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E-Voting Problems Are Mostly User Error, Says ITAA 533

grcumb writes "InfoWorld is carrying a story today which mentions a press kit being distributed by the Information Technology Association of America. Its purpose? To 'help journalists put election equipment-related snafus in context.' Most e-voting problems, they insist, are [l]user issues, where people who don't know how to deal with the new technology cause delays as they seek assistance. They don't seem to feel the need for journalists to understand basic system design issues (like making sure your computer and human processes work), why testing didn't identify these problems, nor why this is better than paper ballots."
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E-Voting Problems Are Mostly User Error, Says ITAA

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  • by erick99 ( 743982 ) <homerun@gmail.com> on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:14AM (#10574116)
    These people need to learn some lessons in human relations. I am sure they have some valid points to be made, however, the way they went about it was condescending and insulting to the journalists. I mean, really, I cannot imagine telling journalists that I am going to "help journalists put election equipment-related snafus in context." Journalists feel that it is their job to collect info and put things into context themselves. The ITAA shot themselves in the foot.
    • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) * on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:27AM (#10574190)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • ...you're part of the precipitate.
      • by Fulcrum of Evil ( 560260 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @08:44AM (#10574711)

        Of course this can only add to the image that most people already have of geeks being condescending towards anybody that doesn't understand what they are doing. The actual article linked from Infoworld only adds to this image.

        Bullshit. This is somebody trying to shift blame away from themselves. The fact is, these poll machines are woefully inadequate and crap is flying. This e-voting crap just isn't going to work.

        • by bman08 ( 239376 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @09:11AM (#10574954)
          Yes it is. Years, lawsuits and probably a few bad elections from now this e-voting crap will absolutely work.
          • My fear is that the sort of problems these are going to cause in the meantime might make the very concept of elections themselves rather obsolete, once the wrong people use this flawed system to get into power.
      • by asoap ( 740625 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @09:28AM (#10575100)
        Have you ever worked with poll workers? The press kit is kinda justified.

        My mother worked in the last Canadian election as Returning officer. She basically ran a district in an election. She was in charge of making sure everyone was trained, renting the offices, highering the accountant, getting signs printed, etc etc etc.

        I was in her office a couple of times and you would be suprised on the signs they have posted everywhere. It's like "Elections for dummies" in there. Everywhere you see a sign that tells you how to do your job. "If this happens, do a b and c. If this happens do x y and z".

        I will not be suprised if these electronic voting systems come with big ass signs that say. "If machine is not on, make sure it is plugged in the wall. If machine is not on, and it's plugged in the wall. Please check that the socket has power."

        The main thing that I noticed is that most people's job at an election office has been so simplified and so documented as to what to do that almost any person can do that job, regardless of personal intellect. If you can read and write, then you're qualified.

        While I do admit that this doesn't help the geeks reputation of trying to be all high and mighty. They won't be the first people to assume that the people running an election are morons.

        -Derek

      • You know, I'm one of those condescending geeks, and I was still extremely offended by the ITAA's attitude.

        You're building devices that have to be at least as good as the freakin punch cards they're replacing. Very few people have problems figuring out how to get people's votes collected using punch cards.

        If you've built a system such that the average Jane has a small chance of screwing it up, you've failed. The average poll worker needs to be able to understand it effortlessly and use it with near per
    • Now I don't know what journalists think thier job is, but from where I sit it seems like it's thier job to write news that sells. So far it seems like they're spinning these E-voting problems like "all hell is breaking loose in FL". It's just a press kit, so it's not like they have to read it. But it is at least one effort (subtle or not) to do damage control if the E-voting issues are not being potrayed correctly in the news.
      • by Mysticalfruit ( 533341 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @08:39AM (#10574678) Homepage Journal
        Exactly. Everybody in 2000 made a big deal about the butterfly ballots in FL.

        What the media forgot to mention was that 96% of the people who used the butterfly ballot were able to figure it out just fine.

        The reason the other 4% couldn't figure out the ballot was because they were stupid. Yet the media make it sound like the populace at large was dumbfounded by these "freakish" ballots.
        They also forgot to mention that these ballots had been in use for years.

        The bigger issue is that in presidential elections in the past, it's generally a landslide, so having ~5% of the votes going uncounted for technical reasons (i.e. voter stupidity) really didn't impact the election.

        I suspect, as with 2000, this election will be so close that 5% margin really will matter. Especially in a winner takes all type of electoral college system. Which further underscores why I think we should dump the electoral college system and go with straight representative elections.
        • by halligas ( 782561 ) * on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @09:37AM (#10575173)
          The bigger issue is that in presidential elections in the past, it's generally a landslide, so having ~5% of the votes going uncounted for technical reasons (i.e. voter stupidity) really didn't impact the election. So your point is that because the reason that people had problems with the butterfly ballots was their own stupidity that it wasn't a big deal? Perhaps we should add a mini IQ test to the ballot, that would really screen out the stupid people. Like it or not, stupid people have a right to vote and a ballot that is confusing or convoluted enough to elminate ~5% of the electorate IS a "big deal". Yes, with any voting system, there will always be some idiots who will mess it up. But the number should be south of 1%.
    • by Qzukk ( 229616 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:42AM (#10574268) Journal
      Journalists feel that it is their job to collect info and put things into context themselves. The ITAA shot themselves in the foot.

