Re: CfC on publishing HTTP API and Core Messages - ACTION REQUIRED

Hi, 
Sorry for the delay. 

On behalf of Lyra Network: 
+1 for publishing HTTP API 
+1 for publishing Core Messages spec 

Regards, 
Gregory 


From: "Jason Normore" <jason.normore@shopify.com> 
To: "Payments WG Public" <public-payments-wg@w3.org> 
Sent: Sunday, August 21, 2016 9:56:09 PM 
Subject: Re: CfC on publishing HTTP API and Core Messages - ACTION REQUIRED 

Shopify does not have any immediate plans to implement the HTTP spec but this may change as the spec evolves. We vote “1” for both specifications in order to keep up any momentum the group has gained in working on this in parallel already. We are not opposed to renaming the Core Messages spec to HTTP Core Messages. 

Jason 

-- 
Jason Normore 
Director of Engineering, Shopify 


On Thu, Aug 11, 2016 at 5:48 AM Telford-Reed, Nick < Nick.Telford-Reed@worldpay.com > wrote: 





Dear Web Payments Working Group Participants, 



At the F2F in London there was support [1] for issuing a Call for Consensus (CFC) to publish two specifications: 



1. The HTTP API 

https://w3c.github.io/webpayments-http-api/ 



2. The Core Messages API 

https://w3c.github.io/webpayments-core-messages/ 



This is the Call for Consensus to publish. The Chairs and staff document their concerns about these publications in this email. Working Group participant responses will be very important to determining next steps. 



Below: 



* Chair concerns and considerations 

* Proposal (ACTION REQUIRED) 

* Reminders about FPWDs, Consensus, and Formal Objections 



PLEASE RESPOND to the proposal by 18 August 2016 (1pm EDT). 



For the co-Chairs, 

Nick Telford-Reed 



[1] https://www.w3.org/2016/07/08-wpwg-minutes 





==================== 

CHAIR CONCERNS AND CONSIDERATIONS 



1) Lack of clear support 



Activity on the issue lists and the repositories for these deliverables has been limited to two organizations with the chairs aware of a third organization with some implementation activity. This suggests that the Working Group as a whole is not engaged in this work. 



While there were no objections to issuing a CFC at the July Face-to-Face meeting, there was not clear support from a large set of participants. The Chairs are worried about using Working Group time to pursue work that is not broadly supported by the participants because: 



a) There is unlikely to be rigorous discussion or debate of the deliverables and they are therefore unlikely to represent a balanced view from the group. 



b) There is unlikely to be significant interest in shipping implementations of these specifications. 



c) The WG will spend time and energy on a deliverable that has a low chance of progressing down the standards track. 



2) Low priority at this time 



The Working Group has previously discussed the priority of its deliverables. The outside-of-browser specifications are a lower priority than other deliverables currently on our agenda. For that reason, spending time on the content of the specifications or the process of publishing them is taking important time away from prioritized work (payment request API suite and payment apps). 



3) Low interest from implementers in the group 



At this time we are aware of only two prospective implementations of the HTTP API: 



- Digital Bazaar, who are also the editors of the specification 

- Worldpay 



We invite Working Group Participants to let us know of their plans to implement. 



4) Use cases not yet well-understood 



At a high level, we understand that the API is intended for outside-of-browser payments such as payments on the Internet of Things. However, it is not yet clear to the Chairs and staff what concrete interoperability problems the API will solve in a still immature market - one suggestion would be to provide interoperability between two different "things" so that they could pay each other. 



For in-browser payments, we understand that the industry expectation is that a Web application behave the same on any browser, so the interoperability benefit of a standard is clear. 



Industry expectations may differ for out-of-browser payments. There are already a number of APIs in use on the Web today that offer payment APIs over HTTP (some of which also make use of the 402 - Payment Required HTTP response code and define normative behaviour for that scenario). We do not yet know whether these payment services or their users are seeking interoperability improvements; understanding those needs in greater detail would help motivate this work. While standards could make it easier to make payments to different endpoints, we don't yet have sufficient information about the business demand so positive indications from group members would be helpful. 



5) For Core Messages, too soon to conclude shared message pattern 



The goal of Core Messages is that we define the same data for in-browser and outside-of-browser payments. We agree that if we CAN avoid specifying the same thing twice, we should. But it is too soon to know whether we can accomplish that goal. Furthermore, there are reasons to think we may not be able to, including: 



* There are different considerations for in-browser software 

and for "open internet" protocols, notably around security 

models. 



* In-browser payments are expected to be largely interactive, 

while we understand at a high level that out-of-browser 

payments are intended to be largely automated. Thus, 

assuming a "mediator" for out-of-browser payments may be 

inappropriate. We need to understand better the use 

cases before making architectural choices that may not 

apply. 



At this time, the Chairs and staff contacts believe that publishing these deliverables as Editor's Drafts is certainly appropriate, but there is not clear consensus to publish them as FPWDs. We feel it is important to hear from the broad set of participants in the group to inform the FPWD decision. 



==================== 

PROPOSAL (ACTION REQUIRED) 



Request that the W3C Director approve the following specifications as First Public Working Drafts: 



1. The HTTP API 

https://w3c.github.io/webpayments-http-api/ 



2. The Core Messages API 

https://w3c.github.io/webpayments-core-messages/ 



For each specification, please indicate one of the following: 



1. Support publishing it as a FPWD of the WPWG 



2. Do not support publishing it as a FPWD of the WPWG at this time, but 

may support it in the future once the WPWG can focus on it. 



3. Do not support publishing it as a FPWD of the WPWG at any time 



4. Support the consensus of the WPWG 



5. Abstain 



We invite you to include rationale in your response. 



If there is strong consensus to publish --this means many answers of type "1" and at most a small number of answers of type "2" or "3"-- by 

18 August 2016 (1pm EDT), the proposal will carry. 



If there is strong consensus to postpone publication --this means many answers of type "2" and at most a small number of answers of type 

"3"-- by 18 August 2016 (1pm EDT), the proposal will not carry but the Chairs will expect the topic to return to the Working Group's agenda once other priority topics have been suitably addressed. 



==================== 

REMINDERS ABOUT FPWDS, CONSENSUS, AND FORMAL OBJECTIONS 



* Publication as a FPWD does NOT indicate that a document is complete 

or represent Working Group consensus. 



* In case of a decision to publish, the Chairs will request approval 

as First Public Working Draft(s). In this case, if you wish your 

LACK of support to publish to be conveyed to the W3C Director and 

reviewed, please include the phrase "FORMAL OBJECTION" [2] in your 

response and be sure to include substantive arguments or rationale. 



* Silence will be taken to mean there is no Formal Objection [2]. 



* The W3C Director takes Formal Objections seriously, and therefore 

they typically require significant time and effort to 

address. Therefore, please limit any Formal Objections to issues 

related to the scope of these documents rather than technical 

content where the Working Group has not yet made a decision. 



* If there are Formal Objections, the Chairs plan to contact the 

individual(s) who made the Formal Objection to see whether there are 

changes that would address the concern and increase consensus to 

publish. 



[2] https://www.w3.org/2015/Process-20150901/#Consensus 







-- 

Nick Telford-Reed | Technology Innovation | m: +447799473854 | t: +44 203 664 5069 

s: WorldPay Centre, 270-289 Science Park, Milton Rd, Cambridge CB4 0WE UK 



http://worldpay-hackathon.bemyapp.com 









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Received on Monday, 22 August 2016 09:25:30 UTC