On 2012-05-02 14:49:09 +0200 (+0200), Bernhard R. Link wrote: > On the other hand, if renaming both of them is the only possible > outcome if both parties cannot agree, it makes it more likely both > sides will actually be willing to discuss the matter, instead of > just issuing demands, hoping the other side will either give up or > will be overruled by the TC at the end.
It seems to me to be more akin to, or some variant on, an all-or-nothing Prisoner's Dilemma. Neither side is necessarily encouraged to give in since the only "favorable" outcome for an individual application--keeping its well-known name--comes from holding out longest in the confrontation. In this scenario, altruism on the part of one participant is the only alternative to preventing an unfavorable outcome for both... and as such both sides (following classic Game Theory principles) will default to the unfavorable outcome. In other words, it does nothing to promote compromise between uncooperative parties. With the TC as an assumed impartial arbitrating body, this changes the game to (theoretically) favor the side with the most effective technical argument when neither can come to an agreement on their own. -- { IRL(Jeremy_Stanley); WWW(http://fungi.yuggoth.org/); PGP(43495829); WHOIS(STANL3-ARIN); SMTP(fu...@yuggoth.org); FINGER(fu...@yuggoth.org); MUD(kin...@katarsis.mudpy.org:6669); IRC(fu...@irc.yuggoth.org#ccl); } -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20120502135222.gu...@yuggoth.org