India Chooses All-Electronic Voting 292
MaximusTheGreat writes "While the U.S. debates the merits of e-voting, India has decided to have all electronic polls in the next elections for its billion strong population. Though India has used e-voting partially in previous elections, it will be the first time a Lok Sabha (central parliament) election will be held in the country since 1952 without the use of ballot papers. Election Commission plans to use about 800,000 electronic voting machines. Also, taking note from India's experience, other commonwealth countries like Malaysia and Britain will be sending representatives to India to see the use of EVMs during the Assembly elections. On a related note they plan to make voter's identity card mandatory for voting."
How they used to do it in the old days (Score:5, Interesting)
Therefore there was no need for any ID Cards. Sigh, practical technology being replaced with technology that infringes on freedoms.
They still do it... (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:How they used to do it in the old days (Score:5, Informative)
Sometimes something as simple as rubbing a peeled potato skin on the fingernail would be enough to erase the mark. I never had the opportunity (or the motivation) to try this but I have this from "reliable sources.."!!
These identity cards will certainly reduce instances of fraudulent voting - and as for privacy concerns - in a country like India with all those other concerns - the cost-benefit just doesn't work out in favour of privacy (and I am talking of the cost-benefit for the man on the street - not for the govt.)
AC
Re:How they used to do it in the old days (Score:3, Informative)
They could just as easily make it considerably easier to vote multiple times.
Re:How they used to do it in the old days (Score:5, Informative)
Don't be a luddite. ID cards aren't infringing on anyone's freedom. It sounds especially ridiculous considering that in India we have a long way to go to achieve basic freedoms, like the right of a female to live [gendercide.org]. Voter ID cards and EVMs are the best thing to happen to India's political system in a long time.
How can this be prevented now? (Score:2)
Without a durable tamperfree record, how can you prevent the same thing with e-voting? I have some solutions--
1: Each ballot should be linked to a specific voter and should be easily verifiable. This means that--
a) The computer prints a ballot after confirming the votes.
b) The ballot contains a bar code that can be easily scanned
c) The ballot contains a human
Re:How they used to do it in the old days (Score:2)
Hmm...I'm unfamiliar with the system, and mozilla seems to be having some kind of trouble clicking on the "mandatory" link, which I assume has more information. However, I don't understand how just having an ID card infringes on freedoms. Sure, it could be used to keep track of who's voting for who, but it can also be almost completely anonymous (the only information the gov
Re:How they used to do it in the old days (Score:2)
Until the "Help America [Not] Vote Act" was passed, ID wasn't reqired in some places. In New York, for example, all you had to do was show up at the polls, and sign the voter roll.
Your signature was checked by at least 2 independent checkers against the signature on file and you could vote based
Honest question (Score:2)
Do you find that your privacy is being violated / there's a greater potential of it being violated by checking your ID rather than your signature? If so, why? Again, don't take this as a sarcastic post, it really isn't, but as I said with my post above, I c
Re:Honest question (Score:2)
In Rochester, NY for example, they closed the only downtown DMV office that was left. Now, people in the city have to drive (or try to take public transportation) out to the DMV's in the suburbs. Sure, they set up a "mobile DMV office" that goes to various locations there, but it's been highly ineffective. According to the Democrat and Chronicle [democratandchronicle.com], the
Re:Honest question (Score:2)
Re:How they used to do it in the old days (Score:2)
WHAT???!!! My Grandmother lived in North East India. The corrupt policemen guarding the polls from "Pakistani terrorists" knew most of the people, they knew she would vote for the non-corrupt politician so they told her "You've voted already" and told her to go home. She didn't manage to vote once in the last ten years of her life. I told her she shouldn't even try, some people
Re:Voting Authentication using MyKad"s PKI (Score:2, Informative)
And oh, <aol>me, too!</aol> on the "I don't have MyKad yet" part.
