<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
  <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="rfc2629.xslt" ?>
  <!-- generated by https://github.com/cabo/kramdown-rfc2629 version  -->

<!DOCTYPE rfc SYSTEM "rfc2629.dtd" [
]>


<rfc ipr="trust200902" docName="draft-knodel-terminology-12" category="info">
  <front>
    <title abbrev="Terminology">Terminology, Power, and Inclusive Language in Internet-Drafts and RFCs</title>

    <author initials="M." surname="Knodel" fullname="Mallory Knodel">
      <organization>Center for Democracy &amp; Technology</organization>
      <address>
        <email>mknodel@cdt.org</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="N." surname="ten Oever" fullname="Niels ten Oever">
      <organization>University of Amsterdam</organization>
      <address>
        <email>mail@nielstenoever.net</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <date year="2022" month="December" day="21"/>

    <area>IETF</area>
    
    <keyword>Internet-Draft</keyword>

    <abstract>


<t>This document argues for more inclusive language conventions sometimes used by RFC authors and the RFC Production Centre in Internet-Drafts that are work in progress, and in new RFCs that may be published in any of the RFC series, in order to foster greater knowledge transfer and improve diversity of participation in the IETF.</t>

<t>It is important to note that this is not standard, it does not represent IETF consensus, and should not be misconstrued as anything other than the authors’ views.</t>



    </abstract>



  </front>

  <middle>


<section anchor="introduction" title="Introduction">

<t>According to <xref target="RFC7322"/>, “The ultimate goal of the RFC publication process is to produce documents that are readable, clear, consistent, and reasonably uniform,” and one function of the RFC Editor is to “[c]orrect larger content/clarity issues; flag any unclear passages for author review.” Documents that are published as RFCs are first worked on as Internet-Drafts.</t>

<t>Given the importance of communication between people developing RFCs, Internet-Drafts (I-D’s), and related documents, it is worth considering the effects of terminology that has been identified as exclusionary. This document argues that certain obviously exclusionary terms should be avoided and replaced with alternatives. We propose nothing more than additional care in the choice of language just as care is taken in defining standards and protocols themselves.</t>

<t>This document presents arguments for why exclusionary terms should be avoided in Internet-Drafts and RFCs and as an exercise describes the problems introduced by some specific terms and why their proposed alternatives improve technical documentation. The example terms discussed in this document include “master-slave” and “whitelist-blacklist”. There is a final section on additional considerations and general action points to address future RFCs and I-D’s. Lastly, a summary of recommendations is presented.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="terminology-and-power-in-internet-drafts-and-rfcs" title="Terminology and Power in Internet-Drafts and RFCs">

<t>According to the work of scholar Heather Brodie Graves from 1993, “one goal of the application of rhetorical theory in the technical communication classroom is to assess the appropriateness of particular terms and to evaluate whether these terms will facilitate or hinder the readers’ understanding of the technical material” <xref target="BrodieGravesGraves"/>. This implies that in order to effectively communicate the content of I-Ds and RFCs to all readers, it is important for Authors to consider the kinds of terms or language conventions that may inadvertently get in the way of effective communication. She continues, “complex and subtle configurations of sexist, racist, or ethnocentric language use in technical documents can derail or interfere with readers’ ability and desire to comprehend and follow important information.”</t>

<t>Indeed, problems of language are problems of everyday speech. Racist and sexist language is rampant and similarly counter-productive in other sectors, notably social work <xref target="Burgest"/>. The terms “master-slave,” treated in detail below are present in other realms of technology, notably “automotive clutch and brake systems, clocks, flip-flop circuits, computer drives, and radio transmitters” <xref target="Eglash"/>.</t>

