On Wed, 2019-04-24 at 18:43 -0700, Bryce Harrington wrote: > Hi all, > > I've been collecting our board votes into a private gitlab > repository: > > https://gitlab.com/inkscape-board/documents > > Currently, this is not accessible to the general public, just members > of > the inkscape-board team. You all should be able to look at what's > there. > > My question is if we should make the past referendums publically > visible > (for increased public transparency) or keep them as private? (Or > something else?) > > There are sometimes cases where we want to share the details about a > referendum with various people. However, I'm not sure whether or not > it > is desireable to have our actual votes public. Also, occasionally we > vote on things (e.g. trademark issues) that we don't want public. > > What do you guys think? Is there value in making past referendums > publically visible? If so, should we show or hide our votes? And > should we include mechanisms to filter public vs. private votes from > being visible? Or just keep everything private?
If we use "Confidential" inkscape-board/documents project issues; then we could use that as a 'live' voting board. I.e. A place to create the vote and do the voting (or just record the voting if that doesn't work). Resolving the issue is a matter of recording the vote result into the archive (git commit can close a bug report for example), which I think should always be public as a matter of policy. If an issue has to be kept dark for a while, then it remains unresolved until it's committed to the public archive. Letting us know what our opacity is. But this depends Martin, _______________________________________________ Inkscape-board mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/inkscape-board