Background for non-Malaysians: "IC" = short for Id. card in Malaysia. MyKad is the new Malaysian identity card with an embedded chip. Looks exactly like a new ATM card. Never could find enough detailed info on them to trust them, but it's supposed able to handle electronic cash, your identification details in electronic forms, PKI, etc. Would be rather hard
Re:Voting Authentication using MyKad"s PKI (Score:2, Informative)
I was searching about MyKad's PKI
and found this
http://www.mykeymykad.com.my/ [mykeymykad.com.my]
but it redirect my browser (Mozilla) to
https://www.mykeymykad.com.my/error.php?errCode=no nIE [mykeymykad.com.my]
err please complain to ca-support@msctrustgate.com
A very sensible decision... (Score:4, Interesting)
All in all, a sensible decision. The voter electronic id-cards are also almost completed - about 75 cents a card. When that gets fully completed, elections in the biggest democracy in the world can be conducted smoothly.
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Outright Discrimination. (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyhow, let me start by saying that this is a very thrilling next step in India's experiment with democracy. It'll be awesome to see the elections being conducted with minimal fraud (hopefully combated with the ID cards), but I see a very serious problem.
0.75 USD is the equivalent of about Rs. 30, and in a country where the Rs. 30 can buy a gourmet meal for 5 (well, I'm exagerating, but please try to see my point), it strikes me as quite a price for a vote. See, voting is no longer something that anyone can do, in fact, it's a form of discrimination. If the government can't teach the masses, and then they charge a ridiculous amount of money to get a ID card for an election, they're essentially telling the poorer (and likely less intelligent people) that they can't vote.
We're too quick to forget what happened when the United States decided that it was time for competency tests, and black people were discriminated against.. because comptency was directly in line with socioeconomic status. This is unfair to the poor people. It's a sad day in India when these 800,000 machines (which will hardly service 1,000,000,000 people) are spread through India.
Obviously it's nice to see voting become fast and easy
I'm not crying about the 0.75 USD, I'm just saying that it's a form of discrimination. They shouldn't be required to have these ID cards, which they will be required to have. Even if it's not a requirement, it'll be a major turn off to voting.
Well, there's my 0.75 USD.
Re:Outright Discrimination.? (Score:3, Interesting)
Secondly, I now shifted my residence about 30 km (20 miles..) from the city and lots of poor 'caste' people live nearby. ALL of them have got the cards sponsored by the 'area chief', who actually does a lot of good work. He's built us a good concrete road, he's doing desilting of a big lake nearby (12 acres - $ 100
Re:Outright Discrimination - Absolutely. (Score:2, Interesting)
It will cost the average indian more money, and it'll cost them 0.75 USD per person. Multiply that by 1 billion, and you have a pretty expensive cost (750 million USD) for a nation that has the second largest AIDs problem on earth, the worst starvation problem on earth, and a good set of pretty dire prob
Re:Outright Discrimination - Absolutely. (Score:2)
If Indians paid less for crappy proprietary s/w, started beleiving in their strengths and stopped listening to ' defer technologically advanced' suggestions, they'd prosper faster.
AIDS is more of a social problem than a pathological one, atleast in India. Indians pay more money to Microsoft, than AIDS drugs every year. Addiction to MSware is tougher to cure than Affliction with AIDS.
Oh puleese (Score:2)
Re:Outright Discrimination. (Score:5, Informative)
1) The cost of Voter's ID card is paid by the govt. Individual voters do not pay anything. I just had to go to a temporary office in my locality to get photographed and pick it up in about 10 minutes. So, the 0.75 USD discrimination problem that you point out is non-existent.
2) The voting machines simply record the number of votes for each candidate, and no record is created about who voted for whom
3) Election commision in India is an independent constitutional body and has been know to re-conduct the elections in voting areas with slightest hint of fraud.
4) Each voting booth in India is allowed to have has one representative from each candidate to ensure that the other candidate does not tryto defraud the voter. This is not perfect but ensures that the fraud when it happens does not skew the result too much.
5) The voting machines contain no OS. The code is in assembly in tamper proof chips, making it very hard to hack
6) The voting machines are not linked together over a network. This implies that to tally votes the machine has to be taken to a central station where again representatives from each candidate ensure that no wholscale fraud takes place.
Re:Outright Discrimination. (Score:2)
You clearly have absolutely no understanding of electoral mechanics, or the means that can be used to trace and/or track voters. Besides which... How do you know what information the machine keeps? Have you examined its code? Its components?
