Before we go down this rathole too far again -

1) If you want to second guess the working group, AD and IESG, then the best 
approach is to probably review the bidding by reading the emails on the working 
group list and then forming an opinion based on that record.  I have and I'm 
pretty content with the current result.

2) With respect to credit, I would add that even to be considered for it a 
contributor's balance of payments on a document, standard etc needs to be 
substantially net positive.  If you're trying to claim credit for a reasonable 
suggestion, but its one of 10s or 100s of unreasonable ones, and you've pretty 
much disrupted the working group while making said suggestions..... well why 
reward that?

3) I think we need to continue to give each WG and each AD deference to their 
established ways of proceeding - unless and until there is some determination 
supported by facts that there is a problem.  


Mike





At 04:08 PM 7/3/2013, Eliot Lear wrote:
>No hat on and I'm not commenting on the specific case at hand.
>
>On the general point, I think it's better to err a bit toward the
>generous side.  As an author I use as a rule of thumb whether or not I
>or the working group has taken someone's suggestion and put it into
>text.  And it has to be more than editorial.  A missing "," doesn't get
>you into acknowlegments, but highlighting confusion or clarifying
>language probably does.
>
>Eliot


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