Relation of Process Document to Patent Policy and Other Policies
W3C
Members'
attention
is
called
to
the
fact
that
provisions
of
the
Process
Document
are
binding
on
Members
per
the
their
Membership
Agreement
[MEMBER-AGREEMENT]
.
The
W3C
Patent
Policy
[PATENT-POLICY]
and
other
policies
incorporated
by
normative
reference
as
a
part
of
the
Process
Document
are
equally
binding.
The
Patent
Policy
and
CEPC
Code
of
Conduct
place
additional
obligations
on
Members,
Team,
and
other
participants
in
W3C.
The
Process
Document
does
not
restate
those
requirements
but
includes
references
to
them.
The
Process
Document,
Patent
Policy,
and
CEPC
Code
of
Conduct
have
been
designed
to
allow
each
to
evolve
independently.
In the Process Document, the term “participant” refers to an individual, not an organization.
Conformance and specialized terms
The terms must , must not , should , should not , required , and may are used in accordance with RFC 2119 . The term not required is equivalent to the term may as defined in RFC2119 [RFC2119] .
Some terms have been capitalized in this document (and in other W3C materials) to indicate that they are entities with special relevance to the W3C Process. These terms are defined within this document, and readers are reminded that the ordinary English definitions are insufficient for the purpose of understanding this document.
1. Introduction
W3C work revolves around the standardization of Web technologies. To accomplish this work, W3C follows processes that promote the development of high-quality standards based on the consensus of the Membership, Team, and public. W3C processes promote fairness, responsiveness, and progress: all facets of the W3C mission. This document describes the processes W3C follows in pursuit of its mission.
The W3C Process promotes the goals of quality and fairness in technical decisions by encouraging consensus , soliciting reviews (by both Members and public), incorporating implementation and interoperability experience, and requiring Membership-wide approval as part of the technical report development process . Participants in W3C include representatives of its Members and the Team , as well as Invited Experts who can bring additional expertise or represent additional stakeholders. Team representatives both contribute to the technical work and help ensure each group’s proper integration with the rest of W3C.
W3C’s technical standards, called W3C Recommendations , are developed by its Working Groups ; W3C also has other types of publications, all described in § 6 W3C Technical Reports . W3C has various types of groups; this document describes the formation and policies of its chartered Working Groups and Interest Groups , see § 3.1 Policies for Participation in W3C Groups and § 3.4 Chartered Groups: Working Groups and Interest Groups . W3C also operates Community and Business Groups, which are separately described in their own process document [BG-CG] .
In addition, several groups are formally established by the Consortium: the W3C Advisory Committee , which has a representative from each Member, and two oversight groups elected by its membership: the Advisory Board (AB) , which helps resolve Consortium-wide non-technical issues and manages the evolution of the W3C process ; and the Technical Architecture Group (TAG) , which helps resolve Consortium-wide technical issues.
Here is a general overview of how W3C initiates standardization of a Web technology:
- People generate interest in a particular topic. For instance, Members express interest by developing proposals in Community Groups or proposing ideas in Member Submissions . Also, the Team monitors work inside and outside of W3C for signs of interest, and helps organize Workshops to bring people together to discuss topics that interest the W3C community.
- When there is enough interest and an engaged community, the Team works with the Membership to draft proposed Interest Group or Working Group charters . W3C Members review the proposed charters, and when there is support within W3C for investing resources in the topic of interest, W3C approves the group(s), and they begin their work.
Further
sections
of
this
Process
Document
deal
with
topics
including
liaisons
(
§ 9
§ 8
Liaisons
),
confidentiality
(
§ 7
Dissemination
Policies
),
and
formal
decisions
and
appeals
(
§ 5
Decisions
).
2. Members and the Team
W3C’s mission is to lead the Web to its full potential. W3C Member organizations provide resources to this end, and the W3C Team provides the technical leadership and organization to coordinate the effort.
2.1. Members
W3C
Members
are
organizations
subscribed
according
to
the
a
Membership
Agreement
[MEMBER-AGREEMENT]
.
They
are
represented
in
W3C
processes
as
follows:
- One representative per Member organization participates in the Advisory Committee which oversees the work of W3C.
- Representatives of Member organizations participate in Working Groups and Interest Groups , where they author and review technical reports .
W3C membership is open to all entities, as described in “ How to Join W3C ” [JOIN] ; (refer to the public list of current W3C Members [MEMBER-LIST] ). The Team must ensure that Member participation agreements remain Team-only and that no Member receives preferential treatment within W3C.
While W3C does not have a class of membership tailored to individuals, individuals may join W3C. Restrictions pertaining to related Members apply when the individual also represents another W3C Member.
2.1.1. Rights of Members
Each Member organization enjoys the following rights and benefits:
- A seat on the Advisory Committee ;
- Access to Member-only information;
- The Member Submission process;
- Use of the W3C Member logo on promotional material and to publicize the Member’s participation in W3C. For more information, please refer to the Member logo usage policy described in the New Member Orientation [INTRO] .
Furthermore,
subject
to
further
restrictions
included
in
the
their
Member
Agreement,
representatives
of
Member
organizations
participate
in
W3C
as
follows:
- In Working Groups and Interest Groups .
-
In
Workshops
.
A Workshop is an event whose goal is usually either to convene experts and
Symposiaother interested parties for an exchange of ideas about a technology or policy, or to address the pressing concerns of W3C Members. (See Workshops;in [GUIDE] ) - On the Team, as W3C Fellows .
The rights and benefits of W3C membership [MEMBER-AGREEMENT] are contingent upon conformance to the processes described in this document. Disciplinary action for anyone participating in W3C activities is described in § 3.1.1.1 Expectations and Discipline .
Additional information for Members is available at the Member website [MEMBER-HP] .
2.1.2. Member Associations and Related Members
2.1.2.1.
Membership
Associations
Membership
Associations
A
“
Member
Association
”
means
a
consortium,
user
society,
or
association
of
two
or
more
individuals,
companies,
organizations
or
governments,
or
any
combination
of
these
entities
which
has
the
purpose
of
participating
in
a
common
activity
or
pooling
resources
to
achieve
a
common
goal
other
than
participation
in,
or
achieving
certain
goals
in,
W3C.
A
joint-stock
corporation
or
similar
entity
is
not
a
Member
Association
merely
because
it
has
shareholders
or
stockholders.
If
it
is
not
clear
whether
a
prospective
Member
qualifies
as
a
Member
Association
,
the
CEO
may
reasonably
make
the
determination.
For
a
Member
Association
,
the
rights
and
privileges
of
W3C
Membership
described
in
the
W3C
Process
Document
extend
to
the
Member
Association
's
’s
paid
staff
and
Advisory
Committee
representative.
Member Associations may also designate up to four (or more at the Team’s discretion) individuals who, though not employed by the organization, may exercise the rights of Member representatives .
For Member Associations that have individual people as members, these individuals must disclose their employment affiliation when participating in W3C work. Provisions for related Members apply. Furthermore, these individuals must represent the broad interests of the W3C Member organization and not the particular interests of their employers.
For Member Associations that have organizations as Members, all such designated representatives must be an official representative of the Member organization (e.g. a Committee or Task Force Chairperson) and must disclose their employment affiliation when participating in W3C work. Provisions for related Members apply. Furthermore, these individuals must represent the broad interests of the W3C Member organization and not the particular interests of their employers.
For all representatives of a Member Association, IPR commitments are made on behalf of the Member Association, unless a further IPR commitment is made by the individuals' employers.
2.1.2.2. Related Members
In the interest of ensuring the integrity of the consensus process, Member involvement in some of the processes in this document is affected by related Member status. As used herein, two Members are related if:
- Either Member is a subsidiary of the other, or
- Both Members are subsidiaries of a common entity, or
- The Members have an employment contract or consulting contract that affects W3C participation.
A subsidiary is an organization of which effective control and/or majority ownership rests with another, single organization.
Related Members must disclose these relationships according to the mechanisms described in the New Member Orientation [INTRO] .
2.1.3. Good Standing
Members who have not lost Good Standing as defined in the Amended and Restated Bylaws of World Wide Web Consortium, Inc. are considered, for the purposes of this Process, to be in Good Standing . A group of related Members is in Good Standing if at least one of them is in Good Standing.
2.2. The W3C Team
The Team consists of CEO , W3C paid staff, unpaid interns, and W3C Fellows. W3C Fellows are Member employees working as part of the Team; see the W3C Fellows Program [FELLOWS] . The Team provides technical leadership about Web technologies, organizes and manages W3C activities to reach goals within practical constraints (such as resources available), and communicates with the Members and the public about the Web and W3C technologies.
The
CEO
may
delegate
responsibility
(generally
to
other
individuals
in
the
Team)
for
any
of
their
roles
described
in
this
document.
Team
Decisions
derive
from
the
CEO
's
’s
authority,
even
when
they
are
carried
out
by
other
members
of
the
Team
.
Oversight over the Team , budgeting, and other business decisions, is provided by the W3C Board of Directors , rather than managed directly by the Process.
Note: See the W3C Bylaws for more details on the Board and overall governance of W3C.
3. Groups and Participation
For the purposes of this Process, a W3C Group is one of W3C’s Working Groups , Interest Groups , Advisory Committee , Advisory Board , or TAG , and a participant is a member of such a group.
3.1. Policies for Participation in W3C Groups
3.1.1. Individual Participation Criteria
3.1.1.1. Expectations and Discipline
There are three qualities an individual is expected to demonstrate in order to participate in W3C:
- Technical competence in one’s role;
- The ability to act fairly;
- Social competence in one’s role.
Advisory Committee representatives who nominate individuals from their organization for participation in W3C activities are responsible for assessing and attesting to the qualities of those nominees.
Participants
in
any
W3C
activity
must
abide
by
the
terms
and
spirit
of
the
W3C
Code
of
Ethics
and
Professional
Conduct
[CEPC]
[COC]
and
the
participation
requirements
described
in
“Disclosure”
in
the
W3C
Patent
Policy
[PATENT-POLICY]
.
The
CEO
may
take
disciplinary
action,
including
suspending
or
removing
for
cause
a
participant
in
any
group
(including
the
AB
and
TAG
)
if
serious
and/or
repeated
violations,
such
as
failure
to
meet
the
requirements
on
individual
behavior
of
(a)
this
process
and
in
particular
the
CEPC,
Code
of
Conduct,
or
(b)
the
membership
agreement,
or
(c)
applicable
laws,
occur.
Refer
to
the
Guidelines
to
suspend
or
remove
participants
from
groups
.
3.1.1.2. Conflict of Interest Policy
Individuals participating materially in W3C work must disclose significant relationships when those relationships might reasonably be perceived as creating a conflict of interest with the individual’s role at W3C. These disclosures must be kept up-to-date as the individual’s affiliations change and W3C membership evolves (since, for example, the individual might have a relationship with an organization that joins or leaves W3C). Each section in this document that describes a W3C group provides more detail about the disclosure mechanisms for that group.
The ability of an individual to fulfill a role within a group without risking a conflict of interest depends on the individual’s affiliations. When these affiliations change, the individual’s assignment to the role must be evaluated. The role may be reassigned according to the appropriate process. For instance, the Team may appoint a new group Chair when the current Chair changes affiliations (e.g., if there is a risk of conflict of interest, or if there is risk that the Chair’s new employer will be over-represented within a W3C activity).
The following are some scenarios where disclosure is appropriate:
- Paid consulting for an organization whose activity is relevant to W3C, or any consulting compensated with equity (shares of stock, stock options, or other forms of corporate equity).
- A decision-making role/responsibility (such as participating on a Board) in other organizations relevant to W3C.
- A position on a publicly visible advisory body, even if no decision-making authority is involved.
Individuals seeking assistance on these matters should contact the Team .
Team
members
are
subject
to
the
Conflict
of
Interest
Policy
for
the
W3C
Team
conflict
of
interest
policy
[CONFLICT-POLICY]
.
3.1.1.3. Individuals Representing a Member Organization
Generally, individuals representing a Member in an official capacity within W3C are employees of the Member organization. However, an Advisory Committee representative may designate a non-employee to represent the Member. Non-employee Member representatives must disclose relevant affiliations to the Team and to any group in which the individual participates.
In exceptional circumstances (e.g., situations that might jeopardize the progress of a group or create a conflict of interest ), the CEO may decline to allow an individual designated by an Advisory Committee representative to participate in a group.
A group charter may limit the number of individuals representing a W3C Member (or group of related Members ).
3.1.2. Meetings
The requirements in this section apply to the official meetings of any W3C group , as well as to official W3C meetings with open-ended participation from the Membership and/or the public, such as Workshops .
W3C distinguishes two types of meetings:
- A face-to-face meeting is one where most of the attendees are expected to participate in the same physical location.
- A distributed meeting is one where most of the attendees are expected to participate from remote locations (e.g., by telephone, video conferencing, or IRC ).
A Chair may invite an individual with a particular expertise to attend a meeting on an exceptional basis. This person is a meeting guest, not a group participant . Meeting guests do not have voting rights . It is the responsibility of the Chair to ensure that all meeting guests respect the chartered level of confidentiality and other group requirements.
3.1.2.1. Meeting Scheduling and Announcements
Meeting announcements should be sent to all appropriate group mailing lists, i.e. those most relevant to the anticipated meeting participants.
The following table lists recommendations for organizing a meeting:
Face-to-face meetings | Distributed meetings | |
---|---|---|
Meeting announcement (before) | eight weeks * | one week * |
Agenda available (before) | two weeks | 24 hours (or longer if a meeting is scheduled after a weekend or holiday) |
Participation confirmed (before) | three days | 24 hours |
Action items available (after) | three days | 24 hours |
Minutes available (after) | two weeks | 48 hours |
* To allow proper planning (e.g., travel arrangements), the Chair is responsible for giving sufficient advance notice about the date and location of a meeting. Shorter notice for a meeting is allowed provided that there are no objections from group participants. In the case of Workshops , shorter notice is not allowed.
3.1.2.2. Meeting Minutes
Groups should take and retain minutes of their meetings, and must record any official group decisions made during the meeting discussions. Details of the discussion leading to such decisions are not required, provided that the rationale for the group decision is nonetheless clear.
3.1.2.3. Meeting Recordings and Transcripts
No-one may take an audio or video recording of a meeting, or retain an automated transcript, unless the intent is announced at the start of the meeting, and no-one participating in the recorded portion of the meeting withholds consent. If consent is withheld by anyone, recording/retention must not occur. The announcement must cover: (a) who will have access to the recording or transcript and (b) the purpose/use of it and (c) how it will be retained (e.g. privately, in a cloud service) and for how long.
3.1.3. Tooling and Archiving for Discussions and Publications
For W3C Groups operating under this Process, a core operating principle is to allow access across disabilities, across country borders, and across time. Thus in order to allow all would-be participants to effectively participate, to allow future participants and observers to understand the rationale and origins of current decisions, and to guarantee long-lived access to its publications, W3C requires that:
- All reports, publications, or other deliverables produced by the group for public consumption (i.e. intended for use or reference outside its own membership) should be published and promoted at a W3C-controlled URL, and backed up by W3C systems such that if the underlying service is discontinued, W3C can continue to serve such content without breaking incoming links or other key functionality.
- All reports, publications, or other deliverables produced by the group for public consumption should follow best practices for internationalization and for accessibility to people with disabilities. Network access to W3C-controlled domains may be assumed.
-
Official
meeting
minutes
and
other
records
of
decisions
made
must
be
archived
by
W3C
for
future
reference;
and
other
persistent
text-based
discussions
sponsored
by
the
group,
pertaining
to
their
work
and
intended
to
be
referenceable
by
all
group
members
should
be.
This
includes
discussions
conducted
over
email
lists
or
in
issue-tracking
services
or
any
equivalent
fora.
Materials
referenced
from
discussions
and
necessary
to
understand
them
should
be
available
at
a
stable
URL,
at
a
level
of
confidentiality
no
stricter
than
the
discussion
minutes.
Note: The lack, or loss, of such archives does not by itself invalidate an otherwise-valid decision.
-
Any
tooling
used
by
the
group
for
producing
its
documentation
and
deliverables
or
for
official
group
discussions
should
be
usable
(without
additional
cost)
by
all
who
wish
to
participate,
including
people
with
disabilities,
to
allow
their
effective
participation.
Note: If a new participant joins who cannot use the tool, this can require the Working Group to change its tooling or operate some workaround.
- All tools and archives used by the group for its discussions and recordkeeping should be documented such that new participants and observers can easily find the group’s tools and records.
The Team is responsible for ensuring adherence to these rules and for bringing any group not in compliance into compliance.
3.1.4. Resignation from a Group
A W3C Member or Invited Expert may resign from a group. On written notification from an Advisory Committee representative or Invited Expert to the Team , the Member and their representatives or the Invited Expert will be deemed to have resigned from the relevant group. The Team must record the notification. See “Exclusion and Resignation from the Working Group” in the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] for information about obligations remaining after resignation from certain groups.
3.2. The Advisory Committee (AC)
3.2.1. Role of the Advisory Committee
The Advisory Committee represents the Members of W3C at large. It is responsible for:
- reviewing plans for W3C at each Advisory Committee meeting .
-
reviewing
formal
proposals
of
W3C:
Charter
Proposals
,
Proposed Recommendationstransitions to Recommendation , andProposedproposed Process Documents . - electing the Advisory Board participants other than the Advisory Board Chair.
- electing a majority (6) of the participants on the Technical Architecture Group .
Advisory
Committee
representatives
may
initiate
an
Advisory
Committee
Appeal
of
a
W3C
decision
or
Team
's
’s
decision.
See also the additional roles of Advisory Committee representatives described in the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] .
3.2.2. Participation in the Advisory Committee
The Advisory Committee is composed of one representative from each Member organization (refer to the Member-only list of current Advisory Committee representatives . [CURRENT-AC] )
When
an
organization
joins
W3C
(see
“
How
to
Join
W3C
”
[JOIN]
),
it
must
name
its
Advisory
Committee
representative
as
part
of
the
their
Membership
Agreement.
The
New
Member
Orientation
[INTRO]
explains
how
to
subscribe
or
unsubscribe
to
Advisory
Committee
mailing
lists,
provides
information
about
Advisory
Committee
Meetings
,
explains
how
to
name
a
new
Advisory
Committee
representative
,
and
more.
Advisory
Committee
representatives
must
follow
the
conflict
of
interest
policy
by
disclosing
information
according
to
the
mechanisms
described
in
the
New
Member
Orientation.
The AC representative may delegate any of their rights and responsibilities to an alternate (except the ability to designate an alternate).
3.2.3. Advisory Committee Mailing Lists
The Team must provide two mailing lists for use by the Advisory Committee :
- One for official announcements (e.g., those required by this document) from the Team to the Advisory Committee . This list is read-only for Advisory Committee representatives.
- One for discussion among Advisory Committee representatives . Though this list is primarily for Advisory Committee representatives, the Team must monitor discussion and should participate in discussion when appropriate. Ongoing detailed discussions should be moved to other appropriate lists (new or existing, such as a mailing list created for a Workshop ).
An Advisory Committee representative may request that additional individuals from their organization be subscribed to these lists. Failure to contain distribution internally may result in suspension of additional email addresses, at the discretion of the Team.
3.2.4. Advisory Committee Meetings
The Team organizes a face-to-face meeting for the Advisory Committee twice a year . The Team appoints the Chair of these meetings (generally the CEO). At each Advisory Committee meeting, the Team should provide an update to the Advisory Committee about:
- Resources
-
- The number of W3C Members at each level.
- An overview of the financial status of W3C.
- Allocations
-
- The allocation of the annual budget, including size of the Team and their approximate deployment.
- A list of all activities (including but not limited to Working and Interest Groups) and brief status statement about each, in particular those started or terminated since the previous Advisory Committee meeting.
- The allocation of resources to pursuing liaisons with other organizations.
Each Member organization should send one representative to each Advisory Committee Meeting. In exceptional circumstances (e.g., during a period of transition between representatives from an organization), the meeting Chair may allow a Member organization to send two representatives to a meeting.
The Team must announce the date and location of each Advisory Committee meeting no later than at the end of the previous meeting; one year’s notice is preferred. The Team must announce the region of each Advisory Committee meeting at least one year in advance.
More information about Advisory Committee meetings [AC-MEETING] is available at the Member website.
3.3. Elected Groups: The AB and the TAG
The W3C Process defines two types of elected groups : the Advisory Board (AB) and the Technical Architecture Group (TAG), both elected by the Advisory Committee .
3.3.1. Advisory Board (AB)
3.3.1.1. Role of the Advisory Board
The Advisory Board provides ongoing guidance to the Team on issues of strategy, management, legal matters, process, and conflict resolution. The Advisory Board also serves the Members by tracking issues raised between Advisory Committee meetings, soliciting Member comments on such issues, and proposing actions to resolve these issues. The Advisory Board manages the evolution of the Process Document . As part of a W3C Council , members of the Advisory Board hear and adjudicate on Submission Appeals and Formal Objections .
The Advisory Board is distinct from the Board of Directors and has no decision-making authority within W3C; its role is strictly advisory.
Note: While the AB as such does not have decision-making authority, its members do when sitting as part of a W3C Council .
Details about the Advisory Board (e.g., the list of Advisory Board participants, mailing list information, and summaries of Advisory Board meetings) are available at the Advisory Board home page [AB-HP] .
3.3.1.2. Composition of the Advisory Board
The
Advisory
Board
consists
of
nine
to
eleven
elected
participants
and
one
Chair
(who
may
be
one
of
the
elected
participants).
With
the
input
of
the
AB
,
the
Team
appoints
the
Chair,
who
should
choose
a
co-chair
among
the
elected
participants.
The
Upon
appointment,
the
Chair(s)
are
subject
to
ratification
by
secret
ballot
ballot,
requiring
approval
by
two
thirds
of
the
AB
upon
appointment.
elected
participants.
Chair
selection
must
be
run
at
least
at
the
start
of
each
regular
term,
as
well
as
when
a
majority
of
the
participants
request
it;
and
may
be
run
at
other
times
when
initiated
by
the
current
chairs
or
the
Team,
for
example
if
a
chair
steps
down
or
if
a
minority
of
the
participants
make
such
a
request.
The
team
also
appoints
a
Team
Staff
Contact
,
as
described
in
§ 3.4.1
Requirements
for
All
Chartered
Groups
.
The
CEO
and
Team
Staff
Contact
have
a
standing
invitation
to
all
regular
Advisory
Board
sessions.
The nine to eleven Advisory Board participants are elected by the W3C Advisory Committee following the AB/TAG nomination and election process .
The terms of elected Advisory Board participants are for two years . Terms are staggered so that each year, either five or six terms expire. If an individual is elected to fill an incomplete term, that individual’s term ends at the normal expiration date of that term. Regular Advisory Board terms begin on 1 July and end on 30 June.
