Network Working Group R. McGowan
Internet-Draft Unicode
Expires: August 22, 2002 February 21, 2002
About Unicode Consortium Procedures, Policies, Stability, and Public
Access
draft-rmcgowan-unicode-procs-01
Status of this Memo
This document is an Internet-Draft and is NOT offered in accordance
with Section 10 of RFC2026, and the author does not provide the IETF
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This Internet-Draft will expire on August 22, 2002.
Abstract
This memo describes various internal workings of the Unicode
Consortium for the benefit of participants in the IETF. It is
intended solely for informational purposes. Included are discussions
of how the decision-making bodies of the consortium work and what
their procedures are, as well as information on public access to the
character encoding & standardization processes.
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1. About The Unicode Consortium
The Unicode Consortium is a corporation. Legally speaking it is a
"California Nonprofit Mutual Benefit Corporation", organized under
section 501 C(6) of the Internal Revenue Service Code. [see http://
www.irs.ustreas.gov/prod/bus_info/eo/bus-orgs.html]. As such, it is
a "business league" not focussed on profiting by sales or production
of goods and services, but neither is it formally a "charitable"
organization. It is an alliance of member companies whose purpose is
to "extend, maintain, and promote the Unicode Standard". To this
end, the consortium keeps a small office, a few editorial and
technical staff, World Wide Web presence, and mail-list presence.
The corporation is presided over by a Board of Directors who meet
annually. The board appoints Officers of the corporation to run the
daily operations.
Membership in the consortium is open to "all corporations, other
business entities, governmental agencies, not-for-profit
organizations and academic institutions" who support the consortium's
purpose. Formally, one class of voting membership is recognized, and
dues-paying members are typically for-profit corporations, research
and educational institutions, or national governments. Each such
full member sends representatives to meetings of the Unicode
Technical Committee (see below), as well as to a brief annual
Membership meeting.
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2. The Unicode Technical Committee
The Unicode Technical Committee (UTC) is the technical decision
making body of the consortium. The UTC inherited the work and prior
decisions of the Unicode Working Group (UWG) that was active prior to
formation of the consortium.
Formally, the UTC is a technical body instituted by resolution of the
board of directors. Each member appoints one principal and one or
two alternate representatives to the UTC. UTC representatives
frequently do, but need not, act as the ordinary member
representatives for the purposes of the annual meeting.
The UTC is presided over by a Chair and Vice-Chair, appointed by the
Board of Directors for an unspecified term of service.
The UTC meets 4 to 5 times a year to discuss proposals, additions,
and various other technical topics. There is no fee for
participation in the UTC meetings. Meeting agendas are not generally
posted to any public forum, but meeting dates, locations, and
logistics are posted well in advance at:
http://www.unicode.org/unicode/timesens/calendar.html
At the discretion of the UTC chair, meetings are open to
participation of member and liaison organizations, and to observation
by others. The minutes of meetings are posted publicly on the
Unicode Web site:
http://www.unicode.org/unicode/consortium/utc-minutes.html
Meetings of the UTC are held in North America, frequently in the San
Francisco Bay Area, where the majority of full members have offices.
Meetings typically last 3 to 4 full days. Rarely, a portion of a
meeting will be declared a "closed caucus" for member
representatives.
All UTC meetings are held jointly with NCITS Technical Committee L2,
the body responsible for Character Code standards in the United
States. They constitute "ad hoc" meetings of the L2 body.
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3. Unicode Technical Committee Procedures
The formal procedures of the UTC are publicly available in a document
entitled "UTC Procedures" available from the Consortium, and on the
website:
http://www.unicode.org/unicode/consortium/utc-procedures.html
Despite the invocation of Robert's Rules of Order, UTC meetings are
conducted with relative informality in view of the highly technical
nature of most discussions. Meetings focus on items from a technical
agenda organized and published by the UTC Chair prior to the meeting.
Technical items are usually proposals in one of the following
categories:
1. Addition of new scripts
2. Addition of new characters or small batches of characters
3. Preparation and Editing of Technical Reports and Standards
4. Changes in the semantics of specific characters
5. Changes to the encoding architecture and forms of use
(Note: The last category of changes are, of course, rare and not
undertaken without significant lead time and involvement of
organizations, such as W3C and IETF, having standards that are likely
to be affected by such changes and with which the UTC maintains
liaisons. Changes that affect existing normalizations in particular
are normally disallowed according to UTC procedures, so that W3C and
IETF standards which rely on them are not thereby broken. See
section 5 below.)
Typical outputs of the UTC are:
1. The Unicode Standard, major and minor versions
2. Unicode Technical Reports
3. Stand-alone Unicode Technical Standards
4. Formal resolutions
5. Liaison statements and instructions to the Unicode liaisons to
other organizations.
