On Mon, Nov 18, 2002 at 03:56:45AM +1000, Anthony Towns wrote: > > Does anyone see any significant strategies for inconsistency with this > > kind of mechanism? > > It has the problem that it's much easier for a non-supermajority option to > win.
As opposed to the 17 Nov draft which in some cases allows a supermajority option to win if it defeats the default option by 1 vote? > If you have: > > A - remove non-free (2:1 supermajority required, say) > B - handwave about the issue, don't really do anything > D - further discussion > > you might get results something like: > > 60 A B D > 30 B A D > 10 D B A > > with the groups being {A} and {B,D}. B defeats D by 90:10, so next we > work with {A,B} scaling A down, ending up with B defeats A 40:30, in > spite of a majority of developers wanting to remove non-free entirely. Sure -- in that context you're proposing that we have a supermajority requirement, and a majority is not necessarily a supermajority. > Of course, that result's probably _stable_ -- the next vote would probably > result in D defeats A 40:30, but I don't know that it's entirely fair > to have B work as a "spoiler" option -- if B hadn't been an option, > A would have passed it's supermajority requirement easily. Yes. > Alternatively you could possibly end up with something like: > > 60 S T D > 50 T D S > > where S and T both have a 2:1 supermajority requirement, and D > doesn't. The result is S beats T, 60:50, and D beats S 50:30, and > D wins. Given T was unanimously preferred to D, that seems like a > significant loss. I'm not sure I agree. In this case, D would have been the default option: further discussion. I imagine that, if this situation were to arise, further discussion would be a good idea. [Why do so many people prefer who prefer T over D also prefer D over S when so many other people prefer S over T?] However, it might be that there are related examples which have analogous but more serious flaws. Can you come up with any? It might also be worth considering derivative methodologies. For example: add to the Nov 16 draft "if a ballot has options with supermajority requirements, once a winner is picked repeat the vote counting procedure with supermajority and the default option redefined for the new winner until we stop picking a new winner". Thanks, -- Raul