On Mon, Jul 23, 2018, 01:11 Antoine Pitrou, <anto...@python.org> wrote:
> > Le 20/07/2018 à 23:14, Brett Cannon a écrit : > > > > Steve pointed out in his reply about how this might increase load as > > people will have to start trying to get people on side to vote the way > > they want. In US politics this is done by someone called a /whip/ who > > "whips up" votes for a bill. With 91 (or more if people start to come > > back to use their commit rights who have not added their GitHub > > usernames) of us getting grandfathered into this, people will be > > somewhat political in getting votes for or against PEPs they care about > > since only people post-Guido would be made core devs knowing they now > > have a vote on PEPs and thus take that into consideration when adding > > new members to the team. > > That's an interesting point, but do you have any evidence of such > phenomena in other open source projects? Just because something happens > in US politics doesn't mean it's likely to happen in a technical project > populated with volunteers. > Nope, no evidence (but I suspect most of what any of us are suggesting has something we can directly compare against 😉). This is just a potential worry of mine. -Brett > Regards > > Antoine. > _______________________________________________ > python-committers mailing list > python-committers@python.org > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-committers > Code of Conduct: https://www.python.org/psf/codeofconduct/ >
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