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Gov/en/Portal:Voting/Main: Difference between revisions

From WikiDeal
Dedicated Voting portal: update links after move, add DAO page, participation/stakes principle (initial hypothesis)
Is-WikiDeal-a-DAO moved to Portal:Institutions (organizational nature, not a voting mechanism; decision by Theo 2026-07-05): removed from portal page list, cross-link kept in Related pages
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{{KidsIntro|When a group has to choose something together, voting gives everyone a fair say. WikiDeal wants to use easy votes for simple yes-or-no questions, and smarter votes when there are many choices. This page is the door to everything about voting at WikiDeal.}}
{{KidsIntro|When a group has to choose something together, voting gives everyone a fair say. WikiDeal wants to use easy votes for simple yes-or-no questions, and smarter votes when there are many choices. This page is the door to everything about voting at WikiDeal.}}
{{ExpertIntro|Entry page of the Voting portal. Initial hypothesis: the voting method should match the complexity of the decision, and the degree of participation should match the stakes. Simple majority for binary questions, Condorcet-style ranked voting (Schulze method) for complex multi-option choices, consensus for editorial work, and single transferable vote for multi-seat elections. The portal covers the methods under study, the proposed rules (eligibility, secret ballot, quorum, election committee, challenges), a research page grounded in the documented practice of the Wikimedia, Debian and Mozilla communities plus peer-reviewed literature, and a page discussing whether WikiDeal is a DAO. Everything is a first hypothesis, to be validated by the steering committee and then by the community.}}
{{ExpertIntro|Entry page of the Voting portal. Initial hypothesis: the voting method should match the complexity of the decision, and the degree of participation should match the stakes. Simple majority for binary questions, Condorcet-style ranked voting (Schulze method) for complex multi-option choices, consensus for editorial work, and single transferable vote for multi-seat elections. The portal covers the methods under study, the proposed rules (eligibility, secret ballot, quorum, election committee, challenges), and a research page grounded in the documented practice of the Wikimedia, Debian and Mozilla communities plus peer-reviewed literature. Everything is a first hypothesis, to be validated by the steering committee and then by the community.}}
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* [[Gov/en/Portal:Voting/Rules|Voting rules]]: the proposed rules of procedure (who votes, secret ballot, quorum, duration, election committee, verification, challenges, transparency).
* [[Gov/en/Portal:Voting/Rules|Voting rules]]: the proposed rules of procedure (who votes, secret ballot, quorum, duration, election committee, verification, challenges, transparency).
* [[Gov/en/Portal:Voting/Research|Voting research and experience]]: what the documented elections of the Wikimedia, Debian and Mozilla communities teach, and what peer-reviewed research says about online governance, multi-option decisions and the evaluation of these processes.
* [[Gov/en/Portal:Voting/Research|Voting research and experience]]: what the documented elections of the Wikimedia, Debian and Mozilla communities teach, and what peer-reviewed research says about online governance, multi-option decisions and the evaluation of these processes.
* [[Gov/en/Portal:Voting/Is-WikiDeal-a-DAO|Is WikiDeal a DAO?]]: what a decentralized autonomous organization is, and where WikiDeal stands with respect to that model.
<span id="related-pages"></span>
<span id="related-pages"></span>
== Related pages ==
== Related pages ==


* [[Gov/en/Portal:Institutions/Governance|Governance]]: one user one vote, Exit to Community, deprivatisation.
* [[Gov/en/Portal:Institutions/Governance|Governance]]: one user one vote, Exit to Community, deprivatisation.
* [[Gov/en/Portal:Institutions/Is-WikiDeal-a-DAO|Is WikiDeal a DAO?]]: what a decentralized autonomous organization is, and where WikiDeal stands with respect to that model (now in the Institutions portal).
* [[Gov/en/Portal:Rules/Fair-Criteria|Fair criteria]]: the socio-economic innovations, several of which involve voting.
* [[Gov/en/Portal:Rules/Fair-Criteria|Fair criteria]]: the socio-economic innovations, several of which involve voting.
* [[Gov/en/Portal:R&D/Innovations:Arbitration Chambers|Arbitration Chambers]] and the [[Gov/en/Portal:Justice/Main|Justice portal]]: dispute resolution.
* [[Gov/en/Portal:R&D/Innovations:Arbitration Chambers|Arbitration Chambers]] and the [[Gov/en/Portal:Justice/Main|Justice portal]]: dispute resolution.

Revision as of 15:08, 5 July 2026

💡 In simple words: When a group has to choose something together, voting gives everyone a fair say. WikiDeal wants to use easy votes for simple yes-or-no questions, and smarter votes when there are many choices. This page is the door to everything about voting at WikiDeal.

🎯 In 20 seconds (expert summary): Entry page of the Voting portal. Initial hypothesis: the voting method should match the complexity of the decision, and the degree of participation should match the stakes. Simple majority for binary questions, Condorcet-style ranked voting (Schulze method) for complex multi-option choices, consensus for editorial work, and single transferable vote for multi-seat elections. The portal covers the methods under study, the proposed rules (eligibility, secret ballot, quorum, election committee, challenges), and a research page grounded in the documented practice of the Wikimedia, Debian and Mozilla communities plus peer-reviewed literature. Everything is a first hypothesis, to be validated by the steering committee and then by the community.

Voting at WikiDeal

Status: first hypothesis (draft), to be reviewed and validated before adoption. Nothing on this page has been adopted. The portal is intended to be reviewed by the founding steering committee and then transmitted to the community through a soft transmission.

Why voting matters for WikiDeal

WikiDeal aims at community ownership, following the principle of one user, one vote described on the Governance page. That principle only becomes real through concrete voting procedures. Several parts of the intended model would rely on them:

  • Electing people. The founding steering committee, and later the bodies the community would choose for itself (a Board of Trustees, committees, arbitrators), are intended to emerge through elections, as part of the soft transmission of governance to the users.
  • Arbitration. The top level of the proposed Arbitration Chambers is intended to use Condorcet voting for its decisions.
  • Open calls. The evaluation of Open Call proposals is intended to combine a public vote with an expert panel review.
  • Strategies and rules. Major orientations, policies and structural changes would be validated by votes of the community, with stronger requirements for structural changes.

One principle: match the method to the decision

The initial hypothesis of this portal is simple: the voting method should depend on the complexity of the decision, and the degree of participation should depend on the stakes. Routine choices can stay light; decisions that affect everyone deserve wider and more careful votes. No single electoral system fits every situation, and social choice theory shows that every method has known limits (see the research page).

Type of decision Envisaged method (first hypothesis)
Binary question (yes or no, adopt or reject) Simple majority
Complex choice between several options Condorcet-style ranked vote, Schulze method
Electing several seats at once Single transferable vote
Everyday editorial work on shared content Consensus, with votes as a last resort
Structural or statutory changes Vote with supermajority requirement

This mapping is a starting point, not a decision. It is adapted from the practice of the Wikimedia and Debian communities, documented on the research page.

Pages in this portal

  • Voting methods: the methods under study (simple majority, approval, ranked votes, Condorcet and Schulze with a worked example, single transferable vote), with the strengths and limits of each.
  • Voting rules: the proposed rules of procedure (who votes, secret ballot, quorum, duration, election committee, verification, challenges, transparency).
  • Voting research and experience: what the documented elections of the Wikimedia, Debian and Mozilla communities teach, and what peer-reviewed research says about online governance, multi-option decisions and the evaluation of these processes.

Related pages

See also: Institutions portal · Licensing and credits