- From: Doug Schepers <schepers@w3.org>
- Date: Mon, 22 Sep 2014 14:58:50 -0400
- To: Annotation <public-annotation@w3.org>
Hi, folks– We've gotten several applications for Invited Experts to the Web Annotation WG. We appreciate the interest and enthusiasm. Because we've gotten overwhelming response to the Web Annotation WG already, with a very large number of attendees on the telcons (25+ people!), we are not accepting Invited Expert applications right now. We'll re-evaluate the situation in a few months when things settle down, and we know what the telcons and mailing list activity will look like. In the meantime, everyone is welcome to join the technical discussion on the mailing list. Because this is a public working group, most of the activities available to members are also available to the community, including: * reviewing and commenting on specifications * reading and participating in the technical email discussions * contributing use-cases and requirements * contributing tests * filing Formal Objections on technical decisions (though we hope it doesn't come to this :P) (If you have relevant IP, you can even grant Royalty-Free patent licenses by filling out a form, but at that point, perhaps you should consider joining W3C.) Unless invited under special circumstances, the public cannot join telcons or attend f2f meetings (though they can read the minutes for all meetings), edit the specifications, or answer polls or calls for consensus. Those privileges are restricted to W3C members or Invited Experts. When we begin to evaluate Invited Expert applications, we will look at several criteria for each individual: * Fills a known gap in the current WG (such as expert knowledge, industry/research ratio) * Proven ability to participate politely, constructively, and with strong technical ability (for example, through participation in the public mailing list) * Implementer of an Annotation project or product (especially Open Annotation support) * Willing and able to participate at a level beyond regular WG members (such as test lead, editor, permanent scribe) If you feel that you meet these criteria, and that public participation is insufficient, and your organization (if any) is unable to join W3C, then contact the WG chairs and staff contacts about Invited Expert status at the proper time. You can read more about working group roles and our work mode in our wiki [1]. Thanks for understanding, and we look forward to an active community discussion! [1] https://www.w3.org/annotation/wiki/Roles_and_Work_Mode Regards- -Doug
Received on Monday, 22 September 2014 18:59:00 UTC