On Thursday, October 20, 2011 10:45:59 AM, Guy Harris wrote:
On Oct 20, 2011, at 9:41 AM, Todd Glassey wrote:
What needs to happen I believe is that this effort should define a process wherein any legal authority can request a IANA update to the data base
By "legal authority" do you mean "authority responsible for time zone rules within a country", or some other form of legal authority?
I mean specifically the people responsible for setting and disseminating notice of the setting of TZ data values. These are actually very accessible people.
If you mean "authority responsible for time zone rules within a country", would it remain possible for the database to be updated even if the authority makes no such request and somebody happens to discover that country X has decided to change the time zone rules?
That also has to be decided. As I said - this is actually 'statements of commercial interoperability' in commerce processes. Legal-organizations (States, Counties, Countries what-ever) publish this information as a basis of their internal e-Operations and calibration so that their people and the rest of the world can all interact. That's a given but we often forget that the time service is used for a number of functions from synchronization to attestation and that the same time source needs to be available for each so that the evidence models are flattenable where needed. So the issue is how to provide a process for legitimate holder of the legal authority to make public statements about their time zones. What this actually is - is a massive opportunity for the IETF to prove its strengthens and to provide the technology to manage this as a design and then a service.
If not, then, unless you can get all such legal authorities to make those request, requiring such a request would not constitute an improvement to the process; the resulting process would be worse, as some updates required by time zone changes wouldn't happen.
I agree totally - unless you have someone who is assigned like Dr. Olson was doing to formally collect that information. I am betting that the NIH.GOV email address didn't hurt the process either. As I said - this is an opportunity to implement what he was doing manually in an automated process and that is the real win here. No matter who actually winds up setting and managing the content IMHO. Todd
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