"3) Election commision in India is an independent constitutional body and has been know to re-conduct the elections in voting areas with
Re:Outright Discrimination. (Score:3, Informative)
in a country where the Rs. 30 can buy a gourmet meal for 5 (well, I'm exagerating, but please try to see my point), it strikes me as quite a price for a vote
I don't think the voter is required to pay for the card. The cost is Rs. 30 to the government. But even if we assume that the voter has to pay:
One only has to get a voter ID card once in a lifetime, not for each election. So the cost gets amortized.
Besides, if someone values their vote at
Re:Outright Discrimination. (Score:2)
Google for "Jim Crow" "poll tax"
Re:A very sensible decision... (Score:2)
But with everyone in India voting (Score:5, Funny)
Re:But with everyone in India voting (Score:4, Informative)
Tech support normally involves calling up the Area Officer and replacing a new machine. The machine itself costs about $100, IIRC.
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Re:But with everyone in India voting (Score:2, Funny)
They just outsorce it to an Indian software house, like everyone else!
Re:But with everyone in India voting (Score:2, Funny)
Great... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Great... (Score:2)
Not so fast... they use Electronic voting machines, assembly language programmed devices. No internet voting yet.
Think Indians are dumb to use technology that's so prone to fraud?
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Re:Great... (Score:3, Informative)
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Re:Great... (Score:2)
Re:Great... (Score:3, Insightful)
Debating the merits is good! (Score:4, Insightful)
This makes it sound like a bad thing
I'm surprised India is doing this
BTW Does this mean the end of election night coverage?
(End of day, sorry you lose,hasta la vista)
Re:Debating the merits is good! (Score:3, Informative)
Brazil (160 million inhabitants) has been doing electronic voting for nearly 10 years, and the last election (2002) [slashdot.org] was "all electronic". The whole system used has been shown to be quite reliable and fast.
Re:Debating the merits is good! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Debating the merits is good! (Score:2)
The electoral college is irritating, but there is no true theoretical difference between it and party discipline in Germany. In both cases a majority opinion can theoretically and occasionally practically be voted down. In Europe, all representatives to the European parlaiment are also chosen by the majority party, and not proportionally. That system developed in Europe for
Re:Debating the merits is good! (Score:2)
I don't know where you got that idea from, the election format for the European elections is different from country to country, and in Belgium for one, it IS proportional (well, mostly, there is a non-proportional division between the three language-communities Dutch-speaking, French-speaking and German-speaking)
Other countries use different mechanisms, which are usually (but not always
Re:Debating the merits is good! (Score:2)
Thank you for the information.
Re:but seems just a bit dangerous? (Score:2)
Voting, numbers and caste system (Score:5, Interesting)
First off, this election will generate a"vote-databases" larger than about any other election on this planet. Given that about a billion people live in India, there will be hundreds of millions of votes. Although electronic voting is nothing new (in the Netherlands the elections are almost 100% electronic for years now), the sheer scale of this electronic election makes it interesting.
But exactly how many people eligible for voting are there? Obviously, a significant number of the about 1 billion inhabitants will be under the legal voting age.
And then, how about the caste system? Please note that I'm not trying to be a troll here: I know the caste system doesn't officially exist anymore, but I've been in India for work for a month, and I found it pretty clear that people from different castes are treated differently. Are people from the lowests castes (or the caste-less) discouraged from voting in any way? And does the mandatory presentation of an ID-card prevent many of these people from voting?
Is there anyone who can provide a decent, and honest, background on this? It is an interesting sociological issue.
Re:Voting, numbers and caste system (Score:5, Informative)
About 40% of the population...
And then, how about the caste system?... Are people from the lowests castes (or the caste-less) discouraged from voting in any way?
Actually, it's the other way round. People from the lowest income levels are actively enlisted for voting, since they can be easily induced with comparatively lesser money.
OTOH, voter apathy among middle-class is quite common in India.
And does the mandatory presentation of an ID-card prevent many of these people from voting?
No way.. refer above, it's encouraged.
Is there anyone who can provide a decent, and honest, background on this? It is an interesting sociological issue.
Actually the caste system existed in India for 'functional reasons' and not as a means of discrimination. Politicians have groomed these into vote-banks by offering money and power.