3.3.1.3. Communications of the Advisory Board
The Team must make available a mailing list, confidential to the Advisory Board and Team, for the Advisory Board to use for its communication.
The Advisory Board should send a summary of each of its meetings to the Advisory Committee and other group Chairs. The Advisory Board should also report on its activities at each Advisory Committee meeting .
3.3.1.4. Liaisons between the Advisory Board and the Board of Directors
To
ensure
good
communication
between
the
AB
and
the
Board
of
Directors
and
facilitate
operational
and
management
consistency,
the
AB
may
appoint
up
to
two
of
its
participants
as
liaisons
to
the
Board
.
Such
appointees
are
expected
to
attend
and
participate
in
Board
meetings
and
access
Board
materials
as
Non-voting
Observers.
[BYLAWS]
They
do
not
form
part
of
the
Board
's
’s
decision-making
body,
and
may
be
excluded
from
such
participation
in
accordance
with
applicable
Board
procedures.
The Advisory Board should reevaluate who is assigned to this role at least at the beginning of each term, and may swap its appointees more frequently as they deem appropriate.
3.3.2. Technical Architecture Group (TAG)
3.3.2.1. Role of the Technical Architecture Group
The mission of the TAG is stewardship of the Web architecture. There are three aspects to this mission:
- to document and build consensus around principles of Web architecture and to interpret and clarify these principles when necessary;
- to resolve issues involving general Web architecture brought to the TAG;
- to help coordinate cross-technology architecture developments inside and outside W3C.
As part of a W3C Council , the members of the TAG hear and adjudicate on Submission Appeals and Formal Objections .
The
TAG
's
’s
scope
is
limited
to
technical
issues
about
Web
architecture.
The
TAG
should
not
consider
administrative,
process,
or
organizational
policy
issues
of
W3C,
which
are
generally
addressed
by
the
W3C
Advisory
Committee,
Advisory
Board,
and
Team.
Please
refer
to
the
TAG
charter
[TAG-CHARTER]
for
more
information
about
the
background
and
scope
of
the
TAG,
and
the
expected
qualifications
of
TAG
participants.
When
the
TAG
votes
to
resolve
an
issue,
each
TAG
participant
(whether
appointed,
elected,
or
the
Chair)
has
one
vote;
see
also
the
section
on
voting
in
the
TAG
charter
[TAG-CHARTER]
and
the
general
section
on
votes
in
this
Process
Document.
Details about the TAG (e.g., the list of TAG participants, mailing list information, and summaries of TAG meetings) are available at the TAG home page [TAG-HP] .
3.3.2.2. Composition of the Technical Architecture Group
The TAG consists of:
- Tim Berners-Lee, who is a life member;
- Three participants appointed by the Team ;
- Eight participants elected by the Advisory Committee following the AB/TAG nomination and election process .
Participants in the TAG choose by consensus their Chair or co-Chairs; in the absence of consensus, the Team appoints the Chair or co-Chairs of the TAG. The Chair or co-Chairs must be selected from the participants of the TAG. Chair selection must be run at least at the start of each regular term, as well as when a majority of the participants request it; and may be run at other times when initiated by the current chairs or the Team, for example if a chair steps down or if a minority of the participants make such a request.
The
Team
also
appoints
a
Team
Staff
Contact
[TEAM-CONTACT]
for
the
TAG,
as
described
in
§ 3.4.1
Requirements
for
All
Chartered
Groups
.
The terms of TAG participants last for two years . Terms are staggered so that four elected terms and either one or two appointed terms expire each year. If an individual is appointed or elected to fill an incomplete term, that individual’s term ends at the normal expiration date of that term. Regular TAG terms begin on 1 February and end on 31 January.
3.3.2.3. Communications of the Technical Architecture Group
The Team must make available two mailing lists for the TAG:
- a public discussion (not just input) list for issues of Web architecture. The TAG will conduct its public business on this list.
- a Member-only list for discussions within the TAG and for requests to the TAG that, for whatever reason, cannot be made on the public list.
The TAG may also request the creation of additional topic-specific, public mailing lists. For some TAG discussions (e.g., a Submission Appeal ), the TAG may use a list that will be Member-only .
The TAG should send a summary of each of its meetings to the Advisory Committee and other group Chairs. The TAG should also report on its activities at each Advisory Committee meeting .
3.3.3. Participation in Elected Groups
3.3.3.1. Expectations for Elected Groups Participants
Advisory Board and TAG participants have a special role within W3C: they are elected by the Membership and appointed by the Team with the expectation that they will use their best judgment to find the best solutions for the Web, not just for any particular network, technology, vendor, or user. Advisory Board and TAG participants are expected to participate regularly and fully. Advisory Board and TAG participants should attend Advisory Committee meetings .
Individuals elected or appointed to the Advisory Board or TAG act in their personal capacity, to serve the needs of the W3C membership as a whole, and the Web community. Whether they are Member representatives or Invited Experts, their activities in those roles are separate and distinct from their activities on the Advisory Board or TAG.
An individual participates on the Advisory Board or TAG from the moment the individual’s term begins until the seat is vacated (e.g. because the term ends). Although Advisory Board and TAG participants do not advocate for the commercial interests of their employers, their participation does carry the responsibilities associated with Member representation, Invited Expert status, or Team representation (as described in the section on the AB/TAG nomination and election process ).
Participation in the TAG or AB is afforded to the specific individuals elected or appointed to those positions, and a participant’s seat must not be delegated to any other person.
3.3.3.2. Elected Groups Participation Constraints
Given the few seats available on the Advisory Board and the TAG , and in order to ensure that the diversity of W3C Members is represented:
- Two participants with the same primary affiliation per § 3.3.3.3 Advisory Board and Technical Architecture Group Elections must not both occupy elected seats on the TAG except when this is caused by a change of affiliation of an existing participant. At the completion of the next regularly scheduled election for the TAG, the organization must have returned to having at most one seat.
- Two participants with the same primary affiliation per § 3.3.3.3 Advisory Board and Technical Architecture Group Elections must not both occupy elected seats on the AB. If, for whatever reason, these constraints are not satisfied (e.g., because an AB participant changes jobs), one participant must cease AB participation until the situation has been resolved. If after 30 days the situation has not been resolved, the Chair will apply the verifiable random selection procedure described below to choose one person for continued participation and declare the other seat(s) vacant.
- An individual must not participate on both the TAG and the AB.
3.3.3.3. Advisory Board and Technical Architecture Group Elections
The Advisory Board and a portion of the Technical Architecture Group are elected by the Advisory Committee , using a Single Transferable Vote system. An election begins when the Team sends a Call for Nominations to the Advisory Committee. Any Call for Nominations specifies the minimum and maximum number of available seats, the deadline for nominations, details about the specific vote tabulation system selected by the Team for the election, and operational information such as how to nominate a candidate. The Team may modify the tabulation system after the Call for Nominations but must stabilize it no later than the Call for Votes. The Team announces appointments after the results of the election are known, and before the start of the term, as described in § 3.3.3.4 Technical Architecture Group Appointments .
In the case of regularly scheduled elections of the TAG , the minimum and maximum number of available seats are the same: the 4 seats of the terms expiring that year, plus the number of other seats that are vacant or will be vacant by the time the newly elected members take their seats.
In the case of regularly scheduled elections of the AB , the minimum and maximum number of available seats differ: The maximum number is the 5 or 6 seats of the terms expiring that year, plus the number of other seats that are vacant or will be vacant by the time the newly elected members take their seats; the minimum number is such that when added to the occupied seats from the prior year, the minimum size of the AB (9) is reached.
Each Member (or group of related Members ) may nominate one individual. A nomination must be made with the consent of the nominee. In order for an individual to be nominated as a Member representative, the individual must qualify for Member representation and the Member’s Advisory Committee representative must include in the nomination the (same) information required for a Member representative in a Working Group . In order for an individual to be nominated as an Invited Expert, the individual must provide the (same) information required for an Invited Expert in a Working Group and the nominating Advisory Committee representative must include that information in the nomination. In order for an individual to be nominated as a Team representative, the nominating Advisory Committee representative must first secure approval from Team management. A nominee is not required to be an employee of a Member organization, and may be a W3C Fellow . The nomination form must ask for the nominee’s primary affiliation , and this will be reported on the ballot. For most nominees, the primary affiliation is their employer and will match their affiliation in the W3C database. For contractors and invited experts, this will normally be their contracting company or their invited expert status; in some cases (e.g. where a consultant is consulting for only one organization) this may be the organization for whom the nominee is consulting. A change of affiliation is defined such that this field would carry a different answer if the nominee were to be re-nominated (therefore, terminating employment, or accepting new employment, are changes of affiliation). (Other formal relationships such as other contracts should be disclosed as potential conflicts of interest.) Each nomination should include a few informative paragraphs about the nominee. If an identified candidate’s nomination information is only partially complete as of the deadline for nominations, the Team may allow extra time for that candidate’s nomination to be completed, so long as it does not delay the election as a whole.
If, after the deadline for nominations, the number of nominees is:
- Greater than or equal to the minimum number of available seats and less than or equal to the maximum number of available seats, those nominees are thereby elected. This situation constitutes a tie for the purpose of assigning incomplete terms . Furthermore, if the number is less than the maximum number of available seats, the longest terms are filled first.
- Less than the minimum number of available seats, Calls for Nominations are issued until a sufficient number of people have been nominated. Those already nominated do not need to be renominated after a renewed call.
- Greater than the maximum number of available seats, the Team issues a Call for Votes that includes the names of all candidates, the (maximum) number of available seats, the deadline for votes, details about the vote tabulation system selected by the Team for the election, and operational information.
When there is a vote, each Member in Good Standing (or group of related Members ) may submit one ballot that ranks candidates in the Member’s preferred order. Once the deadline for votes has passed, the Team announces the results to the Advisory Committee . In case of a tie the verifiable random selection procedure described below will be used to fill the available seats.
The shortest incomplete term is assigned to the elected candidate ranked lowest by the tabulation of votes, the next shortest term to the next-lowest ranked elected candidate, and so on. In the case of a tie among those eligible for a incomplete term, the verifiable random selection procedure described below will be used to assign the incomplete term.
Refer to How to Organize an Advisory Board or TAG election [ELECTION-HOWTO] for more details.
3.3.3.4. Technical Architecture Group Appointments
The Team is responsible for appointing 3 of the participants to the Technical Architecture Group . This mechanism complements the election process. The Team should use its appointments to support a diverse and well-balanced TAG , including diversity of technical background, knowledge, and skill sets.
The Team should actively seek candidates for appointment to the TAG, and must make available to the W3C community at large a means to propose candidates for consideration, explicitly soliciting input from at least current and incoming TAG members, the Advisory Committee , and Working Group Chairs .
The constraints for appointment to the TAG are the same as for elected participants (see § 3.3.3.2 Elected Groups Participation Constraints and § 3.3.3.3 Advisory Board and Technical Architecture Group Elections ), with the additional constraint that a person must not be appointed for more than two consecutive terms. (Partial terms used to fill a vacated seat do not count towards this limit.)
Note:
Individuals
who
have
reached
the
Since
there
are
no
limits
on
elected
terms,
this
limit
of
two
consecutive
on
appointed
terms
may
freely
run
does
not
constrain
term-limited
appointees
from
running
for
election
if
they
wish
to
continue
serving
on
the
TAG
.
at
any
time.
The
Team
's
’s
choice
of
appointee(s)
is
subject
to
ratification
by
secret
ballot
by
both
the
AB
and
the
TAG
,
each
requiring
a
two-thirds
approval.
approval
from
each.
In
the
case
of
regularly
scheduled
elections,
the
TAG
participants
in
this
ratification
are
its
members
for
the
upcoming
term.
For regularly scheduled elections, selection begins once the results of the elections are known, and the Team should announce the ratified appointment(s) no later than the start of the regularly scheduled term. When an appointed seat is vacated outside of a regularly scheduled election, the Team should seek to appoint a replacement unless a regular Call for Nominations is scheduled within 2 months, and it must announce the ratified appointment no later than the Call for Nominations of the next scheduled election.
3.3.3.5. Verifiable Random Selection Procedure
When it is necessary to use a verifiable random selection process (e.g., in an AB or TAG election, to “draw straws” in case of a tie or to fill a incomplete term), W3C uses the random and verifiable procedure defined in RFC 3797 [RFC3797] . The procedure orders an input list of names (listed in alphabetical order by family name unless otherwise specified) into a “result order”.
W3C applies this procedure as follows:
- When N people have tied for M (less than N) seats. In this case, only the names of the N individuals who tied are provided as input to the procedure. The M seats are assigned in result order.
- After all elected individuals have been identified, when N people are eligible for M (less than N) incomplete terms. In this case, only the names of those N individuals are provided as input to the procedure. The incomplete terms are assigned in result order.
3.3.3.6. Elected Groups Vacated Seats
An Advisory Board or TAG participant’s seat is vacated when:
- the participant resigns, or
- an Advisory Board or TAG participant changes affiliations such that the Advisory Board and TAG participation constraints are no longer met, or
- the CEO dismisses the participant for failing to meet the criteria in section § 3.1.1 Individual Participation Criteria , or
- their term ends.
If a participant changes affiliation, but the participation constraints are met, that participant’s seat becomes vacant at the next regularly scheduled election for that group.
Vacated seats are filled according to this schedule:
- When an appointed TAG seat is vacated, the Team appoints a replacement.
-
When
an
elected
seat
on
either
the
AB
or
TAG
is
vacated,
the
seat
is
filled
at
the
next
regularly
scheduled
election
for
the
group
unless
the
group
Chair
requests
that
W3C
hold
an
election
before
then
(for
instance,
due
to
the
group’s
workload).
- The group Chair should not request such an election if the next regularly scheduled election is fewer than three months away.
- The group Chair may request an election, and the election may begin, as soon as a current member gives notice of a resignation, including a resignation effective as of a given date in the future.
When such an election is held, the minimum number of available seats is such that when added to the number of continuing participants, the minimum total number of elected seats is met (8 for the TAG , 9 for the AB ); and the maximum number corresponds to all unoccupied seats. Except for the number of available seats and the length of the terms, the usual rules for Advisory Board and Technical Architecture Group Elections apply.
3.4. Chartered Groups: Working Groups and Interest Groups
This document defines two types of chartered groups :
- Working Groups .
-
Working
Groups
typically
produce
deliverables
(e.g.,
Recommendation
Track
technical
reports
,
software,
test
suites,
and
reviews
of
the
deliverables
of
other
groups)
as
defined
in
their
charter
.
Working Groups have additional participation requirements described in the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] , see particularly the “ Licensing Obligations of Working Group Participants ” and the patent claim exclusion process in “ Exclusion From W3C RF Licensing Requirements ”.
- Interest Groups .
-
The
primary
goal
of
an
Interest
Group
is
to
bring
together
people
who
wish
to
evaluate
potential
Web
technologies
and
policies.
An
Interest
Group
is
a
forum
for
the
exchange
of
ideas.
Interest Groups do not publish Recommendation Track technical reports ; but can publish technical reports on the Note Track .
3.4.1. Requirements for All Chartered Groups
Each group must have a charter . Requirements for the charter depend on the group type. All group charters must be public (even if other proceedings of the group are Member-only ).
Each
group
must
have
a
Chair
(or
co-Chairs)
to
facilitate
effective
discussion
and
coordinate
the
group’s
tasks.
activities.
The
Team
appoints
(and
re-appoints)
Chairs
for
all
groups.
The
Chair
is
a
Member
representative
,
a
Team
representative
,
or
an
Invited
Expert
,
(invited
by
the
Team
).
The
requirements
of
this
document
that
apply
to
those
types
of
participants
apply
to
Chairs
as
well.
Note: The role of the Chair [CHAIR] is described in the Art of Consensus [GUIDE] .
Each
group
must
have
a
Staff
Contact
(also
known
as
Team
Contact
,
),
who
acts
as
the
interface
between
the
Chair
,
group
participants,
and
the
rest
of
the
Team.
Note:
The
role
of
the
Team
Staff
Contact
[TEAM-CONTACT]
is
described
in
the
Art
of
Consensus
[GUIDE]
.
The
Chair
and
the
Team
Staff
Contact
of
a
group
should
not
be
the
same
individual.
Each
group
must
have
an
archived
mailing
list
for
formal
group
communication
(e.g.,
for
meeting
announcements
and
minutes
,
documentation
of
decisions,
and
Formal
Objections
to
decisions).
It
is
the
responsibility
of
the
Chair
and
Team
Staff
Contact
to
ensure
that
new
participants
are
subscribed
to
all
relevant
mailing
lists.
Refer
to
the
list
of
group
mailing
lists
[GROUP-MAIL]
.
A Chair may form task forces (composed of group participants) to carry out assignments for the group. The scope of these assignments must not exceed the scope of the group’s charter. A group should document the process it uses to create task forces (e.g., each task force might have an informal "charter"). Task forces do not publish technical reports ; the Working Group may choose to publish their results as part of a technical report.
3.4.2. Participation in Chartered Groups
There
are
three
types
of
individual
participants
in
a
Working
Group
:
Member
representatives
,
Invited
Experts
,
and
Team
representatives
(including
the
Team
Staff
Contact
).
There are four types of individual participants in an Interest Group : the same three types as for Working Groups plus, for an Interest Group where the only participation requirement is mailing list subscription , public participants .
Except where noted in this document or in a group charter, all participants share the same rights and responsibilities in a group; see also the individual participation criteria .
A participant may represent more than one organization in a Working Group or Interest Group . Those organizations must all be members of the group.
An individual may become a Working or Interest Group participant at any time during the group’s existence. See also relevant requirements in “Joining an Already Established Working Group” in the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] .
On
an
exceptional
basis,
a
Working
or
Interest
Group
participant
may
designate
a
substitute
to
attend
a
meeting
and
should
inform
the
Chair
.
The
substitute
may
act
on
behalf
of
the
participant,
including
for
votes
.
For
the
substitute
to
vote,
the
participant
must
inform
the
Chair
in
writing
in
advance.
As
a
courtesy
to
the
group,
if
the
substitute
is
not
well-versed
in
the
group’s
discussions,
the
regular
participant
should
authorize
another
participant
to
act
as
proxy
for
votes.
To allow rapid progress, Working Groups are intended to be small (typically fewer than 15 people) and composed of experts in the area defined by the charter. In principle, Interest Groups have no limit on the number of participants. When a Working Group grows too large to be effective, W3C may split it into an Interest Group (a discussion forum) and a much smaller Working Group (a core group of highly dedicated participants).
3.4.3. Types of Participants in Chartered Groups
3.4.3.1. Member Representative in a Working Group
An individual is a Member representative in a Working Group if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
- the Advisory Committee representative of the Member in question has designated the individual as a Working Group participant, and
- the individual qualifies for Member representation .
To
designate
an
individual
as
a
Member
representative
in
a
Working
Group
,
an
Advisory
Committee
representative
must
provide
the
Chair
and
Team
Staff
Contact
with
all
of
the
following
information
,
in
addition
to
any
other
information
required
by
the
Call
for
Participation
and
charter
(including
the
participation
requirements
of
the
W3C
Patent
Policy
[PATENT-POLICY]
):
- The name of the W3C Member the individual represents and whether the individual is an employee of that Member organization;
- A statement that the individual accepts the participation terms set forth in the charter (with an indication of charter date or version);
- A statement that the Member will provide the necessary financial support for participation (e.g., for travel, telephone calls, and conferences).
A Member participates in a Working Group from the moment the first Member representative joins the group until either of the following occurs:
- the group closes, or
- the Member resigns from the Working Group; this is done through the Member’s Advisory Committee representative.
3.4.3.2. Member Representative in an Interest Group
When the participation requirements exceed Interest Group mailing list subscription , an individual is a Member representative in an Interest Group if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
- the Advisory Committee representative of the Member in question has designated the individual as an Interest Group participant, and
- the individual qualifies for Member representation .
To designate an individual as a Member representative in an Interest Group , the Advisory Committee representative must follow the instructions in the Call for Participation and charter.
Member participation in an Interest Group ceases under the same conditions as for a Working Group.
3.4.3.3. Invited Expert in a Working Group
The Chair may invite an individual with a particular expertise to participate in a Working Group. This individual may represent an organization in the group (e.g., if acting as a liaison with another organization).
An individual is an Invited Expert in a Working Group if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
- the Chair has designated the individual as a group participant,
-
the
TeamStaff Contact has agreed with the Chair’s choice, and -
the
individual
has
provided
the
information
required
of
an
Invited
Expert
to
the
Chair
and
TeamStaff Contact.
To
designate
an
individual
as
an
Invited
Expert
in
a
Working
Group,
the
Chair
must
inform
the
Team
Staff
Contact
and
provide
rationale
for
the
choice.
When
the
Chair
and
the
Team
Staff
Contact
disagree
about
a
designation,
the
CEO
determines
whether
the
individual
will
be
invited
to
participate
in
the
Working
Group.
To participate in a Working Group as an Invited Expert , an individual must :
- identify the organization, if any, the individual represents as a participant in this group,
- agree to the terms of the invited expert and collaborators agreement [COLLABORATORS-AGREEMENT] ,
- accept the participation terms set forth in the charter, including the participation requirements of the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] , especially in “Note on Licensing Commitments for Invited Experts” and in “Disclosure”, indicating a specific charter date or version,
- disclose whether the individual is an employee of a W3C Member; see the conflict of interest policy ,
- provide a statement of who will provide the necessary financial support for the individual’s participation (e.g., for travel, telephone calls, and conferences), and
- if the individual’s employer (including a self-employed individual) or the organization the individual represents is not a W3C Member, indicate whether that organization intends to join W3C. If the organization does not intend to join W3C, indicate reasons the individual is aware of for this choice.
The Chair should not designate as an Invited Expert in a Working Group an individual who is an employee of a W3C Member. The Chair must not use Invited Expert status to circumvent participation limits imposed by the charter .
An Invited Expert participates in a Working Group from the moment the individual joins the group until any of the following occurs:
- the group closes, or
- the Chair or CEO withdraws the invitation to participate, or
- the individual resigns .
3.4.3.4. Invited Expert in an Interest Group
When the participation requirements exceed Interest Group mailing list subscription , the participation requirements for an Invited Expert in an Interest Group are the same as those for an Invited Expert in a Working Group .
3.4.3.5. Team Representative in a Working Group
An individual is a Team representative in a Working Group when so designated by W3C management. Team representatives both contribute to the technical work and help ensure the group’s proper integration with the rest of W3C.
A Team representative participates in a Working Group from the moment the individual joins the group until any of the following occurs:
- the group closes, or
- W3C management changes Team representation by sending email to the Chair, copying the group mailing list.