<t>However as noted in the research by Ron Eglash, this seemingly entrenched technical terminology is relatively recent. It is not too late for these terms to be replaced with alternative metaphors that are more accurate, clearer, less distracting, and that do not offend their readers. Language matters and metaphors matter. Indeed, metaphors can be incredibly useful devices to make more human the complex technical concepts presented in RFCs. Metaphors should not be avoided, but rather taken seriously. Renowned linguist George Lakoff argued in 1980 that the ubiquitous use of metaphors in our everyday speech indicates a fundamental instinct to “structure our most basic understandings of experience” <xref target="Lakoff"/>. Metaphors structure relationships, and they frame possibilities and impossibilities <xref target="Wyatt"/>.</t>

<t>Like Graves, this document recognises the monumental challenge of addressing linguistics and power, and attempts to “promote awareness that may lead to eventual wide-spread change” <xref target="BrodieGravesGraves"/> and suggests first steps for actions that may remedy the inadvertent use of undesirable terms’. To that end, the list below is a tersely written set of IETF-specific arguments as to why the RFC Editor should be encouraged to correct other content and clarity issues with respect to exclusionary language and metaphors:</t>

<t><list style="numbers">
  <t>The RFC series is intended to remain online in perpetuity. Societal attitudes to offensive and exclusionary language shift over time in the direction of more empathy, not less.</t>
  <t>That exclusionary terms in RFCs are largely hidden from the larger public, or read only by engineers, is no excuse to ignore social-level reactions to the terms. If the terms would be a poor choice for user-facing application features, the terms should be avoided in technical documentation and specifications, too.</t>
  <t>At the time of this drafting, the digital technology community has a problem with monoculture. And because the diversity of the technical community is already a problem, a key strategy to breaking monoculture is to ensure that technical documentation is addressed to a wider audience and greater multiplicity of readers.</t>
  <t>And yet the technical community already includes members who take offense to these terms. Eradicating the use of exclusionary terminology in official RFCs recognises the presence of and acknowledges the requests from black and brown engineers and from women and gender-non-conforming engineers to avoid the use of exclusionary terminology.</t>
</list></t>

<t>This document does not try to prescribe terminology shifts for any and all language that could be deemed exclusionary. Instead what follow are two examples of specific alternative suggestions to “master-slave” and “white-blacklist” and the rationale for the use of the alternatives. Suggested actions for handling additional considerations are presented in a subsequent section.</t>

<section anchor="master-slave" title="Master-Slave">

<t>Master-slave is an offensive and exclusionary metaphor that will and should never become fully detached from history. Aside from being unprofessional and exclusionary it stifled the participation of students whom Eglash interviewed for his research. He asks: “If the master-slave metaphor affected these tough-minded engineers who had the gumption to make it through a technical career back in the days when they may have been the only black persons in their classes, what impact might it have on black students who are debating whether or not to enter science and technology careers at all?” <xref target="Eglash"/></t>

<t>Aside from the arguably most important reason outlined above, these terms are becoming less used and therefore increasingly less compatible as more communities move away from its use (eg <xref target="NIST"/>, <xref target="Python"/>, <xref target="Drupal"/>, <xref target="Github"/> and <xref target="Django"/>. The usage of ‘master’ and ‘slave’ in hardware and software has been halted by the Los Angeles County Office of Affirmative Action, the Django community, the Python community and several other programming languages. This was done because the language is offensive and hurts people in the community <xref target="Django2"/>. Root operator Internet Systems Consortium also stopped using the terms <xref target="ISC"/>.</t>

<t>In addition to being inappropriate and arcane, the master-slave metaphor is both technically and historically inaccurate. For instance, in DNS the ‘slave’ is able to refuse zone transfers on the ground that it is malformed. The metaphor is incorrect historically given the most recent centuries during which “the role of the master was to abdicate and the role of the slave was to revolt” <xref target="McClelland"/>. Yet in another sense slavery is also not ‘just an historic term’, whereas freedom from slavery is a human-rights issue <xref target="UDHR"/>, it continues to exist in the present <xref target="Wikipedia"/>. Furthermore, this term set wasn’t revived until recently, after WWII, and after many of the technologies that adopted it were already in use with different terminology <xref target="Eglash"/>.</t>