Most caste-names are actually job-functions (like Carpenters, Woods, Smiths, Masons, Butchers you come across in Western socities). Present social conditions have actually made things screwed up for all concerned. A case in point - the coconut-tree climber charges about 20 cents a tree, which yields about 20 nuts per month. These guys are heavily sought-after and start charging 40 cents plus 2 nuts (about 10 cents) now. They send their children to 'convent' schools, who in turn learn skills different from their 'inherited' skills. Most 'caste' people in the current generation aren't capable of performing their roles honorably any more. And so it goes on...
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Re:Voting, numbers and caste system (Score:5, Insightful)
Shit.
Same old RSS propaganda material.
Most common excuse given to hide from the fact that the caste system has always been extremely unfair to the lower castes, a highly shameful, dehumanizing and severe abuse of human rights.
(I am an Indian) I too used to believe what you said, having been brainwashed by the right, but I'm sorry to tell you that there's no truth to it. I've done courses on Indian history, and I assure you that it doesn't become any better as you go back in time (which is contrary to the central dogma of Hindu philosophy). Buddhism and Jainism arose more than 2500 years ago as rebel movements against the caste system. (If you haven't guessed it already, I'm atheist).
Here's an interesting tidbit: the concepts of karma and rebirth arose (partly) as a method of oppression of the underprivileged, as a tool to convince them that the misery they faced was the result of their own faults in "previous births".
Anyway, my rant is done. I'll accept two things you said: dirty politicians leverage caste to achieve their dirty ends, and that it initially arose as a functional classification. But there's no way at all you can justify it, its been sickening and shameful almost from the beginning (the dividing line is, IIRC, between the "early Vedic" and the "later vedic" periods, when Varna became "Jathi".)
Re:Voting, numbers and caste system (Score:2)
Partly true. However shame has no ideology and does not have caste as it's bearing. Is the degree of shame different in an unemployed American and an unemployed Indian? So long as people are happy doing their jobs in society, there's no shame involved. I belong to the uppermost caste in the land, but freely mingle with, and actually do some functions 'reserved' for other
Caste is in the past, life is in the NOW! (Score:2)
But look at the NOW. The caste system is no more. It is just a shadow left in the minds of people. New generations will sooner or later, be able to drop the past completely. You can too, NOW! If you so choose.
Don't see your fellow human being as a caste, or put them in ANY comfortable bin like religion, gender, nationality or even soccer team! They are like you, a human being, a sp
Re:Voting, numbers and caste system (Score:2)
Re:Voting, numbers and caste system (Score:2)
This reminds me of the christian tropes of 'the meek shall inherit', 'render unto Caesar' and 'vengeance is mine sayeth the Lord' (i.e. wait for your heavenly reward, co-operate with those who enslave you, don't retaliate) encouraging black slaves in the US not to revolt.
(Note: This is no
Re:Voting, numbers and caste system (Score:2)
Also, interestingly enough the states(UP, Bihar etc.) in which this is an issue are the very states with low-caste candidates holding the reigns of power in
Re:Voting, numbers and caste system (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Voting, numbers and caste system (Score:2, Informative)
Mandatory Voting cards (Score:4, Interesting)
Voting is voluntary in India (source: Subas Pani, Deputy Election Commissioner, Election Commission of India, subaspani(a)eci.gov.in) so I guess it doesn't matter much.
They have only 1500 voters at each polling station so vote rigging is kind of limited in effect (there are always ways and means I realise).
I'm interested to see how this goes for them.
Re:Mandatory Voting cards (Score:3, Informative)
As for why only 65% of population got the cards, I would be surprised if the number was that high.
Vote rigging was brought down mostly due to the efforts of one of the previous election commissioners. Drastic changes were brought in, such as limiting electoral expenditure, prohibiting canvassing 3 days befo
Which box and OS?? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Which box and OS?? (Score:4, Interesting)
A bit of googling bought their sites up. ECIL webpage is pretty low on details, but BEL gives some info here [bel-india.com].
Apparently no OS is used, they have coded assembly right into the chips, so virtually tamper proof.
Re:Which box and OS?? (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.tribuneindia.com/2001/20010312/main4.ht m
How to tamper with voting machines!
Prabhjot Singh
Tribune News Service
Chandigarh, March 11
Can electronic voting machines (EVMs) be tampered with?
