DIS: Re: OFF: [CotC] CFJ 2053 assigned to pikhq

2008-08-11 Thread Josiah Worcester
On 13:19 Sat 09 Aug , Ed Murphy wrote:
 Detail: http://zenith.homelinux.net/cotc/viewcase.php?cfj=2053
 
 =  Criminal Case 2053  =
 
 ehird violated rule 2149 by lying.
 
 
 
 Caller: tusho
 
 Judge:  OscarMeyr
 Judgement:  INNOCENT
 
 Appeal: 2053a
 Decision:   REMAND
 
 Judge:  pikhq
 Judgement:
 
 
 
 History:
 
 Called by tusho:30 Jun 2008 00:10:38 GMT
 Defendant tusho informed:   01 Jul 2008 21:40:34 GMT
 Pre-trial phase ended:  08 Jul 2008 21:40:34 GMT
 Assigned to OscarMeyr:  12 Jul 2008 15:25:22 GMT
 Judged INNOCENT by OscarMeyr:   13 Jul 2008 15:56:01 GMT
 Appealed by Taral:  13 Jul 2008 16:53:50 GMT
 Appealed by Zefram: 13 Jul 2008 19:06:02 GMT
 Appealed by Wooble: 13 Jul 2008 19:19:57 GMT
 Appeal 2053a:   13 Jul 2008 22:46:32 GMT
 REMANDED on Appeal: 21 Jul 2008 16:49:05 GMT
 Remanded to OscarMeyr:  21 Jul 2008 16:49:05 GMT
 OscarMeyr recused:  03 Aug 2008 13:16:22 GMT
 Assigned to ais523: 09 Aug 2008 14:31:13 GMT
 ais523 recused: 09 Aug 2008 16:36:56 GMT
 Assigned to pikhq:  (as of this message)
 
 
 
 Caller's Arguments:
 
 I inititae a criminal CFJ against myself for lying (rule 2149), blah
 blah blah see above.
 
 
 
 Gratuitous Arguments by tusho:
 
 I did not state I am registered. I stated I register. An action failing
 is not illegal.
 
 
 
 Judge OscarMeyr's Arguments:
 
 In the message in question, Defendant stated:  I join and not I am
 registered.  As e argued, a failed action is not a false statement.
 I therefore rule INNOCENT.
 
 
 
 Gratuitous Arguments by Taral:
 
 Wait, didn't CFJ 2048 cover this one? If it's the same action, 2053
 should be ALREADY TRIED.
 
 

CFJ 2048 has judged ehird guilty, but has not gotten around to sentencing yet. 
ALREADY TRIED.



DIS: Re: BUS: too busy

2008-08-11 Thread comex
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 1:22 AM, Taral [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Sun, Aug 10, 2008 at 5:01 PM, comex [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 I nominate each of ais523, BobTHJ, comex, Goethe, Murphy, OscarMeyr,
 Quazie, root, Sgeo, Taral, tusho, woggle, and Wooble for each of the
 offices of Promotor and Rulekeepor.

 That's really annoying, comex.

 I decline my nomination.

Hmm.

I guess you're right, any discussion about this is being lost in the
flood of declines.  Is anyone actually willing to take on one of these
offices?


DIS: Re: BUS: Re: OFF: [CotC] CFJ 2048b assigned to Sgeo, Quazie, Wooble

2008-08-11 Thread Geoffrey Spear
On Mon, Aug 4, 2008 at 8:49 AM, Geoffrey Spear [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Sat, Aug 2, 2008 at 6:36 PM, Ed Murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Detail: http://zenith.homelinux.net/cotc/viewcase.php?cfj=2048b

   Appeal 2048b  

 With the support of my fellow panelists, I intend to cause the panel
 to judge as follows:

 Even stipulating that Austin, not Searle, gives a better account of
 the truth evaluability of performative utterances, the precedent of
 CFJ 1887 established that publishing a statement which could be
 evaluated as neither true nor false (in that case, This statement is
 false) would violate Rule 2149.  The statement at question in this
 case is either a false announcement that the defendant registers or a
 failed action that is neither true nor false.  In any event it was not
 a true statement, and the preponderance of evidence shows that the
 defendant did not believe it to be a true statement at the time e
 published it.  The panel judges AFFIRM.


Sgeo?  Quazie?  thoughts?


DIS: Re: BUS: Inactivity

2008-08-11 Thread Geoffrey Spear
On Sun, Aug 10, 2008 at 8:59 PM, Ian Kelly [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 I go on hold.

Does anyone want to be Registrar?  I'm required to make a nomination
as soon as possible, and I'm fairly likely to just nominate every
single player and install the one who doesn't notice in time to refuse
eir nomination.


