Network Working Group P. Saint-Andre
Internet-Draft &yet
Intended status: Informational October 14, 2014
Expires: April 17, 2015

The Chatroom Relay Role at IETF Meetings
draft-saintandre-chatroom-relay-00

Abstract

During IETF meetings, individual volunteers often help sessions run more smoothly by relaying information back and forth between the physical meeting room and an associated textual chatroom. This document provides suggestions for fulfilling the role of a chatroom relay.

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction

During IETF meetings, individual volunteers often help sessions run more smoothly by relaying information back and forth between the physical meeting room and an associated textual chatroom. This document provides suggestions for fulfilling the role of a chatroom relay.

2. Terminology

A chatroom relay is often referred to as a "Jabber scribe". This term is misleading because nothing prevents the IETF from using a technology other than Jabber/XMPP [RFC6120] [XEP-0045] for chatrooms, and more importantly because volunteers are not expected to scribe the complete contents of the meeting into the chatroom (which would be a much more onerous task than relaying selected information back and forth between the physical room and the chatroom).

3. Tasks

Individuals who volunteer for the role of chatroom relay usually complete the following tasks:

Chatroom relays often complete the following tasks, too:

Although chatroom relays are not expected to scribe the complete contents of conversations that happen the physical room to the chatroom, they sometimes relay the gist of such conversations, especially during ad-hoc discussions for which slides are not available.

4. Suggestions

Experience has shown that the following behaviors that make it easier to act as a chatroom relay:

5. IANA Considerations

This document requests no actions from the IANA.

6. Security Considerations

Although XMPP multi-user chat rooms [XEP-0045] can be configured to lock down nicknames and require registration with the chatroom in order to join, at the time of this writing IETF chatrooms are not so configured. This introduces the possibility of social engineering attacks on discussions held in IETF chatrooms. It can be helpful for chatroom relays to be aware of this possibility.

7. References

[RFC6120] Saint-Andre, P., "Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP): Core", RFC 6120, March 2011.
[XEP-0045] Saint-Andre, P., "Multi-User Chat", XSF XEP 0045, February 2012.

Author's Address

Peter Saint-Andre &yet EMail: peter@andyet.com URI: https://andyet.com/