      Journalists? I'm sure this stuff will be parroted day in and out by our news "personalities" that can tell you all about the voting crashes with a twinkle in their eye. The news sources these days are packed with more people busy looking out for their parent/grandparent company than corroborating stories, checking facts, or even researching a news item themselves as opposed to just running whatever press release is handed to them.
    • Not only that, they're full of shit. Having widespread cases of voting machines not recording the correct vote or even any vote at all, crashing systems, etc. are not examples of user error, they're examples of shitty design.
    • since when... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by darth_zeth ( 155639 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:58AM (#10574372) Homepage
      ...do Journalists deserve respect? And since when do Journalists get tech subjects correct with out their hands being held?

      "Journalism" these days (and perhaps always?) is a whole lot of sensationalism. Most news comes from a limited group of sources anyway, so its not like Journalists are doing all that much collecting of information. It's a phenomenon that's hard to see when you pick up your local paper (unless you pick up 10 papers a day, you don't realize that every paper has the same news articles from the AP or Knight Ridder), but the same principle is painfully obvious in the "blogosphere". Someone has a story, then the next day, everyone has the story (copied form the first blog).
      • Re:since when... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Fulcrum of Evil ( 560260 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @08:46AM (#10574732)

        Journalism" these days (and perhaps always?) is a whole lot of sensationalism.

        Nah, journalism deserves respect. The problem is that it's very rare these days.

        • Re:since when... (Score:3, Interesting)

          by darth_zeth ( 155639 )
          thats actually the point i was trying to make. most "Journalists" are just parrots. They don't actually go out and colelct data, they just repeat what other "journalists" are saying.
          • Re:since when... (Score:3, Interesting)

            by OmniGeek ( 72743 )
            You might be interested in reading Bob Edwards' book on Edward R. Murrow and the origins of broadcast jounalism; I just finished it, and it's quite interesting. I gather from it that quality journalism has always been somewhat the exception, less so in the early days than now, and has suffered enormously from corporate profit motives in broadcasting (ownership of broadcast networks by non-broadcasters, elimination of the FCC's Fairness Doctrine, corporate treatment of news organizations as profit centers, a
    • RTFM (Score:5, Insightful)

      by goldspider ( 445116 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @08:08AM (#10574440) Homepage
      "I am sure they have some valid points to be made, however, the way they went about it was condescending and insulting..."

      Sounds like your run-of-the-mill OSS tech support, if you ask me. Why is it OK to blame "idiot users" when they have problems with complicated OSS, but unacceptable to blame them for not knowing how to use a TOUCH SCREEN?

      • Re:RTFM (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Minwee ( 522556 )
        It's okay to blame users who have picked up your software for free, ignored the documentation which clearly answers their questions and still have problems with complicated software.

        It is _not_ okay to blame users who, as taxpayers, have paid ridiculous amounts of money for a system which is _supposed_ to be fool-proof and simple to use when they find that it is too complicated for them to use and too easy to fool.

        By default the responsibility lies with the user to figure out what he or she is doing. Whe
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) * on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:14AM (#10574117)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • State law only alows you three minutes to vote

      Are you serious?

      Guess we do things differently up here. I've worked at the polls in Canadian elections, and we have to take a class beforehand - the only thing we were told, IIRC, was that the voter can take all the time they require. No interference.

      And we STILL get to count all the votes and declare a winner the same evening. (Yes, we still use paper ballots, so we can do a recount if one is requested).

      Hey, maybe we should export our "use a paper ballot t

  • Ummm.... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by antifoidulus ( 807088 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:16AM (#10574124) Homepage Journal
    this is the ITAA? Aren't they supposed to advocate GOOD software design? Guess what, if the user is making errors, then it's the problem of the software maker. Obviously they didn't design their interface right, obviously they didn't write their instructions well enough etc. The user isn't supposed to have to study a user's manual before voting.
    Come on, this "blame the user" bs is getting really old. Appearently corporations are allowed to be totally incompetent with their own products, but it's always the users fault if they don't know how to use them......
    • Re:Ummm.... (Score:5, Informative)

      by Zachary Kessin ( 1372 ) <zkessin@gmail.com> on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:24AM (#10574173) Homepage Journal
      I really think the old paper balots where the best bet. When I lived in New Hampshire you filled in a paper balot and they fed it into a machine to be counted. (Think SAT tests here). THe computer counted it, but if they had to I am sure that they could re-do it by hand.

      It was easy, cheap and low tech. I really think much of this e-voting a solution looking for a problem.
      • by goneutt ( 694223 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:33AM (#10574211) Journal
        When I went to vote in 2000 it was a multi-fold 8.5"x11" (I think) ballot with the names in large type, use a marker to connect an arrow by the candidates name. None of this punch card chadding, miss aliging of marks, or any of the many faults in the butterfly ballot. The only way you could screw that up was to drool until the ink smeared.

        Oh my god, did I just figure out the next big problem, drooling idiots shorting out the touch screens.
        • ballot with the names in large type, use a marker to connect an arrow by the candidates name. None of this punch card chadding, miss aliging of marks, or any of the many faults in the butterfly ballot.

          They use pretty much the same system where I'm at. (OK, I think it's a double-sided 8.5x14, unfolded card.) It is possible to screw it up though. Say, for instance, someone wasn't paying attention and accidentally marked two candidates for the same position. Then the machine catches the error and they se
      • In NJ, we used to have little tiny throw-levers in a machine that I think just punched a card automatically. This year will be my first time in a voting booth in about 10 years, so I don't know if its the same.