Re: DIS: Re: BUS: Inactivity

2008-08-11 Thread Josiah Worcester
On 13:54 Mon 11 Aug , Geoffrey Spear wrote:
 On Sun, Aug 10, 2008 at 8:59 PM, Ian Kelly [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  I go on hold.
 
 Does anyone want to be Registrar?  I'm required to make a nomination
 as soon as possible, and I'm fairly likely to just nominate every
 single player and install the one who doesn't notice in time to refuse
 eir nomination.

Give me a week or two to get settled in at college, and I'll be able to take up 
the job.

Note: I am not offering to become Rulekeepor or Promoter. Seriously, that's a 
bit much; I can handle Registrar, but the rules... Ugh.



DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Kerim Aydin

Maybe the best way to ensure partnerships live up to obligations may
be to allow equity to work on claims:


Proto: Partnership equity, power-2

Amend Rule 2145 (Partnerships) by appending the following paragraph:

  An Equity Case claiming that a specified partnership has failed to 
  devolve a specific legal obligation onto a subset of its parties 
  CAN be initiated by any Player by announcement.  The case shall be 
  considered to be an Equity Case governing the partnership.

--

-Goethe





Re: DIS: Re: BUS: Re: OFF: [CotC] CFJ 2027a assigned to Sgeo, Wooble, Zefram

2008-08-11 Thread Ed Murphy
Wooble wrote:

 On Fri, Aug 1, 2008 at 4:58 PM, Geoffrey Spear [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Fri, Aug 1, 2008 at 4:58 AM, Ed Murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Detail: http://zenith.homelinux.net/cotc/viewcase.php?cfj=2027a

   Appeal 2027a  
 I intend, with the support of my fellow panelists, to cause the panel
 to judge as follows:

 Rule 2166 does not seem to define recordkeepors in general, just
 recordkeepors of classes of assets. Rule 2125's usage does not refer
 to assets, but to information in general.  Strong game custom as well
 as the precedent in CFJ 1576 hold that the officer who tracks any sort
 of information as part of eir duties is the recordkeepor of that
 information.  The panel judges OVERRULE with a replacement judgment of
 TRUE.

 
 Any thoughts on this, Sgeo?  And CotC Murphy, would you be willing to
 support this ruling if Sgeo does?  If not, you may as well recuse the
 panel.

Yes.



Re: DIS: Re: BUS: Inactivity

2008-08-11 Thread Ed Murphy
pikhq wrote:

 On 13:54 Mon 11 Aug , Geoffrey Spear wrote:
 On Sun, Aug 10, 2008 at 8:59 PM, Ian Kelly [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 I go on hold.
 Does anyone want to be Registrar?  I'm required to make a nomination
 as soon as possible, and I'm fairly likely to just nominate every
 single player and install the one who doesn't notice in time to refuse
 eir nomination.
 
 Give me a week or two to get settled in at college, and I'll be able to take 
 up the job.
 
 Note: I am not offering to become Rulekeepor or Promoter. Seriously, that's a 
 bit much; I can handle Registrar, but the rules... Ugh.

Assessor and Rulekeepor might not be so bad, now I've finally gotten
around to wrapping my head around Subversion.  Unfortunately, my server
is too old to support the server end.  Due to Rule 1450, someone else
will need to serve as Promotor.

Anyone want to take over as Conductor?  (I promise to get caught up on
it before handing it over.)



Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Charles Reiss
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 12:08, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


 Maybe the best way to ensure partnerships live up to obligations may
 be to allow equity to work on claims:

 
 Proto: Partnership equity, power-2

 Amend Rule 2145 (Partnerships) by appending the following paragraph:

  An Equity Case claiming that a specified partnership has failed to
  devolve a specific legal obligation onto a subset of its parties
  CAN be initiated by any Player by announcement.  The case shall be
  considered to be an Equity Case governing the partnership.

 --


If the original contract envisioned not devolving the obligation well onto
the parties (quite likely, in fact), then I don't see what resolution the
equity case could reasonably provide beyond finding that it's not a
partnership, in which case the case couldn't have been initiated in the
first place.

A better approach might be to have rule-imposed devolution on contracts
which have officially declared themselves to be partnerships (rather than
defining partnerships based on their devolution) and provide a means to
resolve failed devolution through equity with:
(a) standing -- it needs to be something weaker than is a party for the
purposes of the case, because the initiator should not be subject to random
obligations the contract imposes on its members or random rewards in the
equity judgment. It, however, needs to be strong enough that the initiator's
actual interest in equity is represented; and
(b) definition of equity -- equity for partnerships needs to be defined to
explicitly include this rule-imposed requirement on the contract.

