<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
<!DOCTYPE rfc [
  <!ENTITY nbsp    "&#160;">
  <!ENTITY zwsp   "&#8203;">
  <!ENTITY nbhy   "&#8209;">
  <!ENTITY wj     "&#8288;">
]>
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="rfc2629.xslt" ?>
<!-- generated by https://github.com/cabo/kramdown-rfc version 1.7.29 (Ruby 3.4.4) -->
<rfc xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" ipr="trust200902" docName="draft-ietf-procon-2026bis-02" category="bcp" consensus="true" submissionType="IETF" obsoletes="2026, 5657, 6410, 7100, 7127, 8789, 9282" updates="7475" tocInclude="true" sortRefs="true" symRefs="true" version="3">
  <!-- xml2rfc v2v3 conversion 3.31.0 -->
  <front>
    <title abbrev="process">The Internet Standards Process</title>
    <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-procon-2026bis-02"/>
    <author initials="R." surname="Salz" fullname="Rich Salz">
      <organization>Akamai Technologies</organization>
      <address>
        <email>rsalz@akamai.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="S." surname="Bradner" fullname="Scott Bradner">
      <organization>SOBCO</organization>
      <address>
        <email>sob@sobco.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <date year="2025" month="December" day="01"/>
    <area>General</area>
    <workgroup>procon</workgroup>
    <keyword>process</keyword>
    <abstract>
      <?line 49?>

<t>This memo documents the process used by the Internet community for
the standardization of protocols and procedures. It defines the
stages in the standardization process, the requirements for moving a
document between stages and the types of documents used during this
process. It also addresses the intellectual property rights and
copyright issues associated with the standards process.</t>
      <t>This document obsoletes RFC 2026, RFC 5657, RFC 6410, RFC 7100, RFC 7127,
RFC 8789, and
RFC 9282.  It also includes the changes from
RFC 7475.
If this document and <xref target="_2418bis"/> are published as RFCs, then
taken together the two of them make RFC 7475 obsolete.</t>
    </abstract>
    <note removeInRFC="true">
      <name>About This Document</name>
      <t>
        Status information for this document may be found at <eref target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-procon-2026bis/"/>.
      </t>
      <t>Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at
        <eref target="https://github.com/ietf-wg-procon/2026bis"/>.</t>
    </note>
  </front>
  <middle>
    <?line 65?>

<section anchor="introduction">
      <name>Introduction</name>
      <t>This memo documents the process currently used by the Internet
community for the standardization of protocols and procedures. The
Internet Standards process is an activity of the Internet Society (ISOC)
that is organized and managed on behalf of the Internet community by
the Internet Architecture Board (IAB) and the Internet Engineering
Steering Group (IESG).</t>
      <t>The Internet, a loosely-organized international collaboration of
autonomous, interconnected networks, supports host-to-host
communication through voluntary adherence to open protocols and
procedures defined by Internet Standards. There are also many
isolated interconnected networks, which are not connected to the
global Internet but use the Internet Standards.</t>
      <t>The Internet Standards Process described in this document is
concerned with all protocols, procedures, and conventions that are
used in or by the Internet, whether or not they are part of the
TCP/IP protocol suite. In the case of protocols developed and/or
standardized by non-Internet organizations, however, the Internet
Standards Process normally applies to the application of the protocol
or procedure in the Internet context, not to the specification of the
protocol itself.</t>
      <t>In general, an Internet Standard is a specification that is stable
and well-understood, is technically competent, has multiple,
independent, and interoperable implementations with substantial
operational experience, enjoys significant public support, and is
recognizably useful in some or all parts of the Internet.</t>
      <t>The process described here only applies to the IETF RFC stream.  See
<xref target="RFC4844"/> for the definition of the streams and <xref target="RFC5742"/> for a
description of the IESG responsibilities related to those streams.</t>
      <section anchor="terminology">
        <name>Terminology</name>
        <t>The following terms are used throughout this document.
For more details about the organizations related to the IETF, see
<xref section="3" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC9281"/>.</t>
        <dl>
          <dt>Alternate Stream</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>The IAB Document Stream, the IRTF Document Stream, and the Independent
Submission Stream, each as defined in <xref section="5.1" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC8729"/>, along with
any future non-IETF streams that might be defined.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>Area Director</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>The manager of an IETF Area.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>ARPA</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>Advanced Research Projects Agency; an agency of the US
Department of Defense.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>Contribution</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>Any submission to the IETF intended by the Contributor for publication as
all or part of an Internet-Draft or RFC and any statement made within the
context of an IETF activity, in each case that is intended to affect the IETF
Standards Process or that is related to the activity of an Alternate Stream
that has adopted this policy.</t>
          </dd>
        </dl>
        <t>Such statements include oral statements, as well as written and electronic
communications, which are addressed to:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Any IETF plenary session,</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Any IETF Working Group (WG; see <xref target="BCP25"/>) or portion thereof or
any WG chair on behalf of the relevant WG,</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Any IETF "birds of a feather" (BOF) session or portion thereof,</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>WG design teams (see <xref target="BCP25"/>) and other design teams that intend
to deliver an output to IETF, or portions thereof,</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>The IESG, or any member thereof on behalf of the IESG,</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>The IAB, or any member thereof on behalf of the IAB,</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Any IETF mailing list, web site, chat room, or discussion board
operated by or under the auspices of the IETF, including the
IETF list itself,</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>The RFC Editor or the Internet-Drafts function.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>Statements made outside of an IETF session, mailing list, or other function,
or that are clearly not intended to be input to an IETF activity, group, or
function, are not Contributions in the context of this document.  And while
the IETF's IPR rules apply in all cases, not all presentations represent a
Contribution.  For example, many invited plenary, area-meeting, or research
group presentations will cover useful background material, such as general
discussions of existing Internet technology and products, and will not be a
Contribution.  (Some such presentations can represent a Contribution as well,
of course).  Throughout this document, the term "written Contribution" is
used.  For purposes of this document, "written" means reduced to a written or
visual form in any language and any media, permanent or temporary, including
but not limited to traditional documents, email messages, discussion board
postings, slide presentations, text messages, instant messages, and
transcriptions of oral statements.</t>
        <dl>
          <dt>Copyright</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>The legal right granted to an author in a document or other work of
authorship under applicable law.  A "copyright" is not equivalent to a "right
to copy".  Rather a copyright encompasses all of the exclusive rights that an
author has in a work, such as the rights to copy, publish, distribute and
create derivative works of the work.  An author often cedes these rights to
his or her employer or other parties as a condition of employment or
compensation.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>Covers</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>A valid claim of a patent or a patent application (including a provisional
patent application) in any jurisdiction, or any other Intellectual Property
Right, would necessarily be infringed by the exercise of a right (e.g.,
making, using, selling, importing, distribution, copying, etc.) with respect
to an Implementing Technology.  For purposes of this definition, "valid
claim" means a claim of any unexpired patent or patent application which
shall not have been withdrawn, cancelled, or disclaimed, nor held invalid by
a court of competent jurisdiction in an unappealed or unappealable decision.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>IETF</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>In the context of this document, the IETF includes all individuals who
participate in meetings, working groups, mailing lists, functions, and other
activities that are organized or initiated by ISOC,
the IESG, or the IAB
under the general designation of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF),
but solely to the extent of such participation.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>IETF Area</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>A management division within the IETF. An Area consists
of Working Groups related to a general topic such as routing. An
Area is managed by one or more Area Directors.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>IETF Documents</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>RFCs and Internet-Drafts that are published as
part of the IETF Standards Process.  These are also referred to as
"IETF Stream Documents" as defined in <xref section="5.1.1" sectionFormat="comma" target="RFC8729"/>.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>IETF Standards Process</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>The activities undertaken by the IETF in any of the settings described
in the above definition of Contribution.  The IETF Standards Process may
include participation in activities and publication of documents that
are not directed toward the development of IETF standards or
specifications, such as the development and publication of Informational
and Experimental documents (see <xref target="sec4"/>).</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>IETF Trust</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>A trust established under the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia, USA, in
order to hold and administer intellectual property rights for the benefit of
the IETF.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>Implementing Technology</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>A technology that implements an IETF specification or standard.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>Internet-Draft</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>A document used in the IETF and RFC Editor
processes, as described in <xref target="sec2"/>.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG)</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>A group comprised of the
IETF Area Directors and the IETF Chair. The IESG is responsible
for the management, along with the IAB, of the IETF and is the
standards approval board for the IETF.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>interoperable</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>For the purposes of this document, "interoperable"
means to be able to interoperate over a data communications path.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>IPR or Intellectual Property Rights</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>Means a patent, utility model, or similar right that may Cover an
Implementing Technology, whether such rights arise from a registration or
renewal thereof, or an application therefore, in each case anywhere in the
world.
