Debian uses the Condorcet method for elections https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Condorcet_method . Each voter is to rank a subset of all options, and this is the resulting pairwise preference graph.
The code does not draw lines between the options that didn't pass the quorum or majority test (drawn in pink), because they are dropped before the Schulze method is used. But it then adds the options again, to show all the options.
When multiple options are in the Schwartz set, the weakest defeats are removed until only 1 option is left in the Schwartz set. I think it only draws the graph after there is only 1 option left. But that didn't happen in this vote.
I think (I’m not sure) its pairwiss preferences excluding those consistent with transitive preferences. ( so if A > B and B > C, the A to C preference is omitted.)
If you look at the results they link, the picture becomes clearer.
They proposed 8 options. 2 directly called for resignations at FSF, 2 directly supported RMS, one said to stop working with FSF, one said to call for governance improvements at FSF, one was no comment, and one was discuss further.
The two options in support of RMS were not majority held opinions, and were held by ~1/6-1/3 of voters.
No comment beat "call for the removal of RMS" by only 8 votes.
For me, the takeaway here is that while Debian will issue no comment, 2/3+ of voters in Debian supported calling for RMSs removal. It's clear which way the tide is moving, even if Debian says nothing.
Look at the row for option 2 in the data table, it will show you how many people preferred that option over other options. Roughly two thirds preferred removing RMS over "we should talk about this further", for example.
> Debian will issue no comment, 2/3+ of voters in Debian supported calling for RMSs removal. It's clear which way the tide is moving, even if Debian says nothing.
FWIW, some people didn’t want to vote because the results would be publicly with names.
So the result of a secret vote might have been different.
The "Further discussion" option is meant to allow for that. Note that the options calling for a statement in support of RMS were even less preferred than "Further discussion", which is quite weird given the context so GP may well have a point.
the more controversial or sensitive a topic, the more likely it is that people will believe that more discussion is needed before a decision is reached, so i don't find that at all surprising.
No, they should have used a standard process for general resolutions and not special cased it. Which is what they did. They have a constitution and a democratic process that requires proposals, seconding, a period of open discussion, and then a vote.
They agreed on their voting system in advance exactly to handle cases where the vote might be contentious.
Your hypothesis is that people voted opposite of their beliefs? Or that they chose not to vote at all?
Both of those feel like possibilities, but probably not in any significant number. In absence of evidence to the contrary, I'd say it's reasonable to look at the results of a vote as evidence of how people actually feel.
Edit: Vote numbers seem consistent with other votes in Debian's history, so it does not appear that a large number of people elected not to vote.
I'm surprised Debian didn't invent a way to do secure secret voting by email already (and by some of the technical comments on the results page I kind of though it was secret)
Public vs secret voting will always be different. I encountered this on daily basis. If vote in secret, one tends to be what one wants even if that is detrimental to others. As for self belief, public disclosed/known belief may not always be the same as self belief. This may consciously or unconsciously known by oneself. People do tend to vote in group if others see your vote.
To clarify, 2/3 supported calling for removal over calling for RMS to stay, or "Further discussion". The option to not comment was clearly preferred over others, it was the only choice in the Schwarz set. There is no ambiguity at all about the outcome.
I didn't imply there is ambiguity in the result. But there is a difference between "what we agree on as a whole community" and what the majority opinion is.
The community agreed on no comment, full stop.
A significant preference was also shown for removal over reinstatement.
> If you want to know what people really think without the possibile influence of preference falsification, it needs to be an anonymous poll.
Which is exactly why we not only allow, but actually enforce it in elections. If your vote could have a strong impact on e.g. your future employment, you wouldn't be free to vote for what you think is best, you'd be compelled to vote for what you think is perceived best.
Except that's not Debian's agreed-to voting process.
I'd also point out that secret ballot is not universal in the US. Certainly the votes of elected officials are not secret. But neither are open votes at, say, a town hall meeting.
> Except that's not Debian's agreed-to voting process.
I'm not suggesting they'd have to do that, I'm saying that there's a very good reason why we usually do that. As organizations become more and more political, I expect that to hit harder and for more of them to adopt secret voting.
> Certainly the votes of elected officials are not secret.
And I find that reasonable. You want to know whether the person you voted for actually does what they said. In Germany, parliament votes are public, but important votes are secret.
For the less important votes, they'll just ask for raised hands and note who won, but not who voted in what way (we now have TV channels film the votes and then use interns to determine who voted what).
For important votes, they're done secretly: you can tell who voted, but not what they voted for. There's no way to hold them accountable, the system is working as intended.
Sure, but do you have evidence it would have moved the needle in the vote. There are many, many well documented phenomena that influence every vote. While they may influence a small number of voters, I've yet to see any evidence that these results are not the genuinely held belief of most folks.