<t>Ultimately master-slave is a poor choice since it is 1) being used less frequently already 2) in a variety of applications 3) to correct perceived exclusionary effects 4) at the request of concerned members of the technical community.</t>

<t>To find alternatives to master-slave, one can look to myriad existing implementations. There are also many other relationships that can be used as metaphors, Eglash’s research calls into question the accuracy of the master-slave metaphor. An alternative should be chosen based on the pairing that is most clear in context:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Primary-secondary based on authority. See for example <xref target="RFC8499"/>.</t>
  <t>Primary-replica based originality.</t>
  <t>Active-standby based on state.</t>
  <t>Writer-reader based on function.</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="blacklist-whitelist" title="Blacklist-Whitelist">

<t>The metaphorical use of white-black to connote good-evil is exclusive. While master-slave might seem like a more egregious example of racism, white-black is arguably worse because it is more pervasive and therefore more insidious. While recent headlines have decried the technical community’s use of master-slave, there is far less discussion about white-black despite its importance. There is even a name for this pervasive language pitfall: the association of white with good and black with evil is known as the “bad is black effect” <xref target="Grewal"/>.</t>

<t>Indeed, there is an entire book on the subject, written by renowned authority on race, Frantz Fanon. In his book “Black Skin, White Masks,” Fanon makes several persuasive arguments that standard language encodes subconscious in-group, out-group preferences <xref target="Fanon"/>.</t>

<t>In the case of blacklist-whitelist in the technical documentation of I-Ds and RFCs, it is entirely a term of art and an arbitrary metaphorical construct with no technical merit. There are scientific uses of black that are related to light– black holes are black because light cannot escape them. Blacklist-whitelist is not a metaphor for lightness or darkness, it is a good-evil metaphor and therefore this trope has significant impact on how people are seen and treated. As we’ve seen with metaphors, its use is pervasive and, though not necessarily conscious, perceptions do get promulgated through culture and repetition.</t>

<t>As with master-slave, we save our technical argument for last, referencing and presenting first the reasons for the use of non-offensive, alternative terminology for the sake of our humanity. Indeed, our technical argument is incredibly succinct: Why use a metaphor when a direct description is both succinct and clear? There can be absolutely no ambiguity if one uses the terms, as suggested below, allow-block rather than white-black.</t>

<t>There are alternatives to this terminology set that vastly improve clarity because they are not even metaphors, they’re descriptions. The alternatives proposed here say exactly what they mean.</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Accept-list and Drop-list for threat signaling. See for example <xref target="RFC8612"/>, <xref target="RFC8782"/>, and <xref target="RFC8783"/>).</t>
  <t>Blocklist-allowlist, deny-allow, exempt-allowlist or block-permit for permissions.</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="other-considerations" title="Other Considerations">

<t>As described in the preceding sections, the language used in technical documentation, like all written text, creates and reinforces expectations and stereotypes. We propose nothing more than additional care in the choice of language just as care is taken in defining standards and protocols themselves. The two examples provided above are not the only cases of exclusionary language to be avoided, and many more can be collected. We use this section to broaden the context of other offensive and exclusionary terminologies to encompass additional concerns, why spotting and eradicating problematic terminologies is a valid endeavour for authors and editors of technical documentation and how this might be systematised.</t>

<t>There are many other metaphors present in technical documentation that are “terms of art” but that have no technical basis whatsoever. If any of these metaphors is offensive there is no excuse for its continued use. A term like “man-in-the-middle” is not technically useful. It is not a standard term, not as clear as its alternative “on-path attacker”, and should therefore be avoided. When presented with the opportunity to employ the use of metaphors or to unthinkingly repeat terms of art that connote gender or race, Authors should simply find a better way to explain themselves. A fun read on the politics of colloquial speech by George Orwell should dissuade any clever Author from using tired explanatory metaphors <xref target="Orwell"/>.</t>