The Team participates in a Working Group from the moment the creation of the group is announced until the group closes.
3.4.3.6. Team Representative in an Interest Group
When the participation requirements exceed Interest Group mailing list subscription , an individual is a Team representative in an Interest Group when so designated by W3C management.
4. Lifecycle of Chartered Groups
W3C creates charters for chartered groups based on W3C community interest. W3C fosters awareness of charters , improves their quality, and gauges Membership support in two formal phases:
A refinement phase helps ensure charters are mission-aligned, reflect community input and consensus , and have been well-socialized and widely reviewed .
Charters then are formally approved through an AC Review and W3C Decision (see § 4.4 Charter Review and Approval ).
4.1.
Initiating
Charter
Development
Refinement
W3C
creates
Charters
can
originate
in
many
venues,
including
existing
Working
or
Interest
Groups
,
Community
Groups,
and
from
the
Membership
.
Prior
to
the
formal
refinement
phase,
the
Team
engages
with
those
various
parties
to
help
prepare
charters
for
chartered
groups
broader
audiences.
Formal
charter
refinement
based
on
interest
from
(see
below)
is
initiated
by
the
Members
Team
sending
a
charter
review
notice
to
the
Advisory
Committee
,
to
the
public,
and,
in
the
case
of
rechartering,
to
the
affected
Group
.
This charter review notice must include:
A short summary of the proposal.
The location of the charter draft , which must be public.
How to participate in the discussion of this charter draft and
Team.where to file issues.The
Teamexpected duration of the charter refinement phase, which mustnotifynot be less than 28 days, and should not be more than 6 months.Who the Chartering Facilitator is.
The Team is responsible for initiating charter refinement at its discretion, in consideration of discussions with the community.
An
Advisory
Committee
when
representative
may
formally
request
that
the
Team
initiate
charter
refinement
.
The
Team
may
deny
such
a
request
if
it
thinks
the
proposal
is
insufficiently
mature,
does
not
align
with
W3C’s
scope
and
mission,
or
otherwise
does
not
meet
the
charter
for
assessment
criteria
described
in
the
Guide
(see
How
to
Create
a
new
Working
Group
or
Interest
Group
),
and
must
reply
with
its
rationale.
This
rejection
is
a
Team
Decision
,
and
can
be
appealed
only
by
5
or
more
Members
,
through
their
Advisory
Committee
representative
,
formally
objecting
to
the
decision
within
8
weeks
of
the
decision
being
announced.
In
this
case
the
Team
must
start
an
appeal
vote
on
whether
to
overturn
the
Team
Decision
.
(No
action
is
required
to
be
taken
when
fewer
than
5
members
object.)
4.2. Charter Refinement
During
charter
refinement
,
the
W3C
community,
under
the
guidance
of
the
Team
,
further
develops
the
charter
draft
with
the
goal
of
achieving
consensus
on
the
proposal.
The
Chartering
Facilitator
—who
is
chosen
(and
may
be
replaced)
by
the
Team
—is
responsible
for
seeking
community
consensus
among
those
participating
in
development.
This
the
refinement
process
and
making
decisions
reflecting
that
consensus
.
In
cases
where
consensus
cannot
be
found,
the
Chartering
Facilitator
may
ask
the
Team
to
make
a
Team
Decision
,
and
must
document
the
rationale
for
the
decision.
Note:
The
Chartering
Facilitator
is
intended
not
necessarily
the
Chair
of
the
group
being
chartered.
During charter refinement :
Wide review of the charter draft is initiated and completed.
All issues filed against the charter draft must be formally addressed , and their resolutions tracked in a disposition of comments highlighting any issues not resolved by consensus.
Before
the
end
of
the
announced
duration
for
the
charter
refinement
phase,
the
Team
(informed
by
the
work
of
the
Chartering
Facilitator
)
must
decide
which
of
the
following
to
raise
awareness,
even
do:
Complete charter refinement by initiating AC Review of the charter draft .
Abandon the proposal.
Extend the charter refinement period.
The
Team
must
announce
its
decision
with
the
same
visibility
as
the
initial
charter
review
notice
,
and
must
include
a
rationale
if
they
are
not
initiating
AC
Review
.
Reaching
the
end
of
the
announced
period
(including
any
announced
extension)
with
no
formal
proposal
announced
decision
is
yet
available.
Advisory
Committee
representatives
considered
a
de-facto
Team
decision
to
abandon
the
proposal.
The
Team
may
provide
feedback
on
revise
such
a
decision
by
announcing
an
alternative
decision.
Formal Objections filed during the charter refinement phase are specially handled:
Objections to decisions pertaining to the content of the charter, as well as objections to initiating the AC Review , are considered registered at the close of the Advisory Committee
discussion listReviewor via other designated channels.of the charter, and are registered against that W3C Decision .Note: This enables all Formal Objections on the same proposed charter to be handled together.
-
W3CObjections to abandoning the proposal or to extending the refinement period can be appealed only if 5 or more Members, through their Advisory Committee representative , formally object to the decision within 8 weeks of the decision. In this case, the Teammaymustbegin workdo one of the following:Abide by the objectors' request, if they all agree on
a Working Groupthe alternative course of action (e.g., to abandon, extend, orInterest Groupcomplete charterat any time.refinement).-
Initiate an AC Review to formally solicit the input of the community and take a W3C Decision on the subsequent course of action.
Convene a Council to decide the subsequent course of action.
(No action is required to be taken when fewer than 5 members object.)
Any other objections are processed normally (See § 5.6 Addressing Formal Objections ).
4.2.
4.3.
Content
of
a
Charter
A Working Group or Interest Group charter must include all of the following information.
- The group’s mission (e.g., develop a technology or process, review the work of other groups).
- The scope of the group’s work and criteria for success.
-
The
duration
of
the
group (typically from six months to two years).proposed charter for the group. - The nature of any deliverables (technical reports, reviews of the deliverables of other groups, or software).
-
Expected
milestone
dates
where
available.
Note: A charter
isdoes notrequiredneed to include schedules for review of other group’s deliverables. - The process for the group to approve the release of deliverables (including intermediate results).
- Any dependencies by groups within or outside of W3C on the deliverables of this group. For any dependencies, the charter must specify the mechanisms for communication about the deliverables.
- Any dependencies of this group on other groups within or outside of W3C. Such dependencies include interactions with W3C Horizontal Groups [CHARTER] .
- The level of confidentiality of the group’s proceedings and deliverables.
- The name and affiliation of the Chair or co-Chairs.
- Meeting mechanisms and expected frequency.
- If known, the date of the first face-to-face meeting . The date of the first face-to-face meeting of a proposed group must not be sooner than eight weeks after the date of the proposal.
- Communication mechanisms to be employed within the group, between the group and the rest of W3C, and with the general public.
- Any voting procedures or requirements other than those specified in § 5.2.3 Deciding by Vote .
- An estimate of the expected time commitment from participants.
- The expected time commitment and level of involvement by the Team (e.g., to track developments, write and edit technical reports, develop code, or organize pilot experiments).
- Intellectual property information. What are the intellectual property (including patents and copyright) considerations affecting the success of the Group? In particular, is there any reason to believe that it will be difficult to meet the Royalty-Free licensing goals in “Licensing Goals for W3C Specifications” in the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] ?
See also the charter requirements in “Licensing Goals for W3C Specifications” in the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] .
For every Recommendation Track deliverable that continues work on a technical report published under any other Charter (including a predecessor group of the same name), for which there is at least an existing First Public Working Draft the description of that deliverable in the proposed charter of the adopting Working Group must provide the following information:
- The title, stable URL, and publication date of the Working Draft or other Recommendation-track document that will serve as the basis for work on the deliverable (labeled “ Adopted Draft ”);
- The title, stable URL, and publication date of the document that was used as the basis for its most recent Exclusion Opportunity as per the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] . (labeled “ Exclusion Draft ”); and
- The stable URL of the Working Group charter under which the Exclusion Draft was published (labeled the “ Exclusion Draft Charter ”).
All of the above data must be identified in the adopting Working Group’s charter using the labels indicated.
The Adopted Draft and the Exclusion Draft must each be adopted in their entirety and without any modification. The proposed charter must state the dates on which the Exclusion Opportunity that arose on publishing the Exclusion Draft began and ended. As per “Joining an Already Established Working Group” in the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] , this potentially means that exclusions can only be made immediately on joining a Working Group.
An Interest Group charter may include provisions regarding participation, including specifying that the only requirement for participation (by anyone) in the Interest Group is subscription to the Interest Group mailing list . This type of Interest Group may have public participants .
A charter may include provisions other than those required by this document. The charter should highlight whether additional provisions impose constraints beyond those of the W3C Process Document (e.g., limits on the number of individuals in a Working Group who represent the same Member organization or group of related Members ).
4.3.
4.4.
Advisory
Committee
Review
of
a
Charter
Review
and
Approval
4.4.1. New Charters and Major Changes
The
Team
Any
new
charter
must
solicit
Advisory
Committee
review
(including
re-chartering
of
existing
chartered
groups
)
and
any
change
that
is
not
a
minor
change
(per
§ 4.4.2
Minor
Changes
to
Active
Charters
)
to
an
already-approved
charter
of
every
new
or
substantively
modified
a
Working
Group
or
Interest
Group
charter,
except
for
either:
must
be
approved
by
a
W3C
Decision
following
an
AC
Review
of
that
charter
extension
substantive
changes
.
Modifications
to
a
charter
that
do
not
affect
should
have
the
way
consensus
of
the
group
functions
in
any
significant
way.
group.
The
review
period
must
be
at
least
28
days.
The
following
are
examples
of
substantive
changes
that
would
not
require
an
Any
Advisory
Committee
Review
:
the
addition
of
representative
may
request
an
in-scope
deliverable,
a
change
of
Team
Contact
,
or
a
change
of
Chair
.
Such
changes
must
nonetheless
be
announced
extended
review
period
in
response
to
the
Advisory
Committee
and
to
participants
in
Call
for
Review;
upon
receipt
of
any
such
request,
the
Working
Team
or
in
the
Interest
Group
,
and
a
rationale
must
be
provided.
extend
the
review
period
to
at
least
60
days.
The
Call
for
Review
of
a
substantively
modified
charter
must
highlight
important
changes
(e.g.,
regarding
deliverables
changes
in
scope,
deliverables,
or
resource
allocation)
and
must
include
rationale
for
the
those
changes.
As
part
of
the
Advisory
Committee
review
The
Call
for
Review
of
any
a
new
or
substantively
modified
Working
Group
charter,
any
Advisory
Committee
representative
charter
may
must
request
an
extended
review
period.
include
a
disposition
of
comments
received
during
the
charter
refinement
process,
highlighting
any
issues
that
were
closed
despite
sustained
objections.
4.4.2. Minor Changes to Active Charters
Such
Editorial
changes
or
substantive
changes
to
a
request
must
charter
(including
extensions
)
that
do
not
affect
the
scope
of
the
group’s
work
or
the
way
the
group
functions
in
any
significant
way
are
deemed
minor
changes
and
may
be
submitted
with
approved
by
a
Member’s
comments
Team
Decision
,
in
response
which
case
they
do
not
require
charter
refinement
nor
Advisory
Committee
Review
.
Any
change
to
the
Call
for
Review.
Upon
receipt
scope
of
any
such
request,
the
Team
charter
or
addition
of
a
new
REC
track
deliverable
that
does
not
fall
within
the
scope
of
an
existing
deliverable
is
a
major,
not
minor
,
change.
The
following
are
examples
of
minor
changes
:
the
renaming
or
restructuring
(e.g.
splitting
or
combining)
of
existing
in-scope
deliverables,
the
addition
of
new
Note
track
deliverables
that
help
explain
the
group’s
work
a
change
of
Staff
Contact
,
or
a
change
of
Chair
.
Minor
changes
,
other
than
a
change
of
Staff
Contact
,
must
should
ensure
that
have
the
Call
for
Participation
for
consensus
of
the
Working
Group
occurs
at
least
60
days
after
group.
The
Team
may
nevertheless
choose
to
initiate
charter
refinement
and/or
Advisory
Committee
Review
when
it
thinks
the
Call
for
changes
would
benefit
from
more
scrutiny
or
explicit
buy-in.
Though
Advisory
Committee
Review
of
is
not
required,
such
changes
must
still
be
announced
to
the
charter.
Advisory
Committee
,
and
to
participants
in
the
Working
or
Interest
Group,
and
a
rationale
must
be
provided.
4.4.
4.5.
Call
for
Participation
in
a
Chartered
Group
Deciding
whether
to
adopt
a
proposed
Working
Group
or
Interest
Group
charter
is
a
W3C
Decision
.
Charters
may
be
amended
based
on
review
comments
per
§ 5.7.2
After
Determining
the
Review
Period
W3C
Decision
before
the
Call
for
Participation.
If
the
decision
is
to
charter
the
group,
the
Team
must
issue
a
Call
for
Participation
to
the
Advisory
Committee.
For
a
new
group,
this
announcement
officially
creates
the
group.
The
announcement
must
include
a
reference
to
the
charter
,
the
name(s)
of
the
group’s
Chair
(s),
Chair(s)
,
and
the
name(s)
of
the
Team
Contact
(s).
Staff
Contact(s)
.
After a Call for Participation, any Member representatives and Invited Experts must be designated (or re-designated). When a group is re-chartered, individuals participating in the Working Group or Interest Group before the new Call for Participation may attend any meetings held within forty-five (45) days of the Call for Participation even if they have not yet formally rejoined the group (i.e., committed to the terms of the charter and patent policy).
Advisory Committee representatives may initiate an Advisory Committee Appeal against the decision to create or substantially modify a Working Group or Interest Group charter.
4.5.
4.6.
Charter
Extension
The
Team
may
decide
to
extend
a
Working
Group
or
Interest
Group
charter
with
no
other
substantive
modifications.
The
Team
must
announce
such
extensions
to
the
Advisory
Committee
.
The
announcement
must
indicate
the
new
duration.
The
announcement
must
also
include
rationale
for
the
extension,
a
reference
to
the
charter
,
and
the
Group
homepage
(which
includes
at
least
the
name(s)
of
the
group’s
Chair
(s),
Chair(s)
,
the
name
of
the
Team
Staff
Contact
,
and
instructions
for
joining
the
group).
After a charter extension, Advisory Committee representatives and the Chair are not required to re-designate Member representatives and Invited Experts .
Advisory Committee representatives may initiate an Advisory Committee Appeal against a Team decision regarding the extension of a Working Group or Interest Group charter.
4.6.
4.7.
Chartered
Group
Closure
A Working Group or Interest Group charter specifies a duration for the group.
The Team , the TAG , or the AB may propose to close a group prior to the date specified in the charter in any of the following circumstances:
-
There are insufficient member resources to produce chartered deliverables or to maintain the group, according to priorities established within W3C.
-
A Patent Advisory Group concluded that the work should be terminated.
-
The TAG or AB determined that continuing operation of the chartered group or its work would be detrimental to W3C or its mission.
-
The group produced all chartered deliverables ahead of schedule.
Such a proposal to close a group must be accompanied by rationale, and the proposal must be confirmed by an AC Review as a W3C Decision .
Closing a Working Group has implications with respect to the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] .
5. Decisions
W3C attempts to resolve issues through dialog. Individuals who disagree strongly with a decision should register with the Chair any Formal Objections .
5.1. Types of Decisions
The Chair of a Working Group or Interest Group has the prerogative to make certain decisions based on their own judgment. Such decisions are called chair decisions .
In contrast, decisions taken by the Chair of a Working Group or Interest Group on the basis of having assessed the consensus of the group or following a vote (see § 5.2.3 Deciding by Vote ) are called group decisions (also known as group “resolutions”).
Decisions made by members of the Team in connection with this Process, based on their own individual or collective judgement, are called Team Decisions .
In contrast, a W3C decision is determined by the Team on behalf of the W3C community by assessing the consensus of the W3C Community after an Advisory Committee review .
5.2. Consensus Building
5.2.1. Consensus
Consensus is a core value of W3C. To promote consensus, the W3C process requires Chairs to ensure that groups consider all legitimate views and objections, and endeavor to resolve them, whether these views and objections are expressed by the active participants of the group or by others (e.g., another W3C group, a group in another organization, or the general public). Decisions may be made during meetings ( face-to-face or distributed ) as well as through persistent text-based discussions .
The following terms are used in this document to describe the level of support for a decision among a set of eligible individuals:
- Consensus :
- A substantial number of individuals in the set support the decision and there is no sustained objection from anybody in the set. Individuals in the set may abstain. Abstention is either an explicit expression of no opinion or silence by an individual in the set.
- Unanimity :
- The particular case of consensus where all individuals in the set support the decision (i.e., no individual in the set abstains).
- Dissent :
- At least one individual in the set sustains an objection.
Note: A Formal Objection always indicates a sustained objection, but isn’t necessary to express it (except in the context of formal AC Reviews ). Disagreement with a proposed decision, however, does not always rise to the level of sustained objection, as individuals could be willing to accept a decision while expressing disagreement.
By default, the set of individuals eligible to participate in a decision is the set of group participants. The Process Document does not require a quorum for decisions (i.e., the minimal number of eligible participants required to be present before the Chair can call a question). A charter may include a quorum requirement for consensus decisions.
Where unanimity is not possible, a group should strive to make consensus decisions where there is significant support and few abstentions. The Process Document does not require a particular percentage of eligible participants to agree to a motion in order for a decision to be made. To avoid decisions where there is widespread apathy, (i.e., little support and many abstentions), groups should set minimum thresholds of active support before a decision can be recorded. The appropriate percentage may vary depending on the size of the group and the nature of the decision. A charter may include threshold requirements for consensus decisions. For instance, a charter might require a supermajority of eligible participants (i.e., some established percentage above 50%) to support certain types of consensus decisions.
If questions or disagreements arise, the final determination of consensus remains with the chair.
5.2.2. Managing Dissent
In some cases, even after careful consideration of all points of view, a group might find itself unable to reach consensus. The Chair may record a decision where there is dissent so that the group can make progress (for example, to produce a deliverable in a timely manner). Dissenters cannot stop a group’s work simply by saying that they cannot live with a decision. When the Chair believes that the Group has duly considered the legitimate concerns of dissenters as far as is possible and reasonable, the group should move on.
Groups should favor proposals that create the weakest objections. This is preferred over proposals that are supported by a large majority but that cause strong objections from a few people. As part of making a decision where there is dissent , the Chair is expected to be aware of which participants work for the same (or related ) Member organizations and weigh their input accordingly.
Note: Dissenters can escalate their sustained objection to a decision by registering a Formal Objection .
5.2.3. Deciding by Vote
A group should only conduct a vote to resolve a substantive issue after the Chair has determined that all available means of reaching consensus through technical discussion and compromise have failed, and that a vote is necessary to break a deadlock. In this case the Chair must record (e.g., in the minutes of the meeting or in an archived email message):
- an explanation of the issue being voted on;
- the decision to conduct a vote (e.g., a simple majority vote) to resolve the issue;
- the outcome of the vote;
- any Formal Objections.
In order to vote to resolve a substantive issue, an individual must be a group participant . Each organization represented in the group must have at most one vote, even when the organization is represented by several participants in the group (including Invited Experts). For the purposes of voting:
- A Member or group of related Members is considered a single organization.
- The Team is considered an organization.
Unless the charter states otherwise, Invited Experts may vote.
If
a
participant
is
unable
to
attend
a
vote,
that
individual
may
authorize
anyone
at
the
meeting
to
act
as
a
proxy
.
proxy.
The
absent
participant
must
inform
the
Chair
in
writing
who
is
acting
as
proxy,
with
written
instructions
on
the
use
of
the
proxy.
For
a
Working
Group
or
Interest
Group,
see
the
related
requirements
regarding
an
individual
who
attends
a
meeting
as
a
substitute
for
a
participant.
A group may vote for other purposes than to resolve a substantive issue. For instance, the Chair often conducts a “straw poll” vote as a means of determining whether there is consensus about a potential decision.
A group may also vote to make a process decision. For example, it is appropriate to decide by simple majority whether to hold a meeting in San Francisco or San Jose (there’s not much difference geographically). When simple majority votes are used to decide minor issues, voters are not required to state the reasons for votes, and the group is not required to record individual votes.
A group charter may include formal voting procedures (e.g., quorum or threshold requirements) for making decisions about substantive issues.
5.3. Formally Addressing an Issue
In the context of this document, a group has formally addressed an issue when it has sent a public, substantive response to the reviewer who raised the issue. A substantive response is expected to include rationale for decisions (e.g., a technical explanation, a pointer to charter scope, or a pointer to a requirements document). The adequacy of a response is measured against what a W3C reviewer would generally consider to be technically sound. If a group believes that a reviewer’s comments result from a misunderstanding, the group should seek clarification before reaching a decision.
As a courtesy, both Chairs and reviewers should set expectations for the schedule of responses and acknowledgments. The group should reply to a reviewer’s initial comments in a timely manner. The group should set a time limit for acknowledgment by a reviewer of the group’s substantive response; a reviewer cannot block a group’s progress. It is common for a reviewer to require a week or more to acknowledge and comment on a substantive response. The group’s responsibility to respond to reviewers does not end once a reasonable amount of time has elapsed. However, reviewers should realize that their comments will carry less weight if not sent to the group in a timely manner.
Substantive responses should be recorded. The group should maintain an accurate summary of all substantive issues and responses to them (e.g., in the form of an issues list with links to mailing list archives).
5.4. Reopening a Decision When Presented With New Information
The Chair may reopen a decision when presented with new information, including:
- additional technical information,
- comments by email from participants who were unable to attend a scheduled meeting,
- comments by email from meeting attendees who chose not to speak out during a meeting (e.g., so they could confer later with colleagues or for cultural reasons).
The Chair should record that a decision has been reopened, and must do so upon request from a group participant.
5.5.
Registering
Formal
Objections
Registering
Formal
Objections
Any
individual
(regardless
of
whether
they
are
associated
with
a
Member)
may
appeal
any
decision
made
in
connection
with
this
Process
(except
those
having
a
different
appeal
process)
by
registering
a
Formal
Objection
with
the
Team
.
Group
participants
should
inform
their
Team
Staff
Contact
as
well
as
the
group’s
Chair(s).
The
Team
Staff
Contact
must
inform
the
CEO
when
a
group
participant
has
also
raised
concerns
about
due
process.
Note: In this document, the term Formal Objection is used to emphasize this process implication: Formal Objections receive formal consideration and a formal response. The word “objection” used alone has its ordinary English connotations. See § 5.2 Consensus Building .