        Also, with these touch screen things, wouldn't the person before you leave their fingerprints on the screen? If so, doesn't this ruin the privacy of voting?
      • Re:Ummm.... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by dbitch ( 553938 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @08:15AM (#10574490)
        Well, what I find interesting, is that the /. crowd, who are aguably the most informed and knowledgable about computers, are the ones who are arguing against evoting. Why is that?

        1) /. knows that the users ARE stupid, and nothing can change that, so go for the least common denominator (paper ballots).

        2) They know that, despite assurances, there's always another bug, and that none of them trust their vote to a damn computer (despite the fact that their livelyhood depends upon it).
        • Re:Ummm.... (Score:3, Insightful)

          I think its some of both, but more number 2. Systems and not just computer systems. Have bugs. A good way to reduce the number of bugs is to make the system as simple as you can. You will alway have some number of mis votes where someone checks the wrong box or something, but if you make the system simple you will hopefully minimise that.

          Also remember that election systems like this are used by a huge number of people once ever few years. So you want the system to be quick to use, cheap and simple as peopl
        • Don't forget 3)... (Score:3, Insightful)

          by OmniGeek ( 72743 )
          3) Electronic systems are easier to manipulate, with many single-point-of-vulnerability opportunities to own the entire system, and are MUCH harder to design and implement in a really secure way than those primitive old paper things. Geeks understand these problems much more acutely than almost anyone else (with the possible exception of certain parties interested in gaming the election results again...?)

          Ouch! That tinfoil hat is suddenly getting very hot!
        • Re:Ummm.... (Score:5, Insightful)

          by demachina ( 71715 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @11:17AM (#10576335)
          I don't think voter intellect is really the issue with evoting. They do in fact make it pretty hard to make a mistake.

          Early indications are the tech savvy of the poll workers setting up systems with a lot of interconnects and make everything work under pressure is certainly a concern. I'm not sure but you get the impression Florida in particular is relying on a working internet connection to the home office which seems insane, problem plagued and wildly insecure, at least the guy they showed on the news was rambling about not being able the machines not being able to connect to the "mainframe".

          But system design would certainly fix that if you insist on using them. First off these machines should need nothing more than a power plug. They should be setup in a central location under nonpartisan supervision, locked and sealed, taken to the poll and then when done transported back to a central, secure, location to unload the results.

          But the damning thing about evoting is there HAS TO BE A PAPER TRAIL. There is an interesting case study in Venezuela which recently had an election involving Hugo Chavez, who is reviled by the Bush administration, and was under constant accusation of trying to rig elections. They used all or mostly evoting machines, BUT they all had printers and a paper trail. The opposition tried to levy charges of election rigging but they simply didn't stick.

          Now turn to the U.S., bastion of democracy, who spends tons of time and money telling the rest of the world how to vote. It appears all or most of the evoting machines have NO PAPER TRAIL. A glitch happens and people's votes disappear. Worse its ridiculously easy to rig the election. The U.S. really is turning in to a laughing stock for the rest of the world, and a shining example of a democracy gone bad.

          Another serious flaw was pointed out by Jimmy Carter on Larry King last night (you can revile him all you want but he does know good and bad electoral process). The U.S. and assorted other international election monitors push hard for elections to be run by impartial, nonpartisan officials. In the U.S. the are almost universally turned over to very partisan hacks who have huge biases, think Katherine Harris in Florida or any election official appointed by biased governors(for example the brother of one of the candidates). You give these people complete control of the election machinery, and you give them electronic voting machines with no paper trail, and no chance of a recount or audit. It will be a miracle if they can resist the temptation to steal the election because it is SO EASY.
    • Re:Ummm.... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by peragrin ( 659227 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:34AM (#10574219)
      How bad are these interfaces??

      It should be really simple.

      on Screen Pick a person to vote for President.

      Under that Pictures of each canidate, and the parties that support them.

      You select one and press the vote button at the bottom, It then verifies you want that canidate, yes / no with no going back.

      repeat for each election.

      If it is any more complicated than that the system is wrong. The computers themselves shouldn't crash. Crashes are signs of bad programing.

      I know people who can use Palms and Graffitti, but don't know how to use a computer. Why Because the interfaces are to much.
      • ...well, not the serious problem, anyhow.

        The odd interface-related snafu here and there gets media attention, surely, but the serious issue is the potential for election rigging with no ability to detect or correct for it after-the-fact. Claiming that the only issues these machines have are interface-related is a slick slight-of-hand, taking attention from where the serious problems lie.

        (After all -- interface-related mistakes, like hanging chads, are made by everyone, and on average shouldn't swing the
      • Re:Ummm.... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Idarubicin ( 579475 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @08:03AM (#10574407) Journal
        on Screen Pick a person to vote for President.

        Under that Pictures of each canidate, and the parties that support them.

        Nope. You're still making the system too complicated. No pictures necessary; just the candidates' name and party affiliation (the latter is even optional.)

        Pictures are an invitation to disaster--remember the debacle when Time altered OJ Simpson's mugshot photo for their cover, probably to make him look more threatening. (Links: Time mugshot image [mugshots.com]; comparison [umn.edu] with Newsweek print of same image.)

        What if you discover partway through election day that your candidate's image is being garbled? What if the tint or contrast settings on some of the screens are off, so your candidate looks purple? No pictures, thank you.

        You select one and press the vote button at the bottom, It then verifies you want that canidate, yes / no with no going back.

        You forgot the last steps: the machine then prints a human-readable (optionally also machine-readable) ballot with all your votes, which you verify and drop in the ballot box before you leave. A touchscreen system with no paper trail is unacceptable.

