Technical issues Lead Team
The mission of the TiLT is to make technical team decisions described in the W3C Process.
TiLT authority comes from delegation by the CEO.
Scope
The Technical issues Lead Team is meant to handle all verifications requests for:
- Group charters approvals, before and after AC review
- Chairs appointments
- Group extensions
- Member submissions
- Workshops (1)
- Patent Advisory Groups (PAGs)
- Start of Councils
- Transition requests (2)
- Anything related to the operational management of developing W3C specs
(1) Those requests still need W3C Management approval in parallel.
(2) TiLT delegates its authority for transition requests.
Out of Scope
The TiLT is “internal to the Team”; it does not have Membership- or community-facing activities. Generally speaking, project management and strategy roles carry out these Membership-and community-facing activities. However, asking approval from TiLT is a signal that can be exposed to the outside.
TiLT does not replace the Strategy Function (e.g., what Workshops W3C should organize). Note, however, that the TiLT does play a role for related decisions (e.g., Workshop approval).
TiLT does not replace Board of Directors nor W3C Management functions. For example, the TiLT does not establish a budget, but through its decisions (e.g., Workshop approval), there are likely to be budgetary impacts (e.g., Workshop costs, human resources for Team Contacts, etc.). Thus, TiLT may be asked to provide input to budget discussions.
Composition
Composition goals:
- Manageable size
- Decision-making continuity
- Viewpoint freshness
- Staff development
The TiLT is staffed as follows:
- 2 seats are 2-year terms, with staggered renewals every year, acting as co-chairs (“co-chair seat”). May need to change at different times.
- 3 seats are 1-year terms, with staggered renewals every 8 months (“regular seat”)
Eligibility:
- By default, all Team Contacts are eligible for either co-chair or regular seats. Individuals from this group are expected to participate but may opt-out. Other W3C Team may opt-in.
- To fill an open seat, assemble the randomized list of individuals interested in the position, with the outgoing TiLT member at the bottom of the list, go down the list until you fill the seat.
Current members
- Atsushi Shimono (September 1, 2023)
- Chris Lilley (May 24, 2023)
- Carine Bournez (December 4, 2024) (co-chair)
- Dominique Hazaël-Massieux (December 4, 2024)
- Philippe Le Hegaret (May 24, 2023) (co-chair)
This composition is reflected in the Github team @w3c/tilt.
Meetings
The W3C Technical Lead Team (TiLT) decides whether to meet synchronously. Currently, TiLT meets every Monday, at 9am Boston time (IRC: &tilt).
The entire W3C team has an open invitation to observe the discussion, including attending calls. (contact plh for that)
Requesting approval from TiLT
For transition requests, TiLT delegates its authority to @w3c/transitions. Follow Organize a Technical Report Transition.
Other requests for approvals MUST be sent as an open issue to tilt-private. There are templates for each type of decision request. Each request receives the label “agenda” and remains open until a decision has been reached.
For sensitive announcement, a draft of the message going to the AC may be needed. If so, use the “Anything else we should think before …” to include or link to those information.
For requests also requiring W3M approval (such as workshop budget), the label “w3m” label is also added.
The list of pending requests is available.
How TiLT responds to requests
Expressions of support
TiLT will only approve requests where there are:
- At least three expressions of support, and
- No objections from TiLT participants. Participants may abstain.
TiLT participants use +1, -1, and 0 respectively to mean support, do not support, abstain. TiLT participants register their responses as a comment in the tilt-private Github issue (last comment takes precedence).
Note: Comments about charter, workshop proposals, etc. (e.g., a link is broken) should be made directly in the relevant repository (e.g., strategy) unless the comment is Team-only, in which case the TiLT repo is appropriate.
Timing of responses
TiLT responses can be expected on this schedule:
Within 2 business days: approval is only possible if every TiLT participant has responded. During this period, TiLT participants may request additional time to evaluate the request.
After 2 business days: approval is possible as soon as there are at least three expressions of support and no objections or requests for additional time.
In cases where there are objections or requests for additional time, TiLT will use its weekly call to resolve differences.
Once TiLT has reached a decision
Once the threshold for a decision has been reached, any TiLT participant may record the decision and close the GitHub issue. If approved, the issue will be “Close as completed”. If rejected, the issue will be “Closed as not planned”.
If a request is approved, the requestor should consult the Guidebook on Charters for next steps.
If a request is rejected, it gets sent back to the originating function.
Communication
As part of the W3C Team, the recommended way to communicate with TiLT is through the tilt-private Github repository (by raising an issue or responding to one), or use @w3c/tilt.
If you’re not part of the W3C Team, the recommended way to communicate with TiLT is @w3c/tilt.
For any request sent to TiLT, Team input is welcome in the Strategy repository. Keep in mind the Team etiquette when posting publicly. For Team confidential discussion, input is welcome in the tilt-private Github repository. Note that any +1/-1/other from non-TiLT is NOT counted to reach TiLT approval but any TiLT member may put a hold on a decision based on non-TiLT opinions.
TiLT MUST provide a weekly digest of its activities to W3M.
TiLT was approved by W3M on May 24, 2023.