So I went on a bit of a rant about potential voting systems and why the current "most votes" system might be flawed.
I've decided to pretty much copy the entire thing into here because I'm interested in knowing people thoughts on this, so here:
EDIT: Food for thoughtFor reference, the tally as it stands:
Another thing I'd like to discuss as food for thought, probably not the place and I'll make a thread elsewhere is your vote tallying system.
as it stands right now C45 has the
most tallied votes, however,
only half of the current voters want C8.
If you "want to keep everyone happy" you need a majority vote (50%<) to change the map or only use this one to decide the two front runners and rerun a vote with only C45 or C8 again.
Why?
Well lets think of it as a two-way representation.
at the time of this posting C8 has 50% of the votes. This means 50% of the people
do want C8 or want
other alternativesSo? What's the big problem.
Well people use "votes" to see what
"most of the people want". Am I right? As a community you should go with what most people want imo.
Well, if someone were to say, add a vote to some other option. Say, C45 or any of the others, then, at the moment in time, C8 would still be the front runner. it has most votes, surely?
No.
At this time it upset the 50% balance so that C8 now has less than 50% of the votes.
Again, looking at the binary perspective, things have changed.
sure, just under half of the people
want C8, but now
over half of the community
want an alternative. Could this mean that given only the option of C8 or C45, C45 would win by a higher margin by way of, say, "compromise"? Possibly.
So, just my food for thought.
Should this be a preliminary poll to decide two options to battle it out in a final vote over the weekend?
I think so, but that's just my opinion.
Using a graphic to represent my ideas;
Recently in politics in Britain this has been a hot topic, the "alternative voting system".
One of the big things that was discussed was the poll tallying. The BBC at the time made a lovely chart that I'm going to use to explain my thoughts.
For the sake of the people that don't know British politics ill use the colours rather than the party names
Imagine each of your votes counted for one square you will notice that
BLUE has the Highest number of
individual votes. The current system, and this vote (or any vote), means that this makes
blue victorious with 234. Great for them.
BUT WAITIf we apply a PR system, or using the binary explanation I said before, the people
against blue are significantly higher.
If we add
red,
yellow, and grey up together. you notice that their votes equal
414What this means is that
blue, although at a quick glance has the "most" votes. They have only
36% of the
total votesas a large scale representation. What this means is that
64% of people don't want blue in power. So is it really fair to say that blue wins on a
majority vote?
I feel although it's nowhere near important. I think it's something to consider in large-scale community votes like this.
Like I said, the easiest way to fix this problem is to run another poll using the two front runners which gives you a simple %want and %don't want decision.
So, what's your opinion on voting systems? Do you agree with how they are, or do you think the system is flawed and could be changed?