No, I don't have specific evidence, and I won't have it until we see an anonymous poll.
I do believe I have a very plausible hypothesis, though, and I find it sufficiently plausible that I'm going to reserve judgement on the true beliefs of people until we see that anonymous poll.
How is it political? What politics are even involved? This very much is a personal issue with Stallman. His objectionable behavior isn’t tied to political beliefs, it’s tied to an individual’s moral and social failings.
Fine, it's just a plain-old controversial topic, then. The same sociological pressures that can lead to preference falsification are in play as with any contentious issue.
Are you asking for evidence that secret ballots prevent voter intimidation? Or evidence that people are harassed online for their stance on this specific issue?
>our comparison of survey results with official election truth indicates that the use of a so-called secret ballot yields more accurate, valid self-reports of voting on socially sensitive ballot issues, such as supporting taxes for elderly services.
Neither. I'm asking for evidence that this phenomena would have materially moved the result. I'm willing to believe that 5% of people cast a vote here contrary to their opinions (though that feels high). Even so, the results likely don't shift materially.
It's only clear that the way this is measured is heavily biased: 4 options out of 8 are against current FSF/RMS' statu quo. Only 2 are for supporting the statu quo. And 1 is for indifference, and the last one for more discussion needed.
If you overcharge the negative choices, it's kind of given most of the answers will fall in them. Survey design 101.
For reference:
- Option 1 "Call for the FSF board removal, as in rms-open-letter.github.io"
- Option 2 "Call for Stallman's resignation from all FSF bodies"
- Option 3 "Discourage collaboration with the FSF while Stallman is in a leading position"
- Option 4 "Call on the FSF to further its governance processes"
- Option 5 "Support Stallman's reinstatement, as in rms-support-letter.github.io"
- Option 6 "Denounce the witch-hunt against RMS and the FSF"
- Option 7 "Debian will not issue a public statement on this issue"
> If you overcharge the negative choices, it's kind of given most of the answers will fall in them
That's not how it works. The voters are asked to rank all options according to their preference, and a winner is chosen according to an extended Condorcet criterion. Adding similar options doesn't affect the outcome.
You should read up on how they conduct votes. Every voter essentially gets a chance to rank every option against every other option. So the number of options should not impact the vote totals.
You forget human perception. If I expose someone to 10 negative statements and only 2 positive ones, you believe that this does not affect their overall perception of the issue?
I'm sure it does, but I don't believe it does materially in this case. People are going to have a perception of other terms, e.g. RMS, as well. While yes, what you describe may have influenced an emotional response, I see no evidence that would have changed the outcome.
You do realize that the community needs to propose and sponsor these options, right?
Fewer people being willing to propose a pro-RMS option is an indication of which way the tide is moving, even if you still want to argue about why this might be the case.
it only takes a few people to sponsor options, and plenty of people have sponsored options that they would not vote for because they believed that these options should be available.
That's exactly my point. If sponsoring options is done by the community, and is relatively easy, then fewer proposed options in one category does suggest that this category is unpopular with the community.
If there are several variations of anti-RMS proposals, it suggests that enough people care about the specifics of how the rebuke is worded, etc., but that generally there is enthusiasm about an anti-RMS stance.
If there are fewer pro-RMS proposals, then either they were proposed by people who don't support that option, but are putting it forward because they think it should exist as an option (as you suggest), or because there are fewer people who are enthusiastic enough to care about the minutia of how a support message is to be worded. Either way, that seems to me like less enthusiasm around an anti-RMS proposal.
new options are only proposed when existing options do not represent all available opinions.
similar proposals can also be merged, and only options that make sense are being sponsored. and they are sponsored also by people who oppose that option because those people believe that the options should be balanced.
the existing options list all sensible outcomes. i can't think of any other pro- or anti-RMS option that would even make sense.
based on that i can't see how you want to extract any data on popularity
How do you get to 2/3rds? I am not familiar with Debian's voting system, but I get just under 1/2 in favor publically supporting removal.
I define "support" as preferring an option over "Further Discussion".
