That has never happened although
there have been a few brief starts.
As I have said before, it is okay if consensus cannot be reached on
particular issues. It should not be at all surprising that, in
the diverse
global Internet community, one size more often than not does not fit
all.
That is perfectly okay. That allows for diversity in the marketplace
and
gives consumers choices. It's a shame that there is so much fear
of a free
market and instead a desire for centralized regulation.
Chuck
-----Original Message-----
From: DannyYounger@cs.com [mailto:DannyYounger@cs.com]
Sent: Tuesday, March 26, 2002 8:05 PM
To: ga@dnso.org
Cc: DJohnson@Wilmer.COM
Subject: [ga] Consensus on consensus?
Karl Auerbach in his "Prescription-to-Promote" has argued that:
"The
concept
of "consensus" must be discarded", with all decisions to be based on
counted
voting using clearly defined procedures such as Robert's Rules.
Stuart
Lynn
has likewise argued that a private sector body, based on consensus
and
consent, has been shown to be impractical.
This begs the question... is it time to replace the consensus process?
If
so, how do we avoid establishing a structural model that relegates
certain
groups automatically to minority status? ICANN seems to
be enamoured with
voting blocks... Can we move to a one-man/one-vote mechanism, and will
such
a
move be accompanied with full membership rights for all participants?
ICANN doesn't have the greatest track record with respect to honoring
consensus... can we expect it to honor an actual vote of the complete
membership? More questions than answers at this point...
for Karl's treatise, see:
http://www.cavebear.com/rw/prescription-to-promote.pdf
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