Re: Submissions open for 2020 Emoji

From: Mark Davis ☕️ via Unicode <unicode_at_unicode.org>
Date: Fri, 20 Apr 2018 09:05:08 +0200

If you want, you can make a proposal to the effect that all proposals made
to the Unicode be hosted publicly in a place accessible the unicode site.
Then the UTC can consider your proposal.

I think it would help the discussion to provide in your proposal links to
policy statements from the W3C, ICANN, etc. that follow that policy. (I'm
not sure exactly what you encompass in your term "public standard": for
example, would you include ISO in that list, even though people have to pay
for (most of) theirs?)

Mark

Mark

On Thu, Apr 19, 2018 at 8:50 PM, Asmus Freytag (c) <asmusf_at_ix.netcom.com>
wrote:

> On 4/19/2018 9:36 AM, Mark Davis ☕️ wrote:
>
> The UTC didn't want to burden the doc registry with all the emoji
> proposals.
>
>
> The question of whether the registry should be divided is independent on
> whether proposals are public or private in nature.
>
> Proposals in private have no place in the context of public standard.
>
> A./
>
>
> Mark
>
> On Thu, Apr 19, 2018 at 6:22 PM, Asmus Freytag via Unicode <
> unicode_at_unicode.org> wrote:
>
>> On 4/19/2018 5:32 AM, Mark Davis ☕️ via Unicode wrote:
>>
>> > imagine I discover that someone has already proposed the emoji that I
>> am interested in
>>
>> In some cases we've have contacted people to see if they want to engage
>> with other proposers. But to handle larger numbers we'd need a simple,
>> light-weight way to let people know, while maintaining people's privacy
>> when they want it.
>>
>>
>> I would tend to think that actual proposals are a matter of public
>> record. Emoji should not be handled differently than other proposals for
>> character encoding in that regard.
>>
>> Why should there be an assumption that these are "proposals in private"
>> in this case?
>>
>> A./
>>
>
>
>
Received on Fri Apr 20 2018 - 02:06:03 CDT

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