According to [0], there were 420 unique voters. Using 420 as the denominator, and collumn 8 [1] as the numerator, we get the following approval voting results:
1) Call for the FSF board removal, as in rms-open-letter.github.io - 203/420 = 48%
2) Call for Stallman's resignation from all FSF bodies - 222/42 = 53%
3) Discourage collaboration with the FSF while Stallman is in a leading position - 19/420 - 52%
4) Call on the FSF to further its governance processes - 221/42 = 53%
5) Support Stallman's reinstatement, as in rms-support-letter.github.io - 52/420 = 12%
6) Denounce the witch-hunt against RMS and the FSF - 84/420 = 20%
7) Debian will not issue a public statement on this issue - 277/420 = 65%
8) Further Discussion - N/A
It does not look like individual votes have been released yet. If they were, I would like to see how accurate my assumption that no one "approves" of both his presence and absence from the board. The sum of approval for both 1 and 5 is 255 = 61%, so it seems like most of the no statement voters actively disprove of a statement in either direction (instead of simply preferring no statement)
You can look at the Majority results if you want to say how many people think an option is acceptable. That ratio is also in the graph. For option 1, 203 people indicated that it's acceptable, 186 said it was unacceptable, leaving 31 that didn't say anything about it. The 203/186=1.09 is in the graph. You could also see that as 52% find that option acceptable.
So if "the tide is moving" in some direction, it's a foregone conclusion? Globally the tide seems to be moving towards socialism, so let's just get it over with?
Socialism has nothing to do with RMS’ disgusting behavior. The tide is turning in that people won’t accept this from the old guard anymore. It has nothing to do with political philosophy.
Of course socialism has a lot to do with this discussion. It is a symptom of the rise of the woke and SJWs, who want to establish control via their ideology (in this case, feminism as a vehicle for socialist control). Everybody who doesn't adhere to the ideology has to be cut down.
You don't have to be an "SJW" to be disgusted with Stallman. The vast, vast majority of people will not defend someone involved in a child sex trafficking ring. That doesn't make you a "socialist", it makes you a regular human with a modicum of empathy and functioning moral compass.
But you need to be a SJW to reject due process and the principle of charity, and opt for maximum moral outrage to exert control and power. Your claim that he defended somebody in a sex trafficking ring is not actually true, for example. Either you are unaware of that and simply run with the narrative of the SJW ideology, which would be exactly the goal, or you are deliberately misrepresenting it, which would also make the point that it is about politics, not personal disgust.
Or explained in another way: apparently Stallman has not done anything illegal. So the people who insist on him being cut down want to install a new justice system. That's SJW ideology.
We've banned this account for using HN primarily for ideological battle. That's not what this site is for. Please don't create accounts to break HN's rules with.
You are a liar, at the very least, you are lying to yourself. You ban me for criticising socialism, not because of ideological battles. If you would care about ideology, you would ban the ideological subjects. For example Stallman's appointment was a frequent topic on here. I did not start those topics, and you let them stay.
Case in point: I did not make any submissions with this account. I only commented. So it doesn't make sense to claim I created the account for ideological battle.
It's also nonsense from you to claim that some discussion taking place in a deeply nested comment thread somehow distracts from what "HN is for". Those who don't care can simply gloss over it. I am not taking away any of your precious front page space.
Just admit that you can't stand criticism of socialism, and that is your basic motivation here.
Users who break the site guidelines around political flamewar always feel like we ban them for their politics. Actually we just ban people for breaking the guidelines. "You ban me for criticizing $X" can have $X = "socialism", "capitalism", or anything else. See https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26148870 for dozens of examples.
We don't care what your favorite flavor of politics is any more than your favorite ice cream. Actually your favorite ice cream would be more interesting, because it gets discussed less. The tedium of these internet battles cannot be overstated.
You don't even have raw vote counts. You have that weird floating relative representation going on, and no formula is given for the totals, or I'm not aware the procedures are that line that out. Example:
2 dimensional matrix
Value at (x, y) coordinates should be read as option X received <value> more votes than option Y. The diagonal is blank since it degenerates in this representation.
Row 1 column 2 would assert that option 1 beat option 2 by 113 votes.
Row 2, column 1 however asserts the opposite, that option 2 beat option 1 by 137. This is reading is articulated explicitly in those results.
I see no way that isn't an indication of contradiction unless their tallying method is so bloody exotic I can't even imagine. Nor can I find the where they define their dividend for the majority calculation, but I'm assuming there is a tally of nay/abstain votes somewhere?
Voting procedure is documented here [0] section A.6
I agree that it would be nice to include the total number of ballots in the final results, but that isn't really relevant to the results.
Each voter submits a ranked choice vote ballot. The table indicates that 113 ballots prefer option 1 over option 2, whicl 137 ballot prefer option 2 over option 1.
The majority calculation is a bit weird. All Debian votes include default option, in this case that is option 8, "Further Discussion". Preferring an option over the default is seen as a general "approval" vote, while prefering the default is considered "disapproval". The "majority" votes looks at the ratio between approval and disapproval. For instance, option 1 had 203 votes to apporove and 186 votes to disaprove, giving it a ratio of 203/186 = 1.09
Voters are not required to vote on all options. Excluding private votes, they release every individual vote once voting is closed, so you can see how many abstensions an indidual option received; but it appears that this has not been released yet.