"Yes", says Mr Amarinder Singh, president, Punjab Pradesh Congress Committee, supporting his assertion by giving a demonstration of how an EVM with a cleverly programmed chip installed in it can transfer votes polled by one candidate to another leaving no remnants of the original voting pattern.
"Convinced that these EVMs can be manipulated, we are going to make a presentation to the Chief Election Commissioner, Dr Manohar Singh Gill, in New Delhi next week and request him to revert to the original system of voting using ballot papers. If the commission does not listen to us, we will have no choice but to knock at the door of the judiciary to get EVMs out of the elections," asserts Mr Amarinder Singh.
Capt Amarinder Singh demonstrates how a "fudged electronic voting machine" works. -- A Tribune photo by Parvesh Chauhan
Mr Amarinder Singh carries a set of EVMs, including the control unit, which during elections remains with the presiding officer of a polling station, and gives a "demonstration of how the programmed chip transfers the votes of one candidate to another".
"We got suspicious about what we call 'sophisticated booth capturing' when we found that there was 129 per cent increase in the votebank of Akalis at Nawanshahr, 100 per cent at Sunam and now 65 per cent at Majitha. The ruling party did well wherever EVMs were used while at other places, we did well. This we did by analysing all elections in the state since 1997," says the PPCC chief, admitting that "my wife and Mr Jagmeet Singh Brar were elected to the Lok Sabha from constituencies where EVMs were used. But till that time, for the ruling Akali Dal, EVMs were something new and unique.
"But once they put their electronics experts on the job, they could immediately find a solution. Whatever the Election Commission says about EVMs is not true. The mother boards, after being removed from the EVMs, do not crash but work perfectly after being soldered back in the machine. Similarly, wave welding, which the Election Commission maintains is not available in India, is very much available at various places in the country," asserts the Punjab Congress chief.
"We put our hardware and software experts on the job. They not only came out with different programmed chips but also revealed how these EVMs had been condemned the world over. Many countries, including Germany, France and the UK, had gone back to the conventional ballot paper polling by discarding the EVMs," he said before giving a demonstration of how an EVM with a programmed chip installed in it "works wonders".
"A programmed chip will not cost much. It is both timed and programmed to convert the votes polled by one candidate to those of another. It is only the final position that will remain on the hardchip or all three memories, thus leaving no scope for anyone to find out the original pattern of voting," he says during the demonstration. "Seventeen votes are cast of which three go to candidate number 1, one each to candidates number two and three, 11 to candidate number 5 and one to candidate number 7. And after a while, when the votes are counted, the machine gives 13 votes to candidate number 1 and four to candidate number 2 and nothing to the rest.
"So each machine can be programmed to transfer, say, every third vote polled by the Congress to the Shiromani Akali Dal. In the Chamunda Devi area, which is a traditional Congress stronghold, our candidate lost during the recent Majitha Assembly byelection. This strengthens our conviction that EVMs were programmed.
"Let bygone be bygone. We do not want this 'sophisticated booth-capturing' to continue anymore. We do not want EVMs but want that in all future el
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
EVMs prevent fraud (Score:5, Informative)
The bulk of the states have generally free and fair elections. The poorest states, especially those in the North, do not. There, the local strongmen actively use force to swing voted to their side and in a lot of constituencies it is not the most popular candidate who wins, but the most popular. In the poorest of the poor states, this fraud happens on a very large scale.
Today, vote rigging is a very simple exercise. All you have to do is get a bunch of very strong men with weapons of some kind and visit each polling station one by one, threaten the officers there and stamp the ballot papers in your favor. The more organized efforts include printing fake ballot papers and having them counted.
Now that EVMs have been introduced, the potential for localized fraud will be several restricted in some ways. Fake ballot papers cannot be printed, votes cannot be changed or removed. However, the local strong men and criminalized parties will still be around. They will still be able to threaten/cajole/buy people and subvert the democratic process. These problems are more systemic and will solve themselves with the passage of time.
Centralized election fraud is a very different matter. On paper, it looks like EVMs can take care of it. The results of "electronic" elections can be easily verified repeatedly and it should be somewhat difficult to systematically rig EVMS. I'm sure that people will find some way of manipulating EVMs, but it shouldn't knew the results much.
Finally, EVMs have delivered a lot of tangible results in India already. For example, results have been tabulated almost instantly, considerably shortening the political and economic uncertainty associated with elections. They definitely help democracy at every level in India.