<t>Gendered pronouns and sexism are common place but easy to spot and replace. Up until recently, strict English grammatists like Orwell decried the use of the neutral pronoun “they”. Without a neutral singular pronoun, “he” is assumed as the default singular pronoun when the gender of the person is unknown or ambiguous. However, that has changed, and it is now widely accepted that “they” can be used as a neutral singular pronoun. Since it is unlikely that all implementers and infrastructure operators are of any particular gender, “he” should never be used to refer to a person in I-Ds and RFCs. An Author who uses male examples sets male-ness as a standard.</t>

<t>Besides race and gender, our world is full of metaphors rooted in oppression, ableism, and colonialism. Militarised metaphors are also a pervasive problem in language, perhaps even more so in technical communities because of the historical and actual relationship between technology and war.</t>

<t>While it is not our intention to be exhaustive we hope to have made a persuasive case for authors and editors to pay attention to the finer details of metaphor, and the ways power is replicated in technical documentation unless detailed attention is paid. The example terms above “master-slave” and “blacklist-whitelist” are already less common. If the IETF community has learned anything from the debate over the use of these terms, and this document, it is that language matters to us deeply as members of society and as engineers. And because language, and society, change over time, we must approach future concerns with some degree of dispassion when the arguments presented in the first section can be clearly applied.</t>

<t>There is harm in protracted discussion that weighs the validity IETF participants’ experiences with exclusionary terminology. The IETF’s own discussions surfaced expressions and defense of racist views that pushed away participants and observers. This illustrates the need to, as Graves is cited above as saying, continue to raise awareness within our community for eventual, lasting change on the continued front of struggle against the racists amongst us. Yet we recommend a living stylesheet, rather than repeated RFCs, be used as a mechanism for monitoring exclusionary language in IETF documents <xref target="inclusiveterminology"/>.</t>

<t>It is there that we welcome additional examples of terminology that might be avoided through more awareness and thoughtfulness.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="summary-of-recommendations" title="Summary of Recommendations">

<t>To summarise, we have bulleted some very concrete action points that can be taken by Editors, reviewers and Authors, both present and future as they develop and publish Internet-Drafts and new RFCs.</t>

<t>Authors can consider to:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Replace the exclusionary terms “master-slave” and “blacklist-whitelist” with more accurate alternatives.</t>
  <t>Read and reflect upon the repository of exclusionary terminology <xref target="inclusiveterminology"/>.</t>
  <t>Reflect on their use of metaphors generally.</t>
  <t>Consider changing existing exclusionary language in current (reference) implementations <xref target="socketwench"/>.</t>
  <t>Consult the RFC style sheet maintained by the RFC editor and the community that can be found at https://github.com/ietf/terminology .</t>
</list></t>

<t>During the publication process, publishers (such as the RFC Editor) are advised to:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Offer alternatives for exclusionary terminology as an important act of correcting larger editorial issues and clarifying technical concepts and</t>
  <t>Maintain the IETF repository that collects all terms that have been considered and indicate whether they are deemed acceptable, and if not what terms Authors should consider instead.</t>
  <t>Suggest to Authors that even when referencing other specifications that have not replaced offensive terminology, the Authors could use another term in their document and include a note to say that they have used the new term as a replacement for the term used in the referenced document.</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="epilogue" title="Epilogue">

<t>This document built a compendium of scholarship, activist campaigns, and the will of technologists who had pointed out general and specific issues with technical terms. This sparked a significant discussion in the IETF. Concretely the document’s writing resulted in a statement by the IESG <xref target="Statement"/> on on Inclusive Language and its mainstreaming with the <xref target="in-solidarity-bot"/>. The authors chose to seek publication of this document as a historical marker of that discussion and as a contribution to social and restorative justice.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="further-reading" title="Further reading">