That'd be it. There was an entire dimension going on there I was unaware of the ranked choice. I was thinking FPTP. Thank you for the reference.
So there is no general 'nay' vote on a proposal except to vote it at a lower rank than the default option? I think I get it now.
I'm actually kind of glad most people don't want to make any statement at all. It isn't really something tht should matter. Beyond my vocal opposition to lending any credibility to the original smear with regards to RMS, I'm kind of in the camp we should all just move on. Most of FSF's insiders that have a problem with him have more than enough points actually relevant to his missing opportunities to make a worthwhile push at ousting him without relying on controversy and lies, but they'd also have to defend it from an equal playing field then. LLVM, GPL issues, etc... Though even looking into the LLVM controversy, I can still see the wisdom in not accepting it and keeping GCC monolithic after having come across a few oldtimers who were there back when proprietary everything was the norm.
If someone is to be dismissed, let it be on technical merits. Not some tabloid smear.
Can someone fill me in on the RMS drama/politics? Is this because he was cancelled due to (supposedly) defending Epstein and he's now trying to uncancel himself?
The only intolerance here is on behalf of a viciously ableist movement which does not allow for purely rational opinions from someone clearly on the autistic spectrum. Making women "uncomfortable" without making or implying advances is purely intolerant of those who fall slightly outside of social norms; I haven't seen any evidence that he actually did or said anything predatory or sexual.
It's the same implicit social shaming that socially awkward "nerds" and "geeks" receive in highschool, except turned up to 11 because of a vicious social movement which explicitly targets outliers. The open source community was far more tolerant when it was merit based and race/gender blind, before it was infested with ideologues and the social contagion that is the social [in]justice movement. Frankly, normies are ruining programming communities by demanding that the culture change to be inclusive of their norms, to the detriment of the very people who founded the movement. It's painfully ironic, and the people leading this charge are simply grabbing at power justified by self righteousness.
I'm aware of the paradox, and it's a wonderful idea!
It still looks to me that in this case, it's the people calling RMS intolerant that are the intolerant ones. On the contrary, I think RMS actually tolerates a whole lot. He clearly has different views than others on a variety of topics, yet he doesn't let it affect his technical decisions. He's been attacked viciously in the media, but he's tolerated it and is coming back to the FSF. An intolerant person would disappear. Consider all the people on the board of the FSF with opposite political views than his, that he tolerates on a day-to-day basis. An "intolerant homophobe/transphobe" would not tolerate having homosexuals/transexuals on the board, for instance.
Ah, yes, I am mostly on board with the specifics of what you said in this message, even if I disagree with some of the generalizations. The original one lacked too much context for me to understand it.
I fail to see how any of this is intolerant, or transphobic. You might not like these opinions. Or disagree that there is good reasoning behind some of this. This does not make the one you are disagreeing with intolerant.
> I fail to see how any of this is intolerant, or transphobic.
Yes. RMS argued for gender-neutral pronouns since more than twenty years ago. Just because it is a different set of neutral pronouns than is popular today, some people mark him transphobic. That is absurd.
Indeed, and it's no surprise that this attempted cancellation of RMS is being pushed by the pronoun enthusiast crowd. These tend to be the type of people who simply can't stand any dissenting opinions to their dogma.
Unfortunately, the more tolerant attitude of just agreeing to disagree seems to have gone out of fashion. Now the preferred option is to destroy a person's entire career and slander their reputation with deliberate misinterpretations of what they've said and done.
It’s not slander if it’s true, and you can be disgusted with RMS without bringing politics into it. He’s bad for the free software movement. It’s as simple as that.
When studying history, I sometimes wonder - how certain things could have happened? Some of these seem ridiculous or unbelievable when you look back.
Now I know how it happens. Some people do something strange, then their number increases, they are very vocal, they're 100% sure what they do is right, they're very emotional about it, and at a certain point it seems like they are the majority. They do certain things like revolutions, usually with a bad result, and you can't do anything, you can just watch it powerlessly and hope it doesn't end badly this time.
Regardless of how abhorrent you might think RMS' actual views are, that letter really unfairly characterizes a lot of things they're claiming RMS said. I appreciate them throughly citing sources for their claims, so its easy to compare what the letter accuses him of saying and what the literal words he used are. Individual interpretation of the amount of twisting they do is left up to the reader.
According to some, he's been an out-of-touch, controversial, abusive voice for FSF for a while. The MIT/Epstein stuff is what gets talked about, and might have been what brought this to a more general public attention, but it's not specifically what the calls for resignation are about.
He isn't perfect, he said something insensitive in the Epstein causa, now all kinds of ridiculous allegations and warranted criticism gets mixed into a toxic cocktail, which doesn't allow anyone to move forward productively.
