admin said in #3595 3w ago:
My favorite argument for voting systems is the wisdom of the crowd. Many decisions must be made by a single leader's well-considered judgement, but often you actually just want to solicit an aggregate opinion from the community, which is often better and even cheaper in expectation than the opinion of any dedicated judge. See also the market.
The market can work great for finding a price equilibrium that optimizes marginal resource usage. But we also recognize that it must be governed politically to match the buying power distribution to politically desired marginal utility, to control externalities, and to manage industry-level investment dynamics. Few seriously advocate that capitalists should hold sovereignty. What if voting systems are similar?
Factoring the sovereign exception-making function out of our voting systems allows us to be much more aggressive in optimizing for operational decision-making and solving their problems. But if the voters aren't sovereign, who is? For simplicity let's assume a monarchic sovereignty for now. Imagine there is some sovereign Administrator with executive power to rewrite and re-interpret the voting systems at will. Then the voters are acting in an advisory capacity, because the Administrator can ignore or reinterpret their votes as he wishes. I call this system "advisory voting".
The problem advisory voting solves is this: given the opinions of the voters on all manner of political questions, and interpreting them as information-carrying signals, solve for the crowd-informed extrapolated will of the Administrator on each question, and do so such that the strategic voting incentives are to be careful, nonpartisan, honest, etc. The sovereign being quite limited cannot answer all questions or know all considerations, but the crowd is abundant and often wise if only the right signals could be pulled out. Projecting the wisdom of the crowd onto the vector of the sovereign's will is just a reasonably well defined machine learning problem on the right side of the bitter lesson.
Various mechanism design schemes like non-independence penalties as in twitter's community notes approximate parts of this idea. But they are still presented as corrections on popular sovereignty rather than factoring out sovereignty.
With sovereignty factored out, voting systems can move at the speed of software and consume large amounts of computing power in learning and inference. In particular, the sovereign's team could model and factor out all the identified issues: low information voters can be identified and given lower weights, factional non-independence can be factored out, the voters' conflicts of interests aren't such a problem if that's just another modeled-out signal, and neither is manipulating the voters or adding a bunch of fake sybil attack voters to the system.
Sofiechan is my attempt to prove out advisory voting in a case where sovereignty is uncontested, the crowd is opinionated, and there are lots of political decisions to be made: an internet forum. If it works, that will be valuable in its own right, but I hope it will also help us chart a course to improve our governance and coordination mechanisms in light of the issues with democracy and the new abundance of computing power.
Democracy has proble