Re: Web Payments Interest Group Charter draft ready for review

Hi Joseph,

i agree with almost all what you said. The only minor point is related 
to the role of the staff. In any group, there are 3 important roles:
*the staff contact
*the chair
*the editor

The chair is imho the major role in the group, driving consensus 
building, ensuring that the group follows its roadmap etc. I tend to 
think tha tthe chair is the primary person responsible for the quality 
of the output.
The editor is also critical. This is how to transform discussions in 
writings. However, the editor should not take decision on the content, 
but just reflect the group position

Finally the staff contact as also an important role, which include 
multiple responsibilities. The obvious role is to link the group with 
W3C (comm team, systeam, etc.) and manage tasks like publications etc. 
Then ensuring that the group works following the W3C process. Then 
promoting the work of the group and recruiting more participants to 
ensure that the output of the group results of discussions with the 
largest possible group. Finally, coordinating with other groups and 
other W3C technologies is another important function. Normally, as you 
can see, W3C staff contact has little impact on the content of the work 
itself. However, it is obvious that when new topics are launched, like 
Web Payments, W3C staff role is greater to bootstrap the whole process

steph

Le 18/05/2014 19:44, Joseph Potvin a écrit :
> I'd like to add a thought along the lines of Stephane's comments (and
> I hope he will correct me if what I say is inconsistent with what he
> and the W3C team have in mind).
>
> Although the W3C's membership includes companies with a diversity of
> business perspectives, my own frame of reference on the topic of
> role-based access to project decisions is based upon this collection
> of sources about the "Foundations of Free/Libre/Open Works Management"
> the I and others have been assembling:
> http://osi.xwiki.com/bin/Projects/draft-flow-syllabus#HFoundationsofFLOWManagement
>
> An industry standards body such as the W3C has a formal mandate from,
> and a formal responsibility to, the members of the consortium who
> guide the scope, substance and quality of the recommendations it
> issues. While it is closely linked to the free/libre/open way, I
> reckon it should not be expected to operate entirely as if it were a
> free/libre/open project foundation like, say, the R Foundation or the
> Apache Foundation. This is not a criticism, it's just a recognition
> that it's a different sort of entity. It shares some but not all the
> characteristics. My impression is that the staff of the W3C as a
> industry standards consortium have a greater direct role and
> responsibility for the scope, substance and quality of its outputs
> than is the case with free/libre/open software foundations, which are
> essentially facilitators in various ways.
>
> Adding on top of that, the fact that the functional realm of web
> payments is already heavily populated with incumbents that span the
> range from the most powerful financial institutions on the planet to
> the tiniest of start-ups, the balancing act that the W3C staff have to
> accomplish if the organization is to host the development of a
> standard on this topic is about as complex a negotiation/coordination
> job as can be thought up.  Issues regarding openness/closedness of
> participation should of course be raised when an stakeholder has a
> concern, but it's useful to do so together with an appreciation of the
> full stakeholder environment that the W3C exists within.
>
> Joseph Potvin
>
>
>
>
>
> On Sun, May 18, 2014 at 12:09 PM, Stephane Boyera <boyera@w3.org> wrote:
>> My apologies for joining late this discussion but i was traveling.
>>
>> I believe I need to bring some clarity on some of the points that were
>> brought in this discussion.
>>   yes W3C develops open and patent-free standards. The development of
>> standards is done in an open way and involve public feedback at different
>> points in the process, see
>> http://www.w3.org/2005/10/Process-20051014/tr.html/
>> In particular, the stage called "Last Call" requires all comments received
>> by the working group (WG) to be addressed, responded and agreed by the
>> commenter. So i believe we can safely say that the development of
>> specifications at W3C is open and transparent.
>> However, there is a big difference between having a WG (or a IG) requesting
>> regularly the feedback of the public, and having a WG working in public.
>> Usually feedback is requested on documents that represent consensus within
>> the WG. While working in public requires that each member exposes its own
>> view in public.
>> I'm all in favor of working in public. More than just transparency, it is
>> usually easier to manage feedback from external parties. People can see e.G.
>> why specific design were ruled out, how consensus was developed etc.
>> For that reason i put in the draft charter the proposal to have the group
>> working in public.
