On 4/5/2011 8:10 PM, Jacob Kaplan-Moss wrote:
On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 7:00 PM, "Martin v. Löwis"<mar...@v.loewis.de>  wrote:
Sorry, no, I don't. I hear a loud message, but not a clear one
(i.e. I think it comes from a vocal minority)

I've given you loads of data including usage statistics, anecdotal
data, user polling on Twitter (and I could add a link to Reddit now,

But it seems to me likely biased, so I am not convinced yet.

but why bother). You've heard from dozens of people who're very
invested in our community that this feature makes us look bad.

You've countered it with a single user who likes the feature and
claims of support in private email.

No, he countered with a community poll that has, as I remember, 100-200 responders. After a contentious discussion.

Neither of us can prove we're speaking for a larger community. You
have root so you get to rule by fiat, and I'm going to accept it and
shut up, but don't you dare accuse me of representing a vocal minority
when you're representing an even smaller one.

This entire process leaves a terrible taste in my mouth.

I agree, but for a quite different reason. Martin sometimes gets opposite demands. That is not easy to deal with. On this issue, after much discussion Martin took a poll and pretty fairly, in my opinion, followed the result.

You did not like that. You get an email that to you is spam. You do not like this. I would agree that you should be able to opt out of receiving them, if you cannot do so now.

An avalanche follows. It mostly consists of people who did not ratings before saying they do not like ratings now, and perhaps even less. Surprise. And there is some rehashing of the same old arguments.

A small number of posts give new data and arguments. I even find them a bit persuasive. I might have found them even more persuasive if not nearly lost in the rest, which had already left a bad taste in *my* mouth.

A couple of argument strike me a strange. On is the Catch-22 argument that ratings without comments are bad, when the person making that argument is the one who turned comments off. The other is the argument that Martin it is acting like a dictator because he rejects the demand that he act like a dictator by ignoring the poll.

That's how it seem from here, anyhow.

--
Terry Jan Reedy


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