For each technical item on the meeting agenda, there is a general
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process as follows:
1. Introduction by the topic sponsor
2. Proposals and discussion
3. Consensus statements or formal motions
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4. Unicode Technical Committee Motions
Technical topics of any complexity never proceed from initial
proposal to final ratification or adoption into the standard in the
course of one UTC meeting. The UTC members and presiding officers
are aware that technical changes to the standard have broad
consequences to other standards, implementors, and end-users of the
standard. Input from other organizations and experts is often vital
to the understanding of various proposals and for successful adoption
into the standard.
Technical topics are decided in UTC through the use of formal
motions, either taken in meetings, or by means of 30-day letter
ballots. Formal UTC motions are of two types:
1. Simple motions
2. Precedents
Simple motions may pass with a simple majority constituting more than
50% of the qualified voting members; or by a special majority
constituting 2/3 or more of the qualified voting members.
Precedents are defined, according to the UTC Procedures as either
(A) an existing Unicode Policy, or
(B) an explicit precedent.
Prececents must be passed or overturned by a special majority.
Examples of implicit precedents include:
1. Publication of a character in the standard
2. Published normative character properties
3. Algorithms required for formal conformance
An Explicit Precedent is a policy, procedure, encoding, algorithm, or
other item that is established by a separate motion saying (in
effect) that a particular prior motion establishes a precedent.
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5. Unicode Consortium Policies
Because the Unicode Standard is continually evolving to approach the
ideal of encoding "all the world's scripts", new characters will
constantly be added. In this sense, the standard is unstable: in the
standard's useful lifetime, there may never be a final point at which
no more characters are added. Realizing this, the Consortium has
adopted certain policies to promote and maintain stability of the
characters that are already encoded, as well as laying out a Roadmap
to future encodings.
The overall policies of the Consortium with regard to encoding
stability are published on the web at this URL:
http://www.unicode.org/unicode/standard/policies.html
Deliberations and encoding proposals in the UTC are bound by these
policies.
The general effect of the policies may be stated in this way: once a
character is encoded, it will not be moved or removed and its name
will not be changed. Any of those actions has the potential for
causing obsolescence of data, and they are not permitted. The
canonical combining class and decompositions of characters will not
be changed in any way that affects normalization. In this sense
normalization, such as that used for International Domain Naming and
"early normalization" for use on the World Wide Web, is fixed and
stable for every character at the time that character is encoded.
Property values of characters, such as directionality for the Unicode
Bidi algorithm, may be changed in some circumstances. As less-well
documented characters and scripts are encoded, the exact character
properties and behavior may not be well known at the time the
characters are first encoded. As more experience is gathered in
implementing the newly encoded characters, adjustments in the
properties may become necessary. This re-working is kept to a
minimum. New and old versions of the relevant property tables are
made available on the Consortium's web site.
Normative and some informative data about characters is kept in the
Unicode Character Database. The structure of many of these property
values will not be changed. Instead, when new properties are
defined, the Consortium adds new files for these properties, so as
not to affect the stability of existing implementations that use the
values and properties defined in the existing formats and files.
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6. UTC and ISO (WG2 and WG20)
The character repertoire, names, and general architecture of the
Unicode Standard are identical to the parallel international standard
ISO/IEC 10646. Unicode provides additional properties and
implementation information that ISO/IEC 10646 does not.
Implementations conformant to Unicode are conformant to ISO/IEC
10646.
ISO/IEC 10646 is maintained by the committee ISO/IEC JTC1/SC2/WG2,
which maintains a web presence at: http://www.dkuug.dk/jtc1/sc2/wg2/.
The WG2 committee is composed of national body representatives to
ISO. Details of ISO organization may be found at http://www.iso.ch.
Details and history of the relationship between ISO/IEC JTC1/SC2/WG2
and Unicode, Inc. may be found in Appendix C of The Unicode
Standard.
WG2 shares with UTC the policies regarding stability: WG2 neither
removes characters nor changes their names once published. Changes
in both standards are closely tracked by the respective committees,
and a very close working relationship is fostered to maintain
synchronization between the standards.
The Unicode Collation Algorithm (UCA) is one of a small set of other
independent standards defined and maintained by UTC. It is not,
properly speaking, part of the Unicode Standard itself, but is
separately defined in Unicode Technical Standard #10 (UTS #10).
There is no conformance relationship between the two standards,
except that conformance to a specific base version of the Unicode
Standard (e.g., 3.0) is specified in a particular version of a UTS.
The collation algorithm specified in UTS #10 is intended to remain in
conformance to ISO/IEC 14651 maintained by ISO/IEC JTC1/SC2/WG20, and
the two organizations maintain a close relationship.
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7. Process of Technical Changes to the Unicode Standard
Changes to The Unicode Standard are of two types: architectural
changes, and character additions.