<t>Ford, Heather., Wajcman, Judy. 2017. “‘Anyone can edit’, not everyone does: Wikipedia and the gender gap” Social Studies of Science. ISSN 0306-3127</t>

<t>Grant, Barbara M. 2008. “Master—slave dialogues in humanities supervision” 
Arts and Humanities in Higher Education, Volume: 7 issue: 1, page(s): 9-27 https://doi.org/10.1177/1474022207084880</t>

<t>Miller, Carolyn, R. 1979. “A Humanistic Rationale for Technical Writing” College English, Vol. 40, No. 6, pp. 610-617</t>

</section>
<section anchor="security-considerations" title="Security Considerations">

<t>Security is dependent on a wide range of actors that are implementing technical documentation. Therefore it is crucial that language is clear, and understood by all that need to implement this documentation. Correct and inclusive language is therefore conducive for secure implementations of technical documentation.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="iana-considerations" title="IANA Considerations">

<t>This document has no actions for IANA.</t>

</section>


  </middle>

  <back>

    <references title='Normative References'>





<reference anchor='RFC2119' target='https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119'>
<front>
<title>Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels</title>
<author fullname='S. Bradner' initials='S.' surname='Bradner'><organization/></author>
<date month='March' year='1997'/>
<abstract><t>In many standards track documents several words are used to signify the requirements in the specification.  These words are often capitalized. This document defines these words as they should be interpreted in IETF documents.  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='14'/>
<seriesInfo name='RFC' value='2119'/>
<seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC2119'/>
</reference>



<reference anchor='RFC8174' target='https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174'>
<front>
<title>Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words</title>
<author fullname='B. Leiba' initials='B.' surname='Leiba'><organization/></author>
<date month='May' year='2017'/>
<abstract><t>RFC 2119 specifies common key words that may be used in protocol  specifications.  This document aims to reduce the ambiguity by clarifying that only UPPERCASE usage of the key words have the  defined special meanings.</t></abstract>
</front>
<seriesInfo name='BCP' value='14'/>
<seriesInfo name='RFC' value='8174'/>
<seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC8174'/>
</reference>




    </references>

    <references title='Informative References'>





<reference anchor='RFC7322' target='https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7322'>
<front>
<title>RFC Style Guide</title>
<author fullname='H. Flanagan' initials='H.' surname='Flanagan'><organization/></author>
<author fullname='S. Ginoza' initials='S.' surname='Ginoza'><organization/></author>
<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, &quot;Instructions to RFC Authors&quot;.</t></abstract>
</front>
<seriesInfo name='RFC' value='7322'/>
<seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC7322'/>
</reference>



<reference anchor='RFC8499' target='https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8499'>
<front>
<title>DNS Terminology</title>
<author fullname='P. Hoffman' initials='P.' surname='Hoffman'><organization/></author>
<author fullname='A. Sullivan' initials='A.' surname='Sullivan'><organization/></author>
<author fullname='K. Fujiwara' initials='K.' surname='Fujiwara'><organization/></author>
<date month='January' year='2019'/>
<abstract><t>The Domain Name System (DNS) is defined in literally dozens of different RFCs.  The terminology used by implementers and developers of DNS protocols, and by operators of DNS systems, has sometimes changed in the decades since the DNS was first defined.  This document gives current definitions for many of the terms used in the DNS in a single document.</t><t>This document obsoletes RFC 7719 and updates RFC 2308.</t></abstract>
</front>
<seriesInfo name='BCP' value='219'/>
<seriesInfo name='RFC' value='8499'/>
<seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC8499'/>
</reference>