See <xref target="ipr-requirements"/> for IPR requirements that must be met for
documents used in the Internet Standards Process.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>Last-Call</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>A public comment period used to gauge the level of
consensus about the reasonableness of a proposed standards action.
See <xref target="sec612"/>.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>Participating in an IETF discussion or activity</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>Making a Contribution, as described above, or in any other way acting in
order to influence the outcome of a discussion relating to the IETF Standards
Process.  Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, acting as a
Working Group Chair or Area Director constitutes "Participating" in all
activities of the relevant working group(s) he or she is responsible for in
an area.  "Participant" and "IETF Participant" mean any individual
Participating in an IETF discussion or activity.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>RFC</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>The basic publication series for the IETF.</t>
          </dd>
          <dt>Working Group</dt>
          <dd>
            <t>A group chartered by the IESG and IAB to work on a
specific specification, set of specifications or topic.</t>
          </dd>
        </dl>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="std-process">
      <name>The Internet Standards Process</name>
      <t>In outline, the process of creating an Internet Standard is
straightforward: a specification undergoes a period of development
and several iterations of review by the Internet community and
revision based upon experience, is adopted as a Standard by the
appropriate body (see below), and is published. In practice, the
process is more complicated, due to (1) the difficulty of creating
specifications of high technical quality; (2) the need to consider
the interests of all of the affected parties; (3) the importance of
establishing widespread community consensus; and (4) the difficulty
of evaluating the utility of a particular specification for the
Internet community.</t>
      <t>The goals of the Internet Standards Process are:</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>
          <t>Technical excellence;</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>Prior implementation and testing;</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>Clear, concise, and easily-understood documentation;</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>Openness and fairness; and</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>Timeliness</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>The procedures described in this document are designed to be fair,
open, and objective; to reflect existing (proven) practice; and to
be flexible.</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>
          <t>These procedures are intended to provide a fair, open, and
objective basis for developing, evaluating, and adopting Internet
Standards. They provide ample opportunity for participation and
comment by all interested parties. At each stage of the
standardization process, a specification is repeatedly discussed
and its merits debated in open meetings and/or public electronic
mailing lists, and it is made available for review via world-wide
on-line directories.</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>These procedures are explicitly aimed at recognizing and adopting
generally-accepted practices. Thus, a candidate specification
must be implemented and tested for correct operation and
interoperability by multiple independent parties and utilized in
increasingly demanding environments, before it can be adopted as
an Internet Standard.</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>These procedures provide a great deal of flexibility to adapt to
the wide variety of circumstances that occur in the
standardization process. Experience has shown this flexibility to
be vital in achieving the goals listed above.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>The goal of technical competence, the requirement for prior
implementation and testing, and the need to allow all interested
parties to comment all require significant time and effort. On the
other hand, today's rapid development of networking technology
demands timely development of standards. The Internet Standards
Process is intended to balance these conflicting goals. The process
is believed to be as short and simple as possible without sacrificing
technical excellence, thorough testing before adoption of a standard,
or openness and fairness.</t>
      <t>From its inception, the Internet has been, and is expected to remain,
an evolving system whose participants regularly factor new
requirements and technology into its design and implementation. Users
of the Internet and providers of the equipment, software, and
services that support it should anticipate and embrace this evolution
as a major tenet of Internet philosophy.</t>
      <t>The procedures described in this document are the result of a number
of years of evolution, driven both by the needs of the growing and
increasingly diverse Internet community, and by experience.</t>
      <section anchor="ipr-requirements">
        <name>Intellectual Property Requirements</name>
        <t>All documents used in the Internet Standards Process must meet the
conditions specified in <xref target="BCP78"/> and <xref target="BCP79"/>.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="organization-of-this-document">
      <name>Organization of This Document</name>
      <t><xref target="sec2"/> describes the publications and archives of the Internet
Standards Process. <xref target="sec3"/> describes the types of Internet
standard specifications. <xref target="sec4"/> describes the Internet standards
specifications track. <xref target="sec5"/> describes Best Current Practice
RFCs. <xref target="sec6"/> describes the process and rules for Internet
standardization. <xref target="sec7"/> specifies the way in which externally-
sponsored specifications and practices, developed and controlled by
other standards bodies or by others, are handled within the Internet
Standards Process. <xref target="sec8"/> describes the requirements for notices
and record keeping, and <xref target="sec9"/> defines a variance process to allow
one-time exceptions to some of the requirements in this document.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec2">
      <name>Internet Standards-Related Publications</name>
      <section anchor="requests-for-comments-rfcs">
        <name>Requests for Comments (RFCs)</name>
        <t>Each distinct version of an Internet standards-related specification
is published as part of the "Request for Comments" (RFC) document
series. This archival series is the official publication channel for
Internet standards documents and other publications of the IESG, IAB,
and the Internet community. RFCs can be obtained from a number of
Internet hosts using standard Internet applications such as the WWW.</t>
        <t>The RFC series of documents on networking began in 1969 as part of
the original ARPA wide-area networking (ARPANET) project.
RFCs cover a wide range of
topics in addition to Internet Standards, from early discussion of
new research concepts to status memos about the Internet.
For information about RFC publication, see <xref target="RFC9280"/>.</t>
        <t>The style guide for writing an RFC is <xref target="RFC7322"/>.
The default input format is <xref target="RFCXML"/>,
RFCs are available in multiple formats as described in <xref target="RFCPAGE"/>.</t>
        <t>Some RFCs document Internet Standards. These RFCs form the 'STD'
subseries of the RFC series <xref target="RFC1311"/>. When a specification has been
adopted as an Internet Standard, it is given the additional label
"STDxxx", but it keeps its RFC number and its place in the RFC
series (see <xref target="sec413"/>).
The status of Internet protocol and service specifications is available
from the <eref target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc-index.txt">RFC Index</eref> in the
RFC repository.</t>
        <t>Some RFCs standardize the results of community deliberations about
statements of principle or conclusions about what is the best way to
perform some operations or IETF process function. These RFCs form
the specification has been adopted as a Best Current Practice (BCP)
, it is given the
additional label "BCPxxx", but it keeps its RFC number and its place
in the RFC series. (see <xref target="sec5"/>)</t>
        <t>Not all specifications of protocols or services for the Internet
should or will become Internet Standards or BCPs. Such non-standards
track specifications are not subject to the rules for Internet
standardization. Non-standards track specifications may be published
directly as "Experimental" or "Informational" RFCs at the discretion
of the RFC Editor in consultation with the IESG (see <xref target="sec42"/>).</t>
        <t>In addition, not all RFCs are standards track documents, and not all
standards track documents reach the level of Internet Standard. In the same
way, not all RFCs which describe current practices have been given the review
and approval to become BCPs. See <xref target="RFC1796"/> for further information.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sec22">
        <name>Internet-Drafts</name>
        <t>During the development of a specification, draft versions of the
document are made available for informal review and comment by
placing them in the IETF's "Internet-Drafts" directory, which is
replicated on a number of Internet hosts. This makes an evolving
working document readily available to a wide audience, facilitating
the process of review and revision.</t>
        <t>An Internet-Draft that is published as an RFC, or that has remained
unchanged in the Internet-Drafts directory for more than six months
without being recommended by the IESG for publication as an RFC, is
simply removed from the Internet-Drafts directory. At any time, an
Internet-Draft may be replaced by a more recent version of the same
specification, restarting the six-month timeout period.</t>
        <t>An Internet-Draft is NOT a means of "publishing" a specification;
specifications are published through the RFC mechanism described in
the previous section. Internet-Drafts have no formal status, and are
subject to change or removal at any time.</t>
        <artwork><![CDATA[
    Under no circumstances should an Internet-Draft
    be referenced by any paper, report, or Request-
    for-Proposal, nor should a vendor claim compliance
    with an Internet-Draft.
]]></artwork>
        <t>Note: It is acceptable to reference a standards-track specification
that may reasonably be expected to be published as an RFC using the
phrase "Work in Progress" without referencing an Internet-Draft.
