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Author Message
25 new of 255 responses total.
scott
response 182 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 26 16:14 UTC 2000

I'd disagree that needing to be a member to vote is "unethical".  If you care
enough to contribute, you are allowed to help decide issues.
jp2
response 183 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 26 16:19 UTC 2000

This response has been erased.

aruba
response 184 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 26 16:30 UTC 2000

Ken wasn't talking about "buying votes", he was talking about lobbying.

I really don't have much sympathy for anyone who says an issue is
important to him and Grex is important to him, doesn't become a member to
vote on it, and then complains that he is being oppressed by "the system". 
We *are* the system.  And as I said up there before the vote ended, anyone
who wants to influence policy on Grex should become a member and vote on
it.
janc
response 185 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 26 18:36 UTC 2000

I'm not sure where to go from here.  I guess we need to come up with a
different solution to the problem that can win more general acceptance.
Not sure what that would be though.
krj
response 186 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 26 19:01 UTC 2000

I didn't mean to suggest buying votes, though rereading my text I can see
where that interpretation could be made.  I'd better scribble that
response.  :)

I'll guess that what was needed in this election, on behalf of this 
proposal, was direct mail to the voters, to explain the issue.
I would suggest that to most Grex members who 
are not grizzled Picospan veterans, the issue seemed very 
obscure.  Alternatively, maybe the majority of the voters 
just chose to vote for the status quo.  The low turnout -- about
30% -- indicates something, but I'm not sure what.

jmsaul
response 187 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 26 20:41 UTC 2000

Re #182:  I never suggested that needing to be a member in order to vote
          was unethical.  Read my responses again.

Re #183:  It's tempting on some level, but....

Re #184:  At best, he was talking about me going out and convincing people
          who agreed with me to buy memberships so their votes would matter.

          If I *had* bought a membership so my vote would be counted, that
          would have made the vote on the proposal 15-19, with it still
          losing and me having sunk money into a system with a policy I
          consider awful.  You'd be happy, because you'd not only have my
          cash but could still read /bbs/censored and snicker at people
          who try to remove their text, but I'd lose money since I'd
          still walk away because of the outcome of the vote.

          And your policy is still unethical, no matter whether I pay Grex
          money so my vote counts or not.  It shouldn't matter who the
          proponent of an idea is.  Would you have changed your vote if I
          had purchased the right to have my vote counted?  Hardly.

Re #185:  You've gone from telling me I should have bought the election
          to telling me I should have spammed the Grex membership.  Do you
          really think that?


void
response 188 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 26 21:14 UTC 2000

   that's disappointing.  that's very disappointing.  don't look for too
many posts from me in bbs anymore.
mary
response 189 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 26 22:35 UTC 2000

Would there be any support for doing two things - eliminating
the scribble command only leaving expurgate available and
having each user see once and only once a warning that once text
is posted it can only be hidden from casual view not totally 
removed from the system?


krj
response 190 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 26 23:04 UTC 2000

I don't know why Joe is arguing with me so much, since we are in agreement
on the fundamental point.
 
"Spam" is a tremendously overused word these days.  In this case, 
I'm talking about sending mail to the voting members of the corporation
to reach the large numbers of them of them who have not been participating
in this item.    I'd expect the opposition to do likewise.
We could have an opt-out list if members are going to get prickly 
about this, but such mail would *not* be Unsolicited Commercial E-mail.
 
Mary's proposal would be significantly worse than the status quo
and I would actively oppose it.
md
response 191 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 00:01 UTC 2000

Well, I'm going to mnet, too, when it comes back up
(I mean, *if* it comes back up -- what's up with that,
anyway?), but I'll still be as active on Grex as ever.
Apart from that, I agree with Joe.  I think the 
celebrated Grex democracy failed this time, for once.
chanur
response 192 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 01:15 UTC 2000

Well, speaking as a member who did vote, I am actually pleased with the 
outcome of this. If people are going to post in a public forum, they 
should be prepared to stand behind what they write. If they have a 
change of heart later on, they can post a public retraction. I don't 
see the problem.

As far as the "fairness" of the vote, it seems to me that there's 
nothing wrong with letting members (as opposed to non-members) decide 
what happens on Grex. If I live in Ypsilanti I pay Ypsilanti taxes and 
vote in Ypsilanti -- not in Ann Arbor.

