Thus, respectfully, this is a non-productive inquiry. This is thus my last note on this particular topic.
Henning
On Dec 16, 2009, at 9:24 PM, Virgilio wrote:
> Dear Prof. Schulzrinne:
> While I believe that some aspects of your comments unfairly characterise
> mine, I do agree with other aspects. I will focus on potential common
> ground. Some of your comments/suggestions have prompted me to perform some
> basic inquiries, and obtain some potentially useful information and ideas,
> which I intend to share with you.
>
>> Just to add a few points to this discussion:
>>
>> First, I think it's fine to say "IEEE should run a leaner ship" - as long
>> as the suggestions are concrete and realistic, rather than vague
>> generalities
>
> I very much agree with you. It is always easy to criticise in the
> abstract, but proposing specifics and showing why they may help is quite
> another matter.
>
> On the other hand, it is difficult to make concrete proposals "blindly".
> In particular, as others have pointed out, itemised statements of revenues
> and expenses for conferences are not being made public. Since you are in
> touch with the IEEE president, could you kindly suggest to make possible
> the release of this information at least for a representative sub-set of
> recent major events? Then we could all study the information, and perhaps
> make specific suggestions. If confidenciallity agreements prevent certain
> information from being released, then specific items may be removed, with
> an explanation. Still the rest could be analised.
> Another reason to release such information is that, since a very large
> number of conference attendees are funded by public agencies, it seems
> that the general public (represented by the funding agencies) does have a
> legitimate interest in ascertaining that their funds are appropriately
> utilised.
>
> Anyhow, I understand that this information is not presently available and
> may take some time before it is. What to do in the mean time? I am
> separately making some suggestions.
>
>>
>> Those dissatisfied with the current society sponsorship model (as opposed
>> to simply wanting to improve it) are also welcome to organize their own
>> events, and to make it more reputable and cheaper than the existing
>> alternatives.
>> One can think of this as somewhat related to franchise models,
>> such as Hyatt hotels or Starbucks. In franchises, the franchisee pays for
>> the privilege of using the brand name, typically as a fraction of revenue.
>
> Electoral action sounds reasonable, but it is complicated especially when
> the voting population is relatively large, and heterogeneous. For
> instance, many IEEE members are practicing engineers who may not share the
> concerns and goals of academic research engineers (see migratory
> labor-force issues, for example)... nothing inherently wrong with that...
> it just complicates matters.
>
> I do agree with the basic model you propose, though: franchising.
> Business-owners do change ocassionally from a franchise firm to another
> (BK<-->McDonald, etc) and possibly to a new firm. Your suggestion is
> useful and deserves separate exploration.
>
>> I think the discussion will be more productive if
>> such accusations, implied or stated, are avoided - or, if you truly
>> believe in this, you should contact the NSF Inspector General, the entity
>> within the NSF responsible for such issues.
>
> I don't know which are the accusations you refer to. A lot of people have
> said or implied that IEEE (ComSoc) conferences are over-priced, for a
> variety of reasons (see record). I simply asked whether that could be
> ground for a funding agency (particularly the NSF, which had just been
> mentioned by Joe) to demand a refund from IEEE. I still believe that the
> basic question is legitimate and important, even if the wording may have
> been non-ideal, and that it deserves a definite conclusive answer. I
> understand that certain grant contracts from certain agencies indeed do
> have some language involving refunds.
> In any case, I respectfully suggest that it may be better that the IEEE
> itself request a legally binding opinion from the officer that you
> mention. If favourable, everyone would feel better (at least concerning
> that agency). If unfavourable, corrective measures could be implemented,
> including refunds if any. Often, self-reporting is viewed as a sign of
> good faith, and normally leads to lesser sanctions when applicable.
>
>
>> Finally, reserves and endowments are common ways that not-for-profits
>> smooth income and expenses, as well as leverage interest/investment income
>> to provide additional operating revenues.
>
> I basically agree with you. The issue is simply whether a contribution to
> IEEE endowment by paying some type of (alleged) "mark-up" over fair-market
> value for certain conference services is a legitimate use of research
> public funds(from any funding agency including foreign ones). The use may
> sound reasonable in principle. But it may not be consistent with the
> applicable regulations.
>
> Additionally, do consider that there may be other worthy endowments to
> contribute to. As an example, the endowments of the following respected
> institutions near IEEE (according to Internet sources) are/were:
> NJIT 70M and Stevens 115M, both appreciable lower than IEEE's.
> Brooklyn Poly (now part of NYU) had 173M, about same as IEEE's, and
> Illinois Tech 258M. But these are institutional endowments for an entire
> campus. The IEEE should probably be compared to the endowment's share of
> the correponding ECE department. Then the IEEE endowment starts looking a
> lot bigger.
>
> In any case, a reasonable person may argue that any public money that
> could somehow be transferred to the IEEE endowment (one way or another)
> should instead be transferred to some of the institutions mentioned (or
> many other worthy causes).
>
> With my best regards,
>
> Virgilio
>
>
_______________________________________________
Tccc mailing list
Tccc@lists.cs.columbia.edu
https://lists.cs.columbia.edu/cucslists/listinfo/tccc
No comments:
Post a Comment