week11--reading marterials
This week I read Chapter 5
Wikipedia's consensus decision-making mechanism faces multiple challenges in practice. The TV show naming dispute case shows that although 80% of participants support "adding disambiguating suffixes only when necessary", a minority of opponents still question the validity of the consensus, leading to a continuous editing war. The arbitration committee ruled that "the discussion must end in a timely manner", but did not specify who would judge the timing of the end, exposing the core flaw of the consensus mechanism: the open community lacks the authority to effectively terminate the discussion. The anonymous environment encourages voting manipulation, making the voting mechanism regarded as "evil" by the community; and the consensus model that relies on continuous discussion is difficult to deal with the minority's infinite delay strategy. The decision-making process often falls into a deadlock of "no one is satisfied but reluctantly accepted", reflecting the fundamental dilemma of large-scale open communities in balancing efficiency and inclusiveness.
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