ZeLonewolf
(Brian M Sperlongano)
45
Process:
- Proposer writes proposal, discusses it widely, and demonstrates consensus with a >75% approval during a 2+ week vote.
- Proposer writes up technical procedure for making the change in the map.
- Proposer discusses proposed change with the communities involved to ensure there are no objections to making the edits
- Proposer makes the edits
There is your process, with no use of the passive voice. It’s also the process that exists today and anyone can use!
In practice, the change from an older tagging scheme to a newer one is rarely a 1:1 substitution and a bunch of work is involved to deal with edge cases, outliers, or cases where the old tag is replaced by more detailed tagging that requires the mapper to make a decision.
The problem isn’t that we don’t have a “process”. The problem (if you can even call it a problem) is that the community rarely agrees on what to do, and most people aren’t willing to put in the effort of listening, technical analysis, persuasive writing and diplomacy needed to do it on a global scale.
This is the reality of an anarchic, community-driven process. Some have suggested that the community process is no longer effective and that it would be better for the OSMF to introduce a formal, bureaucratic process for handling tagging changes. That would certainly “solve” the problem of tagging changes being too hard by appointing an arbiter to decide on such things. However, I suspect that the voting membership of the OSMF would oppose board candidates that would advocate for foundation involvement in tagging issues.