        • Re:Ummm.... (Score:3, Insightful)

          by garcia ( 6573 ) *
          You forgot the last steps: the machine then prints a human-readable (optionally also machine-readable) ballot with all your votes, which you verify and drop in the ballot box before you leave. A touchscreen system with no paper trail is unacceptable.

          And this is the exact reason that this method is unnecessary. Voting is already a pain in the ass for people apparently as so little people do it. So let's make everyone's lives more difficult by adding MORE steps, more pieces of paper to think about, and mo
          • Re:Ummm.... (Score:3, Insightful)

            by cduffy ( 652 )
            And this is the exact reason that this method is unnecessary. Voting is already a pain in the ass for people apparently as so little people do it. So let's make everyone's lives more difficult by adding MORE steps, more pieces of paper to think about, and more places to screw up.

            I'd argue that the actual process that goes on at the polling place has little or nothing to do with turnout. The hassle of getting to the voting place -- sure, I'll accept that that impacts turnout, especially for people without
        • Re:Ummm.... (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Guppy06 ( 410832 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @10:52AM (#10575980)
          "just the candidates' name and party affiliation (the latter is even optional.)"

          No, this is America; the former is optional.
    • by FirstOne ( 193462 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @09:49AM (#10575273) Homepage

      "this is the ITAA?"

      For the most part the ITAA == Professional Liars Association.

      Remember them making all those tech worker shortage projections right in the middle of the dot com collapse? 1.6 Million, 900K [com.com], then 600K. [com.com]

      At the same time the tech industry was laying off workers faster than you can imagine. They did it to promote their H-1B agenda.. Note: They're still at it.

      Debunking the Myth of a Desperate Software Labor Shortage [ucdavis.edu]...."The congressional General Accounting Office found ``serious analytical and methodological weaknesses'' in the [ITAA/Dept. of Commerce] reports.";

      The ITAA was counting all the positions held by Computer consultants and contractors as UNFILLED [ucdavis.edu]!!
      Yikes !!!

      ---

      Now for a little bit about the ITAA with electronic voting and Mr. Miller's pitch to the electronic machine manufacturers. August 22, 2003, Democracy for Sale, CHEAP! [thoughtcrimes.org]

      "Harris Miller (ITAA) Gives the intro spiel about the company and how it can help the industry stave off short-term attacks" from academics and "activists".

      "Harris: .. And there can be two scenarios there: The companies may want to hide behind me, they dont want to say anything... frequently that happens in a trade association, you dont want to talk about the issues as individual companies. We have that issue right now with the Buy America Act, for example in congress. No company wants to act like its against Buy America -- even though theyre all against it so I take all the heat for them."

  • by Exmet Paff Daxx ( 535601 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:17AM (#10574131) Homepage Journal
    When Diebold rewrites my vote as a vote for Bush, it's going to be a problem for me the user.
  • Bullshit (Score:5, Informative)

    by selderrr ( 523988 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:20AM (#10574148) Journal
    India, the worlds largest democracy recently had an all electronic voting. Thats a few hundred million voters. Isn't he USA one of the most educated countries in the world ? The highest distribution of luxury goods ? 99% of the voters has cable TV, whereas in india many voters see a monitor once every 5 years : when they vote.
    • Re:Bullshit (Score:2, Insightful)

      by erick99 ( 743982 )
      Ever stood behind behind people using an ATM? It is astounding to see them read the instruction "Please insert card" and shake their head and stare at the machine and begin randomly pushing buttons. I can understand the difficulty in filling out an electronic ballot. Unfortunately.
    • Re:Bullshit (Score:5, Funny)

      by MyHair ( 589485 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:48AM (#10574311) Journal
      Yeah, but in India everyone is already trained in level 1 tech support.
  • by jonasw ( 778909 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:20AM (#10574154)
    # Don't complain about lack of options. You've got to pick a few when you do multiple choice. Those are the breaks. # Feel free to suggest poll ideas if you're feeling creative. I'd strongly suggest reading the past polls first. # This whole thing is wildly inaccurate. Rounding errors, ballot stuffers, dynamic IPs, firewalls. If you're using these numbers to do anything important, you're insane.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    The ones that says "click 'yes' if you are (insert deaming phrase here)" and as you move your mouse to click the no, it turns into a yes...

    In seriousness, why don't they just put the canidates faces on the ballot? Or graphic representations of thereof?

    Of course previous voters might take liberties with a sharpee pen on the voting screen.
  • by DrWho520 ( 655973 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:22AM (#10574159) Journal
    Just what we need, another double A organization.

    RIAA
    MPAA
    ITAA (It's new!!! : ^D)

    I suggest we all comence drinking heavily and then meet up at AA.
  • by mumblestheclown ( 569987 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:22AM (#10574163)
    There is no such thing as "user error" in such systems. There is only "design error and failure to adequately test."

    A fundamental design feature of any voting system must be that the expected "user error" rate must be well, well below the expected vote differential otherwise the system fails in its primary task of capturing the wishes of the voters.

    User error can be engineered away. Not by "genius" engineers sitting in some back room coming up with better UIs, but "average" engineers with clipboards field testing the system, watching where users make mistakes, and adjusting the system to compensate.

