Thanks Shane for this feedback! I think this is something staff can implement. "Please look for the latest version of this document at this page: https://www.icann.org/resources/pages/rssac-publications-2014-05-12-en" Best Steve On 8/31/16, 11:15 PM, "rssac-caucus-bounces@icann.org on behalf of Shane Kerr" <rssac-caucus-bounces@icann.org on behalf of shane@time-travellers.org> wrote: Wes, At 2016-08-31 07:04:37 -0700 Wes Hardaker <hardaker@isi.edu> wrote: > > Where is the repository for RSSAC documents? > > ICANN documents as a whole can be challenging to find, to the > multiple-versions and archived nature combined with their web > infrastructure, which is a typical CMS engine as far as I can tell. The > results are searches that don't always point to the most recent > document. > > Instead, I'd suggest searching for "RSSAC publications" which turns up > the much more useful and should always be up to date publication list > based on release dates: > > https://www.icann.org/resources/pages/rssac-publications-2014-05-12-en > > [Note: I have no role over the ICANN pages and the publication process] Thanks for the pointer! My guess is that other people would try a similar process to the one that I used and also end up in the wrong place. Educating everyone in the world seems really hard. Fixing the ICANN pages and publication process is probably easier, but I can easily imagine it taking many months if not years. What seems relatively easy would be to put some text at the top of the document saying: "Please look for the latest version of this document at this page: https://www.icann.org/resources/pages/rssac-publications-2014-05-12-en" It's not great, because a human (or program) still has to search through the list and find the most recent copy, but it at least gives a hint about how to do this. BTW, I love the URL which includes a random date in it, although I am a bit disappointed that it doesn't have "pages/pages" in the path. ;) Cheers, -- Shane