> In the future, each server on the network will be bound by the IRCNow Constitution. IRCNow's governance is modeled after the US constitution and its principles of government. This network exists for the public interest, to promote liberty and justice on the Internet.
oh no
constitutional primitivism sure is a hell of a drug, huh?
@ariadne i love it when people argue in favor of human rights by making the case that it's the thing that a bunch of conniving genocidal maniacs & human traffickers would have wanted
@JamesWidman they probably think it’s “fake news”
it's kinda wild to me that someone would think "we want to base our set of rules on a real-life national constitution" and then go "it shall be the u.s. one, even though, as the second-oldest constitution (first is san marino's), it has a lot of flaws that have since been deeply analyzed and corrected in later national constitutions (and, to some extent, in amendments to the u.s. one)"
like, how america-brained someone must be to not even consider "what if some other constitutions got some things right that we should borrow instead?" -- which is even more ironic, because it is well-known that the u.s. constitution's writers took partial inspiration from the iroquois confederacy's laws in addition to european ones
granted, the whole idea of "let's just adapt a national law for our small community" is by itself misguided
@ariadne this… what?
A user accused of abuse who flees to another server must be handed back to the server the abuse was committed on to be judged.
I suppose this is a warning sign:
Each server is guaranteed a republican form of government
This all reads like the wet dream of one of those US-american micronation dudes…
This…
… totally reads like religious zealotry.
@ariadne @arrjay I assumed you were joking about this, but they do in fact have an IRC Electoral College.
They're also picking their vice president as the second place candidate in their presidential election. That's going to work great up until the point where people disagree about how to run things.
@mirabilos @ariadne It's probably fine. Their constitution explicitly states the admins cannot establish an official religion.
@ariadne Are black servers only counted as 3/5ths of a white server and denied a vote?
@ariadne They literally claim that the top reason IRC has lost 90% of its users because:
> Most [IRC servers] do not allow freedom of religion or freedom of the press.
They also have some text describing a "minutemin" "bootcamp" which includes "civics" courses such as:
> How to Ask Good Questions
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@ahills why would an irc server need these things
@ariadne as an staff member on one of the IRC servers, what would you suggest as improvements that could be done or do you think this network is a lost cause? As far as I know the elections and constitution stuff haven't been used yet and have just been on the website for years so there might be room for changes.
@BobParody i mean i think you all should sit down and figure out some real, practical governance for an IRC network, rather than some idyllic propaganda, especially of a nation that has fallen into neofascism…
@ariadne I don't really think many people here (me included) have much knowledge or experience with governance of IRC networks. Do you have any suggestions on where to learn more about network governance?
1. sit down and figure out your actual policy goals
2. craft processes around them
IRC does not need complex governance, it needs trust in the staff who run it.
@jamesh @ariadne @arrjay They're taking the US constitution as a model *without* the amendments?
(In the US, there was exactly one Presidential election that actually worked like this -- the first contested election, which ended up with Jefferson nominally serving as Adams's VP while undermining his administration from within, to the point of surreptitiously funding pamphlets attacking Adams.It was an obvious enough failure to get immediately patched by the 12th amendment, in 1803.)
@ariadne sounds like someone got told they weren’t the President of IRC and this is the response
@cobweb it really does have some “hold my beer” energy to it
@ariadne In practice none of this actually applies and pissnet is better coordinated than IRCNow. There’s no single staff channel (equivalent of pissnet’s #opers), and NgIRCd is horribly broken in ways too numerous to list (but the founder, jrmu, refuses to give up on NgIRCd and suggests that if you don’t like it you should start another network with another ircd and somehow bridge it).
Here’s a far-from-complete list of the ways in which NgIRCd is broken:
MODE +o nick1 nick2 nick3 nick4, resulting in desyncs.&SERVER) to receive snotes.It is literally the worst ircd I have ever used.
@ariadne I’ve been reminded of several more unfixed major bugs:
I’m pretty sure jrmu knows about all this but does not care enough to switch to a less broken ircd.
@noisytoot @ariadne Even without using bugs ngircd is still fundamentally flawed in it's federation design and someone was able to hijack jrmu's account: http://xfnw.freeirc.org/no-real-bugs.html . I think jrmu's reluctance to switching to a different ircd is "minimalism" but sometimes a few extra features and bug-fixes are good. NgIRCd is still missing sasl too with no plans on adding it.
@noisytoot pissnet is the ultimate expression of IRC freedom anyway