  • user error (Score:5, Insightful)

    by donnyspi ( 701349 ) <junk5 AT donnyspi DOT com> on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:23AM (#10574166) Homepage
    While it's fun to bash Diebold and everything, I can see how most of the issues are user problems. I worked as a cashier in a grocery store for years and if I had a nickel for everytime someone got confused on how to use the credit/debit card machine at the register, I'd be a millionaire. People didn't know which way to swipe the freaking card, they hit 'cancel' instead of 'OK', etc. They screwed up in ways I didn't even think were possible. So it comes as no suprise that user error is largely to blame for e-voting mishaps.
    • Re:user error (Score:5, Insightful)

      by MyHair ( 589485 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:52AM (#10574340) Journal
      Oh come on. I'm a very technical guy and good with geometry, and I don't know which way to swipe the card. They're all different. They have a little pic with the stripe on one side, but I still have to stop and think to spatially imagine it.

      The buttons are in different locations, and the procedures are different for different machines.

      ATMs are more consistent than those things.

      And they're stupid to begin with. WTF? It says to hand my card to the cashier to verify signature? Why didn't the cashier just swipe it him/herself in the first place?!?!
    • Why should it matter which way I scan the card? Why not have a reader on both sides of the slot? Why do I have all of these prompts?

      From watching my parents try to use these things, there should be a minimum of two steps: 1) verify the price on the LCD. (at this point, adventurous types can add cashback) 2) swipe card if the price is right. The card type should be identifiable from the card's number. If its a debit card, beep to indicate the user should enter their pin now. If its not a debit card an
    • NOT "user error". (Score:5, Interesting)

      by argent ( 18001 ) <(peter) (at) (slashdot.2006.taronga.com)> on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @08:22AM (#10574546) Homepage Journal
      I can see how most of the issues are user problems [... on credit/debit card machines at grocery stores, customers...] hit 'cancel' instead of 'OK', etc

      That's because most debit card machines at grocery stores are deliberately designed to confuse the user into using their card in a way that costs the grocery store less. I started noticing this recently... in the past couple of years... and it started happening first in new machines but gradually older systems have been reprogrammed with the same scheme.

      The motivation is obvious: If you use your "credit/debit" card as a credit card, the grocery store pays a credit card fee, you pay the amount on the ticket. If you use your "credit/debit" card as a debit card, the grocery store pays less (if anything), but you pay a transaction fee that can be over $3.00 in some cases.

      So, to use it as a credit card: about half have a "credit" or "debit" button you can hit before swiping, so you select "credit" if it's there. Either way, you swipe, then it asks you for a PIN. If you enter the PIN it switches to debit mode, so you have to hit "cancel" at this point. Then it asks you to select "credit" or "debit". Sometimes it asks you to hit "credit/debit" then "credit", if there are other choices (like check-cashing cards). Then, it asks you if the amount is OK. This time you hit "OK" and it goes on to complete the transaction.

      I'm not exaggerating, here. Almost every machine does this, and at least half make you go through all these steps.

      So, I would NOT classify the problems you're seeing as user error. They're the result of customers being systematically trained to hit "CANCEL" as a necessary part of the transaction. This is a user interface design problem.

      And that's just the deliberate design problem... sometimes there are actual bugs in the user interface as well.

      For example, the machines at Home Depot in Houston are not all that agressive about the credit/debit card thing, but they will sometimes briefly switch to a screen asking you to swipe your card or hit cancel before bringing up the signature box: this appears to be a programming error, but it looks like there's a problem with the transaction and the first time it happened I hit "CANCEL" at that point, just in case... because I'd gotten charged twice at a pharmacy when it did something similar.

      I'm a computer professional: I've been programming computers regularly for over 30 years, using everything from paper tape and punch cards to experimental OpenGL-based 3d user interfaces. I'm not a naive user who isn't used to a variety of user interfaces. Yet I have occasionally hit "CANCEL" at the wrong time. I'm not at all surprised that some people are regularly baffled by grocery store card readers. And these are MUCH simpler than voting machines.

      I don't know who this ITAA is, but if they're telling people that voting machine problems are "user error" I wouldn't trust their judgement further than I could spit a Diebold executive.
  • is the user's error of voting for the "wrong" candidate.
  • They openned one of the voting machines up and found a bunch of cash cards pressing against the electronics.

    At the same time banks received a larger than usual number of complaints about faulty ATMs.
  • by Armchair Dissident ( 557503 ) * on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:30AM (#10574201)
    User error? But the voters are the users - if the voter cannot use the system, then the system should not be used! It's not enough to just sit smugly and say "well, it was a user error", if you've already anticipated that as a problem.

    If the users - the voters - will not be able to use the system, then ditch the system for something they can use. Surely that was the whole point behind ditching the punch card system? What's the point in ditching one system for another that the voters still can't use?!
  • by Bombur ( 544425 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:30AM (#10574203)
    Perhaps the United States should drop those machines, use paper ballots and outsource the actual counting to India. With more than one billion citizens, India is the biggest Democracy on the planet, and they always get their ballots counted in time for their electors to mount their horses and take a two-week-trip to Washington.
  • Load of bullsh*t! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by PontifexPrimus ( 576159 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:31AM (#10574208)
    The idea behind the media primer is to get journalists to better understand how electronic voting technology works and not always assume that problems with voting are due to failures of electronic voting technology, said Bob Cohen, senior vice president of the ITAA.

    What kind of distortion of reality is that??? If there are problems that exist solely because of the fact that electronic systems are introduced into the voting process then those systems are at fault for all delays, failures and problems that occur simply due to their being there.