This may also be done in a standards track document itself as long
as the specification in which the reference is made would stand as a
complete and understandable document with or without the reference to
the "Work in Progress".</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec3">
      <name>Internet Standard Specifications</name>
      <t>Specifications subject to the Internet Standards Process fall into
one of two categories: Technical Specification (TS) and
Applicability Statement (AS).</t>
      <section anchor="technical-specification-ts">
        <name>Technical Specification (TS)</name>
        <t>A Technical Specification is any description of a protocol, service,
procedure, convention, or format. It may completely describe all of
the relevant aspects of its subject, or it may leave one or more
parameters or options unspecified. A TS may be completely self-
contained, or it may incorporate material from other specifications
by reference to other documents (which might or might not be Internet
Standards).</t>
        <t>A TS shall include a statement of its scope and the general intent
for its use (domain of applicability). Thus, a TS that is inherently
specific to a particular context shall contain a statement to that
effect. However, a TS does not specify requirements for its use
within the Internet; these requirements, which depend on the
particular context in which the TS is incorporated by different
system configurations, are defined by an Applicability Statement.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sec32">
        <name>Applicability Statement (AS)</name>
        <t>An Applicability Statement specifies how, and under what
circumstances, one or more TSs may be applied to support a particular
Internet capability. An AS may specify uses for TSs that are not
Internet Standards, as discussed in <xref target="sec7"/>.</t>
        <t>An AS identifies the relevant TSs and the specific way in which they
are to be combined, and may also specify particular values or ranges
of TS parameters or subfunctions of a TS protocol that must be
implemented. An AS also specifies the circumstances in which the use
of a particular TS is required, recommended, or elective (see <xref target="sec33"/>).</t>
        <t>An AS may describe particular methods of using a TS in a restricted
"domain of applicability", such as Internet routers, terminal
servers, Internet systems that interface to Ethernets, or datagram-
based database servers.</t>
        <t>The broadest type of AS is a comprehensive conformance specification,
commonly called a "requirements document", for a particular class of
Internet systems, such as Internet routers or Internet hosts.</t>
        <t>An AS may not have a higher maturity level in the standards track
than any standards-track TS on which the AS relies (see <xref target="sec41"/>).</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sec33">
        <name>Requirement Levels</name>
        <t>An AS shall apply one of the following "requirement levels" to each
of the TSs to which it refers:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Required: Implementation of the referenced TS, as specified by
the AS, is required to achieve minimal conformance. For example,
IP and the Internet Control Message Protocl (ICMP) must be implemented
by all Internet systems using the
TCP/IP Protocol Suite.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Recommended: Implementation of the referenced TS is not
required for minimal conformance, but experience and/or generally
accepted technical wisdom suggest its desirability in the domain
of applicability of the AS. Vendors are strongly encouraged to
include the functions, features, and protocols of Recommended TSs
in their products, and should omit them only if the omission is
justified by some special circumstance. For example, the TELNET
protocol should be implemented by all systems that would benefit
from remote access.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Elective: Implementation of the referenced TS is optional
within the domain of applicability of the AS; that is, the AS
creates no explicit necessity to apply the TS. However, a
particular vendor may decide to implement it, or a particular user
may decide that it is a necessity in a specific environment.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>As noted in <xref target="sec41"/>, there are TSs that are not in the
standards track or that have been retired from the standards
track, and are therefore not required, recommended, or elective.
Two additional "requirement level" designations are available for
these TSs:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Limited Use: The TS is considered to be appropriate for use
only in limited or unique circumstances. For example, the usage
of a protocol with the "Experimental" designation should generally
be limited to those actively involved with the experiment.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Not Recommended: A TS that is considered to be inappropriate
for general use is labeled "Not Recommended". This may be because
of its limited functionality, specialized nature, or historic
status.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>Although TSs and ASs are conceptually separate, in practice a
standards-track document may combine an AS and one or more related
TSs. For example, Technical Specifications that are developed
specifically and exclusively for some particular domain of
applicability, e.g., for mail server hosts, often contain within a
single specification all of the relevant AS and TS information. In
such cases, no useful purpose would be served by deliberately
distributing the information among several documents just to preserve
the formal AS/TS distinction. However, a TS that is likely to apply
to more than one domain of applicability should be developed in a
modular fashion, to facilitate its incorporation by multiple ASs.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec4">
      <name>The Internet Standards Track</name>
      <t>Specifications that are intended to become Internet Standards evolve
through a set of maturity levels known as the "standards track".
These maturity levels -- "Proposed Standard" and "Internet Standard" --
are defined and discussed in <xref target="sec41"/>. The way in
which specifications move along the standards track is described in
<xref target="sec6"/>.</t>
      <t>There used to be a status that came between Proposed Standard and Internet
Standard called "Draft Standard." As of the writing of this document, there
still exist some RFCs at that status. Documents at Draft Standard may be
advanced to Internet Standard, either via the procedure described in <xref target="sec6"/>
(if they meet the requirements of <xref target="propstd"/>) or with the consent of the
IESG. The IESG may also decide to remove the Draft Standard status from a
document and mark it as either Historic or Proposed Standard.</t>
      <t>Even after a specification has been adopted as an Internet Standard,
further evolution often occurs based on experience and the
recognition of new requirements. The nomenclature and procedures of
Internet standardization provide for the replacement of old Internet
Standards with new ones, and the assignment of descriptive labels to
indicate the status of "retired" Internet Standards. A set of
maturity levels is defined in <xref target="sec42"/> to cover these and other
specifications that are not considered to be on the standards track.</t>
      <t>Note: Standards track specifications normally must not depend on
other standards track specifications which are at a lower maturity
level or on non standards track specifications other than referenced
specifications from other standards bodies. (See <xref target="sec7"/>.)</t>
      <section anchor="sec41">
        <name>Standards Track Maturity Levels</name>
        <t>Internet specifications go through stages of development, testing,
and acceptance. Within the Internet Standards Process, these stages
are formally labeled "maturity levels".</t>
        <t>This section describes the maturity levels and the expected
characteristics of specifications at each level.</t>
        <section anchor="propstd">
          <name>Proposed Standard</name>
          <t>The entry-level maturity for the standards track is "Proposed
Standard".  A specific action by the IESG is required to move a
specification onto the standards track at the "Proposed Standard"
level.</t>
          <t>A Proposed Standard specification is stable, has resolved known
design choices, has received significant community review, and
appears to enjoy enough community interest to be considered valuable.</t>
          <t>Usually, neither implementation nor operational experience is
required for the designation of a specification as a Proposed
Standard.  However, such experience is highly desirable and will
usually represent a strong argument in favor of a Proposed Standard
designation.</t>
          <t>The IESG may require implementation and/or operational experience
prior to granting Proposed Standard status to a specification that
materially affects the core Internet protocols or that specifies
behavior that may have significant operational impact on the
Internet.</t>
          <t>A Proposed Standard will have no known technical omissions with
respect to the requirements placed upon it.  Proposed Standards are
of such quality that implementations can be deployed in the Internet.
