Good Afternoon, Michael

Thank you for the detailed description. I had no problem with the formatting (I use a 1970's word processor. It doesn't have proportional spacing.) The displays were very clear. I also visited the links you supplied and have spent some time thinking about the material. You'll understand digesting the concept is a slow process (at least, for me).

I take it the basic idea is that anyone may nominate a person by supplying their email address. Then others, with an interest in the choice, show their approval or disapproval by indicating their trust or distrust of the person nominated, or enter another person in nomination.

Votorola maintains a running total of the number (and strength, I think) of supporters for each candidate. This provides a dynamic reflection of candidates' progress through the electoral process and gives an indication of the level of approval and disapproval for each candidate. I'm not sure I understand how one determines the quality of the trust/distrust the voters express. As you mentioned in an earlier post, voters can, if they wish, remove their original vote and cast it for a different candidate if they feel their interests are better served by the change.

One of the pages I reviewed was a summary of information about a voter (Voter X). It looked something like this:

-----*-----*-----*-----*-----*-----*-----*-----*-----*-----*-----

* Toronto  * Register  * Voter  * Elections

* Identity  * Registration  * Votes

         [email protected]
         X
         89 X Street, M9X 9X9
         http://www.onefreeminute.net/#X

Note: [[email protected] is a simulated voter, registered by
       vox-voters-abc.]

  [  ] Send mail to this voter.

  [  ] Visit this voter's neighbourhood in the voter list.

Trust Level 0         Doubters 0

Trust, this voter is currently trusted by nobody.

Doubt, this voter is currently doubted by nobody.

  Trust above is from the latest compiled voter list (snap-2009-
  03-21 / readyList-2009-03-21), and excludes subsequent changes.
  Doubt is current, but excludes the signals of unlisted doubters
  (the user excepted).

This voter is trusting nobody.

This voter is doubting nobody.

Votorola

-----*-----*-----*-----*-----*-----*-----*-----*-----*-----*-----

As mentioned before, I feel it is important for the people who will be voting to engage in a detailed discussion of public issues (hence, the provision in Practical Democracy for the electoral authority to supply triads with summaries of budgets and ordinances). I'm not sure how that would be accomplished with Votorola. I found no 'statement of position' for Voter X, so I'm not clear about how I would decide to trust or doubt this voter. Even though it would not provide the kind of depth necessary for sound decisions, would it be a good idea to add a section below the voter identification to give a brief recap of the voter's positions on issues and people or would that open a can of worms?

The purpose and use of a voter's neighborhood (and the voter list) appears to give a recap of the support and opposition the voter has attracted. Am I correct in thinking the trust/doubt values attach when Voter X (the one I looked at) votes for someone else?

Votorola could, as shown by your post, record and report the decisions of the triads. It could also, perhaps, provide a mechanism for constituents at lower levels to express their views for the guidance of those they've selected to represent them.

Fred Gohlke
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