[Survey-Data]
IETF, "IETF Community Survey 2021", 11 August 2021,
<https://www.ietf.org/blog/ietf-community-survey-2021/>.
[TEMPORAL-TRENDS]
Hardaker, W. and Mallory Knodel
possible (grant number, 136179, 2020).
Efforts in the organization of this workshop by Niels ten Oever were
supported G. Bartlett, "Identifying temporal trends
in part by the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences
Research Council under grant EP/S036075/1.
8. Annexes
8.1. Annex 1 - IETF participation", September 2021,
<https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2021/11/
Hardaker.pdf>.
Appendix A. Data Taxonomy
A Draft Data Taxonomy for SDO Data:
Organization:
Organization Subsidiary
Time
Email domain
Website domain
Size
Revenue, annual
Number of employees
Org - Affiliation Category (Labels) ; 1 : N
Association
Advertising Company
Chipmaker
Content Distribution Network
Content Providers
Consulting
Cloud Provider
Cybersecurity
Financial Institution
Hardware vendor
Internet Registry
Infrastructure Company
Networking Equipment Vendor
Network Service Provider
Regional Standards Body
Regulatory Body
Research and Development Institution
Software Provider
Testing and Certification
Telecommunications Provider
Satellite Operator
Org - Stakeholder Group : 1 - 1
Academia
Civil Society
Private Sector -- including industry consortia and associations;
state-owned and government-funded businesses
Government
Technical Community (IETF, ICANN, ETSI, 3GPP, oneM2M, etc)
Intergovernmental organization
SDO:
Membership Types (SDO)
Members (Organizations for some, individuals for others…) others...)
Membership organization
Regional SDO
ARIB
ATIS
CCSA
ETSI
TSDSI
TTA
TTC
Consortia
Country of Origin:
Country Code
Number of Participants
Patents
Organization
Authors - 1 : N - Persons/Participants
Time
Region
Patent Pool
Standard Essential Patent
If so, for which standard
Participant (An individual person)
Name
1: N - Emails
Time start / time end
1 : N : Affiliation
Organization
Position
Time start / end
1 : N : Affiliation - SDO
Position
SDO
Time
Email Domain (personal domain)
(Contribution data is in other tables)
Document
Status of Document
Internet Draft
Work Item
Standard
Author -
Name
Affiliation - Organization
Person/Participant
(Affiliation from Authors only?)
Data Source - Provenance for any data imported from an external data set
Meeting
Time
Place
Agenda
Registrations
Name
Email
Affiliation
Appendix B. Program Committee
The workshop Program Committee members were Niels ten Oever (Chair,
University of Amsterdam), Colin Perkins (Chair, IRTF, University of
Glasgow), Corinne Cath (Chair, Oxford Internet Institute), Mirja
Kuehlewind (IAB, Ericsson), Zhenbin Li (IAB, Huawei), and Wes
Hardaker (IAB, USC/ISI).
Appendix C. Workshop Participants
The Workshop Participants were Bernhard Ganglmair, Carsten Griwodz,
Christoph Becker, Colin Perkins, Corinne Cath, Daniel Migault, Don
Le, Effy Xue Li, Elizaveta Yachmeneva, Francois Ortolan, Greg Wood,
Ignacio Castro, Jari Arkko, Justus Baron, Karen O'Donoghue, Lars
Eggert, Mallory Knodel, Marc Petit-Huguenin, Mark McFadden, Michael
Welzl, Mirja Kuehlewind, Nick Doty, Niels ten Oever, Priyanka Sinha,
Safiqul Islam, Sebastian Benthall, Stephen McQuistin, Wes Hardaker,
and Zhenbin Li.
IAB Members at the Time of Approval
Internet Architecture Board members at the time this document was
approved for publication were:
Jari Arkko
Deborah Brungard
Lars Eggert
Wes Hardaker
Cullen Jennings
Mallory Knodel
Mirja Kühlewind
Zhenbin Li
Tommy Pauly
David Schinazi
Russ White
Quin Wu
Jiankang Yao
Acknowledgments
The Program Committee wishes to extend its thanks to Cindy Morgan for
logistics support and to Kate Pundyk for note-taking.
We would like to thank the Ford Foundation for their support that
made participation of Corinne Cath, Kate Pundyk, and Mallory Knodel
possible (grant number, 136179, 2020).
Efforts put in this workshop by Niels ten Oever were made possible
through funding from the Dutch Research Council (NWO) through grant
MVI.19.032 as part of the program 'Maatschappelijk Verantwoord
Innoveren (MVI)'.
Efforts in the organization of this workshop by Colin Perkins were
supported in part by the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences
Research Council under grant EP/S036075/1.
Authors' Addresses
Niels ten Oever
University of Amsterdam
Email: mail@nielstenoever.net
Corinne Cath
University of Cambridge
Email: corinnecath@gmail.com
Mirja Kühlewind
Ericsson
Email: mirja.kuehlewind@ericsson.com
Colin Perkins
University of Glasgow
Email: csp@csperkins.org