If RMS accepts his cancellation, he basically caves to wrongful accusations. If he stays, we can't move forward and get work done because of the drama and all the viable reasons why he shouldn't be a central, public FSF spokesperson anymore.
Plus, everyone really just wants to see the FSF fail anyway, for some reason.
The Epstein stuff was more of a last straw. RMS has had terrible reputation for decades, you just don't hear about it unless you talk to people at MIT. The me too movement has shifted the window in such a way that it's finally coming out in a public way.
The FSF sadly functions as a cult of personality for RMS at this point. I do not believe either of them are doing anything to help the cause of FOSS at this point.
I don't get why organizations feel they need to weigh in on this so much. The FSF has a code of conduct (https://fsfe.org/about/codeofconduct.en.html), so it's pretty clear what the conditions are for removing someone.
Either remove him according to the rules of the code of conduct, or leave him be. That's what COCs are for.
If you're not happy with the COC, push for changes.
No you see that is what the heteropatriarchal meanies at the Free Software Foundation wants you to believe in reality if you don’t completely change your institution every time a pink haired person complains in Twitter it means you are a nazi and or rapist
Good. RMS did nothing wrong really, and is the victim of a pile-on by people who can't tolerate others' opinions.
I'm glad to see that Debian isn't caving to the ignorant masses here. The FSF under RMS's leadership has done more for computing freedom than any other organization.
So what if RMS is outspoken about his beliefs? That's exactly the forthright attitude that enabled him to succeed in promoting the GPL so widely. We should all be very glad of this, and not condemn the man just because a few whiners can't deal with someone disagreeing with them.
It is not enough to be "right" to promote a good idea. You need to be a charismatic leader to succeed at FSF's mission. Independently of whether RMS is an intolerant creep or a misunderstood visionary, I do not think it should be difficult to see that he would not be an efficient evangelist for FSF today.
The FSF is already beyond useless. They don't "need" anything as they don't accomplish anything. It's just a cult of personality around RMS at this point. It's beyond redemption.
I think you are missing the point I was making: If you can not inspire others to action, it does not matter whether you are right, because you will not make the world a better place by simply being right.
Why should anyone be subjected to RMS’ opinion on the age of consent? Or the Epstein case? RMS created this situation by injecting his unwanted opinions into to public sphere and now he’s rightfully paying the price for that.
You don't have to visit RMS' personal website if you don't want to be "subjected" to his opinions. As for the Minsky defence, Stallmans position is an entirely rational one and the world would be a much better place if more people would stand up to defend those being attacked by the mob.
> As for the Minsky defence, Stallmans position is an entirely rational one and the world would be a much better place if more people would stand up to defend those being attacked by the mob.
You're talking about defending a client in a child sex trafficking ring. That is absolutely disgusting and irrational. It does nothing but harm the free software movement, just as RMS' many other actions have done.
Yet again you crawl on this forum to spread unproven allegations. Case against Minsky is based on one witness testimony which is contradictes by the testimony of another witness. This was never tried in court, yet, you, time and again, present this allegation as a proven fact. Moreover, the whole ordeal is reported in a very unspecific and imprecise manner, which Stallman rightfully criticized. He also had never defended Epstein.
Your account here exists only for a crusade against Stallman, and i think that this site rules forbid that.
> Case against Minsky is based on one witness testimony which is contradictes by the testimony of another witness
Absolutely false, you've fabricated this. Again, RMS' defense of his friend's involvement in a child sex trafficking ring is indefensible and those of you trying to defend it are dragging our industry and free software ideals through the mud. You're harming every single initiative you claim to support. There was no reason for RMS to talk about the Minsky case, fabricate a secnario involving Epstein's victims or discuss lowering the age of consent. None. It was a bullet in the head of the FSF.
> Your account here exists only for a crusade against Stallman, and i think that this site rules forbid that.
Again, incorrect. Yes I'm bothered by the toxicity being displayed by RMS' supporters, because I care about having a healthy work environment. I post about plenty of other things too though.
I think "no comment" is the most reasonable and mature result. Debian is not directly involved in that fight, and adding fuel to the fight, on either side, is not going to help much.
I wish more people felt this way. The pressure for all people (and all organisations) to pick a side in all issues doesn’t seem like it’s actually helping to fix very many issues...
122 comments
[ 5.7 ms ] story [ 158 ms ] threadWhen multiple options are in the Schwartz set, the weakest defeats are removed until only 1 option is left in the Schwartz set. I think it only draws the graph after there is only 1 option left. But that didn't happen in this vote.