>> However, there are also a number of groups at W3C not working in public.
>> There all kind of reasons for that. Some organizations are not willing to
>> expose their opinions in public but are happy to participate in the
>> consensus building. Sometimes it is just a matter of communication policy,
>> where organizations send people that are not allowed to speak in public.
>> Again there might be many reasons.
>> Here we are in the process of bringing a new community on board. We must
>> understand what is acceptable and what is not for the members of this
>> community. I'm here to learn. That's why, while proposing to work in public,
>> i'm also willing to get feedback whether this is an issue for some members
>> of this community or not.
>> If it is not an issue, then fine. if it is an issue then we will see what to
>> do. But it is essential to let all organizations know that this option is on
>> the table and the charter development CG is here to build consensus on how
>> we will work in the future.
>> I hope this clarify a bit the discussion?
>>
>> Steph
>> Le 15/05/2014 23:58, Melvin Carvalho a écrit :
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On 15 May 2014 23:50, Manu Sporny <msporny@digitalbazaar.com
>>> <mailto:msporny@digitalbazaar.com>> wrote:
>>>
>>>      On 05/15/2014 01:34 PM, Steven Rowat wrote:
>>>       > On 2014-05-15, at 6:28 AM, Manu Sporny <msporny@digitalbazaar.com
>>>      <mailto:msporny@digitalbazaar.com>>
>>>       > wrote:
>>>       >> The option to run the payments work in a closed group, except for
>>>       >> the publication of drafts, is now on the table. This is concerning
>>>       >
>>>       > +1 Where is this proposal made? I can't see it in the links you
>>> sent.
>>>       > The IG is so far listed as Public. ?
>>>
>>>      """
>>>      I would be happy to know if the payment industry is more likely going
>>> to
>>>      be interested in working in public or internally as a closed group and
>>>      query the community on regular basis through the publication of draft
>>>      documents.
>>>      """
>>>
>>>      In the last bullet item in the list here:
>>>
>>>
>>> http://www.w3.org/community/webpaymentsigcharter/2014/05/15/first-draft-of-future-web-payments-interest-group-charter-published/
>>>
>>>       > But IMO It already looks from the proposed Charter that the various
>>>       > forms and arms of the existing financial services industry are
>>> being
>>>       > overly recognized and served by the IG, with 'users' tacked on at
>>>       > the end as sort of an afterthought, as if a revolution in the way
>>>       > finances are carried on isn't going to happen. That may be true,
>>> but
>>>       > it may not.
>>>
>>>      Part of this could be fueled by the W3C wanting to attract as many new
>>>      members as it can into the work. Keep in mind that W3C is going to
>>> have
>>>      to bring on a couple of big members if this work is going to proceed.
>>>      They need these new members because 1) there is a lot of work to be
>>>      done, and W3C needs the money to accomplish that new work, and 2) we
>>>      need to make sure that we have solid representation from the payment
>>>      industry and that they're interested in implementing this stuff that
>>>      we're proposing. If the option is not getting them onboard and not
>>>      starting the work vs. getting them on board and running the work in a
>>>      closed fashion, then that's going to be a hard decision to make for
>>> W3C.
>>>
>>>      That said, I think it would be a disaster for W3C to run the official
>>>      work behind closed doors. There should be enough organizations that
>>> want
>>>      to run this work the way W3C runs most all of its other work; in full
>>>      view of the public.
>>>
>>>
>>> W3C is a member of openstand:
>>>
>>> http://open-stand.org/principles/
>>>
>>> [[
>>>
>>> _*Transparency.*_ Standards organizations provide advance public notice
>>> of proposed standards development activities, the scope of work to be
>>> undertaken, and conditions for participation. Easily accessible records
>>> of decisions and the materials used in reaching those decisions are
>>> provided. Public comment periods are provided before final standards
>>> approval and adoption.
>>>
>>> ...
>>>
>>> _*Openness.*_ Standards processes are open to all interested and
>>> informed parties.
>>>
>>> ]]
>>>
>>> While some work may be done in private, I presume anything related to
>>> *standards* would be made public?
>>>
>>>
>>>      -- manu
>>>
>>>      --
>>>      Manu Sporny (skype: msporny, twitter: manusporny, G+: +Manu Sporny)
>>>      Founder/CEO - Digital Bazaar, Inc.
>>>      blog: The Marathonic Dawn of Web Payments
>>>      http://manu.sporny.org/2014/dawn-of-web-payments/
>>>
>>>
>>
>> --
>> Stephane Boyera        stephane@w3.org
>> W3C                +33 (0) 6 73 84 87 27
>> BP 93
>> F-06902 Sophia Antipolis Cedex,
>> France
>>
>
>
>

-- 
Stephane Boyera        stephane@w3.org
W3C                +33 (0) 6 73 84 87 27
BP 93
F-06902 Sophia Antipolis Cedex,
France

Received on Sunday, 18 May 2014 19:54:22 UTC