One approach might be to imagine that such equity cases really concern an
imaginary pledge of the like
Members of the partnership SHALL ensure that the partnership devolves its
obligations onto its parties. [Except we really need a better definition of
devolve here and there is a huge issue of party-changing scams.]

Doing this really needs a fix for R101 issues with equity cases --
especially since such a pseudo-contract may not reasonably be considered an
amendment of the original partnership contract.

-woggle


Re: DIS: Re: BUS: Inactivity

2008-08-11 Thread Elliott Hird
2008/8/11 Ed Murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 Assessor and Rulekeepor might not be so bad, now I've finally gotten
 around to wrapping my head around Subversion.  Unfortunately, my server
 is too old to support the server end.  Due to Rule 1450, someone else
 will need to serve as Promotor.

You can host your SVN repos on your local HD.

Also, git. :P


Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Geoffrey Spear
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 2:27 PM, Charles Reiss [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 If the original contract envisioned not devolving the obligation well onto
 the parties (quite likely, in fact), then I don't see what resolution the
 equity case could reasonably provide beyond finding that it's not a
 partnership, in which case the case couldn't have been initiated in the
 first place.

That sort of finding seems, to me, to be beyond the scope of an equity
case.  The judgment in an equity case is limited to creating new
agreements between the members of a contract, not finding of fact.

That said, if a partnership doesn't devolve its obligations, then yes,
it is by definition not a partnership, although this determination
should, it seems to me, be made by an Inquiry case.  This in itself is
a bit of a problem, since such a finding means that the contract in
question was never a person (assuming the text of the contract didn't
change at some point causing the partnership to cease to devolve its
obligations), and thus never registered, and could require a bunch of
really obnoxious gamestate recalculation.  R2145 should probably be
rewritten to be a bit more pragmatic, but I'm not sure that redefining
equity to include partnerships properly devolving obligations is the
best way to do that.


Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Kerim Aydin

On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, Charles Reiss wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 12:08, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Maybe the best way to ensure partnerships live up to obligations may
 be to allow equity to work on claims:

 
 Proto: Partnership equity, power-2

 Amend Rule 2145 (Partnerships) by appending the following paragraph:

  An Equity Case claiming that a specified partnership has failed to
  devolve a specific legal obligation onto a subset of its parties
  CAN be initiated by any Player by announcement.  The case shall be
  considered to be an Equity Case governing the partnership.

 --

 If the original contract envisioned not devolving the obligation well onto
 the parties (quite likely, in fact), then I don't see what resolution the
 equity case could reasonably provide beyond finding that it's not a
 partnership, in which case the case couldn't have been initiated in the
 first place.

If a contract, using its legal representatives, claims to be a partnership
and registers as a player, then it is prima facie envisioning the 
devolution of responsibilities.  Thus, by the language of the Equity Court,
a failure of the devolution (for example, through it not being well-
specified in the contract) would indeed be non-envisioned and the 
legitimate subject of an equity settlement--the only thing that needs to
be added is the ability of non-parties to raise the case.

The alternative is to claim a contract is not a partnership when it 
breaks, even though it may have been a partnership for a long-time.  Such 
after-the-fact finding of non-partnership status is worse.

 A better approach might be to have rule-imposed devolution on contracts
 which have officially declared themselves to be partnerships (rather than
 defining partnerships based on their devolution) 

There's no strong rules-test for partnership, as we can't (ahead of time)
test whether an arbitrary contract devolves all responsibilities, that's
kind of a legal halting problem.  The best we can do (probably) accept
a formal claim of partnership-ness as accurate and act to enforce the
devolution.

 (a) standing -- it needs to be something weaker than is a party for the
 purposes of the case, because the initiator should not be subject to random
 obligations the contract imposes on its members or random rewards in the
 equity judgment. It, however, needs to be strong enough that the initiator's
 actual interest in equity is represented; and

All players have an interest to enforcing the obligations of other players.
I should limit this to partnerships that are players though.

 (b) definition of equity -- equity for partnerships needs to be defined to
 explicitly include this rule-imposed requirement on the contract.
 One approach might be to imagine that such equity cases really concern an
 imaginary pledge of the like
 Members of the partnership SHALL ensure that the partnership devolves its
 obligations onto its parties. [Except we really need a better definition of
 devolve here and there is a huge issue of party-changing scams.]

This may be in there already, if we take the view that a claim to be a
partnership means making a claim to be treated as if such a statement exists
that can be defined by equity.  

