From ee64c860f7c09e55648b5b1ecfb45c8a37f19cbe Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nathan Schneider Date: Tue, 14 Oct 2025 05:13:12 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Removed excess question from Dusseault --- content/interviews/dusseault-interoperability.md | 2 -- 1 file changed, 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/content/interviews/dusseault-interoperability.md b/content/interviews/dusseault-interoperability.md index e6dc5da..d00b04f 100644 --- a/content/interviews/dusseault-interoperability.md +++ b/content/interviews/dusseault-interoperability.md @@ -229,8 +229,6 @@ I've just agreed to chair a new working group as it's getting formed. The IESG j I think that's the major standards contributions right now. I also show up in things like HTTP API and OAuth to say when I approve of a draft or I think this work should go forward, I think it should be adopted by the working group. -*I have an OAuth coauthor and ActivityPub originator in the oral history project as well, so it's nice to see the interaction.* - *One thing that I saw in an earlier interview you gave was a reflection on the way in which sometimes people become cold and bitter after a long career in standards and this image of the bitter elder saying no to everything and only seeing the problems. I'm curious whether you have any insights about how to avoid that trap and in general any advice for people who are getting into the work of standards building.* What you're not saying now is that I'm clearly now an elder. I'm fifty-three. I'm sure when I was twenty-six, some of the people I met who were forty seemed old.