- From: Thomas Roessler <tlr@w3.org>
- Date: Mon, 28 May 2007 14:03:24 +0200
- To: Hannes Tschofenig <Hannes.Tschofenig@gmx.net>
- Cc: public-privacy06ws@w3.org
On 2007-05-25 11:44:23 +0200, Hannes Tschofenig wrote: > The Policy Languages Interest Group is designed as a forum to support > researchers, developers, solution providers, and users of policy languages > such as XACML > <http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/tc_home.php?wg_abbrev=xacml> > (eXtensible Access Control Markup Language) and P3P <../> (W3C's Platform > for Privacy Preferences Project). It provides a forum to enable broader > collaboration, through use of email discussion, scheduled IRC topic chats, > Wikis, and Weblog tools. > " > > I think it would be fair to mention other policy languages as well, such as > the onces developed within the IETF that enjoy IETF, 3GPP and OMA support. > Here are the most recent documents: > * Common Policy: http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4745 > * Geolocation Privacy Policy: > http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-geopriv-policy > * Presence Authorization Policy: > http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-simple-presence-rules > Common Policy is also used in the consent framework in SIP. In the interest of readability, I don't want to extend the list there endlessly. Therefore, I'd propose to add "the IETF's Common Policy framework and related work" before ", and P3P". > > " > > The Policy Languages Interest Group is a forum for W3C Members and > >>>non-Members<<< to discuss interoperability issues - along with related > requirements and needs - that arise when using a variety of policy > languages where there is a need to compute results across these multiple > languages. > " > to: > > " > The Policy Languages Interest Group is a forum for W3C members and non-W3C > members to discuss interoperability issues - along with related requirements > and needs - that arise when using a variety of policy languages where there > is a need to compute results across these multiple languages. > > " "for W3C members and the public" ;-) Cheers, -- Thomas Roessler, W3C <tlr@w3.org>
Received on Monday, 28 May 2007 12:03:30 UTC