- From: Michael Cooper <[email protected]>
- Date: Tue, 24 Nov 2015 10:50:09 -0500
- To: [email protected]
- Cc: [email protected]
- Message-ID: <[email protected]>
If people want to contribute to that level they should join the group.
This is important because it requires an intellectual property
commitment that non-participants have not made. We have a liberal
practice with Invited Experts, so very few people would be unable to
join if they want to. The practices of other Working Groups (which I
think opens them to a variety of problems) does not set a precedent for
us. I discussed the pros and cons of various options with Rich in his
role of chair, and we agreed publicly postable but requiring a join to
subscribe strikes the best balance between open-ness and sanely managed
contribution. Michael
On 24/11/2015 10:41 AM, L�onie Watson wrote:
>
> *From:*Michael Cooper [mailto:[email protected]]
> *Sent:* 24 November 2015 14:40
> �That's right. Members of the public can post to the list. But to
> subscribe they must join the group. Michael�
>
> Doesn�t this make things unnescessarily difficult for people who want
> to contribute? They have to post something, then track subsequent
> discussions through the online archives.
>
> It�s possible for people (non-members) to subscribe to webapps, html
> and other public W3C lists. It would be good for WAI to do the same
> and make both ARIA and APA properly public.
>
> L�onie.
>
> --
>
> Senior accessibility engineer @LeonieWatson @PacielloGroup
>
Received on Tuesday, 24 November 2015 15:50:17 UTC