Re: consensus and anonymity

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Oh, I understand cultural sensitivities, but I have never heard of not wanting to challenge in the public (except the disagreeing with the employer thing). The problem with that is that if people don't like something and can't speak up or will only speak through a chair or an AD, it allows natural avenues for abuse. The chair or the AD might as well be making decisions at that point.

Even anonymous voting has verifiability as the crucial part of requirements.

If our consensus process is not independently and openly verifiable, we might as well close shop!

Lakshminath

PS: BTW, I agree with Melinda that we should not allow a minority to block progress; in any type of consensus process, unfortunately some of us will be at the losing end of things.

On 5/31/2007 12:33 PM, Spencer Dawkins wrote:


The alternative - a WG chair who tells the working group that the apparent WG consensus on the mailing list is being overruled because of anonymous objections that the WG chair cannot share with the WG, or because of private objections that the WG chair is "channeling" from a back room - would make voting seem reasonable (or, to use Mark Allman's characterization in another thread, "seem charming").

Thanks,

Spencer


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