Thanks for your thoughts. Your questions are quite valid but I’m inclined to punt on them, as you’ll see:
For #3, it depends on the group. If a government were to use it, they could provide access via terminals in public libraries, schools, and other government facilities. If a private group were to use it, they’d probably just exclude the poor.
For #4, 6, 7, 8: It’s intended for use in any democratic organization for the equivalent of ordinary legislation and bylaws, but not intended to replace their constitutions or founding documents. If there are some laws/bylaws that the group doesn’t have authority to make or change (like on citizenship/membership), they would need a separate method of striking those down.
For #5, if the data is lost, they start afresh. They’d lose any prediction scores they’d gained, but if voters can repeat their good predictions, the problem is mitigated, and if they can’t repeat their good predictions, they don’t deserve their old scores.
I justify “punting” because the app is intended to be customized by many clubs and organizations. It doesn’t feel like that’s merely handwaving the hard parts, but perhaps it is.
Thanks for your thoughts. Your questions are quite valid but I’m inclined to punt on them, as you’ll see:
For #3, it depends on the group. If a government were to use it, they could provide access via terminals in public libraries, schools, and other government facilities. If a private group were to use it, they’d probably just exclude the poor.
For #4, 6, 7, 8: It’s intended for use in any democratic organization for the equivalent of ordinary legislation and bylaws, but not intended to replace their constitutions or founding documents. If there are some laws/bylaws that the group doesn’t have authority to make or change (like on citizenship/membership), they would need a separate method of striking those down.
For #5, if the data is lost, they start afresh. They’d lose any prediction scores they’d gained, but if voters can repeat their good predictions, the problem is mitigated, and if they can’t repeat their good predictions, they don’t deserve their old scores.
I justify “punting” because the app is intended to be customized by many clubs and organizations. It doesn’t feel like that’s merely handwaving the hard parts, but perhaps it is.