On 8 November 2016 at 02:16, Mark Shoulson <mark@kli.org> wrote:
Thought I would let people here know, since I have sort of acted on my own on this. I've submitted another paper to the Unicode Consortium asking to encode pIqaD finally: http://www.unicode.org/L2/L2016/16329-piqad-returns.pdf They always said it wasn't encoded because people weren't using it: I disprove that claim in the document. The discussion on the mailing list there is starting to heat up again; this time they're saying that there are problems with Paramount's copyright and all, but that's also not relevant, and even if it is, they should decide whether or not to encode and *then* we'll worry about difficulties carrying that out.
Anyway, just informing folks. I've been talking to various UTC members, and the official UTC meeting is this week or next week or something, so it will be brought up then and they'll probably have at least some sort of response after that. I'm not going to let them off the hook without at least some *sensible* answer and a path forward (and an explanation as to why the Tolkien alphabets, which apparently may also have copyright issues, are on the Roadmap, even if they aren't encoded, while pIqaD is not only not on the roadmap, but given as an example on the "Not on the Roadmap" page as something not worthy of being there.) Just FYI.
I have some info about this: * the proposal missed the deadline for the November meeting, but is on the agenda for the January one * the good news is that the committee considers the evidence of use for Klingon is now sufficient * the rest of the proposal is in good shape (other than lack of a date), only the IP stands in the way * Tengwar was added to the roadmap before IP issues arose; adding Klingon to the roadmap has no real effect while IP issues are unresolved * their recommendation is that the Klingon community work towards getting the IP owners to engage with them to settle the IP issues (that's your path forward) So... who can take this on? -- De'vID