- From: John Foliot <foliot@wats.ca>
- Date: Fri, 24 Aug 2007 11:27:50 -0700
- To: "'Maciej Stachowiak'" <mjs@apple.com>
- Cc: "'Dan Connolly'" <connolly@w3.org>, <whatwg@whatwg.org>, <wai-xtech@w3.org>, <public-html@w3.org>, <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org>
Maciej Stachowiak wrote: > > This isn't my advice to the WebKit developers, this is my comment on a > bug report *as* a WebKit developer. However, is it the comment of a WebKit developer or as a member of the HTML5 Working Group? This lack of transparency lends the impression that the spec is being unduly influenced by how and what are priorities of the browser makers, rather than of the end users. Since repeatedly the chairs have said that nothing has been decided, stating that something is likely to be dropped is premature and to my mind inappropriate. To comment that it is being questioned/reviewed is one thing, to predict an outcome is another - especially since you *are* a member of the Working Group. How different would this be if another member of the Working Group, one who did not share the same opinions as the IRC cabal, went around to the various bug trackers and stated that LONGDESC is going to be entrenched into HTML5 as an attribute of <video>, and so next-gen browsers should be prepared to support this? Or that based upon the current position of the WAI PF, headers will continue to remain in the Specification, and that browsers should have better support? Since nothing has been decided, why should these *opinions* be treated any differently? Because they are not the current opinions on the IRC channel gang? Think very carefully about the optics here... > > Is it wrong for implementors to look at past specs, other > implementations, or the ongoing web standards process in making > decisions on what to implement? In fact, is it even a matter that > should be discussed on a bunch of web standards mailing lists, rather > than in the bug tracker? Well, given that HTML5 is intended to be the next HTML Standard, darned right it is a matter that should be discussed on W3C Standards mailing lists. That you even would question this leaves me dumbfounded - where else would you discuss emerging standards? Backroom IRC channels? Who exactly is this new standard being written for anyway? Having the major browser makers on board is an important consideration in crafting the Standard, but the day they start making all of the decisions (apparently behind semi-closed doors) is the day that the Accessibility advocates such as myself start to become extremely concerned - and if you have not yet picked up on this it's time you did. It is *exactly* this kind of leveraging that leaves us feeling that we are being humored but not taken seriously, and having WG members making public statements about what is and what is not going to be in the Standard further fuels this concern - especially when the co-chairs keep try to assure us nothing has been decided. Simply put, if nothing has been decided about the new spec, nothing should be posted on blogs, bug trackers or any other forum that says otherwise: else there are conflicting messages, and continued conflict. What is so hard to understand about that? JF > > Regards, > Maciej
Received on Friday, 24 August 2007 18:28:03 UTC