However, as with all technical specifications, Proposed Standards may
be revised if problems are found or better solutions are identified,
when experiences with deploying implementations of such technologies
at scale is gathered.</t>
          <t>Notwithstanding the previous paragraph, the IETF may occasionally
choose to publish as Proposed Standard a
document that contains areas of known limitations or challenges.  In
such cases, any known issues with the document will be clearly and
prominently communicated in the document, for example, in the
abstract, the introduction, or a separate section or statement.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="sec413">
          <name>Internet Standard</name>
          <t>A specification for which significant implementation and successful
operational experience has been obtained may be elevated to the
Internet Standard level. An Internet Standard
is characterized by a high degree of
technical maturity and by a generally held belief that the specified
protocol or service provides significant benefit to the Internet
community.</t>
          <t>A specification that reaches the status of Internet Standard is
assigned a number in the STD series while retaining its RFC number.</t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sec42">
        <name>Non-Standards Track Maturity Levels</name>
        <t>Not every specification is on the standards track. A specification
may not be intended to be an Internet Standard, or it may be intended
for eventual standardization but not yet ready to enter the standards
track. A specification may have been superseded by a more recent
Internet Standard, or have otherwise fallen into disuse or disfavor.</t>
        <t>Specifications that are not on the standards track are labeled with
one of three "off-track" maturity levels: "Experimental",
"Informational", or "Historic". The documents bearing these labels
are not Internet Standards in any sense.</t>
        <section anchor="experimental">
          <name>Experimental</name>
          <t>The "Experimental" designation typically denotes a specification that
is part of some research or development effort. Such a specification
is published for the general information of the Internet technical
community and as an archival record of the work. An
Experimental specification may be the output of an organized Internet
research effort (e.g., a Research Group of the Internet Research Task Force),
an IETF Working
Group, or it may be an individual contribution.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="informational">
          <name>Informational</name>
          <t>An "Informational" specification is published for the general
information of the Internet community. The Informational
designation is intended to provide for the timely publication of a
very broad range of responsible informational documents from many
sources.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="sec423">
          <name>Procedures for Experimental and Informational RFCs</name>
          <t>Unless they are the result of IETF Working Group action, documents
intended to be published with Experimental or Informational status
should be submitted directly to the RFC Editor. The RFC Editor will
publish any such documents as Internet-Drafts which have not already
been so published. In order to differentiate these Internet-Drafts
they will be labeled or grouped in the I-D directory so they are
easily recognizable. The RFC Editor will wait two weeks after this
publication for comments before proceeding further. The RFC Editor
is expected to exercise his or her judgment concerning the editorial
suitability of a document for publication with Experimental or
Informational status, and may refuse to publish a document which, in
the expert opinion of the RFC Editor, is unrelated to Internet
activity or falls below the technical and/or editorial standard for
RFCs.</t>
          <t>To ensure that the non-standards track Experimental and Informational
designations are not misused to circumvent the Internet Standards
Process, the IESG and the RFC Editor have agreed that the RFC Editor
will refer to the IESG any document submitted for Experimental or
Informational publication which, in the opinion of the RFC Editor,
may be related to work being done, or expected to be done, within the
IETF community. The IESG shall review such a referred document
within a reasonable period of time, and recommend either that it be
published as originally submitted or referred to the IETF as a
contribution to the Internet Standards Process.</t>
          <t>If (a) the IESG recommends that the document be brought within the
IETF and progressed within the IETF context, but the author declines
to do so, or (b) the IESG considers that the document proposes
something that conflicts with, or is actually inimical to, an
established IETF effort, the document may still be published as an
Experimental or Informational RFC. In these cases, however, the IESG
may insert appropriate "disclaimer" text into the RFC either in or
immediately following the "Status of this Memo" section in order to
make the circumstances of its publication clear to readers.</t>
          <t>Documents proposed for Experimental and Informational RFCs by IETF
Working Groups go through IESG review. The review is initiated using
the process described in <xref target="sec611"/>.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="historic">
          <name>Historic</name>
          <t>A specification that has been superseded by a more recent
specification or is for any other reason considered to be obsolete is
assigned to the "Historic" level. (Purists have suggested that the
word should be "Historical"; however, at this point the use of
"Historic" is historical.)</t>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec5">
      <name>Best Current Practice (BCP) RFCs</name>
      <t>The BCP subseries of the RFC series is designed to be a way to
standardize practices and the results of community deliberations. A
BCP document is subject to the same basic set of procedures as
standards track documents and thus is a vehicle by which the IETF
community can define and ratify the community's best current thinking
on a statement of principle or on what is believed to be the best way
to perform some operations or IETF process function.</t>
      <t>Historically Internet standards have generally been concerned with
the technical specifications for hardware and software required for
computer communication across interconnected networks. However,
since the Internet itself is composed of networks operated by a great
variety of organizations, with diverse goals and rules, good user
service requires that the operators and administrators of the
Internet follow some common guidelines for policies and operations.
While these guidelines are generally different in scope and style
from protocol standards, their establishment needs a similar process
for consensus building.</t>
      <t>While it is recognized that entities such as the IAB and IESG are
composed of individuals who may participate, as individuals, in the
technical work of the IETF, it is also recognized that the entities
themselves have an existence as leaders in the community. As leaders
in the Internet technical community, these entities should have an
outlet to propose ideas to stimulate work in a particular area, to
raise the community's sensitivity to a certain issue, to make a
statement of architectural principle, or to communicate their
thoughts on other matters. The BCP subseries creates a smoothly
structured way for these management entities to insert proposals into
the consensus-building machinery of the IETF while gauging the
community's view of that issue.</t>
      <t>Finally, the BCP series may be used to document the operation of the
IETF itself. For example, this document defines the IETF Standards
Process and is published as a BCP.</t>
      <section anchor="sec51">
        <name>BCP Review Process</name>
        <t>Unlike standards-track documents, the mechanisms described in BCPs
are not well suited to the phased roll-in nature of the three stage
standards track and instead generally only make sense for full and
immediate instantiation.</t>
        <t>The BCP process is similar to that for proposed standards. The BCP
is submitted to the IESG for review, (see <xref target="sec611"/>) and the
existing review process applies, including a Last-Call on the IETF
Announce mailing list. However, once the IESG has approved the
document, the process ends and the document is published. The
resulting document is viewed as having the technical approval of the
IETF.</t>
        <t>Specifically, a document to be considered for the status of BCP must
undergo the procedures outlined in <xref target="sec61"/>, and <xref target="sec64"/> of this
document. The BCP process may be appealed according to the procedures
in <xref target="sec65"/>.</t>
        <t>Because BCPs are meant to express community consensus but are arrived
at more quickly than standards, BCPs require particular care.
Specifically, BCPs should not be viewed simply as stronger
Informational RFCs, but rather should be viewed as documents suitable
for a content different from Informational RFCs.</t>
        <t>A specification, or group of specifications, that has, or have been
approved as a BCP is assigned a number in the BCP series while
retaining its RFC number(s).</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec6">
      <name>The Internet Standards Process</name>
      <t>The mechanics of the Internet Standards Process involve decisions of
the IESG concerning the elevation of a specification onto the
standards track or the movement of a standards-track specification
from one maturity level to another. Although a number of reasonably
objective criteria (described below and in <xref target="sec4"/>) are available
to guide the IESG in making a decision to move a specification onto,
along, or off the standards track, there is no algorithmic guarantee
of elevation to or progression along the standards track for any
specification. The experienced collective judgment of the IESG
concerning the technical quality of a specification proposed for
elevation to or advancement in the standards track is an essential
component of the decision-making process.</t>
      <section anchor="sec61">
        <name>Standards Actions</name>
        <t>A "standards action" -- entering a particular specification into,
advancing it within, or removing it from, the standards track -- must
be approved by the IESG.</t>
        <section anchor="sec611">
          <name>Initiation of Action</name>
          <t>A specification that is intended to enter or advance in the Internet
standards track shall first be posted as an Internet-Draft (see
<xref target="sec22"/>) unless it has not changed since publication as an RFC.
It shall remain as an Internet-Draft for a period of time, not less
than two weeks, that permits useful community review, after which a
recommendation for action may be initiated.</t>
          <t>A standards action is initiated by a recommendation by the IETF
Working group responsible for a specification to its Area Director,
copied to the IETF Secretariat or, in the case of a specification not
associated with a Working Group, a recommendation by an individual to
the IESG.</t>
          <t>For classification as an Internet Standard, the request for reclassification
must include an explanation of how the following criteria have
been met:</t>
          <ol spacing="normal" type="1"><li>
              <t>There are at least two independent interoperating implementations
with widespread deployment and successful operational experience.
Although not required by the IETF Standards Process, <xref target="RFC5657"/>
can be helpful to conduct interoperability testing.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>There are no errata against the specification that would cause a
new implementation to fail to interoperate with deployed ones.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>There are no unused features in the specification that greatly
increase implementation complexity.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>If the technology required to implement the specification
requires patented or otherwise controlled technology, then the
set of implementations must demonstrate at least two independent,
separate and successful uses of the licensing process.</t>
            </li>
          </ol>
        </section>
        <section anchor="sec612">
          <name>IESG Review and Approval</name>
          <t>The IESG shall determine whether or not a specification submitted to
it according to <xref target="sec611"/> satisfies the applicable criteria for
the recommended action (see <xref target="sec41"/> and <xref target="sec42"/>), and shall in
addition determine whether or not the technical quality and clarity
of the specification is consistent with that expected for the
maturity level to which the specification is recommended.</t>
          <t>The IESG is not bound by the action recommended when the
specification was submitted. For example, the IESG may decide to
consider the specification for publication in a different category
than that requested. If the IESG determines this before the Last-
Call is issued then the Last-Call should reflect the IESG's view.