 Doing this really needs a fix for R101 issues with equity cases --
 especially since such a pseudo-contract may not reasonably be considered an
 amendment of the original partnership contract.

Yes, need to see how those appeals turn out first.

-Goethe




Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Kerim Aydin

On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, Geoffrey Spear wrote:
 R2145 should probably be
 rewritten to be a bit more pragmatic, but I'm not sure that redefining
 equity to include partnerships properly devolving obligations is the
 best way to do that.

The Platonic form (any contract that devolves responsibilities is a
natural partnership and thus recognized by Agora) is a holdover from the 
CFJs that brought partnerships into being at a time that persons were 
not defined by the rules.  It's not needed anymore.

How about requiring a formal mechanism for turning arbitrary contracts
into partnerships that includes enforcement:

1.  A public contract meeting publicity, membership requirements can make 
itself into a partnership by announcement; if it does so it can 
register, this is regardless of whether its text explicitly devolves
responsibilities or not.
2.  If it makes itself a partnership, its members may be subject to
certain types of (equity or criminal) claims.
3.  Existing partnerships grandfathered in, except they have an opt-out
period if they don't like the new requirements.

All this may have to wait until the R101 issues are settled.

-Goethe





Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Charles Reiss
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 12:43, Geoffrey Spear [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 2:27 PM, Charles Reiss [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 If the original contract envisioned not devolving the obligation well onto
 the parties (quite likely, in fact), then I don't see what resolution the
 equity case could reasonably provide beyond finding that it's not a
 partnership, in which case the case couldn't have been initiated in the
 first place.

 That sort of finding seems, to me, to be beyond the scope of an equity
 case.  The judgment in an equity case is limited to creating new
 agreements between the members of a contract, not finding of fact.

 That said, if a partnership doesn't devolve its obligations, then yes,
 it is by definition not a partnership, although this determination
 should, it seems to me, be made by an Inquiry case.  This in itself is
 a bit of a problem, since such a finding means that the contract in
 question was never a person (assuming the text of the contract didn't
 change at some point causing the partnership to cease to devolve its
 obligations), and thus never registered, and could require a bunch of
 really obnoxious gamestate recalculation.  R2145 should probably be
 rewritten to be a bit more pragmatic, but I'm not sure that redefining
 equity to include partnerships properly devolving obligations is the
 best way to do that.

I'm not sure if it is either, but if you go the pragmatic route (which
is a good idea given the extreme annoyance of finding something was
never a person, which likely distorts the jurisprudence on devolving
obligations in the first place), you'll either have an equity
requirement or a criminal requirement or something else. The latter is
tricky to find culpability for individually (especially given the
typical structure of partnership contracts), which likely won't help
dissolve abusive shell-company situations at all. The equity
requirement seems to give a lot of power to the equity judges, but at
least is reasonably likely to find an actual resolution if the right
people are parties to the equation.

In both cases, we need to ensure that the obligations survive any
purported party-changes or termination to the partnership
appropriately. (This at least needs to be powerful enough to stop
trivial partnership scams like filling a Buy Ticket with your
partnership, transferring the VP, and dissolving the partnership.)

-woggle


Re: DIS: Re: BUS: Inactivity

2008-08-11 Thread Ed Murphy
tusho wrote:

 2008/8/11 Ed Murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 Assessor and Rulekeepor might not be so bad, now I've finally gotten
 around to wrapping my head around Subversion.  Unfortunately, my server
 is too old to support the server end.  Due to Rule 1450, someone else
 will need to serve as Promotor.
 
 You can host your SVN repos on your local HD.

I know (I finally ran into a work project where I needed to formally
maintain some client-specific branches), it just means the repo wouldn't
be globally accessible.

 Also, git. :P

Will it run on Red Hat 9?  I'm using TortoiseSVN as a front end.


Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Kerim Aydin

On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, Charles Reiss wrote:
 I'm not sure if it is either, but if you go the pragmatic route (which
 is a good idea given the extreme annoyance of finding something was
 never a person, which likely distorts the jurisprudence on devolving
 obligations in the first place), 

We really don't know whether the *current* system is platonic or
pragmatic.  We had a couple cases where it was obvious that the text
of a contract didn't devolve responsibilities (and therefore wasn't).

We haven't had a case where a partnership text generally claimed to 
devolve responsibility, but then failed to and was brought to court for
it.  The only instances involving the AFO were subject to out-of-court 
settlements before a precedent was set.  So it's not clear to me (under 
the current rules) whether the it was never a partnership argument 
would win over the it claims to be a partnership, so we can impose the 
following equity settlement.  At the moment, a main obstacle in the 
latter course is just Standing.