I was kinda confused by the complexity of the results, but if it is about ranks, it all makes sense now :-)
They proposed 8 options. 2 directly called for resignations at FSF, 2 directly supported RMS, one said to stop working with FSF, one said to call for governance improvements at FSF, one was no comment, and one was discuss further.
The two options in support of RMS were not majority held opinions, and were held by ~1/6-1/3 of voters.
No comment beat "call for the removal of RMS" by only 8 votes.
For me, the takeaway here is that while Debian will issue no comment, 2/3+ of voters in Debian supported calling for RMSs removal. It's clear which way the tide is moving, even if Debian says nothing.
Source data: https://vote.debian.org/~secretary/gr_rms/results.txt
Edit: My 2/3+ estimate is a napkin math overestimate, and the number is probably closer to the 50-60% other comments have suggested below.
How did you come to that number?
Option 2 137 168 165 239 227 199 222
222 voted for option 2 over "we should talk about this further" (default position), which is ~53% (222/420).
FWIW, some people didn’t want to vote because the results would be publicly with names.
So the result of a secret vote might have been different.
this may change in the future if enough people find that (optionally) private votes on resolutions are a good idea.
edit: I found those, so it's not that weird, but not very common: Init systems https://www.debian.org/vote/2019/vote_002 ; Delaying Lenny https://www.debian.org/vote/2008/vote_003 ; Change to membership procedures https://www.debian.org/vote/2008/vote_002
They agreed on their voting system in advance exactly to handle cases where the vote might be contentious.
Both of those feel like possibilities, but probably not in any significant number. In absence of evidence to the contrary, I'd say it's reasonable to look at the results of a vote as evidence of how people actually feel.
Edit: Vote numbers seem consistent with other votes in Debian's history, so it does not appear that a large number of people elected not to vote.
It looks like it would need a General Resolution to allow secret voting for future General Resolutions.
The community agreed on no comment, full stop.
A significant preference was also shown for removal over reinstatement.
The vote totals seem in line with historical votes.
If you want to know what people really think without the possibile influence of preference falsification, it needs to be an anonymous poll.
Which is exactly why we not only allow, but actually enforce it in elections. If your vote could have a strong impact on e.g. your future employment, you wouldn't be free to vote for what you think is best, you'd be compelled to vote for what you think is perceived best.
I'd also point out that secret ballot is not universal in the US. Certainly the votes of elected officials are not secret. But neither are open votes at, say, a town hall meeting.
I'm not suggesting they'd have to do that, I'm saying that there's a very good reason why we usually do that. As organizations become more and more political, I expect that to hit harder and for more of them to adopt secret voting.
> Certainly the votes of elected officials are not secret.
And I find that reasonable. You want to know whether the person you voted for actually does what they said. In Germany, parliament votes are public, but important votes are secret.
For the less important votes, they'll just ask for raised hands and note who won, but not who voted in what way (we now have TV channels film the votes and then use interns to determine who voted what).
For important votes, they're done secretly: you can tell who voted, but not what they voted for. There's no way to hold them accountable, the system is working as intended.
I do believe I have a very plausible hypothesis, though, and I find it sufficiently plausible that I'm going to reserve judgement on the true beliefs of people until we see that anonymous poll.
https://academic.oup.com/poq/article-abstract/59/4/568/19401...
>regression analysis shows that social forces appear to have a greater effect on vote choices among people who doubt the formal secrecy of the ballot.
https://www.jstor.org/stable/23526132
It's only clear that the way this is measured is heavily biased: 4 options out of 8 are against current FSF/RMS' statu quo. Only 2 are for supporting the statu quo. And 1 is for indifference, and the last one for more discussion needed.
If you overcharge the negative choices, it's kind of given most of the answers will fall in them. Survey design 101.
For reference:
- Option 1 "Call for the FSF board removal, as in rms-open-letter.github.io"
- Option 2 "Call for Stallman's resignation from all FSF bodies"
- Option 3 "Discourage collaboration with the FSF while Stallman is in a leading position"
- Option 4 "Call on the FSF to further its governance processes"
- Option 5 "Support Stallman's reinstatement, as in rms-support-letter.github.io"
- Option 6 "Denounce the witch-hunt against RMS and the FSF"
- Option 7 "Debian will not issue a public statement on this issue"
- Option 8 "Further Discussion"
That's not how it works. The voters are asked to rank all options according to their preference, and a winner is chosen according to an extended Condorcet criterion. Adding similar options doesn't affect the outcome.
Fewer people being willing to propose a pro-RMS option is an indication of which way the tide is moving, even if you still want to argue about why this might be the case.
If there are several variations of anti-RMS proposals, it suggests that enough people care about the specifics of how the rebuke is worded, etc., but that generally there is enthusiasm about an anti-RMS stance.