The IESG could also decide to change the publication category based
on the response to a Last-Call. If this decision would result in a
specification being published at a "higher" level than the original
Last-Call was for, a new Last-Call should be issued indicating the
IESG recommendation. In addition, the IESG may decide to recommend
the formation of a new Working Group in the case of significant
controversy in response to a Last-Call for specification not
originating from an IETF Working Group.</t>
          <t>In order to obtain all of the information necessary to make these
determinations, particularly when the specification is considered by
the IESG to be extremely important in terms of its potential impact
on the Internet or on the suite of Internet protocols, the IESG may,
at its discretion, commission an independent technical review of the
specification.</t>
          <t>The IESG will send notice to the IETF of the pending IESG
consideration of the document(s) to permit a final review by the
general Internet community. This "Last-Call" notification shall be
via electronic mail to the IETF Announce mailing list. Comments on a
Last-Call shall be accepted from anyone, and should be sent as
directed in the Last-Call announcement.</t>
          <t>For a Proposed Standard,
the Last-Call period shall be no shorter than two weeks except in
those cases where the proposed standards action was not initiated by
an IETF Working Group, in which case the Last-Call period shall be no
shorter than four weeks. If the IESG believes that the community
interest would be served by allowing more time for comment, it may
decide on a longer Last-Call period or to explicitly lengthen a
current Last-Call period.</t>
          <t>For an Internet Standard, the IESG will perform a review and
consideration of any errata that have been filed.
If they do not believe any of these should hold up the
advancement, then
the IESG, in an IETF-wide Last Call of at least four weeks,
informs the community of their intent to advance a document
from Proposed Standard to Internet Standard.</t>
          <t>If there is consensus for
reclassification, the RFC will be reclassified with or
without publication of a new RFC.</t>
          <t>In a timely fashion after the expiration of the Last-Call period, the
IESG shall make its final determination of whether or not to approve
the standards action, and shall notify the IETF of its decision via
electronic mail to the IETF Announce mailing list.</t>
          <t>In no event shall a document be published on the IETF Stream
without IETF consensus.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="publication">
          <name>Publication</name>
          <t>If a standards action is approved, notification is sent to the RFC
Editor and copied to the IETF with instructions to publish the
specification as an RFC. The specification shall at that point be
removed from the Internet-Drafts directory.</t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="advancing-in-the-standards-track">
        <name>Advancing in the Standards Track</name>
        <t>The procedure described in <xref target="sec61"/> is followed for each action
that attends the advancement of a specification along the standards
track.</t>
        <t>A specification shall remain at the Proposed Standard level for at
least six months.
This minimum period is intended to ensure adequate opportunity for
community review without severely impacting timeliness. The
interval shall be measured from the date of publication of the
corresponding RFC(s), or, if the action does not result in RFC
publication, the date of the announcement of the IESG approval of the
action.</t>
        <t>A specification may be (indeed, is likely to be) revised as it
advances through the standards track. At each stage, the IESG shall
determine the scope and significance of the revision to the
specification, and, if necessary and appropriate, modify the
recommended action. Minor revisions are expected, but a significant
revision may require that the specification accumulate more
experience at its current maturity level before progressing. Finally,
if the specification has been changed very significantly, the IESG
may recommend that the revision be treated as a new document, re-
entering the standards track at the beginning.</t>
        <t>Change of status shall result in republication of the specification
as an RFC, except in the rare case that there have been no changes at
all in the specification since the last publication. Generally,
desired changes will be "batched" for incorporation at the next level
in the standards track. However, deferral of changes to the next
standards action on the specification will not always be possible or
desirable; for example, an important typographical error, or a
technical error that does not represent a change in overall function
of the specification, may need to be corrected immediately. In such
cases, the IESG or RFC Editor may be asked to republish the RFC (with
a new number) with corrections, and this will not reset the minimum
time-at-level clock.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sec63">
        <name>Revising a Standard</name>
        <t>A new version of an established Internet Standard must progress
through the full Internet standardization process as if it were a
completely new specification. Once the new version has reached the
Standard level, it will usually replace the previous version, which
will be moved to Historic status. However, in some cases both
versions may remain as Internet Standards to honor the requirements
of an installed base. In this situation, the relationship between
the previous and the new versions must be explicitly stated in the
text of the new version or in another appropriate document (e.g., an
Applicability Statement; see <xref target="sec32"/>).</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sec64">
        <name>Retiring a Standard</name>
        <t>As the technology changes and matures, it is possible for a new
Standard specification to be so clearly superior technically that one
or more existing standards track specifications for the same function
should be retired. In this case, or when it is felt for some other
reason that an existing standards track specification should be
retired, the IESG shall approve a change of status of the old
specification(s) to Historic. This recommendation shall be issued
with the same Last-Call and notification procedures used for any
other standards action. A request to retire an existing standard can
originate from a Working Group, an Area Director or some other
interested party.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sec65">
        <name>Conflict Resolution and Appeals</name>
        <t>Disputes are possible at various stages during the IETF process. As
much as possible the process is designed so that compromises can be
made, and genuine consensus achieved, however there are times when
even the most reasonable and knowledgeable people are unable to
agree. To achieve the goals of openness and fairness, such conflicts
must be resolved by a process of open review and, where appropriate,
open discussion. This
section specifies the procedures that shall be followed to deal with
Internet standards issues that cannot be resolved through the normal
processes whereby IETF Working Groups and other Internet Standards
Process participants ordinarily reach consensus.</t>
        <section anchor="working-group-disputes">
          <name>Working Group Disputes</name>
          <t>An individual (whether a participant in the relevant Working Group or
not) may disagree with a Working Group recommendation based on his or
her belief that either (a) his or her own views have not been
adequately considered by the Working Group, or (b) the Working Group
has made an incorrect technical choice which places the quality
and/or integrity of the Working Group's product(s) in significant
jeopardy. The first issue is a difficulty with Working Group
process; the latter is an assertion of technical error. These two
types of disagreement are quite different, but both are handled by
the same process of review.</t>
          <t>A person who disagrees with a Working Group recommendation shall
always first discuss the matter with the Working Group's chair(s),
who may involve other members of the Working Group (or the Working
Group as a whole) in the discussion.</t>
          <t>If the disagreement cannot be resolved in this way, any of the
parties involved may bring it to the attention of the Area
Director(s) for the area in which the Working Group is chartered.
The Area Director(s) shall attempt to resolve the dispute.</t>
          <t>If the disagreement cannot be resolved by the Area Director(s) any of
the parties involved may then appeal to the IESG as a whole. The
IESG shall then review the situation and attempt to resolve it in a
manner of its own choosing.</t>
          <t>If the disagreement is not resolved to the satisfaction of the
parties at the IESG level, any of the parties involved may appeal the
decision to the IAB. The IAB shall then review the situation and
attempt to resolve it in a manner of its own choosing.</t>
          <t>The IAB decision is final with respect to the question of whether or
not the Internet standards procedures have been followed and with
respect to all questions of technical merit.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="process-failures">
          <name>Process Failures</name>
          <t>This document sets forward procedures required to be followed to
ensure openness and fairness of the Internet Standards Process, and
the technical viability of the standards created. The IESG is the
principal agent of the IETF for this purpose, and it is the IESG that
is charged with ensuring that the required procedures have been
followed, and that any necessary prerequisites to a standards action
have been met.</t>
          <t>If an individual should disagree with an action taken by the IESG in
this process, that person should first discuss the issue with the
IESG Chair. If the IESG Chair is unable to satisfy the complainant
then the IESG as a whole should re-examine the action taken, along
with input from the complainant, and determine whether any further
action is needed. The IESG shall issue a report on its review of
the complaint to the IETF.</t>
          <t>Should the complainant not be satisfied with the outcome of the IESG
review, an appeal may be lodged to the IAB. The IAB shall then review
the situation and attempt to resolve it in a manner of its own
choosing and report to the IETF on the outcome of its review.</t>
          <t>If circumstances warrant, the IAB may direct that an IESG decision be
annulled, and the situation shall then be as it was before the IESG
decision was taken. The IAB may also recommend an action to the IESG,
or make such other recommendations as it deems fit. The IAB may not,
however, pre-empt the role of the IESG by issuing a decision which
only the IESG is empowered to make.</t>
          <t>The IAB decision is final with respect to the question of whether or
not the Internet standards procedures have been followed.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="questions-of-applicable-procedure">
          <name>Questions of Applicable Procedure</name>
          <t>Further recourse is available only in cases in which the procedures
themselves (i.e., the procedures described in this document) are
claimed to be inadequate or insufficient to the protection of the
rights of all parties in a fair and open Internet Standards Process.
