Re: A sad farewell

Charlie Perkins <charles.perkins@earthlink.net> Wed, 04 November 2020 01:19 UTC

Return-Path: <charles.perkins@earthlink.net>
X-Original-To: ietf@ietfa.amsl.com
Delivered-To: ietf@ietfa.amsl.com
Received: from localhost (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by ietfa.amsl.com (Postfix) with ESMTP id 5FB5E3A1186 for <ietf@ietfa.amsl.com>; Tue, 3 Nov 2020 17:19:02 -0800 (PST)
X-Virus-Scanned: amavisd-new at amsl.com
X-Spam-Flag: NO
X-Spam-Score: -2.344
X-Spam-Level:
X-Spam-Status: No, score=-2.344 tagged_above=-999 required=5 tests=[BAYES_00=-1.9, DKIM_SIGNED=0.1, DKIM_VALID=-0.1, DKIM_VALID_AU=-0.1, DKIM_VALID_EF=-0.1, NICE_REPLY_A=-0.247, RCVD_IN_MSPIKE_H3=0.001, RCVD_IN_MSPIKE_WL=0.001, SPF_HELO_NONE=0.001, SPF_PASS=-0.001, URIBL_BLOCKED=0.001] autolearn=ham autolearn_force=no
Authentication-Results: ietfa.amsl.com (amavisd-new); dkim=pass (2048-bit key) header.d=earthlink.net; domainkeys=pass (2048-bit key) header.from=charles.perkins@earthlink.net header.d=earthlink.net
Received: from mail.ietf.org ([4.31.198.44]) by localhost (ietfa.amsl.com [127.0.0.1]) (amavisd-new, port 10024) with ESMTP id ocsvnGRwphWu for <ietf@ietfa.amsl.com>; Tue, 3 Nov 2020 17:19:00 -0800 (PST)
Received: from elasmtp-kukur.atl.sa.earthlink.net (elasmtp-kukur.atl.sa.earthlink.net [209.86.89.65]) (using TLSv1.2 with cipher ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384 (256/256 bits)) (No client certificate requested) by ietfa.amsl.com (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 930893A0D85 for <ietf@ietf.org>; Tue, 3 Nov 2020 17:19:00 -0800 (PST)
DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=earthlink.net; s=dk12062016; t=1604452740; bh=zF2aGLL+NlT6OyyjCXPruQrbdq/nMcFjnkLy /NFd/2E=; h=Received:Subject:To:References:Cc:From:Message-ID:Date: User-Agent:MIME-Version:In-Reply-To:Content-Type: Content-Transfer-Encoding:Content-Language:X-ELNK-Trace: X-Originating-IP; b=FCfE2cGEbk0mNVPEPRfIe7YT92Tw9BicqIE0X/4f2rgfUT Bgb3JTHLZtd+W9vu5Bc+Xmjh7SpeOhAFx4qd9CBtwwqJnxgCRhsHxJ4Rfb6CX7sO9mc X2enbZWkpGAOtP6F23W+Pq+qXLg0bLVktL5W4Mw+VWkCxHtUkbPvvMzR99BXiLboCBw cVGN5gszux56JRkOBcKVFmCMJC+CUxtcNWeoAkyKTwvpgKnPUzwemiENalJqB0ciZTB fV0ZE3pi7YRAtc1Pj9kdrJqL++IVtQAXo7ASsWJdCR0PVPGnE/oNYAInUOWv4lxK0Nw PulFwO5t9X60LF7+o1pbdaaEZqqA==