    If a problem would not exist if some entity was not there, then that entity can be considered a cause of that problem; this statement is true no matter what your stance on e-voting is!
  • User Testing (Score:5, Interesting)

    by chia_monkey ( 593501 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:35AM (#10574228) Journal
    The better web designers do user testing. Industrial designers do user testing. Marketing gurus do user testing. You'd think an issue as important as, oh I don't know...choosing the leader of one of the most powerful nations in the world would involve user testing. Sad...very sad.
  • Who the hell are these guys, what makes them experts on voting, and more to the point who the hell is paying them to do this?
    • Re:Who are the ITAA? (Score:5, Informative)

      by rlp ( 11898 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:42AM (#10574263)
      The ITAA is a lobbying arm of the big hardware/software corporations. They're the ones that keep issuing studies saying that there's a 'shortage' of American IT workers so the U.S. needs to bring in more H-1B's and outsource more. I'd say they have about as much credibility as certain other more well known *AA's.
  • In Norway... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by say ( 191220 ) <sigve.wolfraidah@no> on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:40AM (#10574253) Homepage

    ...we do our voting by putting one piece of paper (a list, actually, as we do not vote for individuals) (we have a king, yes) in an envelope the people at the polling station give you. Then you put the envelope in a box. Then you leave.

    By the way, the people at the polling stations are chosen from the different political parties.

    Then the boxes are sealed and sent to a counting station (sometimes the same place as the polling station, sometimes somewhere else). There, the votes are put in stacks and counted.

    And you know what? It seems to *gasp* work! Revolutionary system, huh?

  • by Halo- ( 175936 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:40AM (#10574255)
    In the US, (in my 10 years of voting experience,) the polls tend to be staffed by well-intentioned, generally older, volunteers. These people are indispensable, and we owe them a great debt; however, I wouldn't trust them to program a VCR.

    This is a known limitation. The high-level process of recording votes is very simple: present a list of options, record the ones selected. Under the cover a lot of other things need to happen (security, communication, etc) but the part exposed to the workers should be painfully simple, and as close to idiot-proof as possible.

    I'm talking about the connections all being large, brightly color-coded and distinctly shaped. Better yet, bundle all the wires required into a single cable, and have a single yellow plug which goes in the back, and securely locks in.

    When designing a UI, take the dumbest user you can imagine, then imagine them drunk. If this user can't make the machine work, it's not ready for the general public.

  • Diebold (Score:5, Insightful)

    by UdoKeir ( 239957 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:41AM (#10574259)
    Take a look here:
    http://www.itaa.org/about/members.cfm [itaa.org]

    Diebold is one of their member companies. This group is just shilling for the e-voting machine manufacturers.
  • This is the same group that pushed thru doubling H1-B visa
    cap limit from 100,000 to 200,000 in the year 2000 after the
    DOT BOMB was recognized to have gone off .

    With friends like them, who needs enemies .

    Peace !
    Ex-MislTech
  • I understand that there is always going to be people that fear anything resembling a computer, but if you design the UI to be as easy to use as possible this shouldn't be an issue.

    I've seen what our own districts systems look like that I talked about here [slashdot.org] and it seems to be simple enough. The big problems I saw during voting was the first year, because everyone not computer literate feared them, but once you got there the machine itself would walk you through everything and voters got more used to it over
  • from just about every software author/vendor -- including myself.
  • user error? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by spectrokid ( 660550 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:46AM (#10574291) Homepage
    Are these guys out of their mind? Voting systems have to be used by the greatest common denominator. The only thing you can expect is that people have a minimum of reading skills. There can not be a user error because you can not expect the user to know anything. Last elections in Belgium, the voting machines were available weeks on beforehand, filled up with soccer teams and their players instead of parties/candidates. In this way the public could excercise using them with help from town hall staff. Special sessions were organised for seniors etc. Why not put a dummy machine half way the waiting queue so people can try it out?
  • I am amazed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rben ( 542324 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:49AM (#10574320) Homepage

    People should be marching on their state capitols demanding that the current e-voting machines be replaced with verifiable voting methods such as paper ballots until such time as everyone can be satisfied that the e-voting machines are fair and reliable. (Which probably means when they produce a clear paper trail.)

    The foundation of our system of government is put at risk by sloppy or malicious coding and we all sit at home and go about our lives as if nothing is truely at risk. The degree of apathy that has been shown on this issue is astonishing.

    Avi Rubin [avirubin.com], the leading authority on e-voting, gave a great interview in the recent Dr. Dobbs Journel [drdobbs.com]. I think what he says is something that every voter should hear. (His writings on e-voting are here [avirubin.com].) The problem is not whether or not a certain political party or company has rigged these machines to fix the election, it's that the very design and nature of these machines makes it possible to do so in a way that is undetectable.

    Up until now, if you wanted to steal an election, you had to coordinate the work of a large number of people in across a large number of states unless you could blame it all on a bunch of people voting incorrectly in one county in Florida. Now, you could subtley alter the programming of these machines and shift a small percentage of the results produced by each one. It would be almost impossible to detect.

    It's not just the presidential race that is affected, its all the races. Think of the money that is controlled by these politicians and the incentives available to people who want to make sure they get the "right" political climate in the future. If this type of cheating doesn't happen this election, it will happen in another, and soon.

    The only way to make sure that these machines can be trusted is to:

    • Make the source open to viewing by anyone who wishes to see it. The source should be posted on the Internet and paper copies should be supplied to voters on request.
    • Run the software on an operating system that is also open source. It's already been shown that the Diebold machines can be compromised via the Microsoft Windows operating system.
    • Produce a paper audit trail and a printed voting receipt that can be used to verify the results the machine reports.

