The result is, for example,
Joe submits comments X, Y, and Z
I respond to joe's message, and file it under "comments
to fold in"
Fred notices some of the same things joe noticed, but
because Joe only sent his comments to me, I couldn't
make them publicly available, so Fred didn't see them.
He comments on X, Z, and T.
So I have added the following notice to
http://www.hal.com/%7Econnolly/html-spec/index.html
Review and Publication Process
==============================
The WWW technology will probably be moderated by an international
consortium in the future, but since the need for this document is
immediate, it will be published as an SGML Open Technical Report. An
SGML Open technical committee is forming. Contact Dan Connolly
<connolly@hal.com>, or Yuri Rubinsky, <yuri@sq.com> for details.
The document will be publicly available throughout the review process.
We are trying to set up a publicly available archive of the review
comments. Currently, a WIT discussion area and a hypermail archive of
www-html are candidates.
When the public archive mechanism becomes stable, I intend to upload
my collection of comments on the HTML spec to that archive. And in
general, to prevent duplicate comments on similar issues, I reserve
+++++++++
the right to publicly redistribute all comments sent to me regarding
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
the HTML 2.0 spec. I will use discretion in making old messages
++++++++++++++++++
available without the expressed consent of the author, but in the
future, consent will be implictly given just by commenting on the HTML
2.0 document. If you have sent me comments on the HTML 2.0 document
that you don't want made public, please let me know.
Dan