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"Bullard, Claude L (Len)" wrote: > > Perhaps before we take up a petition, all concerned developers > could write a position paper outlining the concerns and possible > remediations and alternatives. A petition is a position paper with many signatures on it. > ... This paper could be submitted > to the WSIO although I am not sure by who or what. I have no way to know whether I can trust the WSIO and I have no idea what the politics of it are. I do know that I've seen petitions seem to work at the W3C. As in petitioned ideas seem to find their ways into specifications. > It is a positive move and contributes rather than detracts. A petition for technical change is a positive move in favour of better technology. I was involved once with a petition to split XSLT from XSL so that it could be used for non-formatting transformations. Some saw that as a negative petition against XSL. I saw it as a positive petition in favour of allowing diverse uses of the underlying technology. The same is true in this case. The petition does not ask SOAP people to give up anything. It merely asks them to use Internet standard technologies and techniques for labeling their packets. Paul Prescod
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