> And I just explained the tiebreaker in that popular proposal, as put forth > in the book Majority Judgment. You apparently had never even heard of that > tiebreaker, so I don't see why you think you're qualified to say anything > about MJ.
Well, what you've just said qualifies me to say that MJ has unnecessarily (because Score and Approval don't need them) elaborate bylaws. I've never claimed to know MJ's bylaws. Of course that means that (as you point out) I don't know what MJ will do in a tie. But you might notice that, of the situations that we discussed, the one that involves a tie was the one in which both factions are trusting and trustworthy. My successful defection examples didn't involve a tie, and therefore didn't require information about the tiebreaker. > I could continue to point out how you're wrong in what follows. For > instance, you apparently think that "probabilistic SFR" means everyone gives > the higher grade. But it's basically a waste of time. You're revealing a complete misunderstanding of what probabilistic voting is. It isn't that every A voter approves B. Every A voter is asked to approve B _with a certain probability_. If all of the A voters use that strategy, some will approve B and some won't. If there are a large number of voters in the election, and therefore a large number of A voters, then the fraction of the A voters who approve B will be equal to the probability with which any particular A voter approves B. Mike Ossipoff ---- Election-Methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info