<reference anchor='RFC8782' target='https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8782'>
<front>
<title>Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) Signal Channel Specification</title>
<author fullname='T. Reddy.K' initials='T.' role='editor' surname='Reddy.K'><organization/></author>
<author fullname='M. Boucadair' initials='M.' role='editor' surname='Boucadair'><organization/></author>
<author fullname='P. Patil' initials='P.' surname='Patil'><organization/></author>
<author fullname='A. Mortensen' initials='A.' surname='Mortensen'><organization/></author>
<author fullname='N. Teague' initials='N.' surname='Teague'><organization/></author>
<date month='May' year='2020'/>
<abstract><t>This document specifies the Distributed Denial-of-Service                              Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) signal channel, a protocol for                                 signaling the need for protection against Distributed Denial-of-Service                   (DDoS) attacks to a server capable of enabling network traffic                            mitigation on behalf of the requesting client.</t><t>A companion document defines the DOTS data channel, a separate                         reliable communication layer for DOTS management and configuration                        purposes.</t></abstract>
</front>
<seriesInfo name='RFC' value='8782'/>
<seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC8782'/>
</reference>



<reference anchor='RFC8783' target='https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8783'>
<front>
<title>Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) Data Channel Specification</title>
<author fullname='M. Boucadair' initials='M.' role='editor' surname='Boucadair'><organization/></author>
<author fullname='T. Reddy.K' initials='T.' role='editor' surname='Reddy.K'><organization/></author>
<date month='May' year='2020'/>
<abstract><t>The document specifies a Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) data channel used for bulk exchange of data that cannot easily or appropriately communicated through the DOTS signal channel under attack conditions.</t><t>This is a companion document to &quot;Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) Signal Channel Specification&quot; (RFC 8782).</t></abstract>
</front>
<seriesInfo name='RFC' value='8783'/>
<seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC8783'/>
</reference>



<reference anchor='RFC8612' target='https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8612'>
<front>
<title>DDoS Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) Requirements</title>
<author fullname='A. Mortensen' initials='A.' surname='Mortensen'><organization/></author>
<author fullname='T. Reddy' initials='T.' surname='Reddy'><organization/></author>
<author fullname='R. Moskowitz' initials='R.' surname='Moskowitz'><organization/></author>
<date month='May' year='2019'/>
<abstract><t>This document defines the requirements for the Distributed Denial-of- Service (DDoS) Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) protocols enabling coordinated response to DDoS attacks.</t></abstract>
</front>
<seriesInfo name='RFC' value='8612'/>
<seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC8612'/>
</reference>