DomainKey-Signature: a=rsa-sha1; q=dns; c=nofws; s=dk12062016; d=earthlink.net; b=IkwH3GvXck5831/I+g4YY5bggl3ZM5Su9et1tr4lT0BqEwcLiXNRrAZqgkjNsrYkSgVnhqYwz2Co6X1nMScn1GoegV1v3dL3g/Nxs+H+GIVrTbDqtPKiEaERQ3zwxZm/kQrCEy+aycMi0TymraKIVHyDf0XkCpoDj4f9pRXiZ74ycrz8EuoZ2KVDH5dmzGPYZ/umJtMJ7HggMNUdFc2Jsa0dJxuC1lpaDXU0a2Dbed7l6BzWpyVoXHWmY9zpk4tSQyuxoXh6+xrzrdJyVDPZ43Eb+UNdqo2BP7lZn/DKioxSXbnxWKf6DrMzRlxlRUUCZ2jyWUIc6cTJHDFotF1hVA==; h=Received:Subject:To:References:Cc:From:Message-ID:Date:User-Agent:MIME-Version:In-Reply-To:Content-Type:Content-Transfer-Encoding:Content-Language:X-ELNK-Trace:X-Originating-IP;
Received: from [99.51.72.196] (helo=[192.168.1.82]) by elasmtp-kukur.atl.sa.earthlink.net with esmtpsa (TLSv1.2:ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:128) (Exim 4) (envelope-from <charles.perkins@earthlink.net>) id 1ka7Ry-0002iD-S7; Tue, 03 Nov 2020 20:18:59 -0500
Subject: Re: A sad farewell
To: Henrik Levkowetz <henrik@levkowetz.com>
References: <71444008-c716-d83f-a2e2-6e4c7e3fd58a@levkowetz.com>
Cc: IETF Discussion <ietf@ietf.org>
From: Charlie Perkins <charles.perkins@earthlink.net>
Message-ID: <ddce180d-5e67-92a4-f838-6a3741052cf5@earthlink.net>
Date: Tue, 03 Nov 2020 17:18:55 -0800
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; WOW64; rv:68.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/68.12.1
MIME-Version: 1.0
In-Reply-To: <71444008-c716-d83f-a2e2-6e4c7e3fd58a@levkowetz.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"; format="flowed"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
Content-Language: en-US
X-ELNK-Trace: 137d7d78656ed6919973fd6a8f21c4f2d780f4a490ca6956df8303b86ceddf5515f9a67e6e6402a3d15372bc54e9b4c8350badd9bab72f9c350badd9bab72f9c
X-Originating-IP: 99.51.72.196
Archived-At: <https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/ietf/iWy4TSncFXRuFHK8eOB_8hJg-nk>
X-BeenThere: ietf@ietf.org
X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.29
Precedence: list
List-Id: IETF-Discussion <ietf.ietf.org>
List-Unsubscribe: <https://www.ietf.org/mailman/options/ietf>, <mailto:ietf-request@ietf.org?subject=unsubscribe>
List-Archive: <https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/browse/ietf/>
List-Post: <mailto:ietf@ietf.org>
List-Help: <mailto:ietf-request@ietf.org?subject=help>
List-Subscribe: <https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf>, <mailto:ietf-request@ietf.org?subject=subscribe>
X-List-Received-Date: Wed, 04 Nov 2020 01:19:02 -0000

