- From: Coralie Mercier <coralie@w3.org>
- Date: Fri, 17 Apr 2015 11:50:03 +0200
- To: "alexandre.morgaut@4d.com" <alexandre.morgaut@4d.com>
- Cc: team-community-process <team-community-process@w3.org>, public-w3qc@w3.org
Dear Alexandre, Your Community Group is among the groups launched more than 6 months ago with 5 people or fewer and is unused. The W3C Team proposes to *CLOSE* it in 10 days, per the Community and Business Group Process [1] (relevant parts quoted below), unless there are compelling arguments not to. W3Québec Community Group https://www.w3.org/community/w3qc/ [1] Community and Business Group Process <https://www.w3.org/community/about/agreements/> Duration and Closure of a Community Group ----------------------------------------- Once a Community Group has been launched, participants may continue to work indefinitely, until the Community Development Lead closes the group; see the grounds for closure. No less than ten business days before closing a group, the Community Development Lead must alert the participants. Once closed, no individuals may join, and discussions stop. However, W3C makes available information about closed Community Groups and archives of their communications. Closed Community Groups are re-opened following the creation process. Grounds for Closure of a Community Group ---------------------------------------- The Community Development Lead may close a Community Group in any of following circumstances: Chair Request. The Group Chair requests that the group be closed (e.g., as the result of a group decision, or on a certain date selected in advance by the group). Inactivity. The number of participants drops below 3 for an extended period, or because participant activity (e.g., as measured by communications among participants) ceases for an extended period. Agreement Violations. When, in the judgment of the Community Development Lead, the group has committed a serious violation of this policy, for instance exceeding its scope. The Community Development Lead and Chair should discuss the group’s status before the Community Development Lead initiates closure. Creation of a Community Group ---------------------------------------- Anyone may propose the creation of a Community Group. A proposal is “complete” when: It includes a name for the group (not already taken by a Community Group) and a scope description. The scope should be different than that of any other Community Group (but it may be the same, such as when two communities wish to explore two solutions to the same set of problems). Five individuals support the creation of the group. The W3C Forum may be used to build this support. Once a proposal is complete, W3C announces the creation of the group (which includes its software infrastructure). This date is called the “launch date.” The Community Development Lead does not formally approve proposals but may reject a proposal for a Community Group when the scope is likely to cause offense or confusion, is frivolous, or is overly broad. -- Coralie Mercier - W3C Communications Team - http://www.w3.org mailto:coralie@w3.org +336 4322 0001 http://www.w3.org/People/CMercier/
Received on Friday, 17 April 2015 09:50:16 UTC