A Formal Objection must include a summary of the issue (whether technical or procedural), the decision being appealed, and the rationale for the objection. It should cite technical arguments and propose changes that would remove the Formal Objection ; these proposals may be vague or incomplete. Formal Objections that do not provide substantive arguments or rationale are unlikely to receive serious consideration. Counter-arguments, rationales, and decisions should also be recorded.
A
No
later
than
when
the
relevant
Council
is
initiated
,
a
record
of
each
Formal
Objection
against
a
decision
regarding
a
publicly-available
document
must
be
made
publicly
available
;
likewise,
a
record
of
each
Formal
Objection
against
a
Member-visible
decision
must
be
made
available
to
Members
.
A
Call
for
Review
to
the
Advisory
Committee
must
identify
any
Formal
Objections
related
to
that
review.
This
requirement
is
waived
if
the
Formal
Objection
is
resolved
to
the
satisfaction
of
the
objector
before
its
confidentiality
is
changed
.
Note:
Formal
Objections
against
matter
in
a
technical
report
are
required
expected
to
be
fully
addressed
before
requesting
advancement
of
the
technical
report
.
A Formal Objection filed during an Advisory Committee Review is considered registered at the close of the review period.
Registering a Formal Objection initiates the process of addressing the Formal Objection . The resolution of a recorded Formal Objection—whether by a Council decision, adoption of a consensus proposal, retraction of the Formal Objection, etc.—must be recorded and made available at the same level of visibility as the record of the Formal Objection itself.
5.6. Addressing Formal Objections
5.6.1. Investigation and Mediation by the Team
The Team considers the Formal objection , researches the question, interviews parties, and so on, to make sure the problem and the various viewpoints are well understood, and to the extent possible, to arrive at a recommended disposition.
In parallel, the Team should start the steps necessary to convene a Council.
If the Team can resolve the issue to the satisfaction of the individual that filed the Formal Objection , the individual withdraws the objection and the disposition process terminates.
Otherwise,
upon
concluding
that
consensus
cannot
be
found,
and
no
later
than
90
days
after
the
Formal
Objection
being
registered,
the
Team
must
initiate
formation
of
a
W3C
Council
,
which
should
be
convened
within
45
days
of
being
initiated.
Concurrently,
it
must
prepare
a
report
for
deliver
to
the
Council
a
report
documenting
its
findings
and
attempts
to
find
consensus.
consensus,
and
hand
over
the
matter
to
the
W3C
Council
.
5.6.2. W3C Council
A W3C Council is the body convened to resolve Formal Objections by combining the capabilities and perspectives of the AB , the TAG , and the Team , and is tasked with doing so in the best interests of the Web and W3C.
5.6.2.1. Council Composition
Each W3C Council is composed of the following members (excepting any renounced or dismissed ):
-
the members of the Advisory Board
-
the elected and appointed members of the Technical Architecture Group
Participation in a W3C Council must not require attendance of face-to-face meetings .
A
distinct
instance
of
the
W3C
Council
is
convened
for
each
decision
being
appealed
or
objected
to.
Membership
The
list
of
each
potential
Council
instance
is
fixed
at
formation,
and
is
not
changed
by
any
members
evolves
as
AB
or
and
TAG
elections
occurring
before
that
terms
start
and
end
until
dismissal
and
renunciation
are
concluded,
at
which
point
the
membership
of
the
Council
has
reached
a
conclusion.
is
fixed.
However,
if
participation
the
number
of
active
members
in
a
Council
falls
so
low
as
to
hinder
effective
and
balanced
deliberations,
the
W3C
Council
Chair
should
dissolve
the
Council
and
call
for
a
new
one
to
be
convened.
Note: TAG and AB elections have no effect on the Council’s membership once it is fixed.
A
Team
member
is
assigned
to
act
as
the
Council
Team
Staff
Contact
,
to
support
this
Council
and
to
facilitate
adherence
to
this
Process.
5.6.2.2. Extraordinary Delegation
In extraordinary cases, if they feel a Council would not be the appropriate deciding body, a member of the Team (particularly the Legal Counsel) or any potential Council member may suggest that the decision for that specific Formal Objection be delegated to the W3C Board of Directors, to an officer of its corporation (such as the Legal Counsel), or to one or more specific individuals from the Team . The potential Council members then may confidentially discuss and must vote whether to delegate the decision for that specific Formal Objection . A decision to delegate must be supported by a two-thirds supermajority vote (i.e., at least twice as many votes in favor as against). Delegation in such cases cannot be later revoked.
The Team must inform the Advisory Committee when a Formal Objection has been delegated, and to whom it has been delegated.
5.6.2.3. Council Participation, Dismissal, and Renunciation
A potential Council member may be dismissed from the Council. In order to apply consistent criteria, the potential Council members decide collectively which reasons against service rise to a sufficient level for a potential member to be dismissed . No-one is automatically dismissed, and individual recusal is not used in the Council. Dismissal applies to an individual person in the context of a specific Council, and should be used rarely in order to preserve the greatest diversity on the Council.
Note: A W3C Council is a deliberative body whose purpose is to find the best way forward for the Web and for W3C. It is not a judicial body tasked with determining right or wrong.
The
Team
must
draft
a
list
of
potential
Council
members,
with
annotations
of
possible
reasons
for
dismissal
against
each
one.
The
W3C
community,
including
members
and
team,
and
potential
council
members,
must
be
given
an
opportunity
to
contribute
possible
reasons
to
this
list.
Affected
members
must
be
given
an
opportunity
to
respond
to
such
comments
about
themselves.
The
Team
may
report
comments
verbatim
or
may
paraphrase
them
while
preserving
their
intent;
they
may
also
elide
inappropriate
comments,
such
as
any
that
violate
applicable
laws
or
the
[CEPC]
[COC]
.
Before
a
Council
forms,
the
Team
presents
the
entire
list
of
potential
members
and
collected
reasons
and
responses
to
the
potential
Council
members,
who
then
consider
for
each
potential
member
whether
that
individual’s
participation
would
compromise
the
integrity
of
the
Council
decision,
and
vote
whether
to
dismiss
that
potential
member.
No
one
is
allowed
to
vote
on
their
own
dismissal;
each
dismissal
is
decided
by
simple
majority
of
those
not
abstaining.
enacted
if
there
are
at
least
as
many
ballots
for
as
against.
Note:
Since
dismissal
is
individual,
when
the
decision
being
objected
to
was
made
by
the
TAG
or
AB
acting
as
a
body,
the
entire
TAG
or
AB
is
not
expected
or
required
to
be
dismissed.
An individual may also renounce their seat on a Council, for strong reason, such as being forbidden by their employer to serve. The individual chooses the extent to which they explain their renunciation. Renunciation is disqualification from participation, not abstention, and should not be used to excuse an absence of participation.
Any person who has been dismissed or who renounces their seat does not receive Council materials, take part in its deliberations, help in the determination of consensus, or vote. The W3C Council may still solicit and hear their testimony, as they can of anyone else in the W3C community.
5.6.2.4.
Unanimous
Short
Circuit
The
full
Council
process
may
be
short-circuited
if
the
Team
recommends
a
resolution
and
every
potential
member
members
of
a
Council
who
is
are
not
renouncing
their
seat
votes
confirm
it
by
a
vote
which
results
in
both
of
the
following:
at least 80% of them vote affirmatively
(no abstentions)to adopt thisresolution.resolutionnone of them vote against adopting the resolution
The request for confirmation must be open for a period of at least two weeks, or until every potential member of the Council not renouncing their seat has voted, whichever is shortest.
This step may be run concurrently with § 5.6.2.3 Council Participation, Dismissal, and Renunciation and prior to choosing a Chair .
Note: This is intended for exceptional cases that don’t seem to warrant a full Council response because they are, for instance, too trivial, duplicative, etc.
5.6.2.5. Council Chairing
The
Chair
of
each
W3C
Council
is
chosen
by
its
members,
by
consensus
if
possible,
falling
back
to
a
vote
if
that
fails.
The
chair
must
be
a
member
of
that
W3C
Council
.
Chair
selection
happens
during
formation
of
each
Council,
and
must
be
re-run
if
requested
by
the
Council
Team
Staff
Contact
or
by
the
Chair
during
the
Council’s
operation.
5.6.2.6.
Convening
the
Council
Deliberations
When
dismissal
,
renunciation
,
and
appointment
of
the
W3C
Council
Chair
have
concluded,
and
delivery
of
the
Team
’s
report,
report
has
been
delivered,
the
W3C
Council
is
considered
to
be
convened
and
can
start
deliberations.
deliberations
.
Having
reviewed
If
a
W3C
Council
has
not
yet
been
convened
within
90
days
of
a
Formal
Objection
being
registered
,
the
information
gathered
by
Chairs
of
the
TAG
and
AB
may
take
independent
action
to
ensure
that
the
dismissal
,
renunciation
,
and
chair
selection
processes
have
been
run.
If
a
report
from
the
Team
is
not
delivered
within
those
90
days,
the
Council
is
considered
convened
upon
selection
of
the
Council
Chair
.
5.6.2.7. Council Deliberations
Once convened , the Council may conduct additional research or analysis, or request additional information or interviews from anyone, including the Team.
The
Council
may
further
attempt
to
broker
consensus,
consensus
on
one
or
more
of
the
formal
objections,
which,
if
successful,
disposes
the
formal
objection.
would
allow
them
to
be
resolved.
Otherwise,
after
sufficient
deliberation,
and
with
due
consideration
of
each
argument
in
the
applicable
Formal
Objections
,
the
W3C
Council
decides
whether
to
uphold
or
overrule
overturn
the
objection.
decision
being
objected
to.
The
W3C
Council
may
overrule
uphold
the
Formal
Objection
decision
even
if
it
agrees
with
some
of
the
supportive
arguments.
arguments
made
as
part
of
a
Formal
Objection
.
When
upholding
overturning
an
objection,
a
decision,
it
should
recommend
a
way
forward.
If
the
overturned
decision
has
already
had
consequences
(e.g.,
if
the
objection
concerns
material
already
in
a
published
document)
the
Council
should
suggest
how
these
consequences
might
be
mitigated.
The
Team
is
responsible
for
making
sure
that
adequate
mitigations
are
enacted
in
a
timely
fashion;
and
the
Formal
Objection
is
not
considered
fully
addressed
until
then.
Note:
This
does
not
create
new
powers
for
the
Team
,
such
as
the
ability
to
“unpublish”
documents.
The
Team
's
’s
role
is
to
ensure
the
responsible
parties
enact
adequate
mitigations,
by
whatever
means
they
already
have
at
their
disposal.
A
Council
may
form
sub-groups
for
deliberation,
who
may
return
with
a
recommendation,
but
the
full
Council
issues
the
final
decision.
The
decision
of
the
W3C
Council
should
be
unanimous,
and
may
be
issued
under
consensus.
However,
if
despite
careful
deliberation
a
W3C
Council
is
unable
to
reach
consensus,
the
W3C
Council
Chair
may
instead
resort
to
voting.
In
that
case,
the
decision
is
made
by
simple
majority,
with
adopted
if
there
are
more
ballots
for
than
against;
in
case
of
a
tie,
the
W3C
Council
Chair
breaking
any
tie.
determines
the
outcome.
However,
if
the
decision
or
proposal
being
objected
to
originated
with
the
TAG
or
AB,
then
members
of
that
group
at
the
time
the
decision
or
proposal
was
made
must
abstain
in
such
a
vote.
In
case
of
a
vote,
if
two
members
of
a
Council
who
share
the
same
affiliation
cast
an
identical
ballot,
then
their
ballots
count
as
a
one
vote,
not
two.
In the case of non-unanimous decisions, members of a W3C Council who disagree with the Council’s decision may write a Minority Opinion explaining the reason for their disagreement.
The
deliberations
of
a
W3C
Council
are
confidential
to
that
W3C
Council
and
its
Council
Team
Staff
Contact
.
Note: This confidentiality requirement is put in place so that the Council can receive sensitive information in confidence and to enable Council members to speak freely in their individual expert capacity without pressure or fear of retaliation by those involved in the dispute, business relations, their employer, etc.
If a W3C Council is unable to come to a conclusion within 45 days of being convened , the W3C Council Chair must inform the AC of this delay and of the status of the discussions. The W3C Council Chair may additionally make this report public .
5.6.2.7.
5.6.2.8.
Council
Decision
Report
A Council terminates by issuing a Council Report , which:
-
must state whether the Council upholds or
overrulesoverturns theobjection(s).decision being objected to. -
must provide a rationale supporting
the decision,its conclusion, which should address each argument raised in the Formal Objection(s). -
must include any recommendation decided by the Council .
-
if the
Formal Objectiondecision has beenupheld,overturned, should include any suggested mitigations . -
must include the Minority
Opinion (s),Opinion(s) , if any. -
must report the names of those who were dismissed or renounced their seat as well as those who were qualified to serve.
-
must report the names of the individuals who participated in the final Council decision.
-
must report the number of votes for/against dismissing each participant.
may report vote
totals,totals for the Council’s decision, ifanya formal vote was held.-
must not attribute any position to any individual on the Council.
The Team must maintain a public page on the W3C website indexing all completed Council Reports . If a Council decision is later overturned by an AC Appeal , this must also be mentioned. Council Reports must be no more confidential than the decision or document being objected to.
The Council may also issue a Supplemental Confidential Council Report with a more restricted level of confidentiality than its main report when it believes that additional commentary on confidential aspects of the case would be informative. However, the main Council Report should be self-sufficient and understandable without reference to Supplemental Confidential Council Reports.
5.6.2.8.
5.6.2.9.
Appealing
Council
Decisions
Advisory Committee representatives may initiate an Advisory Committee Appeal of a Council decision issued in a Council Report .
5.7. Advisory Committee Reviews and W3C Decisions
Advisory
Committee
review
is
the
process
by
which
the
The
Advisory
Committee
formally
confers
its
approval
on
charters
,
technical
reports
,
and
other
matters.
matters
through
an
Advisory
Committee
review
and
its
resulting
W3C
Decision
.
5.7.1.
Start
of
a
Initiating
an
Advisory
Committee
Review
Period
Each Advisory Committee review period begins with a Call for Review from the Team to the Advisory Committee . The Call for Review describes the proposal, raises attention to deadlines, estimates when the decision will be available, and includes other practical information. The Team may share its perspective on the proposal in the Call for Review . Each Member organization may send one review, which must be returned by its Advisory Committee representative .
For clarity, in the context of an AC Review , dissent must be expressed as a Formal Objection .
The Team must provide two channels for Advisory Committee review comments:
- an archived Team-only channel;
- an archived Member-only channel.
The Call for Review must specify which channel is the default for review comments on that Call.
Reviewers may send information to either or both channels. A reviewer may also share their own reviews with other Members on the Advisory Committee discussion list , and may also make it available to the public.
A Member organization may modify its review during a review period (e.g., in light of comments from other Members).
5.7.2.
After
Determining
the
Review
Period
W3C
Decision
After the review period, the Team determines the appropriate W3C Decision , which they must announce to the Advisory Committee . The announcement must indicate the level of support for the proposal ( consensus or dissent ), and specifically whether there were any Formal Objections , with attention to changing the confidentiality level of the Formal Objections .
If there were Formal Objections , at least some of which were upheld , or if there is not consensus because of insufficient support, W3C Decision must be one of:
- The proposal is returned for additional work, with a request to the initiator to improve the proposal.
- The proposal is rejected.
If the proposal has consensus , or if any Formal Objections are retracted or overruled and the proposal otherwise has sufficient support to achieve consensus , this W3C Decision must be one of:
- The proposal is adopted, possibly with additional changes integrated in order to address the comments of the AC (see below).
- The proposal is returned for additional work, with a request to the initiator to make desirable changes identified during the review and to resubmit.
If
the
proposal
is
adopted
with
changes
other
than
class
1
(markup)
changes
,
then
those
changes
must
be
announced
to
the
AC
and
to
the
Group
that
owns
the
document
(if
any).
Additionally,
when
adopting
a
proposal
with
substantive
changes
integrated,
the
announcement
must
include
rationale
for
the
substantive
changes,
and
those
changes.
Substantive
changes
must
have
to
the
proposal
may
be
adopted
only
if
the
revised
proposal
has
consensus
of
the
subset
of
the
AC
that
voted
on
the
initial
proposal
(including
anyone
who
explicitly
abstained).
abstained),
or
if
any
Formal
Objections
against
the
revised
proposal
are
retracted
or
overruled
and
the
revised
proposal
otherwise
has
sufficient
support
to
achieve
consensus
.
For
clarity,
the
Team
should
seek
a
response
from
this
subset
of
the
AC
using
the
same
tooling
and
degree
of
formality
as
it
did
for
the
AC
Review
;
and
as
is
the
case
during
AC
Reviews
,
dissent
in
this
context
must
be
expressed
as
a
Formal
Objection
.
Any Formal Objection raised at this stage against the revised proposal is handled by the same Council responsible for Formal Objections raised against the initial proposal, if any.
Note: Such a Council has the ability to clear either the original or the revised proposal for advancement by overruling all Formal Objections against the original or revised proposal, respectively.
For
publications
which
have
conditions
in
addition
to
AC
approval
for
introducing
substantive
changes
(such
as
Group
consensus
or
implementation
experience),
experience
or
going
through
a
patent
Exclusion
Opportunity
),
those
other
conditions
must
also
be
re-fulfilled.
For charters , substantive changes from the initial proposal that underwent AC Review must not include any increase to the scope. If any such change is desired, it must be returned for additional work and go through a complete new AC Review .
This document does not specify time intervals between the end of an Advisory Committee review period and the W3C decision . This is to ensure that the Members and Team have sufficient time to consider comments gathered during the review. The Advisory Committee should not expect an announcement sooner than two weeks after the end of a review period. If, after three weeks , the outcome has not been announced, the Team should provide the Advisory Committee with an update.
5.8. Advisory Committee Votes
The
Advisory
Committee
votes
in
elections
for
seats
on
the
TAG
or
Advisory
Board
,
and
in
the
event
of
an
Advisory
Committee
Appeal
achieving
the
required
support
to
trigger
an
appeal
vote.
vote
.
Whenever
the
Advisory
Committee
votes,
each
Member
or
group
of
related
Members
has
one
vote.
5.9. Appeal by Advisory Committee Representatives
Advisory Committee representatives may appeal certain decisions, though appeals are only expected to occur in extraordinary circumstances. For the purpose of this section, only Advisory Committee representatives of Members in Good Standing are counted.
When a W3C decision is made following an Advisory Committee review , Advisory Committee representatives may initiate an Advisory Committee Appeal . These W3C decisions include those related to group creation and modification, and transitions to new maturity stages for Recommendation Track documents and the Process document.
Advisory
Committee
representatives
may
also
initiate
an
appeal
for
decisions
of
a
W3C
Council
,
and
for
certain
decisions
that
do
not
involve
an
Advisory
Committee
review
.
These
cases
are
identified
in
the
sections
which
describe
the
requirements
for
the
decision
and
include
additional
(non-reviewed)
maturity
stages
of
Recommendation
Track
documents,
group
charter
extensions
and
closures,
and
Memoranda
of
Understanding
technical
agreements
.
In all cases, an appeal must be initiated within three weeks of the decision.
An Advisory Committee representative initiates an appeal by sending a request to the Team , and should also share this request with the Advisory Committee . The request should say “I appeal this Decision” and identify the decision, and may also include their rationale for appealing the decision.
Note: See Appealing a W3C Decision for a recommendation on how to communicate an appeal request to the Team and the AC .
Within one week the Team must announce the appeal process to the Advisory Committee and provide a mechanism for Advisory Committee representatives to respond with a statement of positive support for this appeal. The archive of these statements must be member-only . If, within one week of the Team’s announcement, 5% or more of the Advisory Committee support the appeal request, the Team must organize an appeal vote asking the Advisory Committee “Do you approve of the Decision?” together with links to the decision and the appeal support.
The ballot must allow for three possible responses: “Approve”, “Reject”, and “Abstain”, together with Comments.
If
The
level
of
support
needed
for
an
Advisory
Committee
Appeal
to
pass
depends
on
the
level
of
ballot
participation
(including
explicit
“abstain”
ballots)
by
Advisory
Committee
Representatives
:
if fewer than 5% participate, the vote fails.
if at least 5% but no more than 15% participate, and the number of
votes to reject“Approve” ballots exceeds three times (3x) the number ofvotes to approve,“Reject” ballots, the vote passes.if more than 15% but fewer than 20% participate, and the number of “Approve” ballots exceeds twice (2x) the number of “Reject” ballots, the vote passes.
if 20% or more participate, and the number of “Approve” ballots exceeds the number of “Reject” ballots, the vote passes.
If
the
vote
passes,
the
decision
is
overturned.
In
that
case,
there
are
Following
such
rejection,
those
who
had
initiated
the
following
possible
next
steps:
The
proposal
is
rejected.
The
proposal
is
returned
for
additional
work,
after
which
may
revise
it
to
address
the
causes
of
rejection
and
follow
the
ordinary
applicable
decision
process
is
re-initiated.
to
submit
the
revised
proposal.
6. W3C Technical Reports
The W3C technical report development process is the set of steps and requirements followed by W3C Working Groups to standardize Web technology. The W3C technical report development process is designed to:
- support multiple specification development methodologies
- maximize consensus about the content of stable technical reports
- ensure high technical and editorial quality
- promote consistency among specifications
- facilitate royalty-free, interoperable implementations of Web Standards, and
- earn endorsement by W3C and the broader community.
See also “licensing goals for W3C Specifications” in the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] .
6.1. Types of Technical Reports
This
chapter
describes
the
formal
requirements
for
publishing
and
maintaining
a
W3C
Recommendation
,
Note
,
or
Registry
Report
.
- Recommendations
- Working Groups develop technical reports on the W3C Recommendation Track in order to produce normative specifications or guidelines as standards for the Web. The Recommendation Track process incorporates requirements for wide review , adequate implementation experience , and consensus -building, and is subject to the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] , under which participants commit to Royalty-Free IPR licenses for implementations. See § 6.3 The W3C Recommendation Track for details.
- Notes
- Groups can also publish documents as W3C Notes and W3C Statements , typically either to document information other than technical specifications, such as use cases motivating a specification and best practices for its use. See § 6.4 The Note Track (Notes and Statements) for details.
- Registries
-
Working GroupsChartered and elected groups can also publish registries in order to document collections of values or other data.These are typicallyA registry can be publishedineither as aseparatedistinct registry report ,although they can also beor directlyembedded inwithin a Recommendation Trackdocumentsdocument asaan embedded registrysection. Defining a registry requires wide review and consensus , but once set up, changes to registry entries are lightweight and can even be done withouta Working Group .the initiating group’s involvement. See § 6.5 The Registry Track for details.
