Network Working Group P. Saint-Andre
Internet-Draft &yet
Intended status: Informational D. York
Expires: October 17, 2015 Internet Society
April 15, 2015

The Jabber Scribe Role at IETF Meetings
draft-saintandre-jabber-scribe-01

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. Such volunteers, commonly called "Jabber scribes", might benefit from the suggestions provided in this document.

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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. Because these chatrooms are currently implemented using Jabber/XMPP technologies (see [RFC6120] and [XEP-0045]) the role is commonly referred to as that of a "Jabber scribe".

This role is important because it is the primary way for a remote attendee to provide feedback or comments back into most IETF meeting sessions. Although there are multiple ways that a remote attendee can listen and follow along, the chatroom provides a method of returning feedback to the physical meeting in something close to real time. These methods hold true for IETF working group sessions, IRTF research group sessions, IETF "birds of a feather" (BoF) sessions, and similar sessions at IETF meetings.

This document provides suggestions for fulfilling the role of a Jabber scribe, based on the authors' personal experience as well as input from other individuals who frequently volunteer as Jabber scribes.

2. Know Your Users

The participants in a chatroom typically fall into three categories, labelled here for ease of understanding:

Chatroom participants are usually identified by a "nickname" or "handle" rather than a full name. This can be confusing to scribes, because they don't always know who is providing questions or comments to be relayed. A scribe should feel free to ask for clarification so that the identity of the remote participant can be communicated at the microphone.

3. Know Yourself

Different people have different aptitudes and skills. Although some people who volunteer to act as Jabber scribes are able to provide a fairly complete transcription of what is said and done in the physical meeting room, that is not the expectation for most volunteers (don't be scared off by the word "scribe"). Fulfilling the primary tasks described in the next section is not a significant burden for most volunteers, and can be an enjoyable way to participate in a session. This document attempts to describe the experience and provide some helpful guidance, but if you are thinking about volunteering then you might also ask other volunteers about their experience. Knowing your aptitudes and skills (e.g., perhaps you are not a great typist) can help you understand the level of involvement you are comfortable with.

4. Primary Tasks

The primary "customers" for a Jabber scribe are the remote participants, and those customers are served in real time. A scribe can assume that remote participants have access to at least the audio stream and perhaps also video for a session (except in extraordinary circumstances, such as when technical problems occur with the streaming facilities). Even though chatroom sessions are logged during IETF meetings and these public logs can be a useful adjunct to the historical record, a scribe is not expected to transcribe what is said and done during the session. Instead, the primary role of a scribe is to act as a relay between the physical room and the remote participants.

In particular, individuals who volunteer for the role of Jabber scribe usually complete the following tasks:

It is the convention in most sessions that the Jabber scribe has the privilege to go to the front of the microphone line to relay information from remote participants. Some Jabber scribes choose to exercise that privilege while others choose to wait in line along with the participants in the physical meeting rooom. However, be aware that because of lag (often 20 seconds or more) between in-room discussions and the audio stream (as well as the inevitable delay while a remote participant types a question or comment to be relayed), it can be helpful for the scribe to "jump the queue" so that such questions and comments are not stale by the time they are relayed to the microphone.

5. Additional Tasks

Additionally some Jabber scribes often complete the following tasks:

Although Jabber scribes are not generally expected to transcribe the complete contents of conversations that happen in 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. (By prior arrangement between the session chairs and the Jabber scribe, actual transcription might be expected for particular sessions.)

6. Suggestions

Experience has shown that the following behaviors make it easier to act as a Jabber scribe.

6.1. Getting Set Up with Jabber

An overview of the IETF Jabber service can be found at <http://www.ietf.org/jabber/>. Many common instant messaging clients support the Jabber/XMPP protocols, and at the time of writing a list of such clients can be found at <http://xmpp.org/xmpp-software/clients/>. Because the IETF Jabber service provides chatrooms only and does not enable direct registration of user accounts, you will need to create a user account at another service; one list of such services can be found at <https://xmpp.net/directory.php>. Not all clients support the ability to join a chatroom, so you might want to test your preferred software in advance of the meeting (the hallway@jabber.ietf.org room is a good place to test). Although the exact user interface for joining a chatroom depends on the software you are using, typically such software will have a "join room" option that prompts you to provide the entire room address (e.g., "hallway@jabber.ietf.org") or separately provide the name of the room (e.g., "hallway") and the domain of the chatroom service (e.g., "jabber.ietf.org"). Asking your fellow IETF participants about their preferred software applications can be a good way to learn about Jabber/XMPP clients that you might want to use.

6.2. Before the Session Begins

If you have volunteered before the session:

6.3. As the Session Is Starting

As you are getting settled and ready for the meeting to start:

Identifying one or more assistants is particularly useful if you want to go up to the microphone to speak as an individual or if you need to take a break or step out of the physical room at some point.

6.4. During the Session

As you perform your role during the session:

6.5. As the Session Is Ending

As you wrap up your scribing at the end of the session:

7. Reporting Problems

If you need to report a problem during an IETF meeting (e.g., problems with media streaming), at the time of this writing there are several ways to do so:

8. Advanced Tips

It can be helpful to run two separate Jabber clients connected to two separate Jabber servers, in order to prevent delays if one of the servers experiences an outage during the session (yes, it has happened).

If you have a chance to do so, you may want to measure the lag time between when something is said in the physical room and when it is heard on the audio stream and then let the remote participants know the length of the delay. This could be accomplished by either listening to the audio stream yourself or working with a remote participant who you know is on the audio stream.

9. IANA Considerations

This document requests no actions from the IANA.

10. 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 Jabber scribes to be aware of this possibility.

In addition, denial of service (DoS) attacks of various kinds are possible, e.g., flooding a chatroom with unwanted or automated traffic.

11. Informative 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.

Appendix A. Acknowledgements

Thanks to Dan Burnett, Dave Crocker, Wes George, Janet Gunn, Joel Halpern, Jelte Jansen, Michael Jenkins, Olle Johansson, Warren Kumari, Jonathan Lennox, Alexandre Petrescu, Melinda Shore, Hugo Salgado, Yaakov Stein, and Greg Wood for their helpful comments and suggestions.

Authors' Addresses

Peter Saint-Andre &yet EMail: peter@andyet.com URI: https://andyet.com/
Dan York Internet Society EMail: york@isoc.org URI: https://www.internetsociety.org/