On Wed, 2025-02-05 at 17:44 +0000, Katherina Walshe-Grey via agora-
business wrote:
> On Wed, 2025-02-05 at 02:16 -0600, secretsnail9 via agora-official
> wrote:
> > 9211~   qenya, Mischief         1.7   De-Convoluting Mooting v1.1
> > 9212*   Mischief                3.0   Incentives
> > 9213~   Murphy                  1.0   Twice the pride
> 
> FOR, FOR, FOR.

CFJ: qenya has submitted a valid ballot on each of the referenda on
proposals 9211, 9212, and 9213.

Evidence: the above-quoted message.

Arguments:

There are various requirements to submit a ballot, but the most
relevant ones here are "The ballot clearly identifies the matter to be
decided." and "The ballot clearly sets forth the voter's intent to
place the identified vote." (both in rule 683). The intent here seems
to be for the first FOR to refer to the referendum on proposal 9211,
the second to the referendum on proposal 9212, and the third to the
referendum on proposal 9213.

However, in order for there to be three ballots cast, the message has
to be interpreted as three voting notices, each of which identifies a
different referendum. In this case, it's only the surrounding context
that implies the specific referendum – in fact, all three notices are
identical, and it's only their position in the message that suggests a
particular decision is referred to. In other words, the context that
the notices require to identify a decision is not part of the notices
themselves. (It isn't like a regular interspersed-votes voting message,
in which the relevant line of the Promotor's message is quoted
immediately before each voting notice and can plausibly be considered
to be part of it.)

Does the fact that the notices can't be interpreted without the context
of the entire message invalidate the ballots? Or are they valid ballots
regardless?

-- 
ais523

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