Claims on this basis may be made to the ISOC Board of
Trustees. The President of the ISOC shall acknowledge
such an appeal within two weeks, and shall at the time of
acknowledgment advise the petitioner of the expected duration of the
Trustees' review of the appeal. The Trustees shall review the
situation in a manner of its own choosing and report to the IETF on
the outcome of its review.</t>
          <t>The Trustees' decision upon completion of their review shall be final
with respect to all aspects of the dispute.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="appeals-procedure">
          <name>Appeals Procedure</name>
          <t>All appeals must include a detailed and specific description of the
facts of the dispute.</t>
          <t>All appeals must be initiated within two months of the public
knowledge of the action or decision to be challenged.</t>
          <t>At all stages of the appeals process, the individuals or bodies
responsible for making the decisions have the discretion to define
the specific procedures they will follow in the process of making
their decision.
Note that this does not require that all discussions
be held in public forums.</t>
          <t>In all cases a decision concerning the disposition of the dispute,
and the communication of that decision to the parties involved, must
be accomplished within a reasonable period of time.</t>
          <t>NOTE: These procedures intentionally and explicitly do not
establish a fixed maximum time period that shall be considered
"reasonable" in all cases. The Internet Standards Process places a
premium on consensus and efforts to achieve it, and deliberately
forgoes deterministically swift execution of procedures in favor of
a latitude within which more genuine technical agreements may be
reached.</t>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec7">
      <name>External Standards and Specifications</name>
      <t>Many standards groups other than the IETF create and publish
standards documents for network protocols and services. When these
external specifications play an important role in the Internet, it is
desirable to reach common agreements on their usage -- i.e., to
establish Internet Standards relating to these external
specifications.</t>
      <t>There are two categories of external specifications:</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>
          <t>Open Standards:
Various national and international standards bodies, such as ANSI,
ISO, IEEE, and ITU-T, develop a variety of protocol and service
specifications that are similar to Technical Specifications
defined here. National and international groups also publish
"implementors' agreements" that are analogous to Applicability
Statements, capturing a body of implementation-specific detail
concerned with the practical application of their standards. All
of these are considered to be "open external standards" for the
purposes of the Internet Standards Process.</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>Other Specifications:
Other proprietary specifications that have come to be widely used
in the Internet may be treated by the Internet community as if
they were a "standards". Such a specification is not generally
developed in an open fashion, is typically proprietary, and is
controlled by the vendor, vendors, or organization that produced
it.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <section anchor="use-of-external-specifications">
        <name>Use of External Specifications</name>
        <t>To avoid conflict between competing versions of a specification, the
Internet community will not standardize a specification that is
simply an "Internet version" of an existing external specification
unless an explicit cooperative arrangement to do so has been made.
However, there are several ways in which an external specification
that is important for the operation and/or evolution of the Internet
may be adopted for Internet use.</t>
        <section anchor="incorporation-of-an-open-standard">
          <name>Incorporation of an Open Standard</name>
          <t>An Internet Standard TS or AS may incorporate an open external
standard by reference. For example, many Internet Standards
incorporate by reference the ANSI standard character set "US-ASCII"
<xref target="US-ASCII"/>. Whenever possible, the referenced specification shall be
available
without restriction or undue fee using
standard Internet applications such as the WWW.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="incorporation-of-other-specifications">
          <name>Incorporation of Other Specifications</name>
          <t>Other proprietary specifications may be incorporated by reference
to a version of the specification as long as the proprietor meets
the requirements of <xref target="ipr-requirements"/>. If the other proprietary
specification is not widely and readily available, the IESG may
request that it be published as an Informational RFC.</t>
          <t>The IESG generally should not favor a particular proprietary
specification over technically equivalent and competing
specification(s) by making any incorporated vendor specification
"required" or "recommended".</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="assumption">
          <name>Assumption</name>
          <t>An IETF Working Group may start from an external specification and
develop it into an Internet specification. This is acceptable if
(1) the specification is provided to the Working Group in
compliance with the requirements of <xref target="ipr-requirements"/>, and (2) change
control has been conveyed to IETF by the original developer of the
specification for the specification or for specifications derived
from the original specification.</t>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec8">
      <name>Notices and Record Keeping</name>
      <t>Each of the organizations involved in the development and approval
of Internet Standards shall publicly announce, and shall maintain
a publicly accessible record of, every activity in which it
engages, to the extent that the activity represents the
prosecution of any part of the Internet Standards Process. For
purposes of this section, the organizations involved in the
development and approval of Internet Standards includes the IETF,
the IESG, the IAB, all IETF Working Groups, and the Internet
Society Board of Trustees.</t>
      <t>For IETF and Working Group meetings announcements shall be made by
electronic mail to the IETF Announce mailing list and shall be
made sufficiently far in advance of the activity to permit all
interested parties to effectively participate. The announcement
shall contain (or provide pointers to) all of the information that
is necessary to support the participation of any interested
individual. In the case of a meeting, for example, the
announcement shall include an agenda that specifies the standards-
related issues that will be discussed.</t>
      <t>The formal record of an organization's standards-related activity
shall include at least the following:</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>
          <t>The charter of the organization (or a defining document equivalent
to a charter);</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>Complete and accurate minutes of meetings;</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>The archives of Working Group electronic mail mailing lists; and</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>All written contributions from participants that pertain to the
organization's standards-related activity.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>As a practical matter, the formal record of all Internet Standards
Process activities is maintained by the IETF Secretariat, and is the
responsibility of the IETF Secretariat except that each IETF Working
Group is expected to maintain their own email list archive and must
make a best effort to ensure that all traffic is captured and
included in the archives. Also, the Working Group chair is
responsible for providing the IETF Secretariat with complete and
accurate minutes of all Working Group meetings. Internet-Drafts that
have been removed (for any reason) from the Internet-Drafts
directories shall be archived by the IETF Secretariat for the sole
purpose of preserving an historical record of Internet standards
activity and thus are not retrievable except in special
circumstances.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="sec9">
      <name>Varying the Process</name>
      <t>This document, which sets out the rules and procedures by which
Internet Standards and related documents are made is itself a product
of the Internet Standards Process (as a BCP, as described in <xref target="sec5"/>.)
It replaces a previous version, and in time, is likely itself to
be replaced.</t>
      <t>While, when published, this document represents the community's view
of the proper and correct process to follow, and requirements to be
met, to allow for the best possible Internet Standards and BCPs, it
cannot be assumed that this will always remain the case. From time to
time there may be a desire to update it, by replacing it with a new
version. Updating this document uses the same open procedures as are
used for any other BCP.</t>
      <t>In addition, there may be situations where following the procedures
leads to a deadlock about a specific specification, or there may be
situations where the procedures provide no guidance. In these cases
it may be appropriate to invoke the variance procedure described
below.</t>
      <section anchor="the-variance-procedure">
        <name>The Variance Procedure</name>
        <t>Upon the recommendation of the responsible IETF Working Group (or, if
no Working Group is constituted, upon the recommendation of an ad hoc
committee), the IESG may enter a particular specification into, or
advance it within, the standards track even though some of the
requirements of this document have not or will not be met. The IESG
may approve such a variance, however, only if it first determines
that the likely benefits to the Internet community are likely to
outweigh any costs to the Internet community that result from
noncompliance with the requirements in this document. In exercising
this discretion, the IESG shall at least consider (a) the technical
merit of the specification, (b) the possibility of achieving the
goals of the Internet Standards Process without granting a variance,
(c) alternatives to the granting of a variance, (d) the collateral
and precedential effects of granting a variance, and (e) the IESG's
ability to craft a variance that is as narrow as possible. In
determining whether to approve a variance, the IESG has discretion to
limit the scope of the variance to particular parts of this document
and to impose such additional restrictions or limitations as it
determines appropriate to protect the interests of the Internet
community.</t>
        <t>The proposed variance must detail the problem perceived, explain the
precise provision of this document which is causing the need for a
variance, and the results of the IESG's considerations including
consideration of points (a) through (d) in the previous paragraph.
