E-voting Trials and Tribulations 286
Alex Susor writes "This article is about the new digital touch screen voting system in Georgia, the first state in the nation to adopt this method of voting statewide. Demonstration machines were set up at the recent primaries to teach voters about the new system (to be in place for the November general election) and had some big problems." Compare and contrast to systems in Florida and Germany.
Couldn't You Just (Score:2, Interesting)
it's only a matter of time (Score:2, Interesting)
until pop under ads for the X10 camera appear
never ending pornsite loops to entertain grandma (since young adults don't vote.. I know.. I waited in line to vote last november, and was saddened by the turnout.. I was the only one under 40 it seemed)
The important part of the article.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Why do we need to go to polls at all? (Score:3, Interesting)
Just mail me my username/password, i'll go to whatever website you want me to go to and vote. I'm sure 1/2 the
Secret ballots with secret software (Score:5, Interesting)
I wonder if it's really legal to have votes counted by a machine that has secret software inside that voters are not allowed to examine?
Shouldn't voters in Georgia be able to file an FOI request to find out what's happening to their votes?
Windows?? (Score:3, Interesting)
A better solution would be to use an embedded microcontroller or other simple hardware device for each voting station and then connect that to a central database server running a much more secure operating system. I think that voting and it's integrity deserve as much mission critical attention as safety systems in an automobile. There simply shouldn't be any failure here. Relying on an OS with several millions of lines of code just to input a few votes just doesn't make any sense.
This frightens me (Score:2, Interesting)
In Belgium we have electronic voting... (Score:1, Interesting)
You still have to go there but you vote on a
magnetic card using "light pen on screen".
Between your wish (what you want to vote) and you
the electronic counting machine, there are so
many computer and possible oriented bug that
you can not trust the election result.
The main issue is that human can not verify
what as been voted. You can not read your own
vote and even if you could, there is no garantee,
it will be read the same way by the "counting
machine".
If you understand french, you can go to read:
http://www.poureva.org/
David GLAUDE
Re:Computerized voting restricts access to voters (Score:5, Interesting)
Voters who are not computer savvy will likely become confused by the unnecessary complication of the new voting machines and many are likely to cast their ballots in error, possibly voting for a candidate they had no intention of supporting.
I think you're over-estimating the complexity of the system for the user.
It's not hard: you see the candidate you want, you touch their name. Their name lights up. If you want to change your vote, you touch a different name. Once you've picked your candidate, you move on to the next page. You can change your vote later. When you want to accept the ballot, just press a last panel on the screen.
This isn't rocket science. It's as easy as the paper ballots, if not easier.
The reliability and accuracy of paper-based systems is what led to the mess in Florida in 2000.
I agree with you on the hacking and digital manipulation. There are ways around this, but only if the system is well-designed. Of course, there are all sorts of ways to manipulate the system to produce a desired result, both subtle (place the candidate's name on the second page of a list of names) and gross (stuff the ballot box with 'votes' for your guy from 'voters' who are dead.) No paper system is 100% tamper proof.
Re:Why do we need to go to polls at all? (Score:3, Interesting)
If all the voting happens in a public place with poll watchers from all parties, then it's harder for someone to lean over a voter and pressure him/her. That's also the reason for the rules restricting who's allowed to accompany a voter and "help" with the voting process.