AssociationVoting

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How to vote

We will need some clarification about how to vote and generally have 2 options:

  1. Open election by simply raising hands or counting the saying of remote participants
  2. Secret ballot by using some tool

This raises the following questions:

  1. Are we going to vote only openly during the official assembly?
  2. If we need to organize some secret voting, what tools could be possible to allow remote participation while ensuring it won't be manipulated?
  3. What type of voting and what related "tool" should be used?
    1. Open vote:
      1. Vote counters just count
      2. Participants use a table like done in ReleaseNumberingDecisionVote
    2. Secret ballot:
      1. Can Foswiki extensions be an option or is the risk of manipulation to high?
      2. What other election tools could be an option for discussion?

-- IngoKappler - 22 Sep 2009

I have been involved in many orgs that work to create and promote standards. They generally use the concept of consensus rather than majority vote. All voting is open, and if someone votes against the measure, it is encouraged to allow them to say why. Usually, particularly if the issues are technical, consensus is somewhat obvious when it occurs, but I have seen some bodies deadlocked on an issue for a while even though a majority vote would have decided it. The idea is that in a community group like foswiki, you want people on board rather than splintered off. Marketing issues sometimes ruin the picture because the issues are sometimes more a matter of "black art" or hunches that sometimes are not easy to support with clear evidence.

I don't see voting itself as the issue, but rather who exactly has the right to vote. Without membership dues of some kind, it is difficult to know who has the right. Here, there is perhaps more weight given to those who are strong implementers and know the system well.

-- RaymondLutz - 23 Sep 2009

Most votes, if any, will be quite suitable for open voting. However, do we also vote for people? There has to be a vote on who will be on the board, no? I think it is good manners to have this vote as a secret vote, as is quite common.

I remember at the last twiki community summit (the one where twiki.net's ceo was embarrased for not knowing the facts, the one that eventuelly led to the continuation of this project as foswiki) we had a secret vote, with the remote participants handig in their vote to an election master. This does not guarantee secrecy for the remote participants, but might be an alternative to using black-box voting tools.

There is always the condorcet voting system btw: http://www.cs.cornell.edu/andru/civs.html.

-- KoenMartens - 23 Sep 2009

Just looked up the articles where the following is stated in chapter 9. General Assembly 5):
"Unless otherwise decided by the General Assembly, all decisions will be taken openly by show of hands or the equivalent for electronic participation and voting. Unless otherwise provided by the Articles of Association, decisions must be taken with a simple majority of votes cast."

Chapter 10. Duties of the General Assembly :
"The General Assembly elects the Board from the number of Active Members. The people obtaining the relative majority of votes (i.e. plurality) will be elected. Voting has to be anonymous only as far as technically feasible and economically justifiable."

So we can elect the board members openly. It remains the decision about how secret we nevertheless want to be, while using a feasible solution/process, e.g.:

-- IngoKappler - 23 Sep 2009

BasicForm edit

TopicClassification CommunityMatters
Topic Summary Community Voting
Interested Parties RaymondLutz
Related Topics TopicVotePlugin wink VotePlugin wink
Topic revision: r5 - 01 Feb 2012, OliverKrueger
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