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Tue, 4 May 2010 11:12:19 +0900 |
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In-reply-to Avri Doria < [log in to unmask]> message dated "Tue, 04 May
2010 01:07:57 +0900." |
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> RS-5 2.2.5 On New Individual Members (Deletion)
>
> 3. An Individual who is employed by or a member of a large noncommercial organization (universities, colleges, large NGOs) and it is too complicated or the Individual lacks the standing to get his/her organization to join on an organizational basis. This person can join NCSG in his or her individual capacity. The Executive Committee shall, at its discretion, determine limits to the total number of Individual members who can join from any single organization (provided the limit shall apply to all Organizations equally).
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> Delete: and it is too complicated or the Individual lacks the standing to get his/her organization to join on an organizational basis. This
>
> Proposed Handling: Accept the deletion in principle, but change:
>
> An Individual who is employed by or a member of a large noncommercial organization
>
> to
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> An Individual who is employed by or a member of a large non-member noncommercial organization
I think this needs some careful wording to avoid confusion in the two uses of
the word member here (One refers to the individual being a member of an
organisation, the other to the organisation not being a member of NCSG). I
think this wording might cause confusion, so perhaps the wording:
An individual who is employed by or is a member of a large non-commercial
organisation (which is not already a member of NCSG).
Also, I would like a note making it plain that being employed by an
organisation which has legitimate grounds for being an NCSG member does not
preclude someone joining as an individual member on their own rights. So, for
example, I am employed by Meiji University (meiji.ac.jp) in Japan, a
non-profit private university. Meiji is entitled to join NCSG under the
proposed new constitution, but so am I. While I _could_ join under the above
clause I am a member of NCUC on the basis of my own domain registration
(a-cubed.info) and also as an academic working on the area of information
ethics, which includes IANA and DNS related issues. I'd hate to be forced out
because my employer joined NCSG as an organisation.
--
Profesor Andrew A Adams [log in to unmask]
Professor at Graduate School of Business Administration, and
Deputy Director of the Centre for Business Information Ethics
Meiji University, Tokyo, Japan
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