- Do we keep the choices-of-microrepresentative secret? (If not, I'd be worried about people buying or coercing other people's votes. Even if the only information they get is how many people delegated to them, that might still be enough to enable that kind of thing.)
- Do we keep the votes-on-the-issues secret? (If not, then we're back to vote-buying. But if so, then you don't even have any way of knowing how your representative voted on each issue. Which might not be a bad thing - I don't think transparency is always good - but it's something to think about.)
I don't mean to sound like I'm defending our current system; it's got similar problems, and other problems too. And maybe there's a way to make all this stuff work. I can easily imagine that a direct democracy like this could be better than what we've got now. But I have a feeling that we could use a more radical change anyway - I'm worried about the "politicians are corrupt" problem, but I'm also worried about, for example, the "people keep voting for policies that don't actually have the desired effects" problem, and it doesn't seem like having a direct democracy or a more flexible representative-choosing system would help much with that. (I'd still kinda like to try something along the lines of the futarchy idea.)
(Then again, radical change seems unlikely. And moving to an Internet-based system like this might make it easier to move to a weirder Internet-based system later. Hmm, or it might make it harder, if people get sick of all the fiddling around. I dunno.)