<?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-14" 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="2023" month="August" day="24"/>

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

    <abstract>


<t>There has been extensive discussion in and around the IETF community about the use of technical terminology, which could be interprereted as exclusionary. The document below is published as an artefact of the discussion because it sparked many debates and inspired several actions in the IETF community. This, however, does not say anything about whether the opinions it holds are correct or incorrect. Since the debate about technology, language, and its implications will probably never be finished, we offer this document for reference in future discussions about the topic.</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. The “dark web” is not counter-related to light; it is a metaphor for evil. 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 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 outlined 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:
  * Replace the exclusionary terms “master-slave” and “blacklist-whitelist” with more accurate alternatives.
  * Read and reflect upon the repository of exclusionary terminology <xref target="inclusiveterminology"/>.
  * Reflect on their use of metaphors generally.
  * Consider changing existing exclusionary language in current (reference) implementations <xref target="socketwench"/>.
  * Consult the RFC style sheet maintained by the RFC editor and the community that can be found at https://github.com/ietf/terminology .</t>

<t>During the publication process, publishers (such as the RFC Editor) are advised to:
  * Offer alternatives for exclusionary terminology as an important act of correcting larger editorial issues and clarifying technical concepts and
  * 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.
  * 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>

</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'/>
    <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'/>
    <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'/>
    <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='RFC8499' target='https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8499'>
  <front>
    <title>DNS Terminology</title>
    <author fullname='P. Hoffman' initials='P.' surname='Hoffman'/>
    <author fullname='A. Sullivan' initials='A.' surname='Sullivan'/>
    <author fullname='K. Fujiwara' initials='K.' surname='Fujiwara'/>
    <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'/>
    <author fullname='M. Boucadair' initials='M.' role='editor' surname='Boucadair'/>
    <author fullname='P. Patil' initials='P.' surname='Patil'/>
    <author fullname='A. Mortensen' initials='A.' surname='Mortensen'/>
    <author fullname='N. Teague' initials='N.' surname='Teague'/>
    <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'/>
    <author fullname='T. Reddy.K' initials='T.' role='editor' surname='Reddy.K'/>
    <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 "Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) Signal Channel Specification" (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'/>
    <author fullname='T. Reddy' initials='T.' surname='Reddy'/>
    <author fullname='R. Moskowitz' initials='R.' surname='Moskowitz'/>
    <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>