Individual Working Groups and Interest Groups should adopt additional processes for developing publications, so long as they do not conflict with the requirements in this chapter.
6.2. General Requirements for Technical Reports
6.2.1. Publication of Technical Reports
Publishing as used in this document refers to producing a version which is listed as a W3C Technical Report on its Technical Reports index at https://www.w3.org/TR [TR] . Every document published as part of the technical report development process must be a public document. W3C strives to make archival documents indefinitely available at their original address in their original form.
Every document published as part of the technical report development process must clearly indicate its maturity stage , and must include information about the status of the document. This status information:
- must be unique each time a specification is published ,
- must state which Working Group developed the specification,
- must state how to send comments or file bugs, and where these are recorded,
- must include expectations about next steps,
- should explain how the technology relates to existing international standards and related work inside or outside W3C, and
- should explain or link to an explanation of significant changes from the previous version.
Every Technical Report published as part of the Technical Report development process is edited by one or more editors appointed by a Group Chair . It is the responsibility of these editors to ensure that the decisions of the Group are correctly reflected in subsequent drafts of the technical report. An editor must be a participant, per § 3.4.2 Participation in Chartered Groups in the Group responsible for the document(s) they are editing.
The Team is not required to publish a Technical Report that does not conform to the Team’s Publication Rules [PUBRULES] (e.g., for naming , status information, style, and copyright requirements ). These rules are subject to change by the Team from time to time. The Team must inform group Chairs and the Advisory Committee of any changes to these rules.
The primary language for W3C Technical Reports is English. W3C encourages the translation of its Technical Reports . Information about translations of W3C technical reports [TRANSLATION] is available at the W3C website.
6.2.2. Reviews and Review Responsibilities
A document is available for review from the moment it is first published . Working Groups should formally address any substantive review comment about a technical report in a timely manner.
Reviewers should send substantive technical reviews as early as possible. Working Groups are often reluctant to make substantive changes to a mature document, particularly if this would cause significant compatibility problems due to existing implementation. Working Groups should record substantive or interesting proposals raised by reviews but not incorporated into a current specification.
6.2.2.1. Wide Review
The
requirements
for
wide
review
are
not
precisely
defined
by
the
W3C
Process.
The
objective
is
to
ensure
that
the
entire
set
of
stakeholders
of
the
Web
community,
including
the
general
public,
have
had
adequate
notice
of
the
progress
of
the
Working
Group
(for
example
through
notices
posted
to
[email protected]
)
and
were
able
to
actually
perform
reviews
of
and
provide
comments
on
the
specification.
A
second
objective
is
to
encourage
groups
to
request
reviews
early
enough
that
comments
and
suggested
changes
can
still
be
reasonably
incorporated
in
response
to
the
review.
Before
approving
transitions,
the
Team
will
consider
who
has
been
explicitly
offered
a
reasonable
opportunity
to
review
the
document,
who
has
provided
comments,
the
record
of
requests
to
and
responses
from
reviewers,
especially
W3C
Horizontal
Groups
[CHARTER]
and
groups
identified
as
dependencies
in
the
charter
or
identified
as
liaisons
[LIAISON]
,
and
seek
evidence
of
clear
communication
to
the
general
public
about
appropriate
times
and
which
content
to
review
and
whether
such
reviews
actually
occurred.
Note: The Team documents best practices for wide review in the Guidebook. [GUIDE]
For
example,
inviting
review
of
new
or
significantly
revised
sections
published
in
Working
Drafts,
and
tracking
those
comments
and
the
Working
Group
's
’s
responses,
is
generally
a
good
practice
which
would
often
be
considered
positive
evidence
of
wide
review.
Working
Groups
should
follow
the
W3C
Horizontal
Groups
’
review
processes,
and
should
announce
to
other
W3C
Working
Groups
as
well
as
the
general
public,
especially
those
affected
by
this
specification,
a
proposal
to
enter
Candidate
Recommendation
(for
example
in
approximately
28
days).
By
contrast
a
generic
statement
in
a
document
requesting
review
at
any
time
is
likely
not
to
be
considered
as
sufficient
evidence
that
the
group
has
solicited
wide
review.
A Working Group could present evidence that wide review has been received, irrespective of solicitation. But it is important to note that receiving many detailed reviews is not necessarily the same as wide review, since they might only represent comment from a small segment of the relevant stakeholder community.
6.2.3. Classes of Changes
This document distinguishes the following 5 classes of changes to a document. The first two classes of change are considered editorial changes , the next two substantive changes , and the last one registry changes .
-
-
No changes to text content
-
- These changes include fixing broken links, style sheets, or invalid markup.
-
-
Changes that do not functionally affect interpretation of the document
-
-
For
Recommendation-track
technical
reports
specifically,
this
constitutes
changes
that
do
not
affect
conformance,
i.e.
changes
that
reasonable
implementers
would
not
interpret
as
changing
architectural
or
interoperability
requirements
or
their
implementation.
Changes
which
resolve
ambiguities
in
the
specification
are
considered
to
change
(by
clarification)
the
implementation
requirements
and
do
not
fall
into
this
class.
- Examples of changes in this class include correcting non-normative examples which clearly conflict with normative requirements, clarifying
informative use cases orvarious other non-normative text, fixing typos or grammatical errors where the change does not change requirements.- If there is any doubt or disagreement as to whether a change functionally affects interpretation, that change does not fall into this class.
- Examples of changes in this class include correcting non-normative examples which clearly conflict with normative requirements, clarifying
-
-
Other changes that do not add new features
-
-
For
Recommendation-track
documents,
these
changes
may
affect
conformance
to
the
specification.
A
change
that
affects
conformance
is
one
that:
- makes conforming data, processors, or other conforming agents become non-conforming according to the new version, or
- makes non-conforming data, processors, or other agents become conforming, or
- clears up an ambiguity or under-specified part of the specification in such a way that data, a processor, or an agent whose conformance was once unclear becomes clearly either conforming or non-conforming.
-
-
New features
-
- Changes that add new functionality, such as new elements, new APIs, new rules, etc.
-
-
Changes to the contents of a registry table
-
- Changes that add, remove, or alter registry entries in a registry table .
6.2.4. Errata Management
Tracking
errors
is
an
important
part
of
a
Working
Group
's
’s
ongoing
care
of
a
technical
report
;
for
this
reason,
the
scope
of
a
Working
Group
charter
generally
allows
time
for
work
after
publication
of
a
Recommendation
.
In
this
Process
Document,
the
term
“
erratum
”
(plural
“errata”)
refers
to
any
error
that
can
be
resolved
by
one
or
more
changes
in
classes
1-3
of
section
§ 6.2.3
Classes
of
Changes
.
Working Groups must keep a public record of errors that are reported by readers and implementers for Recommendations . Such error reports should be compiled no less frequently than quarterly.
Working Groups decide how to document errata. Such documentation must identify the affected technical report text and describe the error; it may also describe some possible solution(s). Readers of the technical report should be able easily to find and see the errata that apply to that specific technical report with their associated tests. Errata may be documented in a separate errata page or tracking system. They may , in addition or alternatively, be annotated inline alongside the affected technical report text or at the start or end of the most relevant section(s).
6.2.5. Candidate Amendments
An
erratum
may
be
accompanied
by
an
informative,
a
non-normative,
candidate
correction
approved
by
group
decision
.
When
annotated
inline,
errata—
including
errata—including
their
candidate
corrections
—
must
—must
be
marked
as
such,
are
treated
as
class
2
changes
,
and
are
published
accordingly.
Note: Annotating changes in this way allows more mature documents such as Recommendations and Candidate Recommendations to be updated quickly with the Working Group’s most current thinking, even when the candidate amendments have not yet received sufficient review or implementation experience to be normatively incorporated into the specification proper.
A candidate addition is similar to a candidate correction , except that it proposes a new feature rather than an error correction.
If
Candidate
corrections
and
candidate
additions
are
collectively
known
as
candidate
amendments
.
In addition to their actual maturity stage , published REC Track documents with candidate amendments are also considered, for the purpose of the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] , to be Working Drafts with those candidate amendments treated as normative.
6.2.6. Maintenance Without a Group
For
all
types
of
technical
reports
and
all
maturity
stages
,
if
there
is
no
group
chartered
to
maintain
a
technical
report
,
the
Team
may
maintain
its
republish
it
at
the
same
maturity
stage
,
integrating
as
needed:
- class 1 changes ;
-
inline
errata
and associated; -
candidate
corrections
. Such corrections, which must be marked as Team correction,; - class 2 changes other than inline errata and Team corrections .
To avoid any potential doubt or disagreement about whether changes really do fall into class 2 , the Team should be conservative, limiting itself to obvious and limited fixes, and must avoid substantial rephrasing, even of non-normative examples and notes. If any such change is desired, the Team must mark it as a Team correction .
Team
corrections
do
not
constitute
a
normative
portion
of
the
Recommendation,
as
defined
in
the
Patent
Policy
[PATENT-POLICY]
(i.e.
(i.e.,
they
are
not
covered
by
the
Patent
Policy).
The
For
Candidate
Recommendations
,
W3C
Recommendations
,
Candidate
Registries
,
W3C
Registries
,
as
well
as
W3C
Statements
,
the
Team
must
solicit
wide
review
on
Team
corrections
that
it
produces.
6.2.6.
6.2.7.
License
Grants
from
Non-Participants
When a party who is not already obligated under the Patent Policy offers a change in class 3 or 4 (as described in § 6.2.3 Classes of Changes ) to a technical report under this process the Team must request a recorded royalty-free patent commitment; for a change in class 4, the Team must secure such commitment. Such commitment should cover, at a minimum, all the party’s Essential Claims both in the contribution, and that become Essential Claims as a result of incorporating the contribution into the draft that existed at the time of the contribution, on the terms specified in the “W3C Royalty-Free (RF) Licensing Requirements” section of the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] .
6.3. The W3C Recommendation Track
Working
Groups
create
specifications
and
guidelines
to
complete
the
scope
of
work
envisioned
by
a
Working
Group
's
’s
charter
.
These
technical
reports
undergo
cycles
of
revision
and
review
as
they
advance
towards
W3C
Recommendation
status.
Once
review
suggests
the
Working
Group
has
met
their
requirements
for
a
new
standard,
including
wide
review
,
a
Candidate
Recommendation
phase
allows
the
Working
Group
to
formally
collect
implementation
experience
to
demonstrate
that
the
specification
works
in
practice.
At
the
end
of
the
process,
the
Advisory
Committee
reviews
the
mature
technical
report,
and
if
there
is
support
from
its
Membership,
W3C
publishes
it
as
a
Recommendation
.
In summary, the W3C Recommendation Track consists of:
- Publication of the First Public Working Draft .
- Publication of zero or more revised Working Drafts .
- Publication of one or more Candidate Recommendations .
-
Publication
of a Proposed Recommendation . Publicationas a W3C Recommendation .
A W3C Recommendation Track document is any document whose current status is one of the four in the numbered list above.
This Process defines certain Recommendation Track publications as Patent Review Drafts . Under the 2004 Patent Policy (and its 2017 update) [PATENT-POLICY-2004] , these correspond to “Last Call Working Draft” in the Patent Policy; Starting from the 2020 Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY-2020] , these correspond to “Patent Review Draft” in the Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] .
W3C may end work on a technical report at any time.
As described in § 6.3.3 Advancement on the Recommendation Track , the Team will decline a request to advance in maturity stage and return the specification to a Working Group for further work if it determines that the requirements for advancement have not been met.
6.3.1. Maturity Stages on the Recommendation Track
- Working Draft ( WD )
-
A
Working
Draft
is
a
document
that
W3C
has
published
on
the
W3C’s
Technical
Reports
page
[TR]
for
review
by
the
community
(including
W3C
Members),
the
public,
and
other
technical
organizations,
and
for
simple
historical
reference.
Some,
but
not
all,
Working
Drafts
are
meant
to
advance
to
Recommendation
;
see
the
document
status
section
of
a
Working
Draft
for
the
group’s
expectations.
Working
Drafts
do
not
necessarily
represent
a
consensus
of
the
Working
Group
with
respect
to
their
content,
and
do
not
imply
any
endorsement
by
W3C
or
its
members
beyond
agreement
to
work
on
a
general
area
of
technology.
Nevertheless
the
Working
Group
decided
to
adopt
the
Working
Draft
as
the
basis
for
their
work
at
the
time
of
adoption.
A
Working
Draft
is
suitable
for
gathering
wide
review
prior
to
advancing
to
the
next
stage
of
maturity.
For all Working Drafts a Working Group:
- should document outstanding issues, and parts of the document on which the Working Group does not have consensus, and
- may request publication of a Working Draft even if its content is considered unstable and does not meet all Working Group requirements.
The first Working Draft of a technical report is called the First Public Working Draft ( FPWD ), and has patent implications as defined in the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] .
- Candidate Recommendation ( CR )
-
A
Candidate
Recommendation
is
a
document
that
satisfies
the
technical
requirements
of
the
Working
Group
that
produced
it
and
their
dependencies,
and
has
already
received
wide
review.
W3C
publishes
a
Candidate
Recommendation
to
- signal to the wider community that it is time to do a final review
- gather implementation experience
Note: Advancing to Candidate Recommendation indicates that the document is considered complete and fit for purpose, and that no further refinement to the text is expected without additional implementation experience and testing; however, additional features might be expected in a later
revision may however be expected.revision. A Candidate Recommendation is expected to be as well-written, detailed, self-consistent, and technically complete as a Recommendation , and acceptable as such if and when the requirements for further advancement are met.Candidate Recommendation publications take one of two forms:
- Candidate Recommendation Snapshot ( CRS )
-
A
Candidate
Recommendation
Snapshot
corresponds
to
a
Patent
Review
Draft
as
used
in
the
W3C
Patent
Policy
[PATENT-POLICY]
.
Publishing
a
Patent
Review
Draft
triggers
a
Call
for
Exclusions,
per
“Exclusion
From
W3C
RF
Licensing
Requirements”
in
the
W3C
Patent
Policy.
Publication as a Candidate Recommendation Snapshot requires verification of either a Transition Request (for the first Candidate Recommendation publication from another maturity stage) or an Update Request (for subsequent Candidate Recommendation Snapshots ).
- Candidate Recommendation Draft ( CRD )
-
A
Candidate
Recommendation
Draft
is
published
on the W3C’s Technical Reports page [TR]tointegratesolicit review of intended changes from the previousCandidate Recommendation Snapshot that the Working Group intends to include in a subsequentCandidate Recommendation Snapshot . This allows for wider review of the changes and for ease of reference to the integrated specification.Any changes published directly into a Candidate Recommendation Draft should be at the same level of quality as a Candidate Recommendation Snapshot . However, the process requirements are minimized so that the Working Group can easily keep the specification up to date.
A Candidate Recommendation Draft does not provide an exclusion opportunity; instead, it is considered a Working Draft for the purpose of the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] .
A Rescinded Candidate Recommendation is a Candidate Recommendation in which significant problems have been discovered such that W3C cannot endorse it or continue work on it, for example due to burdensome patent claims that affect implementers and cannot be resolved (see the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] and in particular “PAG Conclusion”). There is no path to restoration for a Rescinded Candidate Recommendation . See “W3C Royalty-Free (RF) Licensing Requirements” in the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] for implication on patent licensing obligations.
-
Proposed Recommendation ( PR ) A Proposed Recommendation is a document that has been accepted by W3C as of sufficient quality to become a W3C Recommendation . This phase triggers formal review by the Advisory Committee , who may recommend that the document be published as a W3C Recommendation , returned to the Working Group for further work, or abandoned. Substantive changes must not be made to a Proposed Recommendation except by publishing a new Working Draft or Candidate Recommendation .W3C Recommendation ( REC ) -
A
W3C
Recommendation
is
a
specification
or
set
of
guidelines
or
requirements
that,
after
extensive
consensus
-building,
has
received
the
endorsement
of
W3C
and
its
Members.
W3C
recommends
the
wide
deployment
of
its
Recommendations
as
standards
for
the
Web.
The
W3C
Royalty-Free
IPR
licenses
granted
under
the
W3C
Patent
Policy
[PATENT-POLICY]
apply
to
W3C
Recommendations
.
After its initial publication, a W3C Recommendation may be revised (in accordance with § 6.3.10 Revising a W3C Recommendation ) to address editorial or substantive issues that are discovered later. However, new features can only be added if the document already identifies itself as intending to allow new features . Such an allowance cannot be added to a technical report previously published as a Recommendation that did not allow such changes; this requires a new technical report (which could, for example, be similarly named but with an incremented version number).
As technology evolves, a W3C Recommendation may become:
- A Superseded Recommendation
-
A
Superseded
Recommendation
is
a
specification
that
has
been
replaced
by
a
newer
version
that
W3C
recommends
for
new
adoption.
An
Obsolete
or
Superseded
specification
has
the
same
status
as
a
W3C
Recommendation
with
regards
to
W3C
Royalty-Free
IPR
Licenses
granted
under
the
Patent
Policy.
Note: When a Technical Report which had previously been published as a Recommendation is again published as a Recommendation after following the necessary steps to revise it, the latest version replaces the previous one, without the need to invoke the steps of
§ 6.3.13.3§ 6.3.12.3 Abandoning a W3C Recommendation : it is the same document, updated. Explicitly declaring a documented superseded, using the process documented in§ 6.3.13.3§ 6.3.12.3 Abandoning a W3C Recommendation , is intended for cases where a Recommendation is superseded by a separate Technical Report (or by a document managed outside of W3C). - An Obsolete Recommendation
- An Obsolete Recommendation is a specification that W3C has determined lacks sufficient market relevance to continue recommending it for implementation, but which does not have fundamental problems that would require it to be Rescinded . If an Obsolete specification gains sufficient market relevance, W3C may decide to restore it to Recommendation status.
- Rescinded Recommendation
- A Rescinded Recommendation is an entire Recommendation that W3C no longer endorses, and believes is unlikely to ever be restored to Recommendation status. See also “W3C Royalty-Free (RF) Licensing Requirements” in the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] .
- Discontinued Draft
-
A
technical
report
representing
the
state
of
a
Recommendation-track
document
at
the
point
at
which
work
on
it
was
discontinued.
See
§ 6.3.13.1§ 6.3.12.1 Abandoning an Unfinished Recommendation .
Only sufficiently technically mature work should be advanced.
Note: Should faster advancement to meet scheduling considerations be desired, this can be achieved by reducing the scope of the technical report to a subset that is adequately mature and deferring less stable features to other technical reports.
When publishing an updated version of an existing Candidate Recommendation or Recommendation , technical reports are expected to meet the same maturity criteria as when they are first published under that status. However, in the interest of replacing stale documents with improved ones in a timely manner, if flaws have been discovered in the technical report after its initial publication as a CR or REC that would have been severe enough to reject that publication had they be known in time, it is also permissible to publish an updated CR or REC following the usual process, even if only some of these flaws have been satisfactorily addressed.
Working Groups and Interest Groups may make available Editor’s drafts . Editor’s drafts ( ED ) have no official standing whatsoever, and do not necessarily imply consensus of a Working Group or Interest Group , nor are their contents endorsed in any way by W3C.
6.3.2. Implementation Experience
Implementation experience is required to show that a specification is sufficiently clear, complete, and relevant to market needs, to ensure that independent interoperable implementations of each feature of the specification will be realized. While no exhaustive list of requirements is provided here, when assessing that there is adequate implementation experience the Team will consider (though not be limited to):
- is each feature of the current specification implemented, and how is this demonstrated?
- are there independent interoperable implementations of the current specification?
- are there implementations created by people other than the authors of the specification?
- are implementations publicly deployed?
- is there implementation experience at all levels of the specification’s ecosystem (authoring, consuming, publishing…)?
- are there reports of difficulties or problems with implementation?
Planning and accomplishing a demonstration of (interoperable) implementations can be very time consuming. Groups are often able to work more effectively if they plan how they will demonstrate interoperable implementations early in the development process; for example, developing tests in concert with implementation efforts.
6.3.3. Advancement on the Recommendation Track
For all requests to advance a specification to a new maturity stage (called Transition Requests ), the Working Group:
- must record the group’s decision to request advancement.
- must obtain Team verification. Team verification (a Team decision ) must be withheld if any Process requirements are not met or if there remain any unresolved Formal Objections (including any upheld by a Council but not yet fully addressed ), or if the document does not adequately reflect all relevant decisions of the W3C Council (or its delegates). If the Team rejects a Transition Request it must indicate its rationale to the Advisory Committee and the Working Group .
- must publicly document all new features ( class 4 changes ) to the technical report since the previous publication.
- must publicly document if other substantive changes ( class 3 changes ) have been made, and should document the details of such changes.
- should publicly document if editorial changes have been made, and may document the details of such changes.
- must formally address all issues raised about the document since the previous maturity stage .
- must provide public documentation of any Formal Objections .
-
should
report
which,
if
any,
of
the
Working
Group
's’s requirements for this document have changed since the previous step. - should report any changes in dependencies with other groups.
- should provide information about implementations known to the Working Group .
For
a
First
Public
Working
Draft
there
is
no
“previous
maturity
stage”,
so
many
requirements
do
not
apply,
and
verification
is
normally
fairly
straightforward.
For
later
stages,
especially
transition
transitions
to
Candidate
or
Proposed
Recommendation
,
there
is
usually
a
formal
review
meeting
to
verify
that
the
requirements
have
been
met.
Transition
Requests
to
First
Public
Working
Draft
or
Candidate
Recommendation
will
not
normally
be
approved
while
a
Working
Group
's
’s
charter
is
undergoing
or
awaiting
a
decision
on
an
Advisory
Committee
Review
.
6.3.4. Updating Mature Publications on the Recommendation Track
Certain requests to re-publish a specification within its current maturity stage (called Update Requests ) require extra verification. For such update requests , the Working Group:
- must record the group’s decision to request the update.
- must show that the changes have received wide review .
-
must
obtain
Team
verification, or fulfill the criteria for § 6.3.4.1 Streamlined Publication Approval .verification. Team verification (a Team decision),):should be withheld if any Process requirements are not met,
and-
may be withheld in consideration of unresolved Formal Objections (including any upheld by a Council but not yet fully addressed
) or), may be withheld if the document does not adequately reflect all relevant decisions of
thea W3C Council (or itsdelegates).delegates),may be withheld if the Team believes the Group is not making reasonable progress on addressing issues raised by individuals external to the Group.
If the Team rejects an Update Request , it must indicate its rationale to the Working Group . If it waives any Process requirements, it must indicate its rationale to the AC .
- must provide public documentation of any Formal Objections .
- must publicly document of all new features ( class 4 changes ) to the technical report since the previous publication.
- must publicly document if other substantive changes ( class 3 changes ) have been made, and should document the details of such changes.
