TCQ is a powerful tool to give structure to Robert's Rules in large meetings with dozens (or more) of attendees. I would love to be able to use it in other standardisation efforts, but not everyone has (or wants) a GitHub account. Plenty of participants in standards development around the world are not programmers.
What is quite common across the standards world is having access to Standardisation Identity Federation via their ISO, IEC, CEN, national bodies, or related logins.

SIF uses OIDC. I have found precisely zero documentation of it—I discovered its existence via my own experiences logging in with it. It's mentioned in one CENELEC press release, but not much else that's accessible to search engines.
TCQ is a powerful tool to give structure to Robert's Rules in large meetings with dozens (or more) of attendees. I would love to be able to use it in other standardisation efforts, but not everyone has (or wants) a GitHub account. Plenty of participants in standards development around the world are not programmers.
What is quite common across the standards world is having access to Standardisation Identity Federation via their ISO, IEC, CEN, national bodies, or related logins.
SIF uses OIDC. I have found precisely zero documentation of it—I discovered its existence via my own experiences logging in with it. It's mentioned in one CENELEC press release, but not much else that's accessible to search engines.