Hello Henrik,

It was great working with you as chair of MIP4, and I use your tools 
every day that I work on IETF stuff.  You have my sincere thanks and 
appreciation.

Regards,
Charlie P.


On 11/3/2020 6:42 AM, Henrik Levkowetz wrote:
> Dear friends and acquaintances,
>
> After 20 years of writing tools for the IETF, I will let my contract for
> tools maintenance lapse at the end of the year, and move on to other things.
> The reason is the attitude of the current IETF Chair and LLC Board towards
> contractors in particular and IETF participants in general.  Care for the
> community doesn't seem to matter to them.
>
> The current Chair and LLC Board seems to see contractors, including the
> secretariat and myself, not as members of the community, but simply someone
> who should do what they are told by the authority in charge.  This in total
> contrast with the approach of Russ Housley as IETF Chair; he explicitly
> tried to make the secretariat and other contractors an integral part of the
> community, inviting them in, rather than pushing them out.
>
> Remembering how supportive the previous full Exec Dir, Ray Pelletier had
> been with respect to the tools work, I was hoping that things would change
> at the end of last year with Jay Daley; unfortunately it hasn't; rather the
> opposite, and it has simply become too painful to carry on.
>
> Things got bad at the end of last year, when the LLC Board went back on their
> word after accepting my bid on the RFP in full without reservations; they
> simply changed the contract offered without one word of conversation about
> the changes.  My bid would have been substantially different for an RFP with
> the conditions in that contract.  That was tough, but the final straw came at
> the beginning of 2020, when a Tools Architecture and Strategy Team was
> established to look at the tools future, and I was excluded from it.  Being
> considered a replaceable cog and not a part of the community is not a fun
> environment in which to work, and I've been depressed for most of the year
> following that.
>
> The consequence is, as indicated above, that I  will not sign on to any
> contract renewal or bid on any new RFP when the current term runs out for
> the tools maintenance contract at the end of the year.
>
> Many and big thanks are due to all the IETF chairs who have supported and
> encouraged my tools work: Harald Alvestrand, Brian Carpenter, Russ Housley,
> and Jari Arkko.  Huge appreciation and gratitude also goes to Robert Sparks
> and Russ Housley for the privilege of working with them in the Tools Team
> and the TMC (Tools Management Committee).  And finally, thanks to all the
> members of the community who over the years have made it a joy to do tools
> work, by expressing their appreciation of the tools.
>
> ----------
>
> The longer story, for background, to explain how I came to feel so strongly
> about being excluded from tools architecture work and having the LLC Board
> go back on their word without even thinking it was worth talking to me about
> it:
>
> I wrote my first draft of a draft in 1999; my first meeting was IETF 49.
>
> In 2001, Sami Vaarala and I both presented drafts outlining NAT traversal
> for Mobile IP, and based on the way we worked to merge these and build
> consensus, I became co-chair of MIP4, a position I held till the group was
> closed in 2015 (although there was essentially no activity during the last
> 5 years).
>
> I early thought it absolutely silly that in the internet age, IETF documents
> were not available as HTML documents with internal and external links.  That
> led to rfcmarkup (2002), which was deployed to provide htmlized versions of
> RFCs, and later drafts, first on my own domain, and later on tools.ietf.org.
>
> As I was writing drafts, I was annoyed with having to manually check the format
> requirements (line length, boilerplate, and whatnot), and adapted an awk
> snipped as a 10-line script to check line length for me (2003).  That grew,
> and became 'idnits'.
>
> Having to read new revisions of drafts, to keep up with other Mobile IP
> contributions, I found it annoying not to know where the changes in the new
> rev were, and how much was changed.  This led to 'rfcdiff' (2003).
>
> As WG co-chairs, we had to put together a summary of the status of the various
> documents before each meeting -- that status report was the main way to let
> participants know about draft progress, since there was no datatracker in
> 2000, and no WG support in the IESG tracker tool when it appeared.  Doing the
> summary each meeting was very much drudge work, and becoming tired of repeating
> the exercise each meeting, I created a document status page for MIP4, updated
> automatically from various text files available from the draft repository and
> the IESG tracker (around 2004).  Other chairs saw this, and asked me to do the
> same for them, and it grew from there, and was eventually incorporated into the
> official datatracker as WG pages.
>
> Around late 2006/early 2007, serious SQL injection vulnerabilities were
> discovered in the datatracker as it was then.  After a lot of feet-dragging
> by the vendor in addressing the vulnerabilities, Bill Fenner and I started
> a skunk-works project to completely rewrite the publicly accessible datatracker
> from old-style Perl to Python and Django.  For 2 months we worked up to 10
> hours per day, and disclosed the effort only when we had enough in place to
> show that the effort was viable.  The powers that were applauded the effort,
> and we carried through, and released the rewrite in June 2007.
>
> I continued to do tools work during 40%-50% of my time up till 2016, at no
> cost to the IETF -- all work and tools were donated by myself or my employer
> over the years.  In 2016 I was about to switch employers, and the IETF
> Chair and several previous chairs saw the opportunity to get me to work full
> time on IETF tools, which I happily did until the current chair started to
> seriously treat me not as a member of the community but as a contractor that
> needed to be told just what to do in early 2018.  After that, things went
> downhill.
>
> As mentioned earlier, the final straw came early this year, when Alissa and
> Jay decided to set up a Tools Architecture and Strategy Team, and excluded
> me from that work.  That was to me such a clear and unequivocal statement
> of me not being considered part of the community that it drove me into a
> depression, from which I could only partially recover by distancing myself
> from the tools effort more and more.  The depression has gone in waves in
> the following months, often triggered by additional actions and statements
> showing the same attitude.
>
> I don't know which attitude the next Chair will have, but even if it's more
> in line with earlier chairs, the LLC Board and Jay, who have been part of
> making this year a miserable one for me, will still be there, not much changed.
>
> So it's not with joy I move on and look for other things to occupy me; it's
> with sadness in abandoning an area in which I've invested a lot of myself
> over the last 20 years.
>
> My best wishes to you all going forward.
>
>
> 	Henrik
>
>
>
>