Some architectural changes may not affect ISO/IEC 10646, for example,
the addition of some informative properties to Unicode. Those
architectural changes that do affect both standards, such as
additional UTF formats or allocation of planes, are very carefully
coordinated by the committees. As always, on the UTC side,
architectural changes that establish precedents are carefully
monitored and the above-described rules and procedures are followed.
Additional characters for inclusion in the The Unicode Standard must
be approved both by the UTC and by WG2. Proposals for additional
characters enter the standards process in one of several ways:
through...
1. a national body member of WG2
2. a member company or associate of UTC
3. directly from an individual "expert" contributor
The two committees have jointly produced a "Proposal Summary Form"
that is required to accompany all additional character proposals. It
may be found online at:
http://www.dkuug.dk/JTC1/SC2/WG2/docs/form1.html
Instructions for submitting proposals to UTC may be found online at:
http://www.unicode.org/pending/proposals.html
Often, submission of proposals to both committees (UTC and WG2) is
simultaneous. Members of UTC also frequently forward to WG2
proposals that have been initially reviewed by UTC.
In general, a proposal that is submitted to UTC before being
submitted to WG2 passes through several stages:
1. Initial presentation to UTC
2. Review and re-drafting
3. Forwarding to WG2 for consideration
4. Re-drafting for technical changes
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5. Balloting for approval in UTC
6. Re-forwading and recommendation to WG2
7. At least two rounds of international balloting in ISO
About two years are required to complete this process. Proposals of
any type are almost never directly approved by UTC on first viewing,
but are usually sent back to the submitters. Repertoire addition
proposals that are submitted to WG2 before Unicode are generally
forwarded immediately to UTC through committee liaisons. The crucial
parts of the process (steps 5 through 7 above) are never short-
circuited. Two-thirds majority in UTC is required for approval at
step 5.
Proposals for additional scripts are required to be coordinated with
relevant user communities. Often there are ad-hoc subcommittees of
UTC or expert mail list participants who are responsible for actually
drafting proposals, garnering community support, or representing user
communities.
The rounds of international balloting (steps 7) have participation
both by UTC and WG2, though UTC does not directly vote in the ISO
process.
Occasionally a proposal approved by one body is considered too
immature for approval by the other body, and may be blocked de-facto
by either of the two. Only after both bodies have approved the
additional characters do they proceed to the rounds of international
balloting. (The first round is a draft international standard during
which some changes may occur, the second round is final approval
during which only editorial changes are made.)
This process assures that proposals for additional characters are
mature and stable by the time they appear in a final international
ballot.
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8. Public Access to the Character Encoding Process
While Unicode, Inc, is a membership organization, and the final say
in technical matters rests with UTC, the process is quite open to
public input and scrutiny of processes and proposals. There are many
influential individual experts and industry groups who are not
formally members, but whose input to the process is taken seriously
by UTC.
Internally, UTC maintains a mail list called the "Unicore" list,
which carries traffic related to meetings, technical content of the
standard, and so forth. Members of the list are UTC representatives;
employees and staff of member organizations (such as the Research
Libraries Group); individual liaisons to and from other standards
bodies (such as WG2 and IETF); and invited experts from institutions
such as the Library of Congress and some universities. Subscription
to the list for external individuals is subject to "sponsorship" by
the corporate officers.
Unicode, Inc. also maintains a public discussion list called the
"Unicode" list. Subscription is open to anyone, and proceedings of
the "Unicode" mail list are made public via FTP on an occasional
basis. Details are located at:
http://www.unicode.org/unicode/consortium/distlist.html
All technical proposals for changes to the standard are posted to
both of these mail lists on a regular basis. Discussion on the
public list is also monitored by many members of UTC, and frequently
the results of these public discussions are brought up later at UTC
meetings. All technical issues and other standardization "events" of
any significance, such as beta releases and availablility of draft
documents, are announced and then discussed in this public forum,
well before standardization is finalized.
Anyone may make a character encoding or architectural proposal to
UTC. Membership in the organization is not required to submit a
proposal. To be taken seriously, the proposal must be framed in a
substantial way, and be accompanied by sufficient documentation to
warrant discussion. Examples of proposals are easily available by
following links from the "Proposed Characters" heading available at
the Unicode web site. The main proposal page is at:
http://www.unicode.org/unicode/alloc/Pipeline.html
(Guidelines for proposals are given at the web location mentioned in
the previous section.)
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In general, proposals are aired on the "Unicode" mail list, sometimes
for a long period, prior to formal submission. Generally this is of
benefit to the proposer as it tends to reduce the number of times the
proposal is sent back for clarification or with requests for
additional information. Once a proposal reaches the stage of being
ready for discussion by UTC, the proposer will have received contact
through the public mail list with one or more UTC members willing to
explain or defend it in a UTC meeting.
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