- should publicly document if editorial changes changes have been made, and may document the details of such changes.
- must show that the revised specification meets all Working Group requirements, or explain why the requirements have changed or been deferred,
-
should
report
which,
if
any,
of
the
Working
Group
's’s requirements for this document have changed since the previous step. - should report any changes in dependencies with other groups.
- should provide information about implementations known to the Working Group .
There is usually a formal review meeting to verify that the requirements have been met.
Note: Update request verification is expected to be fairly simple compared to verification of a transition request .
The Team must announce the publication of the revised specification to other W3C groups and the Public.
6.3.5. Publishing a First Public Working Draft
To publish the First Public Working Draft of a document, a Working Group must meet the applicable requirements for advancement .
The Team must announce the publication of a First Public Working Draft to other W3C groups and to the public.
6.3.6. Revising a Working Draft
A Working Group should publish a Working Draft to the W3C Technical Reports page when there have been significant changes to the previous published document that would benefit from review beyond the Working Group.
If
6
months
elapse
without
significant
changes
to
a
specification,
a
Working
Group
should
publish
a
revised
Working
Draft
,
whose
status
section
should
indicate
reasons
for
the
lack
of
change.
To
publish
a
revision
of
a
Working
draft,
a
Working
Group:
- must record the group’s decision to request publication. Consensus is not required, as this is a procedural step,
- must provide public documentation of substantive changes to the technical report since the previous Working Draft ,
- should provide public documentation of significant editorial changes to the technical report since the previous step,
- should report which, if any, of the Working Group’s requirements for this document have changed since the previous step,
- should report any changes in dependencies with other groups,
Possible next steps for any Working Draft:
6.3.7. Transitioning to Candidate Recommendation
To publish a Candidate Recommendation , in addition to meeting the requirements for advancement a Working Group :
- must show that the specification has met all Working Group requirements, or explain why the requirements have changed or been deferred,
- must document changes to dependencies during the development of the specification,
- must document how adequate implementation experience will be demonstrated,
- must specify the deadline for comments, delineating the Candidate Recommendation review period , which must be at least 28 days after publication, and should be longer for complex documents,
- must show that the specification has received wide review , and
-
may
identify
features
in
the
document
as
at
risk
.
These
features
may
be
removed
before
advancement
to
ProposedRecommendation withouta requirement to publish a new Candidate Recommendationrequiring an Update Request .
The first Candidate Recommendation publication after verification of having met the requirements for a Transition Request is always a Candidate Recommendation Snapshot . The Team must announce the publication of the Candidate Recommendation Snapshot to other W3C groups and to the public.
Possible next steps after a Candidate Recommendation Snapshot :
- Return to Working Draft
- A revised Candidate Recommendation Snapshot
- A revised Candidate Recommendation Draft
-
ProposedRecommendation - Discontinued Draft
Advisory Committee representatives may initiate an Advisory Committee Appeal of the decision to advance the technical report.
6.3.8. Revising a Candidate Recommendation
6.3.8.1. Publishing a Candidate Recommendation Snapshot
If there are any substantive changes made to a Candidate Recommendation since the previous Candidate Recommendation Snapshot other than to remove features explicitly identified as at risk , the Working Group must meet the requirements of an update request in order to republish.
In addition the Working Group:
- must specify the deadline for further comments, which must be at least 28 days after publication, and should be longer for complex documents,
-
may
identify
features
in
the
document
as
at
risk
.
These
features
may
be
removed
before
advancement
to
ProposedRecommendation withouta requirement to publish a new Candidate Recommendationrequiring an Update Request .
The Team must announce the publication of a revised Candidate Recommendation Snapshot to other W3C groups and to the public.
To provide timely updates and patent protection, a Candidate Recommendation Snapshot should be published within 24 months of the Working Group accepting any proposal for a substantive change (and preferably sooner). To make scheduling reviews easier, a Candidate Recommendation Snapshot should not be published more often than approximately once every 6 months.
Note: Substantive changes trigger a new Exclusion Opportunity per “Exclusion From W3C RF Licensing Requirements” in the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] .
6.3.8.2. Publishing a Candidate Recommendation Draft
A Working Group should publish an Update Draft to the W3C Technical Reports page when there have been significant changes to the previous published document that would benefit from review beyond the Working Group.
To publish a revision of a Candidate Recommendation Draft , a Working Group:
- must record the group’s decision to request publication,
- must provide public documentation of substantive changes to the technical report since the previous Candidate Recommendation Snapshot ,
- should provide public documentation of significant editorial changes to the technical report since the previous Candidate Recommendation Snapshot ,
- should document outstanding issues, and parts of the document on which the Working Group does not have consensus,
- should report which, if any, of the Working Group’s requirements for this document have changed since the previous step,
- should report any changes in dependencies with other groups.
Note: A Working Group does not need to meet the requirements of a Candidate Recommendation Snapshot update request in order to publish a Candidate Recommendation Draft .
Possible next steps after a Candidate Recommendation Draft :
- Return to Working Draft
- A revised Candidate Recommendation Snapshot
- A revised Candidate Recommendation Draft
-
ProposedRecommendation , if there are no substantive change other than dropping at risk features - Discontinued Draft
6.3.9.
Transitioning
to
Proposed
Recommendation
When a Working Group estimates that a Candidate Recommendation has fulfilled all the relevant criteria, it may decide to request advancement to W3C Recommendation .
6.3.9.1. Requirements for Transition
In
addition
to
meeting
the
requirements
for
advancement
,
The
status
information
must
specify
the
deadline
for
Advisory
Committee
review
,
which
must
be
at
least
28
days
after
the
publication
of
the
Proposed
Recommendation
and
should
be
at
least
10
days
after
the
end
of
the
last
Exclusion
Opportunity
per
”Exclusion
From
W3C
RF
Licensing
Requirements”
in
the
W3C
Patent
Policy
[PATENT-POLICY]
.
A
Working
Group:
-
must
show
adequate
implementation
experience
except
where
an
exception
is
approved
by
a
Team
Decision
,.The Team may approve a Candidate Recommendation with minimal implementation experience where there is a compelling reason to do so. In such a case, the Team must explain the reasons for that decision, and that information must be included in the Call for Review proposing advancement to W3C Recommendation .
-
must
show
that
the
document
has
received
wide
review
,. -
must
show
that
all
issues
raised
during
the
Candidate
Recommendation
review
period
have
been
formally
addressed
,. -
must
identify
any
substantive
issues
raised
since
the
close
of
the
Candidate
Recommendation
review
period
, must not have made any substantive changes to the document since the most recent Candidate Recommendation Snapshot , other than dropping features identified at risk. -
maymusthave removed features identifiedidentify, in theCandidate Recommendation Snapshot document as at risk without republishingdocument, where errata are tracked.
Additionally,
if
the
specification
document
has
previously
been
published
as
a
Candidate
W3C
Recommendation
Snapshot
.
The
Team
:
,
the
Working
Group
must
not
announce
the
publication
of
a
Proposed
Recommendation
include
any
class
4
change
to
the
Advisory
Committee
that
publication
unless
it
was
explicitly
marked
as
allowing
new
features
,
and
must
not
include
any
such
marking
if
not
already
present.
6.3.9.2. Initiating Review
If
all
the
criteria
above
are
fulfilled,
the
Team
must
begin
an
Advisory
Committee
Review
on
the
question
of
whether
the
specification
identified
Candidate
Recommendation
Snapshot
is
appropriate
to
publish
as
a
W3C
Recommendation
.
may
approve
a
Proposed
Recommendation
with
minimal
implementation
experience
where
there
If
the
document’s
most
recent
publication
is
not
a
compelling
reason
to
do
so.
In
such
a
case,
the
Team
must
explain
the
reasons
for
that
decision,
and
that
information
Candidate
Recommendation
Snapshot
,
then
it
must
be
included
republished
as
such
in
the
Call
for
Review
proposing
advancement
order
to
W3C
Recommendation
.
Since
provide
a
W3C
Recommendation
basis
for
review.
The
deadline
for
Advisory
Committee
review
must
not
include
any
substantive
changes
from
the
Proposed
Recommendation
it
is
based
on,
to
make
any
substantive
change
to
a
Proposed
Recommendation
the
Working
Group
allow
at
least
28
days,
and
must
return
the
specification
to
Candidate
Recommendation
or
Working
Draft
.
A
Proposed
Recommendation
may
identify
itself
as
intending
to
allow
new
features
(
class
4
changes
)
end
at
least
10
days
after
its
initial
publication
as
a
Recommendation
,
as
described
in
§ 6.3.11.4
Revising
a
Recommendation:
New
Features
.
Such
an
allowance
cannot
be
added
to
a
technical
report
previously
published
as
a
Recommendation
that
did
not
allow
such
changes.
Possible
Next
Steps:
Return
to
Working
Draft
Return
to
Candidate
Recommendation
Recommendation
status
,
(the
expected
next
step).
Discontinued
Draft
Advisory
Committee
representatives
may
initiate
an
Advisory
Committee
Appeal
the
end
of
the
decision
to
advance
last
Exclusion
Opportunity
per
”Exclusion
From
W3C
RF
Licensing
Requirements”
in
the
technical
report.
W3C
Patent
Policy
[PATENT-POLICY]
.
6.3.10.
6.3.9.3.
Transitioning
to
W3C
Recommendation
Resolution
of
Review
The
decision
to
advance
a
document
to
Recommendation
is
a
W3C
Decision
.
In
addition
to
meeting
the
requirements
for
advancement
,
A
Recommendation
must
identify
where
errata
are
tracked,
and
A
Recommendation
must
not
include
any
substantive
changes
from
the
Proposed
Recommendation
on
which
it
is
based.
If
there
was
any
dissent
Formal
Objection
in
during
the
Advisory
Committee
reviews,
Review
,
the
Team
must
publish
the
substantive
content
of
the
dissent
to
W3C
and
the
general
public,
and
the
W3C
Recommendation
must
not
formally
address
be
published
unless
all
Formal
Objections
to
the
comment
document
have
been
retracted
or
overruled
and
at
least
14
days
before
have
elapsed
since
the
publication
as
of
the
corresponding
Council
Report
.
The
decision
to
advance
a
document
to
W3C
Recommendation
.
Advisory
Committee
representatives
may
initiate
an
Advisory
Committee
Appeal
of
the
is
a
W3C
decision
Decision
.
The
Team
must
announce
the
publication
of
a
W3C
Recommendation
to
the
Advisory
Committee
,
to
other
W3C
groups
and
to
the
public.
Advisory
Committee
representatives
may
initiate
an
Advisory
Committee
Appeal
of
the
decision
to
advance
the
technical
report.
The newly published Recommendation must not make any substantive changes to the document compared to the Candidate Recommendation Snapshot submitted for AC Review, other than dropping features identified at risk .
6.3.9.4. Next Steps from W3C Recommendation
Possible next steps: A W3C Recommendation normally retains its status indefinitely. However it may be:
- republished as a revised Recommendation , or
- republished as a Candidate Recommendation or Working Draft to be developed towards a revised Recommendation , or
- declared superseded or obsolete , or
- rescinded .
6.3.11.
6.3.10.
Revising
a
W3C
Recommendation
Revising
a
W3C
Recommendation
6.3.11.1.
Revising
a
Recommendation:
Markup
Changes
6.3.10.1.
A
Working
group
may
request
republication
of
a
Recommendation
to
make
corrections
that
do
not
result
in
any
changes
to
the
text
of
the
specification.
(See
class
1
changes
.)
If
there
is
no
Working
Group
chartered
to
maintain
a
Recommendation
,
the
Team
may
republish
the
Recommendation
with
such
changes
incorporated.
6.3.11.2.
Revising
a
Recommendation:
Editorial
Changes
Editorial changes to a Recommendation require no technical review of the intended changes. A Working Group , provided there are no votes against the decision to publish, may request publication of a Recommendation to make this class of change without passing through earlier maturity stages. (See class 1 and class 2 changes .)
6.3.11.3.
6.3.10.2.
Revising
a
Recommendation:
Substantive
Changes
A
Tentative
corrections
(see
class
3
changes
)
may
be
annotated
into
a
Recommendation
using
candidate
corrections
.
Note: Candidate corrections do not normatively modify the document; they editorially indicate how one might do so. They are therefore published following the provisions of § 6.3.10.1 Revising a Recommendation: Editorial Changes .
A
candidate
correction
can
be
made
normative
and
be
folded
into
the
main
text
of
the
Recommendation
,
once
it
has
satisfied
all
the
same
criteria
as
the
rest
of
the
Recommendation
,
including
review
by
the
community
to
ensure
the
its
technical
and
editorial
soundness
of
the
candidate
amendments
.
soundness.
To
validate
this,
the
Working
Group
must
request
a
Last
Call
for
Review
of
Proposed
Amendments
,
followed
by
an
update
request
.
See
§ 6.3.11.5
§ 6.3.10.4
Incorporating
Candidate
Amendments
.
Alternatively,
a
Working
Group
may
incorporate
the
changes
and
publish
as
a
Working
Draft
—
or,
—or,
if
the
relevant
criteria
are
fulfilled,
publish
as
a
Candidate
Recommendation
—
and
—and
advance
the
specification
from
that
state.
(See
class
3
changes
.)
6.3.11.4.
6.3.10.3.
Revising
a
Recommendation:
New
Features
New
For
Recommendations
explicitly
identified
as
allowing
new
features
,
tentative
new
features
(see
class
4
changes
)
may
be
incorporated
into
a
Recommendation
explicitly
identified
added
as
allowing
new
features
using
candidate
additions
.
A
candidate
addition
can
be
made
normative
in
annotations,
and
be
folded
into
the
main
text
of
the
Recommendation
class
4
changes
using
may
be
normatively
incorporated
in
the
same
process
as
for
candidate
amendments
,
fashion
as
detailed
class
3
changes
in
§ 6.3.11.3
§ 6.3.10.2
Revising
a
Recommendation:
Substantive
Changes
.
Note:
This
prohibition
against
Limiting
the
addition
of
new
features
unless
to
Recommendations
that
explicitly
allowed
allow
them
enables
third
parties
to
depend
on
Recommendations
having
a
stable
feature-set,
feature-set
for
Recommendations
that
do
not
advertise
that
ability,
as
they
have
was
the
case
for
all
Recommendations
prior
to
the
2020
revision
of
this
Process.
Note:
When
a
Recommendation
that
does
not
allow
new
features
,
W3C
must
create
new
features
can
be
added
by
creating
a
new
technical
report
,
and
following
the
full
process
of
advancing
a
that
technical
report
to
Recommendation
beginning
—beginning
with
a
new
First
Public
Working
Draft
.
Such
technical
reports
could
be
written
to
represent
additional
modules
building
on
top
of
the
original
Recommendation
of
the
core
technology,
or
an
expanded
replacement
of
the
original
Recommendation
of
the
core
technology
(in
which
case
the
new
technical
report
will
typically
have
the
same
name
as
the
original,
with
an
incremented
version
number).
6.3.11.5.
6.3.10.4.
Incorporating
Candidate
Amendments
A Last Call for Review of Proposed Amendments verifies acceptance by the W3C community of candidate amendments by combining an AC Review with a patent exclusion opportunity.
The Last Call for Review of Proposed Amendments must be announced to other W3C groups, the public, and the Advisory Committee . The announcement must :
- Identify whether this is a Last Call for Review of Proposed Corrections , Last Call for Review of Proposed Additions , or Last Call for Review of Proposed Corrections and Additions .
-
Identify
the
specific
candidate
amendments
under
review
as
proposed
amendments
(
proposed
corrections
/
proposed additionsproposed additions ). - Specify the deadline for review comments, which must not be any sooner than 60 days from the Call for Review.
- Solicit review and, if it does not already have it, implementation experience.
The combination of the existing Recommendation with the proposed amendments included in the Last Call for Review of Proposed Amendments is considered a Patent Review Draft for the purposes of the Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] . Also, the review initiated by the Last Call for Review of Proposed Amendments is an Advisory Committee Review .
Note: Last Call for Review of Proposed Additions and Last Call for Review of Proposed Corrections and Additions can only be issued for Recommendations that allow new features .
A Working Group may batch multiple proposed amendments into a single Last Call for Review of Proposed Amendments . To facilitate review, a Last Call for Review of Proposed Amendments on a given specification should not be issued more frequently than approximately once every 6 months.
At the end of the Last Call for Review of Proposed Amendments , the W3C Decision may either be to reject the proposed amendment , or to clear the proposed amendment for advancement as is, or to return the proposal to the Working Group with a request to formally address comments made on the changes under review. If the Working Group needs to amend a proposed amendment in response to review feedback it must issue another Last Call for Review of Proposed Amendments on the revised change before it can be incorporated into the main text.
Once all comments on a proposed amendment have been formally addressed , and after the Working Group can show adequate implementation experience and the fulfillment of all other requirements of Recommendation text, it may incorporate the proposed amendment into the normative Recommendation by issuing an update request for publication of the updated Recommendation .
To ensure adequate review of proposed amendment combinations, only proposed amendments included in the most recent Last Call for Review of Proposed Amendments can be incorporated into the normative Recommendation text. (Thus if incorporation of a proposed amendment is postponed, it may need to be included in multiple Last Calls for Review of Proposed Amendments.)
6.3.12.
6.3.11.
Regression
on
the
Recommendation
Track
A Working Group may republish a Recommendation-track technical report at a lower maturity stage by fulfilling the requirements to transition to that maturity stage, as described above.
Additionally,
with
the
approval
approvals
(by
group
decision
)
of
each
of
the
TAG
and
the
AB
the
Team
may
return
the
technical
report
to
a
lower
maturity
stage
in
response
to
wide
review
or
a
formal
objection
.
6.3.13.
6.3.12.
Retiring
Recommendation
Track
Documents
Work on a technical report may cease at any time. Work should cease if W3C or a Working Group determines that it cannot productively carry the work any further.
6.3.13.1.
6.3.12.1.
Abandoning
an
Unfinished
Recommendation
Any Recommendation-track technical report no longer intended to advance or to be maintained, and that is not being rescinded, should be published as a Discontinued Draft , with no substantive change compared to the previous publication. This can happen if the Working Group decided to abandon work on the report, or as the result of an AC Review requiring the Working Group to discontinue work on the technical report before completion. If a Working Group is made to close , W3C must re- publish any unfinished technical report on the Recommendation track as Discontinued Draft .
Such a document should include in its status section an explanation of why it was discontinued.
A Working Group may resume work on such a technical report within the scope of its charter at any time, by re- publishing it as a Working Draft .
6.3.13.2.
6.3.12.2.
Rescinding
a
Candidate
Recommendation
The process for rescinding a Candidate Recommendation is the same as for rescinding a Recommendation .
6.3.13.3.
6.3.12.3.
Abandoning
a
W3C
Recommendation
It is possible that W3C decides that implementing a particular Recommendation is no longer recommended. There are three designations for such specifications, chosen depending on the advice W3C wishes to give about further use of the specification.
W3C may obsolete a Recommendation , for example if the W3C Community decides that the Recommendation no longer represents best practices, or is not adopted and is not apparently likely to be adopted. An Obsolete Recommendation may be restored to normal Recommendation , for example because despite marking it Obsolete the specification is later more broadly adopted.
W3C may declare a Recommendation Superseded if a newer version exists which W3C recommends for new adoption. The process for declaring a Recommendation Superseded is the same as for declaring it Obsolete, below; only the name and explanation change.
W3C may rescind a Recommendation if W3C believes there is no reasonable prospect of it being restored for example due to burdensome patent claims that affect implementers and cannot be resolved; see the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] and in particular “W3C Royalty-Free (RF) Licensing Requirements” and “PAG Conclusion”.
W3C only rescinds, supersedes, or obsoletes entire Recommendations. A Recommendation can be both superseded and obsolete. To rescind, supersede, or obsolete some part of a Recommendation, W3C follows the process for modifying a Recommendation .
Note:
For
the
purposes
of
the
W3C
Patent
Policy
Policy,
[PATENT-POLICY]
an
Obsolete
or
Superseded
Recommendation
has
the
status
of
an
active
Recommendation
,
although
it
is
not
recommended
advised
for
future
implementation;
a
Rescinded
Recommendation
ceases
to
be
in
effect
and
no
new
licenses
are
granted
under
the
Patent
Policy.
6.3.13.4.
6.3.12.4.
Process
for
Rescinding,
Obsoleting,
Superseding,
Restoring
a
Recommendation
The process of rescinding, obsoleting, superseding, or restoring a Recommendation can be initiated either by a request from the Team or via a request from any of the following:
- The Working Group who produced, or is chartered to maintain, the Recommendation
- The TAG , if there is no such Working Group
- Any individual who made a request to the relevant Working Group as described above, or the TAG if such a group does not exist, to obsolete, rescind, supersede, or restore a Recommendation , where the request was not answered within 90 days
-
5%
of
the members of theAdvisory Committee representatives of Members in Good Standing
The Team must then submit the request to the Advisory Committee for review. For any Advisory Committee review of a proposal to rescind, obsolete, supersede, or restore a Recommendation the Team must :
- announce the proposal to all Working Group Chairs , and to the Public, as well as to the Advisory Committee
- indicate that this is a proposal to Rescind, Obsolete, Supersede, or restore, a Recommendation as appropriate
- identify the Recommendation by URL
- publish a rationale for the proposal
- identify known dependencies and solicit review from all dependent Working Groups
- solicit public review
- specify the deadline for review comments, which must be at least 28 days after the announcement
and should
- identify known implementations.
If there was any dissent in the Advisory Committee review , the Team must publish the substantive content of the dissent to W3C and the public , and must formally address the dissent at least 14 days before publication as an Obsolete or Rescinded Recommendation .
The
Advisory
Committee
may
initiate
an
Advisory
Committee
Appeal
of
the
Team
's
’s
decision.
W3C must publish an Obsolete or Rescinded Recommendation with up to date status. The updated version may remove the main body of the document. The Status of this Document section should link to the explanation of Obsoleting and Rescinding W3C Specifications [OBS-RESC] as appropriate.
Once W3C has published a Rescinded Recommendation, future W3C technical reports must not include normative references to that technical report.
Note: W3C strives to ensure that all Technical Reports will continue to be available at their version-specific URL.
6.4. The Note Track (Notes and Statements)
6.4.1. Group Notes
A Group Note ( NOTE ) is published to provide a stable reference for a useful document that is not intended to be a formal standard.
Working Groups , Interest Groups , the TAG and the AB may publish work as Notes . Examples include:
- supporting documentation for a specification, such as explanations of design principles or use cases and requirements
- non-normative guides to good practices
Some
Notes
are
developed
through
successive
Draft
Notes
Note
Drafts
before
publication
as
a
full
Notes
,
while
others
are
published
directly
as
a
Note
.