The proposed variance shall be issued as an Internet Draft. The IESG
shall then issue an extended Last-Call, of no less than 4 weeks, to
allow for community comment upon the proposal.</t>
        <t>In a timely fashion after the expiration of the Last-Call period, the
IESG shall make its final determination of whether or not to approve
the proposed variance, and shall notify the IETF of its decision via
electronic mail to the IETF Announce mailing list. If the variance
is approved it shall be forwarded to the RFC Editor with a request
that it be published as a BCP.</t>
        <t>This variance procedure is for use when a one-time waiver of some
provision of this document is felt to be required. Permanent changes
to this document shall be accomplished through the normal BCP
process.</t>
        <t>The appeals process in <xref target="sec65"/> applies to this process.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="exclusions">
        <name>Exclusions</name>
        <t>No use of this procedure may lower any specified delays, nor exempt
any proposal from the requirements of openness, fairness, or
consensus, nor from the need to keep proper records of the meetings
and mailing list discussions.</t>
        <t>Specifically, the following sections of this document must not be
subject of a variance: <xref target="sec51"/>, <xref target="sec61"/>, <xref target="sec611"/> (first paragraph),
<xref target="sec612"/>, <xref target="sec63"/> (first sentence), <xref target="sec65"/> and <xref target="sec9"/>.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="security-considerations">
      <name>Security Considerations</name>
      <t>Security issues are not discussed in this memo.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="iana-considerations">
      <name>IANA Considerations</name>
      <t>This document has no IANA actions.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="change-log">
      <name>Change Log</name>
      <section anchor="working-group-draft">
        <name>Working group draft</name>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Draft 0: Adopted by PROCON WG.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Draft 1: Various GitHub fixes. Improve 7475 obsolescence text. Add wording
about RFC style, output formats, default input; remove text about standards
requiring ASCII. Unindent or remove text blocks. Discuss legacy "Draft
Standard" documents. Tighten IPR requirements on Informational.  Add WG
changelog section.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Draft 2: Fix link to repository, tweak wording about RFC style and
formats. Clarify that not all discussions must be public.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
      </section>
      <section anchor="individual-draft">
        <name>Individual draft</name>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Draft 0: Translated the nroff source of RFC 2026 into markdown.
The notices in the document at section 12.4 were prefaced with "THIS TEXT
ADDED TO PASS THE IDNITS CHECKS" so that the draft could be published.
The copyright notice is changed to the current one.
Because of this and other boilerplate, some section numbers differ
from the original RFC.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Draft 1: Add Scott Bradner as co-author. Add Note. Alphabetize
terminology. Minor wording tweaks.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Draft 2: Clarified Note about the RFC's. More word tweaks.  Remove
bulk of text from the Notices, and point to RFC 2026, to avoid confusion
and pass the idnits checks.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Draft 3: Incorporated RFC 5378.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Draft 4: Updated terminology and removed some obvious or old terms.
In some cases this meant minor editorial changes in the body text.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Draft 5: Add text about RFC 5657 and errata to the intro Note. Incorporate
RFC 5742.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Draft 6: Incorporate RFC 6410. Moved some text around to make the
new text flow a bit better.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Draft 7: Incorporate RFC 7100, RFC 7475, and RFC 9282.  Add mention of
the "rfcindex.txt" file.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Draft 8: Incorporate RFC 7127.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Draft 9: Incorporate RFC 8789.
Updates (not obsoletes) RFC 5378, RFC 5657, and RFC 7475.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Draft 10: Incorporate RFC 8179.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Draft 11: Remove IPR section (RFC 5378 and RFC 8179) and add a pointer
to those RFCs instead.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Draft 12: Addressed the editorial issues found by the following verified
errata: 523, 524, 1622, 3014, 3095, and 7181. Errata 3095 was marked as
editorial, although it seems to be a semantic change but one that
properly reflects consensus. The following errata were closed by the
conversion to markdown and associated tooling, as they do the right thing:
6658, 6659, 6661, 6671, and 6669.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Draft 13: Address some pre-adoption issues raised on the WG mailing list.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
      </section>
    </section>
  </middle>
  <back>
    <references anchor="sec-combined-references">
      <name>References</name>
      <references anchor="sec-normative-references">
        <name>Normative References</name>
        <reference anchor="RFC9281">
          <front>
            <title>Entities Involved in the IETF Standards Process</title>
            <author fullname="R. Salz" initials="R." surname="Salz"/>
            <date month="June" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the individuals and organizations involved in the IETF standards process, as described in BCP 9. It includes brief descriptions of the entities involved and the role they play in the standards process.</t>
              <t>The IETF and its structure have undergone many changes since RFC 2028 was published in 1996. This document reflects the changed organizational structure of the IETF and obsoletes RFC 2028.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="11"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9281"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9281"/>
        </reference>
        <referencegroup anchor="BCP78" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/bcp78">
          <reference anchor="RFC5378" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5378">
            <front>
              <title>Rights Contributors Provide to the IETF Trust</title>
              <author fullname="S. Bradner" initials="S." role="editor" surname="Bradner"/>
              <author fullname="J. Contreras" initials="J." role="editor" surname="Contreras"/>
              <date month="November" year="2008"/>
              <abstract>
                <t>The IETF policies about rights in Contributions to the IETF are designed to ensure that such Contributions can be made available to the IETF and Internet communities while permitting the authors to retain as many rights as possible. This memo details the IETF policies on rights in Contributions to the IETF. It also describes the objectives that the policies are designed to meet. This memo obsoletes RFCs 3978 and 4748 and, with BCP 79 and RFC 5377, replaces Section 10 of RFC 2026. This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.</t>
              </abstract>
            </front>
            <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="78"/>
            <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="5378"/>
            <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC5378"/>
          </reference>
        </referencegroup>
        <referencegroup anchor="BCP79" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/bcp79">
          <reference anchor="RFC8179" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8179">
            <front>
              <title>Intellectual Property Rights in IETF Technology</title>
              <author fullname="S. Bradner" initials="S." surname="Bradner"/>
              <author fullname="J. Contreras" initials="J." surname="Contreras"/>
              <date month="May" year="2017"/>
              <abstract>
                <t>The IETF policies about Intellectual Property Rights (IPR), such as patent rights, relative to technologies developed in the IETF are designed to ensure that IETF working groups and participants have as much information as possible about any IPR constraints on a technical proposal as early as possible in the development process. The policies are intended to benefit the Internet community and the public at large, while respecting the legitimate rights of IPR holders. This document sets out the IETF policies concerning IPR related to technology worked on within the IETF. It also describes the objectives that the policies are designed to meet. This document updates RFC 2026 and, with RFC 5378, replaces Section 10 of RFC 2026. This document also obsoletes RFCs 3979 and 4879.</t>
              </abstract>
            </front>
            <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="79"/>
            <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8179"/>
            <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8179"/>
          </reference>
        </referencegroup>
        <reference anchor="RFC7322">
          <front>
            <title>RFC Style Guide</title>
            <author fullname="H. Flanagan" initials="H." surname="Flanagan"/>
            <author fullname="S. Ginoza" initials="S." surname="Ginoza"/>
            <date month="September" year="2014"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the fundamental and unique style conventions and editorial policies currently in use for the RFC Series. It captures the RFC Editor's basic requirements and offers guidance regarding the style and structure of an RFC. Additional guidance is captured on a website that reflects the experimental nature of that guidance and prepares it for future inclusion in the RFC Style Guide. This document obsoletes RFC 2223, "Instructions to RFC Authors".</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7322"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7322"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC1796">
          <front>
            <title>Not All RFCs are Standards</title>
            <author fullname="C. Huitema" initials="C." surname="Huitema"/>
            <author fullname="J. Postel" initials="J." surname="Postel"/>
            <author fullname="S. Crocker" initials="S." surname="Crocker"/>
            <date month="April" year="1995"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document discusses the relationship of the Request for Comments (RFCs) notes to Internet Standards. This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="1796"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC1796"/>
        </reference>
      </references>
      <references anchor="sec-informative-references">
        <name>Informative References</name>
        <reference anchor="_2418bis">
          <front>
            <title>IETF Working Group Guidelines and Procedures</title>
            <author fullname="Rich Salz" initials="R." surname="Salz">
              <organization>Akamai Technologies</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="David Schinazi" initials="D." surname="Schinazi">
              <organization>Google LLC</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Scott O. Bradner" initials="S. O." surname="Bradner">
              <organization>SOBCO</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="15" month="October" year="2025"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) has responsibility for
   developing and reviewing specifications intended as Internet
   Standards.  IETF activities are organized into working groups (WGs).
   This document describes the guidelines and procedures for formation
   and operation of IETF working groups.  It also describes the formal
   relationship between IETF participants WG and the Internet
   Engineering Steering Group (IESG) and the basic duties of IETF
   participants, including WG Chairs, WG participants, and IETF Area
   Directors.

