On 01/21/2016 09:53 PM, Ronald Chmara wrote:

> On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 12:33 PM, Flyingmana <flyingm...@googlemail.com> 
> wrote:
>> An RFC could still be valuable for the project, even if the original
>> author leaved, so taking it over should be possible. And it should not
>> be painful in any way.
>> Would we need some rules in case multiple people want to take it over,
>> or should we say the first one wins?
>> Is there any way to abuse the taking over of an withdrawn RFC?
> 
> Hypothetically:
> 
> An RFC being used primarily for ongoing debate/argument/trolling
> purposes could live indefinitely, generating hundreds, or thousands,
> of messages, and changesets/PR's, and list churn, in the name of
> "making sure an issue is adequately discussed and resolved".
> 
> Even as individual trolls, marks, and sockpuppets were knocked down,
> new ones could pick up the mantle of "but we're discussing important
> things, here!", and continue the loop, only finally exhausting the
> suite of RFC mechanisms all of the trolls/marks/puppets finally gave
> up, or were someho0w being administratively prohibited from all future
> participation.
> 
> Which, if the PHP email lists were an endless trolling/argument/debate
> forum like twitter or reddit, would be completely appropriate.
> 
> This is all hypothetical, of course.
> 
> -Ronabop
> 

Thats a valid problem.
How is this currently handled for the case, the troll is not willing to
withdraw it?

-Flyingmana


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