-Goethe





Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread comex
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 2:58 PM, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 (b) definition of equity -- equity for partnerships needs to be defined to
 explicitly include this rule-imposed requirement on the contract.
 One approach might be to imagine that such equity cases really concern an
 imaginary pledge of the like
 Members of the partnership SHALL ensure that the partnership devolves its
 obligations onto its parties. [Except we really need a better definition of
 devolve here and there is a huge issue of party-changing scams.]

 This may be in there already, if we take the view that a claim to be a
 partnership means making a claim to be treated as if such a statement exists
 that can be defined by equity.

... What?

I've read this paragraph about 5 times but I can't figure out what it means.


Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Geoffrey Spear
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 3:29 PM, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 We really don't know whether the *current* system is platonic or
 pragmatic.  We had a couple cases where it was obvious that the text
 of a contract didn't devolve responsibilities (and therefore wasn't).

 We haven't had a case where a partnership text generally claimed to
 devolve responsibility, but then failed to and was brought to court for
 it.

R2145 seems clear and explicit enough to me in defining only those
that do devolve obligations as persons.  I don't really see a reading
of the rule that would lend itself to ruling otherwise, and I don't
see any ambiguity in the wording that would allow for a best
interests of the game judgment under R217.

If we do fix it to be pragmatic, the proposal doing so should probably
retroactively grandfather in everything contracts currently believed
to be persons have done.


Re: DIS: Re: BUS: Inactivity

2008-08-11 Thread comex
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 3:17 PM, Ed Murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Also, git. :P

 Will it run on Red Hat 9?  I'm using TortoiseSVN as a front end.

I don't know, but git is nice.  If all recordkeepors used a
distributed VCS (git, hg, monotone, doesn't matter which as long as
everyone uses the same one), anyone could grab a copy of everyone's
report history, making that history extraordinarily robust against
data loss or recordkeepors quitting Agora.


Re: DIS: Re: BUS: Inactivity

2008-08-11 Thread ais523
On Mon, 2008-08-11 at 15:45 -0400, comex wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 3:17 PM, Ed Murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Also, git. :P
 
  Will it run on Red Hat 9?  I'm using TortoiseSVN as a front end.
 
 I don't know, but git is nice.  If all recordkeepors used a
 distributed VCS (git, hg, monotone, doesn't matter which as long as
 everyone uses the same one), anyone could grab a copy of everyone's
 report history, making that history extraordinarily robust against
 data loss or recordkeepors quitting Agora.
I version the Notary report with darcs, but the repository isn't
currently publically available.
-- 
ais523


Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Geoffrey Spear
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 3:29 PM, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 The only instances involving the AFO were subject to out-of-court
 settlements before a precedent was set.

By the way, I think the AFO clearly does devolve its obligations onto
its members, but in such a way that, since the passage of Take it to
Equity, the members are simply in violation of the contract if they
don't cause the AFO to obey the rules of Agora to the maximum possible
extent, and it's impossible to punish them for such violations.   It
seems to me that the wording of the contract is sufficient to make the
AFO a person, but not sufficient to actually compel members to do
anything.


Re: DIS: Re: BUS: Inactivity

2008-08-11 Thread Taral
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 12:17 PM, Ed Murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Also, git. :P

 Will it run on Red Hat 9?  I'm using TortoiseSVN as a front end.

Git's very simple. It runs almost anywhere.

-- 
Taral [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Please let me know if there's any further trouble I can give you.
 -- Unknown


Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Kerim Aydin

On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, Geoffrey Spear wrote:
 R2145 seems clear and explicit enough to me in defining only those
 that do devolve obligations as persons.  I don't really see a reading
 of the rule that would lend itself to ruling otherwise, and I don't
 see any ambiguity in the wording that would allow for a best
 interests of the game judgment under R217.

What's not clear about R2145 is what constitutes devolving.  Is the 
devolve pragmatic or platonic?  That's not defined!

For example, what if the partnership text SAYS that it devolves 
responsibilities, then a partnership doesn't follow up on something, 
and no party of that contract brings a case alleging an infringement?  
That's a case of a partnership's operations being in contradiction 
with its text, but with no one outside the partnership able to bring 
a case against it.  

It would be in keeping with current rules to state devolve is
pragmatic, if you claim to be a partnership, then we can enforce
that devolution on you.

-Goethe





Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Kerim Aydin

On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, Geoffrey Spear wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 3:29 PM, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 The only instances involving the AFO were subject to out-of-court
 settlements before a precedent was set.

