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Request a statement review for Ethical Web Principles #624
Comments
It's not clear what the TAG plans for a few open issues, such as w3ctag/ethical-web-principles#121 , w3ctag/ethical-web-principles#120, w3ctag/ethical-web-principles#92 . Are those for a next revision ? |
Note that https://www.w3.org/TR/2024/DNOTE-ethical-web-principles-20240610/ was published, merging an editorial PR (w3ctag/ethical-web-principles#122) |
PING: w3ctag/ethical-web-principles#94 should indeed be addressed in the next version. |
w3ctag/ethical-web-principles#121 remains to be classified. |
We're still talking about this one. We may make some progress at the f2f. |
w3ctag/ethical-web-principles#121 has been closed. |
Approved. The Note for the AC Review is https://www.w3.org/TR/2024/DNOTE-ethical-web-principles-20240718/ . Per Process: the Team must then begin an Advisory Committee Review on the question of whether the document is appropriate to publish as a W3C Statement |
Document title, URL
https://www.w3.org/TR/ethical-web-principles/
Abstract
See published Note
Status
See published Note
Wide Review
We most recently presented this document at the AC meeting in 2024 and had generally good feedback there.
A11Y request: w3c/a11y-request#75 (comment)
I18N request feedback: w3ctag/ethical-web-principles#116 - we resolved with PR 119.
PING feedback: the PING group did raise an issue w3ctag/ethical-web-principles#94 however the TAG agreed that the issue had been dealt with in the existing tech w3ctag/ethical-web-principles#94 (comment) and while some discussion on this point continued, we agreed to put it on thee back burner for now.
As noted in the acknowledgements section, this document has had review from tech ethicists as well people in the community. We reached out to civil society and advocacy groups, as well as regulators (though the latter often cannot comment officially) and communicated about it on social media. The UN Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights mentioned our document in their presentation to the Advisory Committee, noting it as an example of “growing awareness among SSOs and those active in standard-setting processes of the importance of human rights”. https://www.w3.org/2024/Talks/ac-slides/human-rights/OHCHR.pdf It was also highlighted in the report from the same office on “Human rights and technical standard-setting processes…” https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/4031373 also quoted the Ethical Web Principles as an example of “growing awareness of the importance of human rights among standard-setting organizations.” The document has been reference in the W3C Vision doc as well as the Ethical Principles for Web Machine Learning https://www.w3.org/TR/webmachinelearning-ethics/ issued by the Machine Learning Working Group, among other references.
Link to group's decision to request transition
The TAG recorded a consensus decision here to move the document forward for transition to statement.
Issues addressed
53 issues were closed and processed. The remaining issues, the group explicitly decided to leave to a future revision (‘back urner’). No commenter has expressed dissatisfaction with the resolutions. We have highlighted significant contributions from commenters in the Acknowledgements section of the document.
Formal Objections
No formal objections were received by the task force during the development of this document.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: