-1. While I'm glad that we've gotten to the point that we can sanely
have this discussion, I disagree with Jono's proposal for similar
reasons to David and Jack:

On Tue, Mar 9, 2010 at 10:24 AM, David Wondelry ~DarkwingDuck~
<ubu...@darkwingduck.org> wrote:
> This is why I feel this course of action is like a very small band-aid
> to a larger problem. What should be done is a set of bylaws on how to
> deal with issues, leadership and how to conduct business. Changing
> leaders will not solve this issue.

This proposal does little to address the root issues this team has,
and opens us up to some huge possible pitfalls:

A) It does not define what the responsibilities of the team leader
are, how decisions are made within the team, or what should happen if
the team leader has a conflict of interest and thus can't participate
in a decision.

B) It does not describe desperately-needed processes for dispute
resolution. This team has issues that have been unresolved for...
what, a year now?... because we do not have anything in place to look
at them and make a final decision. Disputes are going to happen.
Sometimes, they'll involve the team's leader. Even if you rotate the
team's leader, there are very few people on this team that I've never
heard disagree with someone, and they probably would once given the
stress of power ;)

C) This team does not have a defined membership population. In
Ubuntu-in-general, the people who get to vote for stuff are Ubuntu
Members. They have to go through a process to get to be one. It's thus
difficult for someone to manipulate Ubuntu elections by ballot
stuffing or getting their friends (who don't do anything LoCo-related)
to sign up and vote the way they want, or create multiple accounts,
or... yeah, you get the idea.

In the LoCo, the only barrier to participation that I can think of is
that the Launchpad group requires approval to get into, which
currently (as I understand it; this isn't written down formally afaik)
consists of me, Neal, or Nathan asking 1) Does your account profile
consist of spam links to foreign drug sites?, 2) Does it look like
you're just joining teams to collect shiny group icons? Not exactly a
high barrier to entry. There is nothing saying who does and does not
have enough team contribution or team association to be able to vote.
Saying "everyone" is not an acceptable solution, because as I've said,
it leaves us wide open to abuse.

This is an issue in other elections, like the Ubuntu IRC Council
election that happened recently. In that case, leaders were picked by
the Community Council, not voted on by the general IRC population.
That is, as far as I'm aware, the regular way to deal with this
situation in Ubuntu. I'm not necessarily saying it's a good idea in
this case, but it (and the issues I raised above) deserve
consideration.

D) Voting once a year would likely *increase*, rather than decrease,
the politics and other stupidity that happens on a regular basis on
this team. There's enough bickering already without adding the
additional motive of "If I win this small victory, I'll look better
next year when I try for leadership!".

I was going to spend longer thinking about this, but the large number
of +1 convinced me that I should probably not postpone it so the
people who don't spend absurd amounts of time thinking about things
like this wouldn't get swept up in the positiveness. Now that I check
my email this morning, I see others have already broken the trend for
me, but anyway :)

As for what others have said already:

Akkana:
I have problems figuring that mapping out too, actually. I generally
look for their Launchpad page (which often has IRC nick and realname),
or ask in PM, apologizing for my bad memory. If that's too direct,
feel free to PM me (rww) if I'm around and we can try to figure it out
together.

In general, it might be a good idea if people replying to this thread
put their IRC nicks (if they have one) by their names at the bottom of
the email.

I agree that this process is confusing, but feel it reflects the
confusing nature of the problems in the team. I think you hit upon one
of the reasons we urgently need to resolve these problems: the
complexity of working within the existing team is likely turning away
newcomers to the team.

David:
I disagree with your characterization of the issues; I don't think
it's a NorCal-SoCal split so much as a difference in individual
opinions. I do, however, agree with your assertion that we need bylaws
to deal with issues, and that simply changing leaders will not solve
our problems.

Jack:
I agree with you that a set of bylaws would go a long way towards
fixing the problems I outlined above. I agree with most of your
proposal, though as I mentioned above, I have reservations about using
Launchpad membership as a definition of who is eligible to vote. I
also dislike the focus on peoples' regions, as it would tend to
further the image that we have North California vs. South California
battles.

</replies>

Thanks for the replies thusfar, and for the time people are spending
reading, thinking, and writing about these issues. I hope this thread
continues to be a reasoned discussion of the issues involved.

~ Robert Wall (rww)

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