 By the way, I think the AFO clearly does devolve its obligations onto
 its members, but in such a way that, since the passage of Take it to
 Equity, the members are simply in violation of the contract if they
 don't cause the AFO to obey the rules of Agora to the maximum possible
 extent, and it's impossible to punish them for such violations.   It
 seems to me that the wording of the contract is sufficient to make the
 AFO a person, but not sufficient to actually compel members to do
 anything.

But its not enforceable because only members can bring a case forward
that they're in violation, that's the whole thing my proto was trying
to add (granting Standing to non-parties in this specific type of
situation).  

Also (side note), I'd argue that if a member can't be compelled to do 
anything, then there's no devolution of responsibilities.

 -Goethe




Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Kerim Aydin

On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, comex wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 2:58 PM, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 (b) definition of equity -- equity for partnerships needs to be defined to
 explicitly include this rule-imposed requirement on the contract.
 One approach might be to imagine that such equity cases really concern an
 imaginary pledge of the like
 Members of the partnership SHALL ensure that the partnership devolves its
 obligations onto its parties. [Except we really need a better definition of
 devolve here and there is a huge issue of party-changing scams.]

 This may be in there already, if we take the view that a claim to be a
 partnership means making a claim to be treated as if such a statement exists
 that can be defined by equity.

 ... What?

 I've read this paragraph about 5 times but I can't figure out what it means.

If a contract posts a formal message (e.g. a message is posted on its
behalf according to its mechanisms) claiming to be a partnership and taking
on responsibilities, than it is envisioning responsibilities in the
equity sense, whether or not its text specifies a way to devolve them.  
You are what you do, not what you say you are.  -Goethe









Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Ed Murphy
Wooble wrote:

 On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 3:29 PM, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 The only instances involving the AFO were subject to out-of-court
 settlements before a precedent was set.
 
 By the way, I think the AFO clearly does devolve its obligations onto
 its members, but in such a way that, since the passage of Take it to
 Equity, the members are simply in violation of the contract if they
 don't cause the AFO to obey the rules of Agora to the maximum possible
 extent, and it's impossible to punish them for such violations.   It
 seems to me that the wording of the contract is sufficient to make the
 AFO a person, but not sufficient to actually compel members to do
 anything.

Note that this only became a problem with Take it to equity! was
adopted; before that, you could go straight to criminal prosecution
of the members for failing to keep the AFO obedient.


Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread comex
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 4:30 PM, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 But its not enforceable because only members can bring a case forward
 that they're in violation, that's the whole thing my proto was trying
 to add (granting Standing to non-parties in this specific type of
 situation).

 Also (side note), I'd argue that if a member can't be compelled to do
 anything, then there's no devolution of responsibilities.

A criminal case might have been able to punish people (for example, by
deregistering them) for violating their obligations before Take it to
Equity!, and I suppose some of those punishments might have imposed
obligations on them to repent.  But if they refuse to follow them,
what are you left with?  A criminal case.  There is no real way to
compel/force anyone to do anything, without their having agreed to a
contract to that effect, and there never has been.

So I'd say that devolution of responsibilities exists if there is an
obligation, regardless of whether arbitrary punishments can be levied
on members for failure to comply with things.


Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Ed Murphy
comex wrote:

 On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 2:58 PM, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 (b) definition of equity -- equity for partnerships needs to be defined to
 explicitly include this rule-imposed requirement on the contract.
 One approach might be to imagine that such equity cases really concern an
 imaginary pledge of the like
 Members of the partnership SHALL ensure that the partnership devolves its
 obligations onto its parties. [Except we really need a better definition of
 devolve here and there is a huge issue of party-changing scams.]
 This may be in there already, if we take the view that a claim to be a
 partnership means making a claim to be treated as if such a statement exists
 that can be defined by equity.
 
 ... What?
 
 I've read this paragraph about 5 times but I can't figure out what it means.

I'm not sure which paragraph you mean.  In any case, I agree with
Goethe's first sentence, but disagree with the rest; this is a
legitimate loophole and should be patched by legislation, not by
hand-waving implicit pledges into existence.



Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Kerim Aydin

On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, Ed Murphy wrote:
 Note that this only became a problem with Take it to equity! was
 adopted; before that, you could go straight to criminal prosecution
 of the members for failing to keep the AFO obedient.

I'm not so sure.  Take it to equity! prevents violations from being
against R1742.  However, it could still be a prosecutable criminal 
offense for members to fail in their devolved responsibilities (e.g. a 
violation against R2145 instead, and a higher-power rule at that).  
That's an entirely different avenue I hadn't thought about.

This would be a desired feature: limiting criminal claims w.r.t to
general contracts, but holding partnership responsibilities to a 
higher standard.