If there are fewer pro-RMS proposals, then either they were proposed by people who don't support that option, but are putting it forward because they think it should exist as an option (as you suggest), or because there are fewer people who are enthusiastic enough to care about the minutia of how a support message is to be worded. Either way, that seems to me like less enthusiasm around an anti-RMS proposal.
similar proposals can also be merged, and only options that make sense are being sponsored. and they are sponsored also by people who oppose that option because those people believe that the options should be balanced.
the existing options list all sensible outcomes. i can't think of any other pro- or anti-RMS option that would even make sense.
based on that i can't see how you want to extract any data on popularity
I define "support" as preferring an option over "Further Discussion".
According to [0], there were 420 unique voters. Using 420 as the denominator, and collumn 8 [1] as the numerator, we get the following approval voting results:
1) Call for the FSF board removal, as in rms-open-letter.github.io - 203/420 = 48%
2) Call for Stallman's resignation from all FSF bodies - 222/42 = 53%
3) Discourage collaboration with the FSF while Stallman is in a leading position - 19/420 - 52%
4) Call on the FSF to further its governance processes - 221/42 = 53%
5) Support Stallman's reinstatement, as in rms-support-letter.github.io - 52/420 = 12%
6) Denounce the witch-hunt against RMS and the FSF - 84/420 = 20%
7) Debian will not issue a public statement on this issue - 277/420 = 65%
8) Further Discussion - N/A
It does not look like individual votes have been released yet. If they were, I would like to see how accurate my assumption that no one "approves" of both his presence and absence from the board. The sum of approval for both 1 and 5 is 255 = 61%, so it seems like most of the no statement voters actively disprove of a statement in either direction (instead of simply preferring no statement)
[0] https://vote.debian.org/~secretary/gr_rms/
[1] https://vote.debian.org/~secretary/gr_rms/results.txt
So it might be more correct to say ~3/5s?
Or explained in another way: apparently Stallman has not done anything illegal. So the people who insist on him being cut down want to install a new justice system. That's SJW ideology.
> Your claim that he defended somebody in a sex trafficking ring is not actually true, for example.
He continues to defend Minsky. This a fact. It's in his "apology".
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
Case in point: I did not make any submissions with this account. I only commented. So it doesn't make sense to claim I created the account for ideological battle.
It's also nonsense from you to claim that some discussion taking place in a deeply nested comment thread somehow distracts from what "HN is for". Those who don't care can simply gloss over it. I am not taking away any of your precious front page space.
Just admit that you can't stand criticism of socialism, and that is your basic motivation here.
We don't care what your favorite flavor of politics is any more than your favorite ice cream. Actually your favorite ice cream would be more interesting, because it gets discussed less. The tedium of these internet battles cannot be overstated.
2/3+ is overestimate.
About 52% (228/439) preferred one option from 1-4 (anti-RMS) better than neutral options (7-8).
If we ignore winning option 7, then 63% preferred 1-4 to default option 8, while 20% preferred 5-6 (pro-RMS) to option 8.
You don't even have raw vote counts. You have that weird floating relative representation going on, and no formula is given for the totals, or I'm not aware the procedures are that line that out. Example:
2 dimensional matrix Value at (x, y) coordinates should be read as option X received <value> more votes than option Y. The diagonal is blank since it degenerates in this representation.
Row 1 column 2 would assert that option 1 beat option 2 by 113 votes.
Row 2, column 1 however asserts the opposite, that option 2 beat option 1 by 137. This is reading is articulated explicitly in those results.
I see no way that isn't an indication of contradiction unless their tallying method is so bloody exotic I can't even imagine. Nor can I find the where they define their dividend for the majority calculation, but I'm assuming there is a tally of nay/abstain votes somewhere?
What am I missing?
I agree that it would be nice to include the total number of ballots in the final results, but that isn't really relevant to the results.
Each voter submits a ranked choice vote ballot. The table indicates that 113 ballots prefer option 1 over option 2, whicl 137 ballot prefer option 2 over option 1.
The majority calculation is a bit weird. All Debian votes include default option, in this case that is option 8, "Further Discussion". Preferring an option over the default is seen as a general "approval" vote, while prefering the default is considered "disapproval". The "majority" votes looks at the ratio between approval and disapproval. For instance, option 1 had 203 votes to apporove and 186 votes to disaprove, giving it a ratio of 203/186 = 1.09
Voters are not required to vote on all options. Excluding private votes, they release every individual vote once voting is closed, so you can see how many abstensions an indidual option received; but it appears that this has not been released yet.
[0] https://www.debian.org/devel/constitution
So there is no general 'nay' vote on a proposal except to vote it at a lower rank than the default option? I think I get it now.
