Maybe a solution would be to require that it be clear that any action's
performer is clear or else it does it does not occur, regardless of method.

On 06/14/2018 04:59 PM, Aris Merchant wrote:
> I've considered that, but it's also problematic. There are message
> based actions which aren't taken by announcement. For instance, voting
> isn't a by announcement action, and neither is a Notice of Honor. Like
> the other provisions toward the end of the paragraph (timing and
> ordering), it doesn't belong in the by announcement definition. Less
> critically, adding it there would make the definition of by
> announcement inelegant.
>
> -Aris
> On Thu, Jun 14, 2018 at 1:46 PM Kerim Aydin <ke...@u.washington.edu> wrote:
>>
>>
>> A way to stop the "overriding" may be to include "sender must be
>> clear" in the *definition* of by announcement rather than as an additional
>> property.  It's awkward to say "you did that by announcement, but it failed
>> for reason B" and better to be able to say "you didn't do it by announcement
>> because the announcement was ambiguous" (the same way you would do if
>> other parts of the announcement were unclear).  (I think doing so would
>> fix what you're seeing in R2141).
>>
>> On Thu, 14 Jun 2018, Aris Merchant wrote:
>>> On Thu, Jun 14, 2018 at 1:03 PM Kerim Aydin <ke...@u.washington.edu> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Thu, 14 Jun 2018, Aris Merchant wrote:
>>>>> Change the power of Rule 478, "Fora", to 3.1.
>>>>>
>>>>> [I'm astonished that no one has thought to do this before now, given
>>>>> that this rule contains conditions for ALL actions taken by sending 
>>>>> messages
>>>>> to work.]
>>>> Unless there's a specific conflict, I don't see the need.  And are you
>>>> sure (i.e. done due diligence) that there's no "rules to the contrary
>>>> notwithstanding" in a different power-3 rule that needs to overrule this
>>>> rule in order to work?
>>> I have now. There are none that shouldn't be overridden, and at least
>>> one that should (Rule 2141). The point is that this is a very easy
>>> restriction to override. Any power 3.0 "X CAN Y by announcement, rules
>>> to the contrary notwithstanding" would bypass the restriction, despite
>>> the fact that it clearly isn't trying to. I'm not sure that it's
>>> absolutely critical that the power of the rule be increased, and I
>>> know we're very reluctant to increase anything above 3.0. However, it
>>> seems to me that R478 is exactly the kind of critical infrastructure
>>> that shouldn't ever be overridden, it being one of our most basic and
>>> most ancient rules.
>>>
>>> -Aris
>>>
>>

-- 
----
Publius Scribonius Scholasticus

Reply via email to