Security risks (Score:2, Informative)
Re:PARENT IS A GOATSE.CX LINK (Score:2)
Not exactly the same (Score:2, Insightful)
I would still worry about ballot rigging, etc. I can still see ways in which such things can be manipulated. Other than ballot rigging, my other fear would be privacy. Maybe you could find ways to deduce who voted for wh
Very simply put (Score:4, Informative)
It makes a curious kind of sense -- local politicians in rural areas often pay constituents to vote -- but each constituency (ballot box, rather) is just 1500-odd votes, and hence dwarfed by the size of the country. Also, the worst offenders are usually caught by the election commission, setting examples for the rest.
The other, more dangerous form of rigging elections, is when influential politicians inflate the electoral roll and have people vote multiple times. This happens largely in the metros, because in constituencies with huge electoral rolls and many migrant labourers, fake names are more likely to go unnoticed. The election commission tries to regulate this as much as is possible, but how do you challenge the identity of a man (or woman) who possesses no identification beyond a birth certificate? Especially when you consider migrant labourers who work in big cities, and who often have nothing but names to confirm their identities.
It is to redress this second form of rigging that voter id cards were introduced. As of now they have no other uses beyond identification for voting, and the government has no plans to make them so.
So put it all in perspective, and it makes sense. I am a libertarian by nature, but I understand the bind the election commission is in.
Stop Me if you've heard this one.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Rival parties came up with some ingenious methods to beat these "ingenious"....oh sorry, "indeginous" machines(this was done in the previous polls... which were in 2001 I guess). Let's take, for example, the two parties I am interested in, The Congress (I) and the BJP. Now, local Congress leaders (hypothetical case), campaigning in villages, demonstrated the EVMs for public awareness purposes. The villagers were told the "correct" procedure for voting.
"To vote for the pa
They used electronic voting before 1952?? (Score:2)
it will be the first time a Lok Sabha (central parliament) election will be held in the country since 1952 without the use of ballot papers
Do you mean they used EVMs before 1952??Just joking.
Reminds me of another joke -
Q. What did they use in Romania before they used candles?
A. Electricity.
Re:They used electronic voting before 1952?? (Score:2)
Voter identity card (Score:3, Insightful)
Requiring proof of identity is not a problem, and a card is a pretty reasonable way of doing it, the dye approach is equally reasonable. In Australia, by way of contrast, the whole problem of fraud is largely avoided by making the voting process mandatory (it aint completely avoided but anomalies are much easier to detect). One is registered at a specific location for voting and one is expected to vote at that location (elections are on Saturdays) your name is checked off and clearly if you get there and your name is already checked off then there is a problem. There is a mechanism for absentee and postal ballots for those who are away, but these numbers are few and indeed for many electorates these votes are not relevant for the outcome. Clearly this process would be 50 times larger in india, but that is probable still manageable and there is a strong tradition of voting so making it compulsory shouldn't be impossible. Then the identity fraud problem really goes away (other more overt forms of fraud remain however
OMG: A real use for biometrics? (Score:4, Interesting)
You go to vote, get a retinal scan stored with your vote. If you vote more than once, [insert appropriate action here: {use the most recent vote | use only unchanged votes | throw away vote | some other action}].
The big security hole is fake retinas being inserted into the database. There's always a point of weakness in the security hierarchy where you might be able to slip in fake data. It's plausible to be able to detect fake retinal images, but that may not be possible. Of course, false data is the bane of any electronic voting device.
The good part, though, is that it allows people to vote anonymously and vote only once without being identified--as long as there's no database that correlates retinas to names, that is.
(Oh my god ... I didn't just use "OMG" did I?)
Re:OMG: A real use for biometrics? (Score:3, Insightful)
You can't do this because it is a secret ballot. The votes just get recorded, there is no record of who voted for who (could lead to some uncomfortable situations).
No matter what there will always be some weakness. India has a seperate body to monitor elections and they have forced reelection
In other news (Score:3, Funny)
The US had this for awhile (Score:2)
130 candidates (Score:3, Funny)
Electronic elections... (Score:2, Interesting)
Meanwhile, in Florida...
