On 1/30/2020 9:06 AM, James Cook via agora-discussion wrote:
> On Thu, 30 Jan 2020 at 17:03, James Cook <jc...@cs.berkeley.edu> wrote:
>> Here's a somewhat different way we could do it:
>>
>> * An announcement resolving a decision doesn't need to specify
>> anything other than the decision --- not even the outcome. That causes
>> the decision to resolve to the (platonically) correct outcome, and it
>> is self-ratifying that that occurred.
>>
>> * The resolver SHALL include all that extra stuff in their resolution
>> message (and maybe SHALL respond to CoEs).
>>
>> Is there anything wrong with that? I feel with the current system,
>> even when we eventually figure out which proposals are adopted,
>> there's some disturbing temporary uncertainty about when exactly they
>> were adopted, which doesn't seem better than the temporary uncertainty
>> this version would introduce about what the outcome was.
> 
> As I often do, I sent this just a little too soon and should have
> thought more. An obvious flaw with what I wrote is that we may never
> know for sure what exactly self-ratified, whereas the current system
> explicitly makes the outcome ratify.
> 
> Anyway, I like G.'s proposal, but why even require a reasonably
> accurate tally for it to be self-ratifying? Just require
> decision+outcome, and make the rest SHALL.

I went back and forth on that as a possibility - I don't have a strong reason
so maybe a SHALL is best - the only issue being what Alexis pointed out, that
if we want (as e suggested) to require the Assessor respond to inaccurate
tallies that don't change the result, we need to hard-code that, if the
individual ballots don't self-ratify.  (A special category of "no this doesn't
self ratify but the Officer has to respond to the CoE anyway").

-G.








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