I'm actually kind of glad most people don't want to make any statement at all. It isn't really something tht should matter. Beyond my vocal opposition to lending any credibility to the original smear with regards to RMS, I'm kind of in the camp we should all just move on. Most of FSF's insiders that have a problem with him have more than enough points actually relevant to his missing opportunities to make a worthwhile push at ousting him without relying on controversy and lies, but they'd also have to defend it from an equal playing field then. LLVM, GPL issues, etc... Though even looking into the LLVM controversy, I can still see the wisdom in not accepting it and keeping GCC monolithic after having come across a few oldtimers who were there back when proprietary everything was the norm.
If someone is to be dismissed, let it be on technical merits. Not some tabloid smear.
113 people preferred option 1 over option 2
137 [different] people preferred option 2 over option 1
and presumably the balance of the 420 didn't express a preference. Or at least that's how I read it.
It's the same implicit social shaming that socially awkward "nerds" and "geeks" receive in highschool, except turned up to 11 because of a vicious social movement which explicitly targets outliers. The open source community was far more tolerant when it was merit based and race/gender blind, before it was infested with ideologues and the social contagion that is the social [in]justice movement. Frankly, normies are ruining programming communities by demanding that the culture change to be inclusive of their norms, to the detriment of the very people who founded the movement. It's painfully ironic, and the people leading this charge are simply grabbing at power justified by self righteousness.
Being "intolerant to intolerance" is a fairly well accepted idea in societies that value personal freedoms.
He'd also have been disgusted by being used in a propagandistic manner.
It still looks to me that in this case, it's the people calling RMS intolerant that are the intolerant ones. On the contrary, I think RMS actually tolerates a whole lot. He clearly has different views than others on a variety of topics, yet he doesn't let it affect his technical decisions. He's been attacked viciously in the media, but he's tolerated it and is coming back to the FSF. An intolerant person would disappear. Consider all the people on the board of the FSF with opposite political views than his, that he tolerates on a day-to-day basis. An "intolerant homophobe/transphobe" would not tolerate having homosexuals/transexuals on the board, for instance.
Yes. RMS argued for gender-neutral pronouns since more than twenty years ago. Just because it is a different set of neutral pronouns than is popular today, some people mark him transphobic. That is absurd.
Unfortunately, the more tolerant attitude of just agreeing to disagree seems to have gone out of fashion. Now the preferred option is to destroy a person's entire career and slander their reputation with deliberate misinterpretations of what they've said and done.
It's significantly more detailed and complex than "allegedly defending Epstein".
Here's the letter supporting RMS: https://rms-support-letter.github.io/
Now I know how it happens. Some people do something strange, then their number increases, they are very vocal, they're 100% sure what they do is right, they're very emotional about it, and at a certain point it seems like they are the majority. They do certain things like revolutions, usually with a bad result, and you can't do anything, you can just watch it powerlessly and hope it doesn't end badly this time.
If RMS accepts his cancellation, he basically caves to wrongful accusations. If he stays, we can't move forward and get work done because of the drama and all the viable reasons why he shouldn't be a central, public FSF spokesperson anymore.
Plus, everyone really just wants to see the FSF fail anyway, for some reason.
The FSF sadly functions as a cult of personality for RMS at this point. I do not believe either of them are doing anything to help the cause of FOSS at this point.
Either remove him according to the rules of the code of conduct, or leave him be. That's what COCs are for.
If you're not happy with the COC, push for changes.
. .
Edit: it’s sarcasm just on case
I'm glad to see that Debian isn't caving to the ignorant masses here. The FSF under RMS's leadership has done more for computing freedom than any other organization.
So what if RMS is outspoken about his beliefs? That's exactly the forthright attitude that enabled him to succeed in promoting the GPL so widely. We should all be very glad of this, and not condemn the man just because a few whiners can't deal with someone disagreeing with them.
You're talking about defending a client in a child sex trafficking ring. That is absolutely disgusting and irrational. It does nothing but harm the free software movement, just as RMS' many other actions have done.
Your account here exists only for a crusade against Stallman, and i think that this site rules forbid that.
Absolutely false, you've fabricated this. Again, RMS' defense of his friend's involvement in a child sex trafficking ring is indefensible and those of you trying to defend it are dragging our industry and free software ideals through the mud. You're harming every single initiative you claim to support. There was no reason for RMS to talk about the Minsky case, fabricate a secnario involving Epstein's victims or discuss lowering the age of consent. None. It was a bullet in the head of the FSF.
> Your account here exists only for a crusade against Stallman, and i think that this site rules forbid that.
Again, incorrect. Yes I'm bothered by the toxicity being displayed by RMS' supporters, because I care about having a healthy work environment. I post about plenty of other things too though.