[EM] Free riding
Jonathan Lundell
jlundell at pobox.com
Wed Sep 3 08:06:52 PDT 2008
On Sep 3, 2008, at 12:28 AM, Juho wrote:
> I hope this speculation provided something useful. And I hope I got
> the Meek's method dynamics right.
Meek completely fixes Woodall free riding. That strategy takes
advantage of the fact that most STV methods (to the extent we're in a
STV/Meek/etc context) are sensitive to elimination order in how they
distribute surpluses. In most other STV methods, if I vote for my
first and second preferences AB first, and A has a surplus, then only
a fraction of my vote (or a probabilistic whole) transfers to B. But
if I rank hopeless candidate Z first: ZAB, then (hopefully) A gets
elected before Z is eliminated, and my whole vote goes to B. If Z gets
eliminated first, no harm done, I'm left with AB. The hazard, of
course, is that so many voters do this that Z gets elected and/or AB
eliminated.
Meek cures this entirely via its principle that when Z is eliminated,
the ballots are counted *as if Z had never run*. There's no advantage
to me in ranking Z first.
Hylland is another kettle of fish. Here, I vote BA instead of my
sincere AB, because I "know" that A will be elected without my help,
and I can afford to spend my entire vote on B.
This is only useful, of course, if I'm competing with other A
supporters who have some second choice, say AC voters. They will have
only a fraction of their votes transfer to C, while I will have my
entire vote counted for B because I didn't bother to rank A first,
even though A is my first choice (I'd better be very confident).
There's a risk to the Hylland strategy, of course, if I make a mistake
in judging that A will be elected without my help. Other than that,
though, I don't offhand see a way of defending against Hylland free
riding.
More information about the Election-Methods
mailing list