- From: Christine Runnegar <runnegar@isoc.org>
- Date: Wed, 19 Aug 2015 13:48:24 +0000
- To: "norcie@cdt.org" <norcie@cdt.org>
- CC: David Singer <singer@apple.com>, "public-privacy (W3C mailing list)" <public-privacy@w3.org>
Good ideas from both Greg and David. Greg, if you haven’t started already, I suggest you choose option 2, the Presentation API. Christine (co-chair) > On 15 Aug 2015, at 2:20 am, Greg Norcie <gnorcie@cdt.org> wrote: > > Yes, thanks for pointing that out! > > I will be very literal. > > Then if there's something I spotted that's not fitting in, I'll write up question(s) to address that and send out a summary to the list. > > On Fri, Aug 14, 2015 at 12:54 PM, David Singer <singer@apple.com> wrote: > I think that’s an interesting idea. It would be good to see what it’s like if you answer the questionnaire “as a lawyer would” i.e. focus on the question actually asked, and answer that, even if you know that that misses some important information. > > Then we can comment “if the question had been phrased differently, it would have brought out the following important information”, and “none of these questions caused us to talk about these aspects of our spec., which also have privacy implications”. > > For me, these are rather important: “if we went with this questionnaire, what would we miss?” > > thanks! > > > On Aug 14, 2015, at 9:27 , Greg Norcie <gnorcie@cdt.org> wrote: > > > > Hi all, > > > > As a next step, I was thinking I could take the privacy questionaire I've been developing out for a test run on a proposed standard. > > > > IIRC there are two we're currently looking at: > > > > [1] Media Capture Streams http://www.w3.org/TR/2015/WD-mediacapture-streams-20150414 > > [2] Presentation API http://www.w3.org/TR/presentation-api/ > > > > Anyone have feedback on which one would needs attention more? Ideally we'd both improve a standard and get some insight into what the questionaire is not. > > > > (I'll edit the questions on the wiki based on my experiences and send a summary to the list) > > -- > > /***********************************/ > > Greg Norcie (norcie@cdt.org) > > Staff Technologist > > Center for Democracy & Technology > > 1634 Eye St NW Suite 1100 > > Washington DC 20006 > > (p) 202-637-9800 > > PGP: http://norcie.com/pgp.txt > > > > Fingerprint: > > 73DF-6710-520F-83FE-03B5 > > 8407-2D0E-ABC3-E1AE-21F1 > > > > /***********************************/ > > David Singer > Manager, Software Standards, Apple Inc. > > > > > -- > /***********************************/ > Greg Norcie (norcie@cdt.org) > Staff Technologist > Center for Democracy & Technology > 1634 Eye St NW Suite 1100 > Washington DC 20006 > (p) 202-637-9800 > PGP: http://norcie.com/pgp.txt > > Fingerprint: > 73DF-6710-520F-83FE-03B5 > 8407-2D0E-ABC3-E1AE-21F1 > > /***********************************/
Received on Wednesday, 19 August 2015 13:49:02 UTC