On Sun, Apr 18, 2021 at 5:08 PM Timo Röhling <t...@gaussglocke.de> wrote:

>
> 1. Do we want to retain the ability to vote openly?
>

Yes, options are always good. However, as I mentioned on Salsa[1], I think
secret is the better default going forward. Confidentiality allows people
to vote what they think instead of being pressured to vote a certain way.
It prevents possible harassment. It prevents damaged relationships if
people vote differently on contentious topics. It absolutely still gives
people the freedom to publicly announce how they voted, if they choose to
do so. Most of us in Debian take privacy very seriously, let's extend that
to our votes as well.

Obviously, open votes are more transparent, which is nice and very
> appropriate for many technical issues that we might vote on. On the
> other hand, most votes in Debian are DPL elections anyway.
>

I think that some of the most contentious issues I've seen in Debian have
been technical issues. I absolutely think those should be confidential for
the reasons above.

2. How much are we committed to the current process that works
> exclusively via email?
>

Email is proven and robust. Kurt's suggestion of tools to facilitate it is
a solid one.


> On the other hand, some people might have considerably less trust in
> their web browser than their email client.
>

Yes, this. Not necessarily the browser itself but there are many more
vulnerability points between the user and a final ballot. I'm happy to be
convinced otherwise but that's my initial inclination.

-Olek

[1] https://salsa.debian.org/-/snippets/540#note_236214

Reply via email to