There
are
few
formal
requirements
to
publish
a
document
as
a
Note
or
Draft
Note
Draft
,
and
they
have
no
standing
as
a
recommendation
of
W3C
but
are
simply
documents
preserved
for
historical
reference.
Note:
The
W3C
Patent
Policy
[PATENT-POLICY]
does
not
apply
any
licensing
requirements
or
commitments
for
Notes
or
Draft
Notes
Note
Drafts
.
6.4.2. Publishing Notes
In
order
to
publish
a
Note
or
Draft
Note
Draft
,
the
group:
-
must
record
their
decision
to
request
publication
as
a
Note
or
DraftNote Draft , and - should publish documentation of significant changes to the technical report since any previous publication.
Both
Notes
and
Draft
Notes
Note
Drafts
can
be
updated
by
republishing
as
a
Note
or
Draft
Note
Draft
.
A
technical
report
may
remain
a
Note
indefinitely.
6.4.3. Elevating Group Notes to W3C Statement status
A W3C Statement is a Note that has been endorsed by W3C as a whole. In order to elevate a Note to W3C Statement status, A group must :
- show that the document has received wide review .
- record the group’s decision to request publication as a W3C Statement .
- show that all issues raised against the document since its first publication as a Note have been formally addressed .
- provide public documentation of any Formal Objections .
A Note specifying implementable technology should not be elevated to W3C Statement status; if it does, the request to publish as a Statement must include rationale for why it should be elevated, and why it is not on the Recommendation track .
Once these conditions are fulfilled, the Team must then begin an Advisory Committee Review on the question of whether the document is appropriate to publish as a W3C Statement . During this review period, the Note must not be updated.
The decision to advance a document to W3C Statement is a W3C Decision . Advisory Committee representatives may initiate an Advisory Committee Appeal of the decision.
The Team must announce the publication of a W3C Statement to the Advisory Committee , other W3C groups, and the public.
6.4.4. Revising W3C Statements
Given
a
recorded
group
decision
to
do
so,
groups
can
request
publication
of
a
W3C
Statement
with
editorial
changes
—
including
—including
candidate
amendment
—
without
—without
any
additional
process.
A candidate amendment can be folded into the main text of the W3C Statement , once it has satisfied all the same criteria as the rest of the Statement , including review by the community to ensure the substantive and editorial soundness of the candidate amendments . To validate this, the group must request an Advisory Committee review of the changes it wishes to incorporate. The specific candidate amendments under review must be identified as proposed amendments just as in a Last Call for Review of Proposed Corrections .
The decision to incorporate proposed amendments into W3C Statement is a W3C Decision . Advisory Committee representatives may initiate an Advisory Committee Appeal of the decision.
6.5. The Registry Track
A
registry
documents
a
data
set
consisting
of
one
or
more
associated
registry
tables
,
each
table
representing
an
updatable
collection
of
logically
independent,
consistently-structured
registry
entries
.
A
registry
has
three
associated
components:
consists
of:
- the registry definition , defining how the registry tables are structured and maintained
-
one
or
more
registry
tables
,
holding
the
data
set
represented
by
the
registry
(the
registry
data
)
one or more referencing specifications, which make use of the registry
The purposes of maintaining a registry can include:
- non-collision
- Avoiding the problem of two entities using the same value with different semantics.
- non-duplication
- Avoiding the problem of having two or more different values in use with the same semantics.
- information
- Providing a central index where anyone can find out what a value means and what its formal definition is (and where it is).
- submission
- Ease of adding new terms, including by stakeholders external to the custodian organization.
- consensus
- Promoting a clear consensus of the community on the terms.
This section of the W3C Process provides a specialized process facilitating the publication and maintenance of such registry tables , particularly those required by or closely related to W3C Recommendations .
Note: Not every table in a specification is a potential registry. If the intent or effect is that the table enumerates all the possibilities the authors of the specification expect or envisage, then the table by itself is enough. Similarly, if the table is managed by the Working Group and only updated as part of specification update, then the complexities of registry management are not needed.
6.5.1. Registry Definitions
A registry definition defines what each registry table is and how it is maintained. It must :
- Define the scope and purpose of each registry table .
- Define the fields of each registry table and their constraints (e.g. values must be drawn from a defined set, or be unique, or only reference publicly available resources, etc.)
-
Define
the
policy
for
changes
to
existing
entries,
such
as
- whether entries can be deleted or deprecated
- whether entries can be changed after being published, and what kinds of changes are allowed
- whether previously-deleted unique identifiers can be re-used, or are reserved indefinitely
- Define the method and criteria by which changes are proposed, approved, and incorporated. (For example, a registry could define that changes to registry entries can be proposed using a particular web form or email address, that they must be accompanied by certain background information, or that they do or do not need to be approved by any member of a particular Working Group.)
-
Identify
the
custodian
of
the
registry
table
:
the
entity
to
which
requests
for
registry
changes
must
be
sent,
and
which
is
responsible
for
evaluating
whether
such
requests
satisfy
the
criteria
defined
in
the
registry
definition
.
The custodian may be the
Working Group ,initiating group, the Team , or a delegated entity. The custodian for all registry tables in a single registry should generally be the same entity.If the custodian of a registry table ceases to exist or to operate as a custodian (e.g., the relevant group is disbanded, or the custodian is unresponsive to repeated attempts to make contact), and the chartered or elected group that owns the registry definition is itself closed or unresponsive, the Team should propose replacing the custodian , which must be confirmed by an AC Review as a W3C Decision .
6.5.2. Publishing Registries
Registries
A
chartered
or
elected
group
can
be
published
either
publish
a
registry
as
a
stand-alone
technical
report
on
the
Registry
Track
,
where
it
is
called
a
registry
report
,
or
incorporated
as
part
of
a
Recommendation
as
a
registry
section
.
A
registry
report
or
registry
section
Working
Groups
is
purely
documentational,
is
not
subject
to
the
W3C
Patent
Policy,
and
must
not
contain
any
requirements
on
implementations.
For
have
the
purposes
additional
option
of
the
Patent
Policy
[PATENT-POLICY]
,
any
incorporating
a
registry
section
in
as
part
of
a
Recommendation
track
document
is
not
a
normative
portion
of
that
specification.
,
as
an
embedded
registry
.
The
registry
report
or
embedded
registry
section
must
:
-
Clearly
label
the
registry
report
/ sectionor embedded registry , its tables , and its registry definitions as such, including a link to § 6.5 The Registry Track in this Process. - Include the registry definition for each of its registry tables .
-
Provide
the
registry
data
by
either:
- Including the entire contents of each registry table , either inline in the report (e.g. formatted as a table, or list, or other appropriate representation), or in a machine-readable file published as part of the technical report , or (preferably) both.
- Linking to one or more standalone Registry Data Reports containing the registry tables in human-readable form, machine-readable form, or (preferably) both.
- Include, if the registry table is provided in a machine-readable file, a definition of the format of that file.
The Team must make available a means for interested parties to be notified of any updates to a registry table .
Note: Since the Process does not impose requirements on changes to the contents of a registry table other than those imposed by the registry definition , acceptance of proposed registry changes on behalf of the custodian and publication of an updated registry report that contains only registry changes since the previous publication can be automated if satisfaction of those rules can be automatically verified.
Rules for publication and advancement on the Registry Track are identical to that of the Recommendation Track with the following exceptions:
- Registry reports are not subject to the [PATENT-POLICY] , and therefore none of their publications correspond, to First Public Working Draft , Working Draft , or Patent Review Draft for the purposes of the [PATENT-POLICY] .
- For the same reason, there is no equivalent to Rescinded Recommendation nor to Rescinded Candidate Recommendation for Registries .
-
The
equivalent
of
Working
Draft
is
called
Draft RegistryRegistry Draft . - The equivalent of Candidate Recommendation is called Candidate Registry , with Candidate Recommendation Snapshot and Candidate Recommendation Draft corresponding to Candidate Registry Snapshot and Candidate Registry Draft .
- The equivalent of W3C Recommendation is called W3C Registry ; Obsolete Recommendation and Superseded Recommendation correspond to Obsolete Registry and Superseded Registry .
-
There is no equivalent to the Proposed Recommendation phase. Instead, an Advisory Committee Review is started upon publication of each Candidate Registry Snapshot .Changes that add new features(i.e.(i.e., class 4 changes ) are allowed in all W3C Registries , without needingthethem to explicitly indicate that this is allowed.
6.5.3. Updating Registry Tables
Changes
to
the
contents
of
a
registry
table
that
are
in
accordance
with
the
registry
definition
,
(i.e.
Class
5
changes
)
can
be
made
by
re-publishing
the
technical
report
that
contains
the
affected
table,
without
needing
to
satisfy
any
other
requirements
for
the
publication
(not
even
Working
Group
consensus,
a
group
decision
,
unless
this
is
required
by
the
registry
definition
).
Such
registry
changes
do
not
trigger
new
Advisory
Committee
Reviews
,
nor
Exclusion
Opportunities,
and
do
not
require
verification
via
an
update
request
,
even
for
technical
reports
at
maturities
where
this
would
normally
be
expected.
Such
publications
can
be
made
even
in
the
absence
of
a
Working
Group
group
chartered
to
maintain
the
registry
when
the
custodian
is
another
entity.
Note:
The
custodian
is
only
empowered
to
make
registry
changes
.
If
the
Working
Group
group
establishing
the
registry
wishes
to
empower
the
custodian
to
add
commentary
on
individual
entries,
this
needs
to
be
part
of
the
registry
table’s
definition.
If
other
changes
are
desired,
they
must
need
to
be
requested
of
the
group
responsible
Working
Group—
or
for
maintaining
the
registry
definition
—or
in
the
absence
of
such
a
Working
Group,
group,
of
the
Team.
Changes to the registry tables made in accordance with candidate or proposed amendments to the registry definition which would not be allowed by the unamended registry definition must be identified as such.
6.5.4. Registry Data Reports
When the registry data is published in a separate technical report from its registry definition , that report is called a Registry Data Report . This technical report :
- Must link to the registry definition establishing the registry tables that it contain.
-
May
contain
informativenon-normative introductory text, examples, and notes about the registry tables and entries that it contains. (Changes to these parts are deemed to be editorial changes ).
Registry Data Reports do not have maturity stages in and of themselves; The maturity stage of the registry whose data they record is that of the technical report holding the registry definition .
Anytime
a
change
is
made
to
a
registry
definition
,
the
Working
Group
group
maintaining
the
registry
definition
must
update
and
republish
any
document
holding
the
corresponding
registry
tables
to
make
it
consistent
with
these
changes.
Given
a
recorded
group
decision
to
do
so,
the
Working
Group
group
maintaining
the
registry
definition
may
republish
the
Registry
Data
Report
to
incorporate
editorial
changes
.
If
there
is
no
Working
Group
chartered
to
maintain
this
registry,
the
Team
may
do
so
instead.
6.5.5. Specifications that Reference Registries
Registries document values, they do not define any architectural or interoperability requirements related to those values. All architectural and interoperability requirements pertaining to registry entries must be contained in the specifications that reference the registry, and are therefore subject to the processes (including approval and intellectual property provisions) applicable to those referencing specifications.
If there are entries that must be implemented, or any other such restrictions, they must be defined or documented in the referencing specification without dependency on the registry.
Basic-Method
as
defined
in
the
registry”
is
not
Basic-Method
in
the
registry
would
then
affect
conformance.
Instead,
the
requirement
Basic-Method
,
and
implement
it
as
defined
by
section
yy
of
IETF
RFC
Basic-Method
as
an
entry.)
6.5.6. Registries and Patents
A registry report or embedded registry is not subject to the W3C Patent Policy, and must not define any requirements on implementations. For the purposes of the Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] (only), any embedded registry in a Recommendation track document is not a normative portion of that specification.
6.6. Switching Tracks
Given a Group decision to do so, Working Groups can republish a technical report on a different track than the one it is on, under the following restrictions:
- A technical report that is or was a W3C Recommendation , W3C Statement , or Patent Review Draft cannot switch tracks.
- A technical report should not switch away from the Recommendation Track without due consideration of the Patent Policy implications and approval of W3C’s legal counsel if the Working Group envisions a likelihood of returning to it later.
Technical reports that switch tracks start at their new track’s initial maturity stage, while retaining any established identity (url, shortname, etc.).
Note: The initial maturity stage of the Recommendation track is Working Draft . First Public Working Draft designates a specific type of Working Draft and is not a separate maturity stage. A document which switches to the Recommendation track is only published as a First Public Working Draft if it was never previously published as such; otherwise, it is simply a Working Draft .
6.7. Further reading
Refer to "How to Organize a Recommendation Track Transition" [TRANSITION] in the Art of Consensus [GUIDE] for practical information about preparing for the reviews and announcements of the various steps, and tips on getting to Recommendation faster [REC-TIPS] . Please see also the Requirements for modification of W3C Technical Reports [REPUBLISHING] .
7. Dissemination Policies
7.1. Public Communication
The Team is responsible for managing communication within W3C and with the general public (e.g., news services, press releases, managing the website and access privileges, and managing calendars). Members should solicit review by the Team prior to issuing press releases about their work within W3C.
The Team makes every effort to ensure the persistence and availability of the following public information:
- W3C technical reports whose publication has been approved. Per W3C IPR Policies , W3C technical reports (and software) are available free of charge to the general public.
- A mission statement [MISSION] that explains the purpose and mission of W3C, the key benefits for Members, and the organizational structure of W3C.
-
Legal
documents,
including
theMembershipAgreementAgreements [MEMBER-AGREEMENT] and documentation of any legal commitments W3C has with other entities. - The Process Document.
- Public results of W3C activities and Workshops .
To keep the Members abreast of W3C meetings, Workshops , and review deadlines, the Team provides them with a regular (e.g., weekly) news service and maintains a calendar [CALENDAR] of official W3C events. Members are encouraged to send schedule and event information to the Team for inclusion on this calendar.
7.2. Confidentiality Levels
There are three principal levels of access to W3C information (on the W3C website, in W3C meetings, etc.): public, Member-only, and Team-only.
While
much
information
made
available
by
W3C
is
public,
“
Member-only
”
information
is
available
to
authorized
parties
only,
including
representatives
of
Member
organizations,
Invited
Experts
,
(as
described
in
https://www.w3.org/invited-experts/#memaccess
),
the
Advisory
Board,
the
TAG,
and
the
Team.
For
example,
the
charter
of
some
Working
Groups
may
specify
a
Member-only
confidentiality
level
for
group
proceedings.
“ Team-only ” information is available to the Team and other authorized parties.
Those authorized to access Member-only and Team-only information:
- must treat the information as confidential within W3C,
-
must
use
reasonable
efforts
to
maintain the proper level ofpreserve that confidentiality, and -
must
not
release
this
information
to
the
general
public
or
press.press, nor beyond the proper level of access.
The Team must provide mechanisms to protect the confidentiality of Member-only information and ensure that authorized parties have proper access to this information. Documents should clearly indicate whether they require Member-only confidentiality. Individuals uncertain of the confidentiality level of a piece of information should contact the Team.
Advisory Committee representatives may authorize Member-only access to Member representatives and other individuals employed by the Member who are considered appropriate recipients. For instance, it is the responsibility of the Advisory Committee representative and other employees and official representatives of the organization to ensure that Member-only news announcements are distributed for internal use only within their organization. Information about Member mailing lists is available in the New Member Orientation [INTRO] .
7.3. Changing Confidentiality Level
As a benefit of membership, W3C provides some Team-only and Member-only channels for certain types of communication. For example, Advisory Committee representatives can send reviews to a Team-only channel. However, for W3C processes with a significant public component, such as the technical report development process, it is also important for information that affects decision-making to be publicly available. The Team may need to communicate Team-only information to a Working Group or the public. Similarly, a Working Group whose proceedings are Member-only must make public information pertinent to the technical report development process.
This document clearly indicates which information must be available to Members or the public, even though that information was initially communicated on Team-only or Member-only channels. Only the Team and parties authorized by the Team may change the level of confidentiality of this information. When doing so:
- The Team must use a version of the information that was expressly provided by the author for the new confidentiality level. In Calls for Review and other similar messages, the Team should remind recipients to provide such alternatives.
- The Team must not attribute the version for the new confidentiality level to the author without the author’s consent.
- If the author has not conveyed to the Team a version that is suitable for another confidentiality level, the Team may make available a version that reasonably communicates what is required, while respecting the original level of confidentiality, and without attribution to the original author.
8.
Workshops
and
Symposia
The
Team
organizes
Workshops
and
Symposia
to
promote
early
involvement
in
the
development
of
W3C
activities
from
Members
and
the
public.
The
goal
of
a
Workshop
is
usually
either
to
convene
experts
and
other
interested
parties
for
an
exchange
of
ideas
about
a
technology
or
policy,
or
to
address
the
pressing
concerns
of
W3C
Members.
Organizers
of
the
first
type
of
Workshop
may
solicit
position
papers
for
the
Workshop
program
and
may
use
those
papers
to
choose
attendees
and/or
presenters.
The
goal
of
a
Symposium
is
usually
to
educate
interested
parties
about
a
particular
subject.
The
Call
for
Participation
in
a
Workshop
or
Symposium
may
indicate
participation
requirements
or
limits,
and
expected
deliverables
(e.g.,
reports
and
minutes
).
Organization
of
an
event
does
not
guarantee
further
investment
by
W3C
in
a
particular
topic,
but
may
lead
to
proposals
for
new
activities
or
groups.
Workshops
and
Symposia
generally
last
one
to
three
days.
If
a
Workshop
is
being
organized
to
address
the
pressing
concerns
of
Members,
the
Team
must
issue
the
Call
for
Participation
no
later
than
six
weeks
prior
to
the
Workshop’s
scheduled
start
date.
For
other
Workshops
and
Symposia,
the
Team
must
issue
a
Call
for
Participation
no
later
than
eight
weeks
prior
to
the
meeting’s
scheduled
start
date.
This
helps
ensure
that
speakers
and
authors
have
adequate
time
to
prepare
position
papers
and
talks.
9.
Liaisons
W3C uses the term liaison to refer to coordination of activities with a variety of organizations, through a number of mechanisms ranging from very informal (e.g., an individual from another organization participates in a W3C Working Group, or just follows its work) to mutual membership, to even more formal agreements. Liaisons are not meant to substitute for W3C membership.
All liaisons must be coordinated by the Team due to requirements for public communication; patent, copyright, and other IPR policies; confidentiality agreements; and mutual membership agreements.
W3C may negotiate technical agreements with another organization. For purposes of the W3C Process, a technical agreement is a formal contract, or a Memorandum of Understanding ( MoU ), or a similar document, between W3C and another party or parties, that relates to the technical activity of the Consortium (e.g., its publications, groups, or liaisons). It specifies rights and obligations of each party toward the others. These rights and obligations may include joint deliverables, an agreed share of technical responsibilities with due coordination, and/or considerations for confidentiality and specific IPR.
Non-technical agreements, including those between W3C and its Members for the purposes of membership, between W3C and its Partners for the purposes of partnership [BYLAWS] , and other agreements related to the operation of the Consortium or to the ordinary provision of services, are not subject to these Process provisions.
When considering a technical agreement (i.e., before the decision whether to sign is made), the Team should provide the Advisory Committee with a draft of the proposed agreement , along with an explanation of how W3C would benefit from signing this agreement , for their review and discussion. After addressing any comments, and subject to any management or governance procedures that apply (e.g., formal review of proposed contracts by legal counsel or by the Board ), if the Team decides to proceed with signing the agreement , the Team must announce the intent to sign, and provide the final text of the agreement , with an explanation of signing rationale, to the Advisory Committee . Advisory Committee representatives may initiate an Advisory Committee Appeal of the decision to sign the agreement . If the proposal is rejected on appeal , the Team must not sign the agreement on behalf of W3C unless directed to do so by the Board . A signed agreement should be made public.
Information about W3C liaisons with other organizations [LIAISON] and the guidelines W3C follows when creating a liaison is available on the Web.
10.
9.
Member
Submission
Process
Submissions
The
Member
Submission
process
allows
Members
to
propose
technology
or
other
ideas
for
consideration
by
the
Team
.
After
review,
the
Team
may
make
the
material
available
at
the
W3C
website.
The
formal
process
affords
Members
a
record
of
their
contribution
and
gives
them
a
mechanism
for
disclosing
the
details
of
the
transaction
with
the
Team
(including
IPR
claims).
The
Team
also
makes
review
comments
on
the
Submitted
materials
available
for
W3C
Members,
the
public,
and
the
media.
A
Member
Submission
consists
of:
One
is
a
document
or
more
set
of
documents
developed
outside
of
the
W3C
process,
W3C,
and
Information
about
the
documents,
provided
submitted
to
W3C
by
the
Submitter.
One
one
or
more
Members
(called
the
(the
Submitter(s)
)
may
participate
in
a
Member
Submission.
Only
W3C
Members
may
be
listed
as
Submitters
.
The
Submission
process
consists
of
the
following
steps:
One
of
the
Submitters
sends
a
request
to
the
Team
to
acknowledge
the
Submission
request.
The
Team
and
Submitter
(s)
communicate
to
ensure
that
the
Member
Submission
is
complete.
propose
technology
or
other
ideas.
After
review,
the
Team
must
either
acknowledge
or
reject
the
Submission
request.
If
acknowledged
,
the
Team
must
may
make
the
Member
Submission
material
available
at
the
public
W3C
website,
in
addition
to
Team
comments
about
the
Member
Submission
.
If
rejected
,
the
Submitter
(s)
may
initiate
a
Submission
Appeal
.
Note:
To
avoid
confusion
about
the
Member
Submission
process,
please
note
that:
Documents
in
a
Member
Submission
are
developed
outside
of
the
W3C
technical
report
development
process
(and
therefore
are
not
included
in
the
index
of
W3C
technical
reports
[TR]
).
The
Submission
process
is
not
a
means
by
which
Members
ask
for
“ratification”
of
these
documents
as
W3C
Recommendations
.
There
is
no
requirement
or
guarantee
that
technology
which
is
part
of
an
acknowledged
Submission
request
will
receive
further
consideration
by
W3C
(e.g.,
by
a
W3C
Working
Group
).
website.
Making
a
Member
Submission
available
at
the
W3C
website
does
not
imply
endorsement
indicate
endorsement,
acceptance,
or
adoption
by
W3C,
including
the
W3C
Team
its
Team,
or
its
Members.
The
acknowledgment
of
a
Submission
request
does
not
imply
that
any
action
will
be
taken
by
W3C.
It
merely
records
publicly
that
the
Submission
request
has
been
made
by
the
Submitter.
Submitter(s).
