Gencer, M.2024-07-182024-07-1820121539-3062https://doi.org/10.4018/jitsr.2012010102https://hdl.handle.net/11411/6583This paper reports the results of an exploratory study on the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) specifications corpus in relation to the changes in volume, structure, and production of Internet standards. Using data spanning three decades, the authors examine changes in the production volume and type composition of IETF documents, their interdependency, and the level of collaboration involved in their production. Longitudinal changes in the standards corpus exhibit an increasing trend in interdependency, number of refinement steps, and number of authors, and additionally reveal that standards production is of an episodic nature with regular peaks in output volume. Complementary analysis on the network structure of dependencies highlights a trend toward compartmentalization of the system over the years involving the emergence of relatively isolated subsystems of related standards. The authors suggest that a perspective which considers a system like IETF as an organization itself, rather than a constellation of extra-organizational activities, is needed to understand and manage standardization processes like this one. Copyright © 2012, IGI Global.eninfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessInternet Engineering Task ForceProductionStandards CollaborationStandards EvolutionChanges İn VolumeComplementary AnalysisExploratory StudiesInternet Engineering Task ForcesInternet StandardNetwork StructuresProduction VolumesRefinement StepStandardization ProcessProductionStandardsThe evolution of IETF standards and their productionArticle2-s2.0-8486059087610.4018/jitsr.2012010102331N/A1710