<reference anchor="Burgest" target="www.jstor.org/stable/23711113.">
  <front>
    <title>“Racism in Everyday Speech and Social Work Jargon.”</title>
    <author initials="David R." surname="Burgest">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="1973"/>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name="Social Work, vol. 18, no. 4, 1973, pp. 20–25" value=""/>
</reference>
<reference anchor="Eglash" target="https://doi.org/10.1353/tech.2007.0066">
  <front>
    <title>Broken Metaphor: The Master-Slave Analogy in Technical Literature.</title>
    <author initials="." surname="Ron Eglash">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2007"/>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name="Technology and Culture, vol. 48 no. 2, 2007, pp. 360-369." value=""/>
</reference>
<reference anchor="BrodieGravesGraves" target="https://doi.org/10.1080/10572259809364639">
  <front>
    <title>Masters, slaves, and infant mortality: Language challenges for technical editing</title>
    <author initials="." surname="Heather Brodie Graves">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="." surname="Roger Graves">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="1998"/>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name="Technical Communication Quarterly, 7:4, 389-414" value=""/>
</reference>
<reference anchor="Wyatt" >
  <front>
    <title>Danger! Metaphors at Work in Economics, Geophysiology, and the Internet</title>
    <author initials="." surname="Sally Wyatt">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2004"/>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name="Science, Technology, and Human Values, Volume: 29 issue: 2, page(s): 242-261" value=""/>
</reference>
<reference anchor="Lakoff" >
  <front>
    <title>Metaphors We Live By</title>
    <author initials="." surname="George Lakoff">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="." surname="Mark Johnson">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="n.d."/>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name="U of Chicago P, 1980." value=""/>
</reference>
<reference anchor="Orwell" >
  <front>
    <title>Politics and the English Language</title>
    <author initials="." surname="George Orwell">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="1946"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="McClelland" target="https://current.workingdirectory.net/posts/2011/master-slave">
  <front>
    <title>We need better metaphors</title>
    <author initials="J." surname="McClelland">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2011"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="UDHR" target="http://www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/">
  <front>
    <title>The Universal Declaration of Human Rights</title>
    <author >
      <organization>United Nations General Assembly</organization>
    </author>
    <date year="1948"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="Fanon" >
  <front>
    <title>Black skin, white masks</title>
    <author initials="F." surname="Fanon">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="1952"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="Jansens" target="https://www.drupal.org/project/project_issue_file_review/issues/343414#comment-1164514">
  <front>
    <title>I don't believe in PC</title>
    <author initials="." surname="Bart Jansens">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2008"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="Python" target="https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/8x7akv/masterslave-terminology-was-removed-from-python-programming-language">
  <front>
    <title>'master-slave' Terminology Was Removed from Python Programming Language</title>
    <author initials="." surname="Daniel Oberhaus">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2018"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="Django" target="https://github.com/django/django/pull/2692">
  <front>
    <title>#22667 replaced occurrences of master-slave terminology with leader/follower #2692</title>
    <author initials="." surname="fcurella">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2014"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="Django2" target="https://github.com/django/django/pull/2692#issuecomment-44221563">
  <front>
    <title>comment on #22667 replaced occurrences of master-slave terminology with leader/follower #2692</title>
    <author initials="." surname="lynncyrin">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2014"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="Wikipedia" target="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Slavery_in_the_21st_century">
  <front>
    <title>Slavery in the 21st century</title>
    <author >
      <organization>Wikipedia</organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2018"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="Drupal" target="https://www.drupal.org/project/drupal/issues/2275877">
  <front>
    <title>Replace 'master-slave' terminology with 'primary/replica'</title>
    <author initials="." surname="Xano">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2014"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="Grewal" target="https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-bad-is-black-effect/">
  <front>
    <title>The 'Bad Is Black' Effect</title>
    <author initials="D." surname="Grewal">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2017"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="socketwench" target="https://deninet.com/blog/2018/09/09/even-tech-words-matter">
  <front>
    <title>Even in tech, words matter</title>
    <author initials="." surname="socketwench">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2018"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="ISC" target="https://twitter.com/ISCdotORG/status/943152507211071489">
  <front>
    <title>@ISCdotORG reply tweet</title>
    <author initials="." surname="Internet Systems Consortium">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2017"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="Github" target="https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/k7qbyv/github-to-remove-masterslave-terminology-from-its-platform">
  <front>
    <title>Github to Remove 'Master/Slave' Terminology From its Platform</title>
    <author initials="." surname="Kevin Truong">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author >
      <organization>VICE</organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2020" month="June"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="NIST" target="https://www.politico.com/news/2020/06/25/agency-ends-use-technology-terms-racist-associations-339880">
  <front>
    <title>Agency to end use of technology terms such as 'master' and 'slave' over racist associations</title>
    <author initials="." surname="Eric Geller">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author >
      <organization>Politico</organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2020" month="June"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="inclusiveterminology" target="https://github.com/ietf/terminology">
  <front>
    <title>Inclusive terminology in IETF Documents</title>
    <author >
      <organization>IETF</organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2020" month="August"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="Statement" target="https://www.ietf.org/about/groups/iesg/statements/on-inclusive-language/">
  <front>
    <title>IESG Statement on on Inclusive Language</title>
    <author >
      <organization>IESG</organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2021" month="May"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="in-solidarity-bot" target="https://github.com/ietf/terminology">
  <front>
    <title>Inclusive terminology in IETF Documents</title>
    <author >
      <organization>IETF</organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2020" month="August"/>
  </front>
</reference>


    </references>



  </back>

<!-- ##markdown-source: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-->

</rfc>