A
Member
Submission
made
available
by
W3C
is
not
a
W3C
technical
report
and
must
not
be
referred
to
as
an
output
or
“work
in
progress”
of
W3C.
The
list
of
acknowledged
Member
Submissions
[SUBMISSION-LIST]
Submission
is
available
at
process
consists
of
the
W3C
website.
following
steps:
-
Submission
request, only one Member formally sends in the request. That Member must copy each -
One
of
the
Submitters
,
copying
the
Advisory
Committee
representatives
of
the
other
participating Members, and each of those Advisory Committee representatives must confirm (by email to the Team) their participation in the Submission request. At any time prior to acknowledgment, any SubmitterSubmittersmay withdraw support for(if any), sends aSubmissionrequest(described in " Howtosend a Submission request " [SUBMISSION-REQ] ). A Submission request is “withdrawn” when no Submitter(s) support it. The Team must not make statements about withdrawn Submission requests. Prior to acknowledgment,theSubmitter (s) must not , under any circumstances , refer to a document as “submittedTeam to acknowledge theWorld Wide Web Consortium” or “under consideration by W3C” or any similar phrase either in public or Member communication. The Submitter (s) must not imply in public or Member communication that W3C is working (with the Submitter (s)) on the material in the MemberSubmission.request. TheSubmitter (s) may release the documents in the Member Submission to the public prior to acknowledgment (without reference to the Submission request). After acknowledgment, the SubmitterTeam(s) must not , under any circumstances , imply W3C investment in the Member Submission until,andunless, the material has been adopted as a deliverable of a W3C Working Group . 10.1.1. Scope of Member Submissions When a technology overlaps in scope with the work of a chartered Working Group, Members should participate in the Working GroupSubmitter(s)and contribute the technologycommunicate to ensure that thegroup’s process rather than seek publication through theMember Submissionprocess. The Working Groupmay incorporate the contributed technology into its deliverables. If the Working Group does not incorporate the technology, it should not publish the contributed documents as Working Group Notes since Working Group Notes represent group output, not input to the group. On the other hand, while W3Cisin the early stages of developing a charter, Members should usecomplete. - Review
-
The
Team
reviews
the
Submission
processtobuild consensus around concrete proposals for new work. Members should not submit materials covering topics well outsideevaluate its scope, quality, and compliance with thescope of W3C’s mission [MISSION] . 10.1.2. Information Required in aSubmissionRequestrequirements, including licensing requirements:-
The
SubmitterSubmitter(s)(s)and any other authors of the submitted material must agreethat, if the request is acknowledged, the documents into license theMemberSubmissionwill be subject tounder the W3C Document License [DOC-LICENSE]and will include a reference to it. The Submitter (s) may hold the copyright for the documents in a Member Submission.. -
The
request
must
satisfy
the
Member
Submission
licensing
commitments
in
“Licensing Commitments in W3C Submissions” in theThe W3C Patent Policy[PATENT-POLICY] . The Submitter (s) must include the following information: The list of all submitting Members. Position statements from all submitting Members (gathered by the Submitter). All position statements must appear in a separate document. Complete electronic copies of any documents submitted for consideration (e.g., a technical specification, a position paper, etc.) If the Submission request is acknowledged, these documents will be made available by W3C and therefore must satisfy the Team’s Publication Rules [PUBRULES] . Submitters may hold the copyright for the material contained in these documents, but when made available by W3C, these documents must be subject to the provisions of the W3C Document License [DOC-LICENSE]§ sec-submissions .
The request must also answer the following questions. What proprietary technology is required to implement the areas addressed by the request,Detailed procedures andwhat terms are associated with its use? Again, many answersrequirements arepossible, but the specific answer will affect the Team’s Decision . What resources, if any, does the Submitter intend to make available if W3C acknowledgesdefined by theSubmission requestTeam andtakes action on it? What action would the Submitter like W3C to take if the Submission request is acknowledged? What mechanisms are there to make changes to the specification being submitted? This includes, but is not limited to, stating where change control will reside ifdocumented in therequest is acknowledged. For other administrative requirements related to Submission requests, see“How to send a Submission requestMember submissions guidebook ” [MEMBER-SUB] .10.2. Team Rights and Obligations Although they are not technical reports, -
The
- Decision
-
After
review,
the
documents in a Member SubmissionTeam mustfulfill the requirements established by the Team , including the Team’s Publication Rules [PUBRULES] . The Team sends a validation notice to the Submitter (s) once the Team has reviewed a Submission request and judged it complete and correct. Prior to a decision toeither acknowledge or reject therequest, the request is Team-only , and the Team must hold it in the strictest confidentiality. In particular, the Team must not comment to the media about theSubmission request.10.3. Acknowledgment of a Submission Request The Team acknowledges a Submission request by sending an announcement to the Advisory Committee . Though the announcement may be made at any time, the Submitter (s) can expect an announcement between four to six weeks after-
If
acknowledged
,
the
validation notice . TheTeam mustkeep the Submitter (s) informed of when an announcement is likely to be made. Once a Submission request has been acknowledged, the Team must : Makemake the Member Submission available at the public W3Cwebsite. Make the Team comments about the Submission request available at the W3C website. If the Submitter (s) wishes to modify a document made available as the result of acknowledgment, the Submitter(s) must start the Submission process from the beginning, even just to correct editorial changes . 10.4. Rejection of a Submission Request, and Submission Appeals The Team may reject a Submission request for a variety of reasons, including any of the following: The ideas expressed in the request overlap in scope with the work of a chartered Working Group, and acknowledgment might jeopardize the progress of the group. The IPR statement made by the Submitter (s) is inconsistent with W3C’s Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY] and in particular the “Licensing Commitments in W3C Submissions”, Document License [DOC-LICENSE] , orwebsite alongside otherIPR policies. The ideas expressed in the request are poor, might harm the Web, or run counter to W3C’s missionacknowledged Member Submissions[MISSION][SUBMISSION-LIST] . -
The ideas expressed in the request lie well outside the scope of W3C’s mission. In case of a rejection,If rejected , the Team must inform the Advisory Committeerepresentativerepresentative(s)(s)of theSubmitter (s). If requested by the Submitter (s), the TeamSubmitter(s) , and must provide rationaleto the Submitter (s) about the rejection. Other than toif requested by theSubmitterSubmitter(s) . The Submitter(s)(s), the Teammust notmaymake statements about whyinitiate a Submissionrequest was rejected.Appeal .
-
If
acknowledged
,
the
The
Advisory
Committee
representative
representative(s)
(s)
of
the
Submitters
Submitter(s)
(s)
may
initiate
a
Submission
Appeal
.
The
procedure
for
handling
Submission
Appeals
is
the
same
as
for
Formal
Objections
,
except
that
an
AC
Appeal
is
not
possible
and
both
the
Formal
Objection
and
the
Council
Report
are
confidential
to
the
Team
,
TAG
,
and
AB
.
11.
10.
Process
Evolution
Revision
of
the
W3C
Process
and
related
documents
(see
below)
undergoes
similar
consensus
-building
processes
as
for
technical
reports
,
with
the
Advisory
Board
—
acting
as
the
sponsoring
Working
Group
.
The
documents
may
be
developed
by
the
AB
or
by
another
group
to
whom
the
AB
has
delegated
development.
Review
includes
soliciting
input
from
the
W3C
community,
and
in
particular
the
Team.
The documents covered by this section are:
-
the W3C Process (this document)
-
the W3C Patent Policy [PATENT-POLICY]
-
the W3C Code of
Ethics and ProfessionalConduct[CEPC][COC] -
The W3C Document License [DOC-LICENSE]
The Advisory Board initiates review as follows:
- The Team sends a Call for Review to the Advisory Committee and other W3C groups.
- After comments have been formally addressed and the document possibly modified, the Team seeks endorsement from the Members by initiating an Advisory Committee review . The review period must last at least 28 days .
- After the Advisory Committee review , following a W3C decision to adopt the document(s), the Team does so and sends an announcement to the Advisory Committee . Advisory Committee representatives may initiate an Advisory Committee Appeal to W3C.
Note:
As
of
June
2020,
the
Patent
Policy
is
developed
in
the
Patents
and
Standards
Interest
Group
,
the
Code
of
Ethics
and
Professional
Conduct
in
the
Positive
Work
Environment
Community
Group
,
and
the
Process
in
the
W3C
Process
Community
Group
.
12.
Appendix
A:
Retired
Terminology
This section is non-normative.
Previous versions of this process defined and used various concepts and document statuses that have since been retired or renamed. For ease of reference, this appendix lists the more notable ones, and it links to the the definition or relevant section in the most recent version of the Process that used them, and gives the more recent equivalent term when there is one.
- Amended Recommendation (retired term)
- Last defined in section 6.2.1 of the 2020 Process .
- Edited Recommendation (retired term)
- Last defined in section 6.1.2 of the 2019 Process .
- Last Call (retired term)
- Last defined in section 7.4.2 of the 2005 Process .
- Maturity level (renamed term)
- Last defined in section 6.3.1 of the 2021 Process , now called maturity stage .
- Member Consortium , plural: Member Consortia (renamed term)
- Last defined in section 2.1.2.1 of the 2021 Process , now called Member Association .
- Memorandum of Understanding , plural: Memoranda of Understanding, abbreviation: MoU (renamed term)
- Last defined in section 9 of the 2021 Process , now called technical agreement .
- Other Charter (renamed term)
- Last used in section 5.2.6 of the 2020 Process , now called Exclusion Draft Charter .
- Proposed Recommendation (retired term)
- Last defined in section 6.3.1 of the 2023 Process .
- Team Submissions (retired term)
- Last defined in section 2.2.1 of the 2019 Process .
- W3C Chair (renamed term)
- Last defined in section 2.2 of the 2014 Process , now called CEO .
Appendix B: Acknowledgments
This section is non-normative.
The
editors
are
grateful
to
the
following
people,
who
as
interested
individuals
and/or
with
the
affiliation(s)
listed,
have
contributed
to
this
proposal
for
a
revised
Process:
Brian
Kardell,
Carine
Bournez
(W3C),
Adam
Basha,
Anna
Weinberg
(Apple)
Charles
McCathie
Nevile
(ConsenSys),
Nevile,
Chris
Lilley
(W3C),
Chris
Needham
(BBC),
Chris
Wilson
(Google),
Coralie
Mercier
(W3C),
David
W.
Singer
(Apple),
Delfí
Ramírez,
Dominique
Hazaël-Massieux
Denis
Ah-Kang
(W3C),
Elika
J.
Etemad
aka
fantasai,
Fuqiao
Xue
Dominique
Hazael-Massieux
(W3C),
Jeff
Jaffe
Ian
Jacobs
(W3C),
Jeffrey
Yasskin
(Google),
Kevin
Fleming
(Bloomberg),
Léonie
Watson
(The
Paciello
Group),
Jill
Schmidt
(Apple),
Marcos
Cáceres
(Apple),
Mark
Nottingham
(Cloudflare),
Nottingham,
Martin
Thomson
(Mozilla),
Michael
Champion
(Microsoft),
Champion,
Michael
Sirtori
(Intel),
Mike
Smith
(W3C),
Nick
Doty
(Center
for
Democracy
and
Technology),
Nigel
Megitt
(BBC),
Philippe
Le
Hégaret
(W3C),
Ralph
Swick
(W3C),
Samuel
Weiler
(W3C),
Sandro
Hawke
(W3C),
Sam
Sneddon
(Apple),
Shawn
Lawton
Henry,
Henry
(W3C),
Tantek
Çelik
(Mozilla),
Ted
Thibodeau
Jr
(OpenLink
Software),
Virginia
Fournier
Theresa
O’Connor
(Apple),
Wendy
Seltzer
(W3C),
Yves
Lafon
Vivien
Lacourba
(W3C).
The editors are sorry for forgetting any names, and grateful to those who have listened patiently to conversations about this document without feeling a need to add more.
The
following
individuals
contributed
to
the
development
of
earlier
versions
of
the
Process:
Alex
Russell
(Google),
Andreas
Tai
(Institut
fuer
Rundfunktechnik),
Andrew
Betts
(Fastly),
Ann
Bassetti
(The
Boeing
Company),
Anne
van
Kesteren,
Art
Barstow
(Nokia,
unaffiliated),
Bede
McCall
(MITRE),
Ben
Wilson,
Brad
Hill
(Facebook),
Brian
Kardell
(JQuery),
(JQuery,
Igalia),
Carine
Bournez
(W3C),
Carl
Cargill
(Netscape,
Sun
Microsystems,
Adobe),
Charles
McCathie
Nevile
(ConsenSys),
Chris
Lilley
(W3C),
Chris
Needham
(BBC),
Chris
Wilson
(Google),
Claus
von
Riegen
(SAP
AG),
Coralie
Mercier
(W3C),
Cullen
Jennings
(Cisco),
Dan
Appelquist
(Telefonica,
Samsung),
Dan
Connolly
(W3C),
Daniel
Dardailler
(W3C),
Daniel
Glazman
(Disruptive
Innovations),
David
Baron
(Mozilla),
David
Fallside
(IBM),
David
W.
Singer
(Apple),
David
Singer
(IBM),
Delfí
Ramírez,
Dominique
Hazaël-Massieux
(W3C),
Don
Brutzman
(Web3D),
Don
Deutsch
(Oracle),
Eduardo
Gutentag
(Sun
Microsystems),
Elika
J.
Etemad
aka
fantasai,
Florian
Rivoal,
Fuqiao
Xue
(W3C),
Geoffrey
Creighton
(Microsoft),
Giri
Mandyam
(Qualcomm),
Gregg
Kellogg,
Hadley
Beeman,
Håkon
Wium
Lie
(Opera
Software),
Helene
Workman
(Apple),
Henri
Sivonen
(Mozilla),
Håkon
Wium
Lie
(Opera
Software),
Ian
Hickson
(Google),
Ian
Jacobs
(W3C),
Ivan
Herman
(W3C),
J
Alan
Bird
(W3C),
Jay
Kishigami
岸上順一
(NTT),
Jean-Charles
Verdié
(MStar),
Jean-François
Abramatic
(IBM,
ILOG,
W3C),
Jeff
Jaffe
(W3C),
Jeffrey
Yasskin
(Google),
Jim
Bell
(HP),
Jim
Miller
(W3C),
Joe
Hall
(CDT),
John
Klensin
(MCI),
Josh
Soref
(BlackBerry,
unaffiliated),
Judy
Brewer
(W3C),
Judy
Zhu
朱红儒
(Alibaba),
Kari
Laihonen
(Ericsson),
Karl
Dubost
(Mozilla),
Ken
Laskey
(MITRE),
Kevin
Fleming
(Bloomberg),
Klaus
Birkenbihl
(Fraunhofer
Gesellschaft),
Larry
Masinter
(Adobe
Systems),
Lauren
Wood
(unaffiliated),
Liam
Quin
(W3C),
Léonie
Watson
(The
Paciello
Group),
Liam
Quin
(W3C),
Marcos
Cáceres
(Mozilla),
Maria
Courtemanche
(IBM),
Mark
Crawford
(SAP),
Mark
Nottingham,
Michael
Champion
(Microsoft),
Michael
Geldblum
(Oracle),
Mike
West
(Google),
Mitch
Stoltz
(EFF),
Natasha
Rooney
(GSMA),
Nigel
Megitt
(BBC),
Olle
Olsson
(SICS),
Ora
Lassila
(Nokia),
Paul
Cotton
(Microsoft),
Paul
Grosso
(Arbortext),
Peter
Linss,
Peter
Patel-Schneider,
Philippe
Le
Hégaret
(W3C),
Qiuling
Pan
(Huawei),
Ralph
Swick
(W3C),
Renato
Iannella
(IPR
Systems),
Rigo
Wenning
(W3C),
Rob
Sanderson
(J
Paul
Getty
Trust),
Robin
Berjon
(W3C),
Sally
Khudairi
(W3C),
Sam
Ruby
(IBM),
Sam
Sneddon,
Samuel
Weiler
(W3C),
Sandro
Hawke
(W3C),
Sangwhan
Moon
(Odd
Concepts),
Scott
Peterson
(Google),
Shawn
Lawton
Henry,
Steve
Holbrook
(IBM),
Steve
Zilles
(Adobe
Systems)
Steven
Pemberton
(CWI),
TV
Raman
(Google),
Tantek
Çelik
(Mozilla),
Ted
Thibodeau
Jr
(OpenLink
Software),
Terence
Eden
(Her
Majesty’s
Government),
Thomas
Reardon
(Microsoft),
Tim
Berners-Lee
(W3C),
Tim
Krauskopf
(Spyglass),
Travis
Leithead
(Microsoft),
Virginia
Fournier
(Apple),
Virginie
Galindo
(Gemalto),
Wayne
Carr
(Intel),
Wendy
Fong
(Hewlett-Packard),
Wendy
Seltzer
(W3C),
Yves
Lafon
(W3C).
Appendix C: Changes
This section is non-normative.
Changes
since
the
12
June
3
November
2023
Process
This
document
is
based
on
the
12
June
3
November
2023
Process
.
A
list
of
issues
addressed
,
a
diff
from
Process
2023
to
this
latest
version
,
as
well
as
a
detailed
log
of
all
changes
since
then
are
available.
The
only
change
is:
In
addition
to
a
number
of
editorial
adjustments
and
minor
teaks,
the
following
is
a
summary
of
the
main
differences:
- Changes to technical reports and their publication
-
-
ExpandRetire the Proposed Recommendation phase of the Recommendation track. It was only used as a short-lived transition during which various verifications and votes about CR were done. These can be done on a CR without having to republish it as a separate thing. This simplifies the Process without changing the actual quality or consensus expectations. (See Issue 861 ) - Retire “ Streamlined Publication Approval ”. This was meant to enable REC track publication with fewer/faster approval steps when some stricter than usual criteria were fulfilled. However, regular REC track publication have improved enough that this became unnecessary, and nobody was using it. (See Issue 856 )
- Add a requirement to make progress on external issues for update requests (See Issue 781 )
- Drop the requirement to publish every 6 months if nothing has changed. (See Issue 1013 )
- Enable Team to replace defunct registry custodians when no-one else can. (See Issue 699 )
- Allow registries to be published by Interest Groups, the Advisory Board, and the TAG, in addition to Working Groups. (See Issue 902 )
- Rename “registry sections” to embedded registries to avoid confusion over whether they can be split across multiple sections of a Recommendation . (See Issue 800 )
- Rename "Draft Note" into "Note Draft", and "Draft Registry" into "Registry Draft" to be consistent with other statuses that uses the word "Draft", and to make that word stand out more. (See Issue 779 )
- Clarify the definition of a Registry (see Issue 800 ) and of Recommendation Track Documents (see Pull Request 831 ).
- Consolidate and harmonize into a one section the various parts of the Process that described whether and how the Team can maintain technical reports that no longer have a Group chartered to maintain them. (See Pull Request 860 )
-
- Changes to chartering
- Introduce a formal Charter Refinement phase prior to the AC Review . (See Issue 580 )
- Be more specific about which types of changes to a charter must go through AC Review. (See Pull Request 1042 )
- Require Chairs to be listed in Charters. (See Issue 823 )
- Reorganize and rephrase § 4.4 Charter Review and Approval for readability and ease of understanding. This change, while moderate in size, is purely editorial. (See Pull Request 850 )
- Changes to formal decision making and escalation
- Adjust the rules guiding initiation of Councils, to make the deadline strict, and to provide a fallback mechanism if they are not met. (See Pull Request 925 )
- Make the Council’s short-circuit a little more flexible. (See Issue 852 )
- Exclude TAG/AB Members from voting on TAG/AB proposals in Councils. (See Issue 749 )
- Limit the involvement of Tim Berners-Lee to the TAG proper, not including the Council. (See Pull Request 792 )
- Council dismissal vote counts must be reported. (See Issue 748 )
- Require documentation of how Formal Objections get resolved. (See Issue 953 )
- Put constraints on the timing of making Formal Objections public. (See Issue 735 )
- Fine-tune the rules about how changes can be incorporated into a proposal following an AC Review. (See Issue 825 )
-
Adjust
AC
appeal
vote
threshold
based
on
participation,
aligning
with
the
thresholds
and
super
majority
requirements
for
"Requisite
Member
Vote"
from
6 electedthe W3C Bylaws. (See Issue 886 ) - Let the originator of a proposal decide whether to try again after addressing feedback following an AC Appeal. (See Issue 844 )
-
Simplify
provisions
regarding
substitute
representatives
and
3 appointedproxies. (See Issue 373 )
- Other changes
-
Reuse
the
bylaws’
notion
of
Good
Standing,
and
restrict
TAG
and
AB
elections
as
well
as
AC
Votes
where
a
decision
is
made
based
on
counting
ballots
to
8Members in Good Standing. (See Issue 935 and3. SeePull Request 954 ) -
The
section
on
Member
Submissions
was
significantly
shortened
and
simplified,
reducing
the
2023-05-24 Dispositioncomplexity under formal Process authority, and shifting much ofCommentsthe material to /Guide, under Team authority. (See Issue 412 and Pull Request 936 ) - Clarify how the outcome of certain ballots are determined. (See Issue 836 , Issue 838 )
- Stop citing the superseded TAG charter. (See Issue 794 )
- Clarify amount of leeway around incomplete nominations to TAG or AB elections. (See Issue 464 )
- Shift most of the non-normative discussion about Workshops to [GUIDE] , and reorganize the remaining normative requirements. (See Pull Request 876 )
-
The
URL
of
this
document
was
changed
from
/Consortium/Process/
to
/policies/process/
for
rationale.better integration in the W3C website architecture.
Changes since earlier versionsChanges since earlier versionsChanges since earlier versions of the Process are detailed in the changes section of the previous version of the Process.
-
Reuse
the
bylaws’
notion
of
Good
Standing,
and
restrict
TAG
and
AB
elections
as
well
as
AC
Votes
where
a
decision
is
made
based
on
counting
ballots
to
Conformance
Document conventions
Conformance requirements are expressed with a combination of descriptive assertions and RFC 2119 terminology. The key words “MUST”, “MUST NOT”, “REQUIRED”, “SHALL”, “SHALL NOT”, “SHOULD”, “SHOULD NOT”, “RECOMMENDED”, “MAY”, and “OPTIONAL” in the normative parts of this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119. However, for readability, these words do not appear in all uppercase letters in this specification.
All of the text of this specification is normative except sections explicitly marked as non-normative, examples, and notes. [RFC2119]
Examples
in
this
specification
are
introduced
with
the
words
“for
example”
or
are
set
apart
from
the
normative
text
with
class="example"
,
like
this:
Informative
notes
begin
with
the
word
“Note”
and
are
set
apart
from
the
normative
text
with
class="note"
,
like
this:
Note, this is an informative note.