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I like the idea of trying it out using the existing technologies. (I also like allowing negative signatures.) The one thing I’m worried about is changes: say someone submits a proof for signing and it gets signed by a few people, then someone else comes along and changes the proof? Or less radically, one person is reading something to sign it and notices some easy-to-fix errors and goes ahead and fixes them. How does that interact with the signature process?
That’s why I would say that we should take snapshots. If something’s worth signing, it’s worth preserving in it’s current form. We don’t want that to disrupt the natural evolution of the pages, but on the other hand if something’s been signed then perhaps there should be a hesitation before changing it. The only way I can think of of having both is to take a snapshot of the thing to be signed.
Also, maybe “ready to be signed” is not the first step. Maybe, “I’m thinking of this being signed” is the first step. That goes in the “discussions on signing” section. Then those who think that they would consider signing the thing can take a first look at it and comment on whether or not they could sign it. After a short time period, it could then move to “ready to be signed” if no-one has any improvements to make.
If we’re seriously thinking that this could be peer review done right (I certainly am), then it should feel formal and shouldn’t be a casual thing to do. When I sign a page, or request a page to be signed, I should be doing so as a Professional Mathematician.
I don’t like the fact that taking a snapshot would cause there to be two copies of the material. Would they be interconnected in any way? I’ve been hoping that Peer Review Done Right would apply to The nLab itself, rather than to some “nJournal” made up of material copied from the nLab at various points in time.
The reason I liked the idea of including signed objects from separate pages is exactly that, as you say, it would make for a hesitation before changing that object, but wouldn’t disrupt the natural evolution of the rest of the page(s) on which it appears. I don’t quite understand why we would want the same bit of serious mathematics to be signed in one state but also continue to “evolve naturally” in a different copy.
it should feel formal and shouldn’t be a casual thing to do
I agree, but since we are signing much smaller “bits” of mathematics than any ordinary journal article, it should also be easy to do a lot of them.