- From: Mark Nottingham <mnot@mnot.net>
- Date: Sun, 9 Jan 2022 20:19:12 +1100
- To: www-tag@w3.org
- Message-Id: <D55C5888-5C28-4B79-83A4-71EE460BA11B@mnot.net>
Hi TAG, Happy New Year! This document doesn't have any official home (yet), but I thought it might interest some here. Feedback (e.g., on the repo's issues list) most welcome. Cheers, > Begin forwarded message: > > From: internet-drafts@ietf.org > Subject: New Version Notification for draft-nottingham-avoiding-internet-centralization-01.txt > Date: 9 January 2022 at 8:14:43 pm AEDT > To: "Mark Nottingham" <mnot@mnot.net> > > > A new version of I-D, draft-nottingham-avoiding-internet-centralization-01.txt > has been successfully submitted by Mark Nottingham and posted to the > IETF repository. > > Name: draft-nottingham-avoiding-internet-centralization > Revision: 01 > Title: Centralization and Internet Standards > Document date: 2022-01-09 > Group: Individual Submission > Pages: 20 > URL: https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-nottingham-avoiding-internet-centralization-01.txt > Status: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-nottingham-avoiding-internet-centralization/ > Html: https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-nottingham-avoiding-internet-centralization-01.html > Htmlized: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-nottingham-avoiding-internet-centralization > Diff: https://www.ietf.org/rfcdiff?url2=draft-nottingham-avoiding-internet-centralization-01 > > Abstract: > Despite being designed and operated as a decentralized network-of- > networks, the Internet is continuously subjected to forces that > encourage centralization. > > This document offers a definition of centralization, explains why it > is undesirable, identifies different types of centralization, > catalogues limitations of common approaches to controlling it, and > explores what Internet standards efforts can do to address it. > > > > > The IETF Secretariat > > -- Mark Nottingham https://www.mnot.net/
Received on Sunday, 9 January 2022 09:19:31 UTC