Subject: To the last (real) question...
Author:
Posted on: 2017-04-30 19:50:00 UTC

... yes, it absolutely depends on what we're deciding.

We're lucky, here, that every case is unique. There are always unique circumstances to consider, and those affect how we handle things.

Look at the amendments to the Constitution. I passed the Fourth Amendment with five votes, because it was minor; I refused to pass the Third with six, because it was bigger than that.

My view is that for major things, it should be clear that the majority of the Board (fine, fine, 'PPC community') is at least vaguely in favour of changing the status quo. Ideally, that's because they all came out and voted, but that doesn't happen often. More commonly, you get a dozen "for" votes and a couple of "against", at which point you have to assume that any silent people against it would step up out of fear of seeing their preferred option lose (since it isn't close).

There is no automatic triggering of a vote - a formal vote isn't even required! But if multiple people are objecting to something, there clearly isn't consensus.

I'm going to do a little mind-reading, if you'll forgive me the presumption. :) You, Tomash, have struck me in the past few months as being someone who very much appreciates clear rules and, for want of a better term, legal process. There's been three or four incidents where you've stood up (by email, here, or in the Discord) and said 'here is the evidence, let us pass judgement' (paraphrased muchly).

And I sympathise with that. I have a great deal of sympathy with that - see exhibit A, this thread. But... this is the PPC, not a criminal justice system. The reason we don't have a firm list of crimes, court procedures, and punishments, is that... we don't actually do this all that often.

You. Data Junkie. ... yeah, y'know what, that is the entire list of closely-debated ban votes that I can remember. Data Junkie's was manipulated by Data themselves undercover as a troll, and yours would've been a slam-dunk no-ban (as were everyone else's) had you not been confessed guilty of something outside the remit of the Constitution.

And other than that? All the bans I can think of have been very clear, vast-majority decisions. This is not a problem we have.

I have comments on temporary bans, but for the sake of structure I've put them elsewhere in the thread. But they do somewhat link to this (in that they explain how I can say that, for instance, Zdimensia's ban was uncontroversial when there were a dozen different lengths proposed).

hS

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