Re:Electronic elections... (Score:2)
(Sorry, bad joke, mod me down if you wish :-D)
Great!! (Score:2)
Bad move (Score:2)
I think it was Kernigan that proved that even if you compiled the source yourself, you can't prove that the binary does what you think it does. What if the compiler is bogus and fraudulent? Even if you recompile the compiler, what if THAT compiler is bogus?
There are too many theoretical holes, that even if not true, will keep the conspiracy theorists busy. This is the one single
eVoting vs EVM (Score:2, Interesting)
eVoting is quite different from EVMs, and I don't think the author made that difference in the article
Yeah, won't they be suprized when Saxby Chambliss (Score:2)
Read this if you don't understand what I am saying [blackboxvoting.org]
total pop vs. registered voters (Score:2)
Given that India is currently run by the ultra-right fundamentalist party, is the use of electronic voting and an identity card a technique to put up barriers to the rural/poor population? (Perhaps a candidate's brother will use th
this has been going on in the US for years (Score:2)
This isn't some sort of massively networked remote internet voting system that would allow people to vote naked while they scrub off in their internet enabled showers.
So this system sounds much the same as the system in many US cities and towns which either use electronic or mecahnical tallying. B
India Uses Proportional Representation (Score:2)
One big difference is that the Indian elections use proportional representation, an early 20th century voting system that counts voter preference rankings to determine results, as opposed to the US's simpler, strictly 19th century plurality voting system where winner takes all, even with a minority of the total votes cast.
The US actually began to use PR during the
Re:*Shakes head* (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:*Shakes head* (Score:3, Informative)
So either we're talking some other country or you just pulled that one out of a hat.
Re:*Shakes head* (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't understand the Americans. They have more people living in poverty than there are people in Spain, yet they build nukes and spend tons of money so they can live on the bleeding edge of [insert thing here].
So what the FUCK is your point?
Re:*Shakes head* (Score:2)
Cheers,
Ian
Re:*Shakes head* (Score:3, Insightful)
The average time to get re-hired in South Carolina is 11 months. And that's in the booming industries.
Re:*Shakes head* (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:*Shakes head* (Score:5, Informative)
India
Population - 1,045,845,226
Population below poverty line - 25%
Unemployment - 8.8%
Military Expenditure - $12,079.7 million ( 2.5% of gdp)
US
Population - 280,562,489
Population below poverty line - 13%
Unemployment - 5%
Military Expenditure - $276.7 billion ( 3.2% of gdp)
Facts? (Score:2)
Re:*Shakes head* (Score:3, Insightful)
Need for Electronic voting in India..... (Score:4, Informative)
the various costs that the government will incurr on a traditional paper based voting system
i) Printing of the ballot paper (paper on which the vote is marked), this takes about 60-70 % of the cost of election thats coz because the crieteria for being a candidate are
a) the person must be above 24
b) the deposit was earlier INR 1000 to 2000 odd thats about $25 - $50 max.
then the no of candiates used to be around 50, in some places it had touched 100, think of printing a paper with 100 candiates name on it and a few million copies of it, u get the point....
ii) logistics of movement of ballot boxes and personell and the security along with it and personnel payements about 20 - 25 %
iii) misc 5% like the security ink, etc
the initial cost of acquring electronic voting machines are a bit high, but since the same machines can be used for all public elections, the long term benifits are cumulative and it is clearly visible
the electronic voting machines help in reducing the money spent on ballot paper by a minimum of 50% which can be used for other development purposes
this system was tested in earlier elections and everyone is satisfied with this system as this reduces the number of double voting (like the stamp is put for two or more candidates) an other voting anomilies.....
Re:*Shakes head* (Score:2)
Which is to say, that those country-wide stats often give a very skewed picture; for instance, the state I was born, Kerala, has 100% literacy, and health-levels that match European standards. And yet, as a country, we rank 127 on the UN Development scale, primarily because of bad literacy levels in the North and in the tribal belt in the c
Re:*Shakes head* (Score:2, Insightful)
No. (Score:5, Interesting)
Back in India, we face the same problems as any other democracy; heck, I'll argue that we face more lobbyists and well-entrenched groups than you Americans do. The ongoing 'debate' over the tax reform is a perfect example; the central government has been trying to move all the 25 states into a uniform VAT zone for the last 8 or so years without any succcess. Grapevine has it that a solution is possible only in 2005, well after the next round of general elections. We are, after all, one-sixth of all humanity; there's bound to be someone somewhere who doesn't like something for some reason.
