Subject: I'm reassured
Author:
Posted on: 2017-05-02 15:00:00 UTC

I'd like you to know you've done a good job of reading my mind. I do like clear rules, well-defined processes, that sort of thing.

I completely agree that we don't have a problem with non-obvious ban vote results. Me and Data are the only two votes without a clear consensus result I can think of, and Data's had Torolling muddling everything up. Other than in those cases, it's been extremely obvious what we collectively want, so there's no point in trying to nail down specifics about how we vote. It also helps that, like you said, we don't ban people often.

My other concern was non-ban decisions. The example that was running around in my head was when we decided that it'd be fine for me to be galloping around this thread. That was decided by a few approvals followed by a declaration that the decision was made about a day after the question was posed, along with general silence from everyone else. The process was almost uncomfortably fuzzy, but that's on my brain, not the community.

However, like you pointed out, if anyone objected, they would've probably spoken out for fear of being outvoted. So it's actually reasonable to interpret silence as a weak vote in favor of whatever proposal is clearly winning. (That's a useful way to describe how we do things around here. Thanks.) This means we basically never have a problem with non-obvious decision-making results, which means there's no point to trying to codify a bunch of stuff in advance.

My only real quibble with what you said is the use of a majority standard for (at the very least) the major decisions like bans. A 50/50 split in the community doesn't feel like enough agreement to go forward on anything. Given that everything about how we make decisions is rather context-dependent, I'd rephrase that to say that for major things, we need "most" of the community to be in favor of (or at least not opposed to) significant changes.

To give a concrete example, I'd definitely consider there to be something off if we banned someone without at least 2/3rds votes in favor, and I'd expect way more than that. This is why, when I counted the Glarn votes, I set the length of the semi-automatic temporary ban for breaking the formal last chance to 3 months (which had near-unanimous support) as opposed to a year (which had just 75% support).

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