Goethe wrote: > Solutions proposed: > 1. judicially declare all actions performed by "annabel" to be > (retroactively) ineffective because, in retrospect, the messages didn't > constitute clear communication as to whom they applied to (I still think > this would have and did work, hence no crisis, but this was a minority > view).
I don't remember this being brought up. It would have required recalculating the gamestate to account for the removal of Annabel's purported actions, except that #3 later patched over it. > 2. have everyone deregister except 1 person whom we were sure was still > a player and had been a player throughout the whole time. That person would > become the holder of every office and proposals would have a quorum of 1. > We would then be sure whom the holder of every office was. E could then > ratify by proposal the recent rulesets and officer reports and everyone could > re-register going on as before. (I think this fix wouldn't work/is broken > now, > when offices can be vacant and the speaker is no longer the default > officeholder?) Anyway, we never did this, maybe because we never convinced > everyone to deregister en masse. A similar solution was applied rigorously back around 1997. A proposal revamping the economy was purportedly adopted, then months later was discovered to have failed. Zefram worked out about a dozen potential values of the gamestate just for who held which offices, depending on interpretation (the "Quantum Crisis"), then we all agreed to patch it as follows: a) All but one player announced "If I am Promotor, then I resign, naming <the one player> as my successor". This collapsed the quantum states for that portion of the gamestate. b) The holder of Assessor was similarly collapsed. c) A fix proposal was adopted, effectively ratifying the adoption of the original economic revamp proposal. > 3. pass a proposal ratifying the gamestate without #2 first. I think we > did this, but I think several people always thought this didn't solve the > problem (and we still haven't solved the problem) because we didn't do #2 > first. We did (that was one of my proposals); it basically ratified the legal fiction that actions performed via Maud's and Annabel's e-mail addresses during the time in question were performed by separate persons.