Interrupting to bring you this important message: The election is happening at the moment, and 1,385 (0.15% of 897,145 eligible) users have already voted! I can answer common questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
Came here to figure out how to submit my ballot. Found the answer above. Suggesting that the ballot have text added, "Once sorted, you do not need to submit you ballot. You may edit your ballot until the election close, when it will be automatically submitted."
i know it's relatively common for people to ask others before clicking through to find the information for themselves, but i dunno how much information the page actually needs to display up front
it also has a bit of text at the top right that changes any time you make a change to your list, indicating that it was saved
As a note, I do actually re-run the election with multiple slots if we call people up. I don't just pick the second-most first-round votes if one candidate hits 50% after one round.
The "Workflow" is not very intuitive, the Link (for the "How to vote" Popup) is called "Learn more..." (just like the Links for Tag Wikis, and we all know that nobody finds the Tag Wikis, ah-ah...!), no URL displayed in the Status Bar, it's not clear that Link will be a Popup. After ranking the Candidates, one is "afraid" to loose their Selection if we get redirected to some vague "Learn more..." Page in the Help Center...
Since I have pretty regular interactions with 5 of the 6 candidates (and all 5 demonstrate an admirable passion for curation and system/community health), I find that I've differentiated between these 5 candidates based on how I perceive their generosity and clarity of principle. One of these candidates stands out to me as someone who is very clear about their principles and has had a track record of answering my philosophical questions with supporting meta posts.
To current moderators, would you agree that the majority of your daily routine is queue based? Given that the mod dashboard spoon-feeds an unending stream of flags/exceptions to handle, should the candidate card put greater focus on users who demonstrate a high degree of dedication to review queues?
Frequently, candidates for a moderator election are called up later to meet demand.
New election or calling up candidates from a previous election asks the question "when" this happens. However it doesn't address the question of "how" this happens.
Moderators in the chat room for the 2022 electio...
I open the mod flag queue regularly throughout the day. I pick out the easy flags and come back to the more difficult ones when I have more time.
But I also spend a lot of time looking at PHP tag, closing non-English questions, tidying up some random issues I can find or sometimes even proactively looking up issues.
while there are 5 of 6 candidates worth chosen, I limited my vote for two candidates. Simply because in my view those will be not just honored but actually beneficial as moderators.
A quick message from my sponsors: The election is underway, and 2,186 (0.24% of 897,155 eligible) users have already voted! I can answer common questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
@Ollie then advertise on your favorite social media platform -- raise awareness.
@Dharman Should we favor users who demonstrate unique curation activities? Users who innovate? who do things differently? who add diversity to the activities of the mod team?
@Dharman I think I don't get the STV by now. I will look up something in my native language to study this, but before, does SO uses Scottish STV or something else ?
@Dharman Meek STV is a version of STV with a more fine-tuned transfer of surplus (excess) votes. Please see OpaVote's in-depth explanation of Meek STV for more info.
@Thingamabobs Basically, if your first choice doesn't get enough votes to win in the first round, the candidate with least amount of votes is eliminated and all votes from the people who picked them get transferred to their second choice. Then in round 2 the process is repeated until someone is elected
@Dharman And in addition to that, if the first place candidate has way too many votes, a proportional fraction of those votes are also transferred... (except that doesn't apply with only 1 candidate, but could apply for a re-run with 2 selections for calling up candidates later)
@ElectionBot How can the USA smarten up and run a preferential election like Stack Overflow? Why should Americans continue to vote against who they don't want from the two primary parties? Should we educate Americans by allowing them to vote on restaurant menu items to make the process more familiar?
I feel like it is a good time to brush up on game theory and choose your ranking wisely. Heck, ranking the candidate you don't want elected higher may get your preferred candidate elected. Since voters can change their vote until the end, maybe make a meta post or two to coerce others to vote similarly.
@KevinB America does not have a problem with the volume of choices. Not only is there always like 100 people that you can vote for as president in every election; you can also handwrite "Mickey Mouse" if you want to.
Stackoverflow Election != US election. Thank goodness. Ranked-choice voting always confused me a bit. I'm glad the election gets rerun if more mods need to be called up - that makes it more fair. Thanks for the Meta post and explanation @DanielWiddis and @Catija!
@mickmackusa The vast majority of votes in a 2-party first past the post system are wasted. If you vote for a party you know will lose, it's wasted... you could have at least made a statement. If you vote for a party you know will win, it's wasted. They didn't need you! You could have at least made a statement. The odds of you being the deciding vote are infinitesimally small.
A quick message from my sponsors: The election is in progress, and 2,485 (0.28% of 897,157 eligible) users have already voted! I can answer common questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
@DanielWiddis I LOVE the preferential votes and statistics of the SO election because with finer granularity, you can start to extrapolate which points/metrics appeared to collect the most support. The same could be done for IRL elections. If you had a couple of dozen candidates and the ones near the top of the first choice vote were in favor of, say, abortion -- then statistician/politicians can read that message clearly and adjust their goals to serve the people.
@mickmackusa Just because they know what people want, they don't necessarily act accordingly. I mean there already are "pollster" (if it was translated correctly)
@mickmackusa Sure and many, not me, came to the conclusion that it doesn't matter what's on the menu and how they elect. What is not completely wrong but also not true.
@KevinB Nah, polling can be pretty accurate if interpreted correctly, which is why pollsters make a lot of money selling their services to campaigns. I may or may not have done so myself! The problem is that the "general public" is statistically illiterate and just wants a bottom line percentage number and the ad-selling media is happy to comply, not educate.
It would be fun to have exit polling, or any more insight than raw vote totals. Like, do low-rep users prefer low-rep candidates? Do users who have been banned avoid voting for candidates who state that the CoC isn't enforced strongly enough?
I would have been much easier for me to sort the candidates this SO election if candidates would have been open about whether they are Pastafarians or not.
Polling could be done: Ask a Question with 6 Answers with the Names of the 6 Candidates and Voters would upvote only the first 3 Candidates they voted for, nothing for the next Candidates they voted for, and downvote for the Candidates they excluded. // But the Results would probably influence the "Global Voting", I reckon...