    They say we get the government we deserve. If we don't raise hell with out state governments and election boards over the use of these machines, you can be certain of it.

  • "News" (Score:3, Interesting)

    by 4of12 ( 97621 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:51AM (#10574333) Homepage Journal

    The technology industry group, which is a staunch supporter of electronic voting technology, made that argument in a document that was distributed to "help journalists put election equipment-related snafus in context."

    So this is standard practice in this day and age. Diffuse focus away from the real issue.

    By now any advocate with money tries to cloak their position in an "infotainment" package that is ready-made, not requiring any expensive or embarrassing reporter leg-work to dig out all the details of an issue like ACM's position on e-voting [acm.org], and is sure not to upset any sponsors of the media-outlet.

    The unfortunate fact is that U.S. Constitutional protections against government suppression of free speech are insufficient to prevent the development of a lapdog press that relies on money and ratings.

    There is absolutely no reason why the press must be factual, truthful, unbiased, complete, or even relevent to the issues of the day.

  • Ok then. (Score:3, Funny)

    by GodHead ( 101109 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @07:55AM (#10574358) Homepage
    I buy that 100%. It's stupid users.

    The easiest fix would be to not use these new systems.

    Glad we got that worked out.

  • User errors in such a system are mostly design mistakes, says I (wi' a curse).
  • Unnecessary (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ajs318 ( 655362 ) <sd_resp2NO@SPAMearthshod.co.uk> on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @08:03AM (#10574401)
    In the UK, we have hand-counted paper ballots. We have had them since we started having elections. It is a system that everybody can understand, and it's evolved over the years to be surprisingly robust.

    Each ballot slip is placed whole into the box. So it's verifiable if necessary, by re-counting. The fact of your voting is recorded, but in such a way as not to be able to link your name to a particular ballot paper. In case the ballot slips are secretly marked or anything like that, you can pick your own if you feel sufficiently paranoid {you aren't forced to accept the one the presiding officer gives you}; so it's secret.

    Each polling station takes votes from an area no bigger than the volunteers working there could comfortably count by hand all the votes from. So it's scalable -- if you have more voters, you just add more polling stations. It's also quick -- in each polling station, there are only a few thousand votes to count. All this is going on in parallel, results are initially telephoned through and then the ballot papers are sealed back up in case they need to be re-counted.

    The numbers involved mean that to "buy" an election, you would have to pay off a lot of people. So it's actually quite tamper-proof. And if any shenanigans are suspected, a recount can be ordered -- or, in the worst case the ballot repeated -- in just the known affected polling stations.

    It is not clear to me how this system could be improved on without introducing new failure modes. Any kind of vote-counting machine is susceptible to tampering. Even if it is absolutely open to public scrutiny for the days when it is not being used for an election, there are stunts that could be pulled on the day. And even if the machine is verified by a hand-count, it will still takes the same number of people to hand-count the ballots after the machine is done, so what have you saved?

    If you're going to rely on human honesty, it's best to distribute that reliance as widely as possible, i.e. to trust several thousand people to be just a little bit honest rather than trust a few people or just one person to be very honest indeed. After all, the majority of human beings are generally honest, and more so when the stakes are low. What benefit is there to dishonesty in counting a few thousand votes among tens of millions? On the other hand, if you are the managing director of the company that makes the only officially-approved voting machines, you effectively have every election in your hands -- and that is where the benefits of being dishonest do start to show.
    • Re:Unnecessary (Score:3, Informative)

      by sholden ( 12227 )
      The fact of your voting is recorded, but in such a way as not to be able to link your name to a particular ballot paper. In case the ballot slips are secretly marked or anything like that, you can pick your own if you feel sufficiently paranoid {you aren't forced to accept the one the presiding officer gives you}; so it's secret.

      That's simply not true. In the UK your ballot papers have serial numbers on them (not secret marks, but obvious serial numbers on the back) which connect each ballot to the counte
    • Re:Unnecessary (Score:3, Informative)

      by at_18 ( 224304 )
      That's not just the UK. Almost all European countries vote in the same exact way. And no one this side of the Atlantic was able to figure out why Florida's manual recounts took more than a few hours.
  • ITAA Members (Score:5, Interesting)

    by femto ( 459605 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @08:05AM (#10574415) Homepage
    Members: ITAA Enterprise Solutions Division (eVoting)

    ----->>>>

    Election Technology Council - ETC

    The ETC is a coalition of companies dedicated to the development, delivery and support of electronic voting solutions to the American electorate.

    Visit http://www.electiontech.org [electiontech.org] for more information.

    ----->>>>

    On the about ETC page:

    Council Members

    Advanced Voting Solutions (AVS)
    Diebold Election Systems
    Election Systems & Software (ES&S)
    Hart InterCivic
    Perfect Voting System
    Sequioa Voting Systems
    Unilect
    VoteHere, Inc

    ----->>>>

    'nuff said

  • by bogado ( 25959 ) <bogado.bogado@net> on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @08:34AM (#10574635) Homepage Journal
    Well, no one (or very few) will read this now, I know that. But I must say that if this machines are hard to use, assemble and whatever this is tha fault of whoever design them.

    Brasil have eletronic voting in a national scale for some years now. Here we have mandatory voting, this means that every Brasilian must vote or at least justify (if you're away for instance). This includes a large portion of the population that is iliterate.