-Goethe





Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread comex
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 5:01 PM, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, Ed Murphy wrote:
 Note that this only became a problem with Take it to equity! was
 adopted; before that, you could go straight to criminal prosecution
 of the members for failing to keep the AFO obedient.

 I'm not so sure.  Take it to equity! prevents violations from being
 against R1742.  However, it could still be a prosecutable criminal
 offense for members to fail in their devolved responsibilities (e.g. a
 violation against R2145 instead, and a higher-power rule at that).
 That's an entirely different avenue I hadn't thought about.

Sounds good, except that Rule 2145 looks pretty Platonic to me.
However, amending it to do what you suggest would be interesting.


Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Kerim Aydin

On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, comex wrote:
 There is no real way to
 compel/force anyone to do anything, without their having agreed to a
 contract to that effect, and there never has been.

Not true.  At least, depending on how the R101 case turns out, not necessarily 
true.  If equity settlements can be imposed in general, we've also found that 
contracts can allow one person to act on behalf of another.  An equity case 
can include:

   If Party A fails to act as this equity settlement states, the
judge can act on Party A's behalf to do so.

I've been planning to use this method for future enforcement, I don't know 
if anyone else has thought of it but it seems pretty straightforward.  

-Goethe





Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Kerim Aydin

On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, comex wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 5:01 PM, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, Ed Murphy wrote:
 Note that this only became a problem with Take it to equity! was
 adopted; before that, you could go straight to criminal prosecution
 of the members for failing to keep the AFO obedient.

 I'm not so sure.  Take it to equity! prevents violations from being
 against R1742.  However, it could still be a prosecutable criminal
 offense for members to fail in their devolved responsibilities (e.g. a
 violation against R2145 instead, and a higher-power rule at that).
 That's an entirely different avenue I hadn't thought about.

 Sounds good, except that Rule 2145 looks pretty Platonic to me.
 However, amending it to do what you suggest would be interesting.

How can something be platonic when the proof is in the execution?
It's what, pragmatically platonic?  platonically pragmatic?  Pragtonic?
Platmatic?

-Goethe




Re: DIS: Re: BUS: Werewolves has been stalled for nearly a month

2008-08-11 Thread Zefram
Ed Murphy wrote:
Aha, this was ineffective due to being sent during the discussion
period;

Grumble.  Why did you say I need votes when votes weren't actually valid?

-zefram


Re: DIS: Re: BUS: Werewolves has been stalled for nearly a month

2008-08-11 Thread Ed Murphy
Zefram wrote:

 Ed Murphy wrote:
 Aha, this was ineffective due to being sent during the discussion
 period;
 
 Grumble.  Why did you say I need votes when votes weren't actually valid?

Because I made a mistake.  I did say voting begins at Wed 2 Jul
on July 1.

Speaking of, I need nominations.  (As a reminder, the townspersons
still alive are comex, Pavitra, Quazie, root, tusho, and Zefram.)



DIS: Re: BUS: Re: OFF: [CotC] CFJ 2019a assigned to Wooble, avpx, Taral

2008-08-11 Thread Geoffrey Spear
On Sun, Jul 27, 2008 at 8:33 PM, Geoffrey Spear [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Sat, Jul 19, 2008 at 2:39 PM, Taral [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 I can't find this on zenith.

 Regardless, with the support of the panel, I intend to cause the panel
 to judge REMAND. There are issues to look at here, but nothing
 warranting an override or reassignment.

 Err, I guess this is a CFJ again.  I support this intent.

And now this is even more officially a CFJ.  avpx or CotC Murphy, care
to giv us the third support we need to remand it?


Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread comex
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 5:07 PM, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, comex wrote:
 There is no real way to
 compel/force anyone to do anything, without their having agreed to a
 contract to that effect, and there never has been.

 Not true.  At least, depending on how the R101 case turns out, not necessarily
 true.  If equity settlements can be imposed in general, we've also found that
 contracts can allow one person to act on behalf of another.  An equity case
 can include:

   If Party A fails to act as this equity settlement states, the
judge can act on Party A's behalf to do so.

 I've been planning to use this method for future enforcement, I don't know
 if anyone else has thought of it but it seems pretty straightforward.

Well, yeah, I discounted that, because I have yet to see a persuasive
argument to the effect that I couldn't just refuse such an equation.


Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Geoffrey Spear
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 6:51 PM, comex [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Well, yeah, I discounted that, because I have yet to see a persuasive
 argument to the effect that I couldn't just refuse such an equation.

Well, we could just follow the US Supreme Court and determine that the
existence of a fundamental individual right doesn't mean that a court
can't take away that right just by saying they can.


