- From: Jaime Delgado <jaime.delgado@ac.upc.edu>
- Date: Thu, 15 Sep 2016 09:25:30 +0200
- To: Renato Iannella <renato.iannella@monegraph.com>, W3C POE WG <public-poe-wg@w3.org>
Dear Renato, I also fully support your position. Regards, Jaime. El 15/09/2016 a las 2:45, Renato Iannella escribió: > > I have grave concerns about the suggestion to change the name of ODRL in > order to address misperceptions. > > If there are indeed perceptions, then the solution is not a name change > but information sharing, education and dialogue. > > I want to use the example of W3C's Encrypted Media Extensions as an > example to make my point. > In response to significant and negative media saturation by the > Electronic Frontier Foundation (including street protests), W3C did not > change the name of the EME specification. Instead they disseminated > considered arguments for the reason(s) behind the work. This > demonstrates leadership. > > We are not exactly in the same situation, but we should not be mislead > into thinking that merely changing the name of a specification will > magically cause perceptions to change. > > This is why the ODRL Community (from V2.0) moved towards "policy" as our > main language driver, as this has been a deliberate move by the > ODRL community embrace holistic initiatives and support general policies. > > The ODRL community has been working diligently for the past 16 YEARS > building up community of trust around a common need for policy expressions. > > There is no technical and architectural reason for a name change. I am > concerned that a push to impose a name change would be poorly received, > perhaps even considered by some to be disparaging an dismissive of the > community’s careful and considered work over the years. > > The ODRL brand is important as it is well established amongst many > communities. An ill-considered change of name will cause disruption, > confusion and lead to less trust and acceptance. > > Existing users and implementors of ODRL, the ODRL Community Group, and > ODRL Profile communities will be left frustrated, and disenfranchised. > > I strongly support keeping the name of ODRL while continuing to focus > efforts on making it a better language so that it becomes part of the > web framework for future digital publishing. > > I oppose the proposal to change the name of ODRL. > > > Renato Iannella, Monegraph > Co-Chair, W3C Permissions & Obligations Expression (POE) Working Group >
Received on Thursday, 15 September 2016 07:28:30 UTC