    This means that in a federal election, like the last one that elected Lula in 2002, we have eletronic voting machines installed in places in the middle of the amazon jungle, that can only be reached by "donkeys", and those machines are sometimes installed and operated by people who are not intimate with any tecnology at all, and the voters sometimes can't even read.
  • by whitroth ( 9367 ) <whitroth@[ ]ent.us ['5-c' in gap]> on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @08:59AM (#10574848) Homepage
    I'm currently volunteering with the Kerry campaign in Brevard Co, FL (home to Cape Canaveral and KSC). In this county we have optical-scan ballots.

    The last two days, I've spent about five-plus hours as a poll watcher. In this office, they use the same ballots for the early voting as they do for the absentee ballots. All of them are pre-folded - three or four folds.

    About every 10 minutes or so, one of the folks in the office has to clear a paper jam. The ballot is counted...but then hangs up trying to go into the receiving box (the whole unit's the size of a 55 gal. drum, except plastic and with a square cross-section).

    Unfolded ballots drop...but the manufacturer obviously DID NOT CONSIDER folded ballots at all. A cheap scanner or print that I bought that jammed that often would be returned for another brand within days.

    Oh, and just to make me even more confident, I called the Supervisor of Elections a few weeks ago, and found out that the software that tabulates the votes is from everyone's favorite, non-buggy, no-back-doors maker, Diebold.

    Wannaful, wannaful.

    mark
  • by swillden ( 191260 ) * <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @09:41AM (#10575205) Journal

    I sent this to Bartlett Cleland, the VP of Public Policy at ITAA. I suggest others do the same. His e-mail address is bcleland@itaa.org.

    - - - - -

    Mr. Cleland,

    Please excuse me if you are not the ITAA staffer responsible for the e-Voting segment, and please forward this to the appropriate person.

    Also, let me state at the outset that I am an IBM employee, not an IBM spokesman. My opinions are my own, though my position at IBM assures that they are informed.

    I read an InfoWorld article this morning that discusses the press kit you're distributing and I'm writing to tell you that I, and virtually everyone else in the industry you purport to represent, is appalled by the stance you're taking. You are doing a disservice both to the industry and to the country as a whole.

    Your press kit tells the world, first, that the IT industry is incompetent. You're saying that we are incapable of making electronic voting equipment that is properly designed for the task, and that we have to resort to blaming the users for not knowing how to use the systems, rather than performing proper requirements analyses and user testing to assure that such a crucial system -- a system designed to be used by volunteers without formal computer education -- will in fact function as designed.

    I understand that the makers of the current crop of voting machines have botched the job in virtually every way imaginable, but if you want to support the IT industry you should properly be calling for them to use the appropriate tools to fix the problem, and to get assistance from others where needed, not working to convince the world that all of the IT industry is as incompetent as these few companies.

    Even more seriously, though, your press kit will lead journalists to believe and report that the IT industry in general is in favor of e-voting when nothing could be further from the truth. Outside of the small handful of companies currently in the business of making voting machines, IT engineers are nigh-universally opposed to purely electronic voting. Moreover, if there is anyone at all in the IT security industry who thinks it's a good idea, they haven't spoken out. The senior IT professionals who have the deepest understanding of how one would go about creating a secure, trustworthy electronic voting system say, unanimously, that it cannot be done.

    Papering over the failures of the current crop of voting machines paints the IT industry as incompetent, and supporting purely electronic voting, in the face of expert opinion that it cannot be done securely, damages both the industry and the nation. Please stop. Instead, you should be pointing out that more responsible portions of the industry are pushing for the creation of voting machines that produce paper ballots, are designed to be foolproof and are adequately tested both for security and usability prior to deployment.

    Thank you,

    Shawn
    --
    Shawn E. Willden
    Senior I/T Security Architect
    IBM Global Services, Global Smart Card Solutions
    [ e-mail and phone elided to avoid massive spam ]

  • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @10:41AM (#10575823) Journal
    There are politicians and businesses that blame every single problem on somebody/something else. Worse, our society accepts this. These folks do not want to take any responsibility for their own set of issues.
  • by alizard ( 107678 ) <alizard.ecis@com> on Wednesday October 20, 2004 @06:32PM (#10581240) Homepage
    The truth about DRE machines is probably somewhere in between the positions taken by people like Harris and Cohen, said Dan Seligson, editor of Electionline.org, the Web site of a non-partisan Washington, D.C., group that tracks election reform across the U.S.

    "There are two sides of this issue: Elections officials say that (DRE machines) are one hundred percent safe and accurate, and on the other side, computer scientists say they're fraught with problems. The truth is in the middle. No system is 100 percent secure, nor are they rife with security breaches."

    And what are Dan Seligson's qualifications in the area of computer technology?

    The mistake InfoWorld made was to review this as a public policy issue having to do with technology as an issue on which reasonable people can disagree.

    The DRE issue is one where the only people who have a right to have their opinions treated with respect are persons with expertise in computer security. If a person doesn't have this expertise, the best he or she can do is provide pointers to people who do have it.

    I am not aware of any report by technically qualified people not on the Diebold/ES&S payroll that says that the technology packaged by this company (they are effectively one) is remotely close to adequate.

    An IT publication is supposed to write about issues from an IT viewpoint according to the facts and informed opinions available.

    On no-paper trail touchscreen voting machines, there is no support an IT publication should take seriously for the viewpoint that Diebold/ESS has provided its customers with anything but a total FUBAR.

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