The electronic voting machines also had significant problems in deployment; if I remember correctly, they were developed way back in the 80's itself, at the (government-owned) Electronic Corporation of India Ltd [ecil-india.com] (the products webpage doesn't mention voting machines, so I could be wrong on the company) There were just too many groups resisting technology; as followers of Indian politics will note, elections in the 80's and 90's were invariably accompanied by booth-capturing, rigging and voter impersonation. Goondas (that's Indian English for the American 'rowdy') patronised by political parties would often take over polling booths, and stuff ballot papers in them. If you really wanted to vote on Election Day, you'd want to vote early in the day itself; not only to avoid the crowd, and violence if any, but also because someone else would have already voted under your name. And then, there'd be those political clashes, electoral violence, bomb blasts... an endless tyranny making a mockery of our constitutional values.
Obviously, the situation needed some strong action and, as I recall, the then Election Commissioner, Mr TN Seshan (who was and still is a sort of middle-class Indian hero), strongly asserted his Commission's independence from the government de jour, by the following measures:-
a)Paramilitary Forces:-
Not many Indians realise this, but elections in India see the world's largest peacetime movement of troops. All elections these days, unless they are the sub-province-level Panchayat elections, are actually conducted by the federal paramilitary battalions, the Border Security Force (BSF), the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) etc, and not the state police, who report to the government of the day and, therefore, presumably are not to be trusted.[1]
b) Behavioural Changes:-
For a month or so before the actual elections exercise, the Commission enforces a so-called "Model Code of Conduct" on all political parties; among other things, the contestants can't promise soft bribes for their constituents. Compliance is entirely voluntary; the Commission can't, for instance, pull someone up for breaking the Code, but then, which contestant in his right mind would want to be caught on the wrong side of his constituents' ire?
This was certainly the case between 1991 and 1995/6, until elections were announced in the teeny-weeny state of Goa [photoguide.to], bringing us to step (c), technology.
c) Technology:-
Only after the above two easy-sounding, but difficult-to-implement steps did the Election Commission turn to technology. Even there there has been significant backlash; as I recall, there were many states that were tardy in issuing voter ID's. And even in that, the voter ID's are technologically-minimal; they are basically laminated printouts of a voter's digital pic, his name, address, date of birth, and the EC's hologram.
The end result is a vastly improved electoral process. Booth capturing and rigging will now completely vanish, even if it's only because the goondas haven't as yet figured out how to crack the voting machine. And then, there are obvious questions as to the quality of the nincompoops we elect.
That, however, shouldn't d
Re:No. (Score:2)
Yeah. Rigging will vanish because it moves away from the thuggery and violence previously required, and toward the more sophisticated, genteel manipulation of electronics. The rigging just moves out of the public's eye.
Re:No. (Score:2)
Thanks, (Score:2)
Naah, I'll pass. :-)
Re:What if it was hacked? (Score:2)
If they do get cracked, couldn't it be by the leaving politicians request, at which the "changes" made by a cracker wouldn't be looked at, they could just let him on by.
A similar problem is with non-electronic means, somebody has to be trusted enough to get the votes from voters, counted, and registered. The system ain't perfect, but India, I believe is cutting out more temptations for folks to fiddle with results.
Anyways, they could use IPv6 to transfer
Re:How does electronic voting equal e-voting (Score:2)
Your are, no doubt, mislead by the concept of e-mail which, by its nature, is networked, but there's nothing in "e" which implies Internet or any other form of networking.
For instance, my articles for print publication are written in purely electronic digital form. They are "e" documents, as opposed to dead tree documents, even if they never see a network.
KFG
Re:Only 800.000 machines? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:So what? (Score:2)
Seriously though, there's a lot of hype about Indian tech, some of it is plain stupid. You're right; doesn't help one bit by the fact that most people here are geeks, and geeks by nature are baggard about themselves.
Indeed, if we go all electronic, it's an Indian, or at the best, a sociological achievement; the world's largest administrative exercise has finally discovered 20 year old technology. Nothing more, nothing less.
(I'm Indian, btw)