Chris
jp2
response 193 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 02:57 UTC 2000

This response has been erased.

jmsaul
response 194 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 03:18 UTC 2000

I never said the vote was unfair.  I said that the policy the vote upheld is
unethical.  I stand by that.

And no, I don't consider Mary's suggestion to be a reasonable alternative.

But then, that doesn't matter.
other
response 195 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 03:43 UTC 2000

Since when is majority rule ethical, by *any* standard?  

Joe, I'm afraid the expectations you're expressing are utopian and bear little
relation to reality.  

Majority rule is the process because it *works*, not because it is best.
Within the confines of a majoritarian system, Grex tries to achieve consensus,
and goes to great lengths to assure that all interested parties have the
fullest opportunity to provide their input, whether or not they care enough
to support the system financially, and thereby earn the right to participate
in the actual decision-making process.

I myself voted in the minority on this, because I see it as an appropriate
cmpromise solution to the issue.  Whether or not this proposal passes is not
substantive to the value I place on Grex, but I appreciate that this is not
the case with all users.

Any decision has outcomes, and if losing the input of those who see this
proposal as vital is the outcome, then i'm sorry to lose that input, but I
cannot fault the process, nor can I ignore the result and change the policy
to suit my taste.  Frankly, I think it's better that way.
jp2
response 196 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 03:56 UTC 2000

This response has been erased.

krj
response 197 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 04:18 UTC 2000

Bzzt.  He mentioned Nazis.  Game over.  :)
twinkie
response 198 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 04:39 UTC 2000

It seems rather asinine to have a "member" vote and a "non-member" vote, when
the non-members aren't taken in to consideration.

What's the point here? Trying to show that people who can pony up $5 a month
know better than people who choose not to?

gypsi
response 199 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 05:11 UTC 2000

I know all of the reasons behind member voting, but you would think that an
issue like this would be left up to all bbs users.  Why have a non-member
vote if it doesn't count?  
carson
response 200 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 05:36 UTC 2000

re #196: (you call those examples of ethical rule by majority?)
jp2
response 201 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 11:40 UTC 2000

This response has been erased.

cmcgee
response 202 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 11:48 UTC 2000

I too voted with the minority, and I too find the outcome disappointing.  But
that doesn't invalidate the process.  Nor does the use of majority voting by
unethical people invalidate the process.  Grex's concensus + voting is the
most useful decision-making rule that I've ever participated in.  

As with other democratic institutions, Grex is open to education, voter
registration, and other tactics that ensure the fullist participation in our
decision processes.  I hope that in the future, this issue can be reformulated
in a way that more people support individuals' ability to truly remove their
words from all future viewers. And I hope that people who agree with me
register to vote before the next election.  I may even go so far as to recruit
their registration.  It won't be the first time I've tried to sway the outcome
of an election by getting like-minded people registered, and to the polls on
election day.  

In addition, I like the complementary "opinion-polling" process that comes
with separating member and non-member votes.  Gives me a reality-check about
whether I'm in an over-all minority, or simply in the minority of those who
registerd and participated.  
jmsaul
response 203 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 14:26 UTC 2000

I'm not saying that the process is invalid.

I'm saying that the policy as it stands is wrong, and that I cannot and will
not support a system that upholds it.  The fact that it was upheld by a
majority vote of Grex's paying members makes it clear to me that this is a
community I do not wish to be a part of.  Control over one's own works, and
the ability to repair mistakes, is a very important ethical issue.  If the
majority of this community doesn't believe in it, and in fact is openly
contemptuous of it, I don't want to be a member of the community.
remmers
response 204 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 15:01 UTC 2000

As I said before, I'm sorry you feel that way Joe, but it's
certainly your choice to make.

Re #202, last paragraph:  Yes, opinion-polling is one of the reasons
I set up the vote program so that anybody could run it.

And speaking of reality-checks, does the fact that only a third of
the eligible members voted provide one?  It was a lower voter
turnout than we usually get, and this despite the fact that the
issues got a lot more discussion than usual -- several different
items in two conferences.  Are a lot of people saying that they
don't view this as that important an issue?
jmsaul
response 205 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 15:07 UTC 2000

I suspect that, the way it was phrased, people who didn't follow the
discussions thought it was an obscure technical issue.
aruba
response 206 of 255: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 15:13 UTC 2000

I don't think it's a very important issue, and I have read all the
discussion.
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