   This document obsoletes RFC2418, and RFC3934.  It also includes the
   changes from RFC7475, and with [_2026bis], obsoletes it.  It also
   includes a summary of the changes implied in RFC7776 and incorporates
   the changes from RFC8717 and RFC9141.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-procon-2418bis-01"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFCXML" target="https://authors.ietf.org/rfcxml-overview">
          <front>
            <title>RFCXML overview and background</title>
            <author>
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date>n.d.</date>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFCPAGE" target="https://www.ietf.org/process/rfcs/">
          <front>
            <title>About RFCs</title>
            <author>
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date>n.d.</date>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="US-ASCII">
          <front>
            <title>Coded Character Set -- 7-Bit American Standard Code for Information Interchange</title>
            <author initials="" surname="ANSI" fullname="ANSI">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date year="1986" month="March"/>
          </front>
          <annotation>ANSI X3.4-1986</annotation>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC4844">
          <front>
            <title>The RFC Series and RFC Editor</title>
            <author fullname="L. Daigle" initials="L." role="editor" surname="Daigle"/>
            <author>
              <organization abbrev="IAB">Internet Architecture Board</organization>
            </author>
            <date month="July" year="2007"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the framework for an RFC Series and an RFC Editor function that incorporate the principles of organized community involvement and accountability that has become necessary as the Internet technical community has grown, thereby enabling the RFC Series to continue to fulfill its mandate. This memo provides information for the Internet community.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4844"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4844"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC5742">
          <front>
            <title>IESG Procedures for Handling of Independent and IRTF Stream Submissions</title>
            <author fullname="H. Alvestrand" initials="H." surname="Alvestrand"/>
            <author fullname="R. Housley" initials="R." surname="Housley"/>
            <date month="December" year="2009"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the procedures used by the IESG for handling documents submitted for RFC publication from the Independent Submission and IRTF streams.</t>
              <t>This document updates procedures described in RFC 2026 and RFC 3710. This memo documents an Internet Best Current Practice.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="92"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="5742"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC5742"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8729">
          <front>
            <title>The RFC Series and RFC Editor</title>
            <author fullname="R. Housley" initials="R." role="editor" surname="Housley"/>
            <author fullname="L. Daigle" initials="L." role="editor" surname="Daigle"/>
            <date month="February" year="2020"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the framework for an RFC Series and an RFC Editor function that incorporate the principles of organized community involvement and accountability that has become necessary as the Internet technical community has grown, thereby enabling the RFC Series to continue to fulfill its mandate. This document obsoletes RFC 4844.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8729"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8729"/>
        </reference>
        <referencegroup anchor="BCP25" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/bcp25">
          <reference anchor="RFC2418" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2418">
            <front>
              <title>IETF Working Group Guidelines and Procedures</title>
              <author fullname="S. Bradner" initials="S." surname="Bradner"/>
              <date month="September" year="1998"/>
              <abstract>
                <t>This document describes the guidelines and procedures for formation and operation of IETF working groups. This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.</t>
              </abstract>
            </front>
            <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="25"/>
            <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="2418"/>
            <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC2418"/>
          </reference>
          <reference anchor="RFC3934" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3934">
            <front>
              <title>Updates to RFC 2418 Regarding the Management of IETF Mailing Lists</title>
              <author fullname="M. Wasserman" initials="M." surname="Wasserman"/>
              <date month="October" year="2004"/>
              <abstract>
                <t>This document is an update to RFC 2418 that gives WG chairs explicit responsibility for managing WG mailing lists. In particular, it gives WG chairs the authority to temporarily suspend the mailing list posting privileges of disruptive individuals. This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.</t>
              </abstract>
            </front>
            <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="25"/>
            <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="3934"/>
            <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC3934"/>
          </reference>
          <reference anchor="RFC7776" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7776">
            <front>
              <title>IETF Anti-Harassment Procedures</title>
              <author fullname="P. Resnick" initials="P." surname="Resnick"/>
              <author fullname="A. Farrel" initials="A." surname="Farrel"/>
              <date month="March" year="2016"/>
              <abstract>
                <t>IETF Participants must not engage in harassment while at IETF meetings, virtual meetings, or social events or while participating in mailing lists. This document lays out procedures for managing and enforcing this policy.</t>
                <t>This document updates RFC 2418 by defining new working group guidelines and procedures. This document updates RFC 7437 by allowing the Ombudsteam to form a recall petition without further signatories.</t>
              </abstract>
            </front>
            <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="25"/>
            <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7776"/>
            <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7776"/>
          </reference>
          <reference anchor="RFC8716" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8716">
            <front>
              <title>Update to the IETF Anti-Harassment Procedures for the Replacement of the IETF Administrative Oversight Committee (IAOC) with the IETF Administration LLC</title>
              <author fullname="P. Resnick" initials="P." surname="Resnick"/>
              <author fullname="A. Farrel" initials="A." surname="Farrel"/>
              <date month="February" year="2020"/>
              <abstract>
                <t>The IETF Anti-Harassment Procedures are described in RFC 7776.</t>
                <t>The IETF Administrative Oversight Committee (IAOC) has been replaced by the IETF Administration LLC, and the IETF Administrative Director has been replaced by the IETF LLC Executive Director. This document updates RFC 7776 to amend these terms.</t>
                <t>RFC 7776 contained updates to RFC 7437. RFC 8713 has incorporated those updates, so this document also updates RFC 7776 to remove those updates.</t>
              </abstract>
            </front>
            <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="25"/>
            <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8716"/>
            <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8716"/>
          </reference>
        </referencegroup>
        <reference anchor="RFC9280">
          <front>
            <title>RFC Editor Model (Version 3)</title>
            <author fullname="P. Saint-Andre" initials="P." role="editor" surname="Saint-Andre"/>
            <date month="June" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document specifies version 3 of the RFC Editor Model. The model defines two high-level tasks related to the RFC Series. First, policy definition is the joint responsibility of the RFC Series Working Group (RSWG), which produces policy proposals, and the RFC Series Approval Board (RSAB), which approves such proposals. Second, policy implementation is primarily the responsibility of the RFC Production Center (RPC) as contractually overseen by the IETF Administration Limited Liability Company (IETF LLC). In addition, various responsibilities of the RFC Editor function are now performed alone or in combination by the RSWG, RSAB, RPC, RFC Series Consulting Editor (RSCE), and IETF LLC. Finally, this document establishes the Editorial Stream for publication of future policy definition documents produced through the processes defined herein.</t>
              <t>This document obsoletes RFC 8728. This document updates RFCs 7841, 8729, and 8730.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9280"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9280"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC1311">
          <front>
            <title>Introduction to the STD Notes</title>
            <author fullname="J. Postel" initials="J." surname="Postel"/>
            <date month="March" year="1992"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The STDs are a subseries of notes within the RFC series that are the Internet standards. The intent is to identify clearly for the Internet community those RFCs which document Internet standards. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="1311"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC1311"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC5657">
          <front>
            <title>Guidance on Interoperation and Implementation Reports for Advancement to Draft Standard</title>
            <author fullname="L. Dusseault" initials="L." surname="Dusseault"/>
            <author fullname="R. Sparks" initials="R." surname="Sparks"/>
            <date month="September" year="2009"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>Advancing a protocol to Draft Standard requires documentation of the interoperation and implementation of the protocol. Historic reports have varied widely in form and level of content and there is little guidance available to new report preparers. This document updates the existing processes and provides more detail on what is appropriate in an interoperability and implementation report. This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="9"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="5657"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC5657"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC2026">
          <front>
            <title>The Internet Standards Process -- Revision 3</title>
            <author fullname="S. Bradner" initials="S." surname="Bradner"/>
            <date month="October" year="1996"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This memo documents the process used by the Internet community for the standardization of protocols and procedures. It defines the stages in the standardization process, the requirements for moving a document between stages and the types of documents used during this process. This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="9"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="2026"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC2026"/>
        </reference>
      </references>
    </references>
    <?line 1379?>

<section numbered="false" anchor="acknowledgments">
      <name>Acknowledgments</name>
      <t>We gratefully acknowledge those who have contributed to the development of
IETF RFC's and the processes that create both the content and documents.  In
particular, we thank the authors of all the documents that updated
<xref target="RFC2026"/>.</t>
      <t>We also thank Sandy Ginoza of the Secretariat for sending all the original
RFC sources, and John Klensin for his support and cooperation during the
process of creating this document.</t>
    </section>
  </back>
  <!-- ##markdown-source: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-->

</rfc>
