Hi, On Fri, Jan 13, 2017 at 4:15 PM, Nathaniel Smith <njs@pobox.com> wrote:
On Fri, Jan 13, 2017 at 3:32 PM, Matthew Brett <matthew.brett@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi,
On Fri, Jan 13, 2017 at 3:24 PM, Evgeni Burovski <evgeny.burovskiy@gmail.com> wrote:
On Fri, Jan 13, 2017 at 8:22 PM, Matthew Brett <matthew.brett@gmail.com> wrote: [...]
Of course that requires some formalization, but I think it's a considerably better system than the BDFL, for our case.
It seems to me that the effort needed to formalize it is not worth the benefit, specifically in our case.
Well - as a broader community, I think we'll have to do this anyway. For example, I know that Stefan vdW wants to set up this model for scikit-image. I am sure he'd be happy to help draft it, I know I would. Maybe we could do that in relation to this PR, making sure that we set some reasonable time limit for getting it done, say 3 weeks.
It's still the case that this is a novel social organization you invented that AFAICT has never been tested by any F/OSS project, and directly goes against the F/OSS community's hard-won cultural knowledge about what kinds of organizations work well (see e.g. [1]). Now- these are not necessarily bad things! Our community is legitimately different than a "traditional" group of F/OSS developers in a variety of ways, and less encultured to the "traditional" way of doing things. And social experimentation is great -- how else can we find better ways to live? While there's a lot of wisdom and experience in Karl Fogel's book, it's surely not the final word.
But... we should also be realistic that when someone shows up saying "hey I've worked out a better method of social organization based on first principles and thinking really hard, it'll 100% definitely be awesome", then historically it *usually* doesn't quite work out so nicely as promised. And it's often difficult to effectively do this kind of experimentation at the same time as doing the actual work of like, developing software. "Choose boring technology" [2] applies to social technology too.
* I agree with boring technology, but I doubt you're really arguing that choosing a leader at regular intervals is novel in open source or elsewhere. Debian is an obvious example [1]; * I don't know if an 'election' is the right method of choosing someone, that's really up for debate. Obviously an election is a very standard way of doing that; * I don't personally know of a BDFL system working well in the absence of the criteria I put above, but it would certainly be useful to have a look at a few examples. Can you suggest a few to consider?
If scikit-image is set on doing this, maybe the pragmatic thing to do is wait and see how it works out for them? I've seen zero appetite from anyone else on this list for elections and such.
I think your idea here is the BDFL is low risk and choosing a leader is high risk, but it seems to me that both have risks, and that the best way of assessing the relative risks is to consider and refine a couple of concrete proposals, with discussion of prior experience, where applicable. For the appetite thing, you are probably referring to the nervous atmosphere that surrounds any discussion of governance, which is presumably due to the strong reactions against any such discussion in the past. I'm sure you'd agree that that 'get it over with as quickly as possible' is not the best way to come to a good solution. Having said that, if Ralf and / or Pauli do not have much interest in this topic, discussion will quickly become futile and counterproductive, and we will have to stop quickly to avoid making a mess. Cheers, Matthew [1] https://www.debian.org/devel/leader