Adapted from Community Specification Governance Policy 1.0 and FINOS FDC3 Governance Policy.
This document provides the governance policy for specifications and other documents developed using the Community Specification process in a repository (each a “Working Group”). Each Working Group and must adhere to the requirements in this document.
Each Working Group may include the following roles. Additional roles may be adopted and documented by the Working Group.
“Participants” are those that have made Contributions to the Working Group subject to the Community Specification Contribution Policy 1.0. The Creator Assertions Working Group has the specific purpose of defining and releasing technical standards that extend the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity technical specification to describe additional assertions that allow content creators to express individual and organizational intent about their content.
In practice, “participants” means people that attend and contribute to meetings, raise issues, pull requests (to submit patches to the standards projects), and provide editorial reviews. If you wish to become a participant, you are invited to:
- Read the CAWG contributing guide
- File an issue for discussion
- File a pull request (suggested revision) (NOTE: requires acceptance of the Community Specification License.)
- Attend a working group meeting
- Contact one of the maintainers directly
“Editors” are responsible for ensuring that the contents of the document accurately reflect the decisions that have been made by the group, and that the specification adheres to formatting and content guidelines. Each Working Group will designate an Editor for that Working Group. A Working Group may select a new Editor upon Approval of the Working Group Participants.
“Maintainers” are responsible for organizing activities around developing, maintaining, and updating the specification(s) developed by the Working Group. Maintainers are also responsible for determining consensus and coordinating appeals. Each Working Group will designate one or more Maintainer for that Working Group. A Working Group may select a new or additional Maintainer(s) upon Approval of the Working Group Participants.
Once you have signed the Contributor License Agreement, you can apply to become an editor or maintainer by Contact one of the existing maintainers directly. Generally, the maintainers will look for both a history of contribution to CAWG and a commitment to investing sufficient time in the role from any prospective candidates before accepting them to either of those roles.
If you are new to CAWG, but willing to make the investment of time, the maintainers can work with you to build up a history of contribution.
2.1. Consensus-Based Decision Making. Working Groups make decisions through a consensus process (“Approval” or “Approved”). While the agreement of all Participants is preferred, it is not required for consensus. Rather, the Maintainers will determine consensus based on their good faith consideration of a number of factors, including the dominant view of the Working Group Participants and nature of support and objections. The Maintainers will document evidence of consensus in accordance with these requirements.
2.2. Appeal Process. Decisions may be appealed be via a pull request or an issue, and that appeal will be considered by the Maintainers in good faith, who will respond in writing within a reasonable time.
Inspired by ANSI’s Essential Requirements for Due Process, Community Specification Working Groups must adhere to consensus-based due process requirements. These requirements apply to activities related to the development of consensus for approval, revision, reaffirmation, and withdrawal of Community Specifications. Due process means that any person (organization, company, government agency, individual, etc.) with a direct and material interest has a right to participate by: a) expressing a position and its basis, b) having that position considered, and c) having the right to appeal. Due process allows for equity and fair play. The following constitute the minimum acceptable due process requirements for the development of consensus.
3.1. Openness. Participation shall be open to all persons who are directly and materially affected by the activity in question. There shall be no undue financial barriers to participation. Voting membership on the consensus body shall not be conditional upon membership in any organization, nor unreasonably restricted on the basis of technical qualifications or other such requirements. Membership in a Working Group’s parent organization, if any, may be required.
3.2. Lack of Dominance. The development process shall not be dominated by any single interest category, individual, or organization. Dominance means a position or exercise of dominant authority, leadership, or influence by reason of superior leverage, strength, or representation to the exclusion of fair and equitable consideration of other viewpoints.
3.3. Balance. The development process should have a balance of interests. Participants from diverse interest categories shall be sought with the objective of achieving balance.
3.4. Coordination and Harmonization. Good faith efforts shall be made to resolve potential conflicts between and among deliverables developed under this Working Group and existing industry standards.
3.5. Consideration of Views and Objections. Prompt consideration shall be given to the written views and objections of all Participants.
3.6. Written procedures. This governance document and other materials documenting the Community Specification development process shall be available to any interested person.
4.1. Pre-Draft. Any Participant may submit a proposed initial draft document as a candidate Draft Specification of that Working Group. The Maintainer will designate each submission as a “Pre-Draft” document.
4.2. Draft. Each Pre-Draft document of a Working Group must first be Approved to become a “Draft Specification.” Once the Working Group approves a document as a Draft Specification, the Draft Specification becomes the basis for all going forward work on that specification.
4.3. Working Group Approval. Once a Working Group believes it has achieved the objectives for its specification as described in the Scope, it will Approve that Draft Specification and progress it to “Approved Specification” status.
4.4. Publication and Submission. Upon the designation of a Draft Specification as an Approved Specification, the Maintainer will publish the Approved Specification in a manner agreed upon by the Working Group Participants (i.e., Working Group Participant only location, publicly available location, Working Group maintained website, Working Group member website, etc.). The publication of an Approved Specification in a publicly accessible manner must include the terms under which the Approved Specification is being made available under.
4.5. Submissions to Standards Bodies. No Draft Specification or Approved Specification may be submitted to another standards development organization without Working group Approval. Upon reaching Approval, the Maintainer will coordinate the submission of the applicable Draft Specification or Approved Specification to another standards development organization. Working Group Participants that developed that Draft Specification or Approved Specification agree to grant the copyright rights necessary to make those submissions.
Information disclosed in connection with any Working Group activity, including but not limited to meetings, Contributions, and submissions, is not confidential, regardless of any markings or statements to the contrary. Notwithstanding the foregoing, if the Working Group is collaborating via a private repository, the Participants will not make any public disclosures of that information contained in that private repository without the Approval of the Working Group.