DIS: Re: BUS: PNP Voting

2008-08-11 Thread Elliott Hird
2008/8/11 The PerlNomic Partnership [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 This message serves to make votes on behalf of the PerlNomic
 Partnership (a public contract).

 The PerlNomic Partnership votes as follows. Each vote is made a
 number of times equal to the PerlNomic Partnership's EVLOD on each
 ordinary decision listed below. Each decision is identified by the
 number of the proposal the decision is about.

 [invalid votes]

Don't ask.


Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Kerim Aydin


On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, comex wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 5:07 PM, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, comex wrote:
 There is no real way to
 compel/force anyone to do anything, without their having agreed to a
 contract to that effect, and there never has been.

 Not true.  At least, depending on how the R101 case turns out, not 
 necessarily
 true.  If equity settlements can be imposed in general, we've also found that
 contracts can allow one person to act on behalf of another.  An equity case
 can include:

   If Party A fails to act as this equity settlement states, the
judge can act on Party A's behalf to do so.

 I've been planning to use this method for future enforcement, I don't know
 if anyone else has thought of it but it seems pretty straightforward.

 Well, yeah, I discounted that, because I have yet to see a persuasive
 argument to the effect that I couldn't just refuse such an equation.

Well, yeah, that's the subject of your CFJ, but there's plenty of
opinion at the moment that you can't.  -Goethe







Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread comex
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 10:23 PM, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Well, yeah, I discounted that, because I have yet to see a persuasive
 argument to the effect that I couldn't just refuse such an equation.

 Well, yeah, that's the subject of your CFJ, but there's plenty of
 opinion at the moment that you can't.  -Goethe

And yet I have yet to see a persuasive argument based on the Rules to
back up that opinion.


Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread Kerim Aydin

On Mon, 11 Aug 2008, comex wrote:
 On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 10:23 PM, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Well, yeah, I discounted that, because I have yet to see a persuasive
 argument to the effect that I couldn't just refuse such an equation.

 Well, yeah, that's the subject of your CFJ, but there's plenty of
 opinion at the moment that you can't.  -Goethe

 And yet I have yet to see a persuasive argument based on the Rules to
 back up that opinion.

It doesn't matter whether you see one at this point.





Re: DIS: Proto: partnership enforcement

2008-08-11 Thread comex
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 10:46 PM, Kerim Aydin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 And yet I have yet to see a persuasive argument based on the Rules to
 back up that opinion.

 It doesn't matter whether you see one at this point.

Heh.  Well, look at your arguments for appeal.  The first half is
irrelevant because it deals with the wrong right.  But this is the
interesting part:

 R101(iv) refers to becoming party to the initial agreement,
 not the equity result; agreeing to become party to
 the initial agreement as binding under these Rules
 means explicitly agreeing to a process in the Rules for
 enforcing the binding, and that is currently the equity
 process. Otherwise the term binding has no meaning.

With respect to everything after the semicolon, as CFJ 2101 was
initiated BEFORE Take it to Equity!, (at the time of the CFJ) there
is a process in the Rules for enforcing the binding: criminal cases.

So we are left with:

R101(iv) refers to becoming party to the initial agreement, not the
equity result.

Now, it seems pretty clear to me that equations are new binding
agreements-- do you disagree?  So, why should an equation be exempted
from the right?  R101 (iv) does not limit itself to any specific type
of binding agreement.

The answer, of course, is that equations were not envisioned as being
restricted by R101 (iv), and ruling that right ineffective would
prevent the equity court from being largely useless, and (thanks to
your recent proposal) the entire contracts system from being broken.
It also makes sense: why should Rule 101 protect me against an
agreement imposed by the Rules themselves?

Now, personally, I prefer a broken equity court.  But I also agree
that R101 (iv) shouldn't be affecting the case, and if it turns out
to be breaking the equity court, we should either explicitly legislate
the brokenness or work around it.

But -- as far as I can see -- there is nothing in the Rules that would
indicate that the right is ineffective.  The ambiguity is very small.

So it's a clash of two Agoran traditions: the tradition of
interpreting the Rules literally and applauding loopholes and
unintended side effects of Rules, and the tradition of interpreting
the Rules in the best interests of Agora to let the game continue--
see the Black Repeals, or really the Agoran reaction to many scams...
But this is not a scam.  Although Take it to Equity! may have
created some urgency in the matter, I think we have the time to afford
ruling the case based solely on the merits, and-- if it is what the
majority of Agorans want-- to fix the loophole, or R101.

Proto-proposal: Repeal Rule 101.