BobTHJ wrote: > On Fri, Jun 27, 2008 at 11:49 AM, Kerim Aydin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> This is absurd. You've set up an impossible condition if no one's buying. >> I state that the fact of no one being willing to buy even the cheapest >> of votes is a state not envisioned by the contract, and therefore should >> get anyone off the hook who makes a good faith effort to sell. >> > Actually, there has been more Vote Market activity in the past month > then in the six months previously. There have certainly been > opportunities to gain VP, and there presently exist at least 10 open > tickets. Just not much of it has been for the buying or selling of > votes. Speaking personally, the more effort it takes, the less often anyone will bother. I suggest amending the Vote Market so that, instead of a three-step specific process: Alice> I offer to sell my vote on 6000 for 1 VP Bob> I vote FOR 6000; I accept Alice's offer, please vote FOR Alice> I vote FOR 6000 votes can be sold in a two-step general process: Alice> I sell my vote on 6000 for 1 VP Bob> I vote FOR 6000; I spend up to 5 VP to buy votes via clauses something like these: "I sell my vote on <Agoran decision> for <price>" is equivalent to conditionally voting "endorsing the person (if any) who buys my vote; if they are not an eligible voter, then as they direct; if there is no such person, then no vote". "I spend up to <price> to buy votes" is equivalent to buying whatever votes are for sale, cheapest first, ties broken in favor of those that went on sale first, up to a maximum total expenditure of <price>; vote purchases are processed in the order they are made.