Greg,

> But it's a strange bar to set: perfect representation of entire community. By 
> that token, nobody can say anything is controversial if a different group is 
> disagreeing.

Sorry, for not being clear. I am not talking definitions here, of course you 
can call it "controversial" when you get N-1 NACK's!

I object that it's enough evidence to deny any change (see below). For example, 
in case the interests of developers became misaligned with the interests of the 
community (you can't say it can't happen).


Wladimir,

>The *entire network* needs to agree to switch to your new software.

Why the "entire network"? So if, say, 75% of everybody involved want some 
change and 25% don't, the majority can't have it?

Well, I guess we're down to that philosophical question of whether majority can 
dictate minority or whether minority can be a roadblock to majority :)

Probably no reason to discuss it further :) A "software fork" seems like an 
inevitable resolution for this.

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