WI Bill Would Require E-Voting Paper Trail, Source 87
AdamBLang writes "Three Wisconsin legislators announced today that they began circulating a memo for cosponsors to a bill that would require electronic voting machines to produce a paper ballot. Additionally, the new bill includes a provision that the source code must be publicly accessible. After the November 2004 elections, there were numerous reports of problems with the new paperless touch voting screens. Problems include machines subtracting or adding votes, freezing up, shutting down and skipping past races."
First Ballot (Score:1, Troll)
and . . . (Score:1)
Paper, we don't need no stinking (Score:3, Insightful)
"It's not who votes that counts. It's who counts the votes." -- Joseph Stalin and up till now that's been Diebold.
Fraud is rampant in many ways (Score:2)
After we ensure that the vote cast is recorded as intended we also need to move on to the most important issue.
Ensuring the person casting the vote is who they say they are and that they are entitled to cast the vote.
I won't be satisfied until we use picture id and get receipts for our votes. If we are to eliminate fraud lets not do it half assed.
Re:Fraud is rampant in many ways (Score:2)
After we ensure that the vote cast is recorded as intended we also need to move on to the most important issue.
Ensuring the person casting the vote is who they say they are and that they are entitled to cast the vote.
Making sure the person is who they say should be done before not after they vote.
FalconRound and Round this argument goes (Score:2)
It is not a strawman argument... (Score:3, Insightful)
Hell we still have the Voting Rights Act nearly 40 years after it was supposedly not
Re:Paper, we don't need no stinking (Score:1)
Re:Paper, we don't need no stinking (Score:2)
Now, I don't know any Russian, but I have my doubts that there is a single Russian word that means both "to enumerate" and "is of importance" in the way that "counts" does. Do you have a source for this convenient quote?
Re:Paper, we don't need no stinking (Score:2)
Re:Paper, we don't need no stinking (Score:2)
Re:Paper, we don't need no stinking (Score:2)
Results 1 - 10 of about 115,000 for "Liberté, egalité, fraternité". No clue who said it I guess your on your own. I don't subscribe to the "repetition is truth" idea either. However Ask a stupid question on slashdot get a stupid/flippant answer.
Re:Paper, we don't need no stinking (Score:1)
Re:Paper, we don't need no stinking (Score:2)
During the last election where you had thoses rare occurances of problems with electronic machines, none of thme were made by Diebold. Also the companies that did have problems had ties with the Democrat party.
Re:Paper, we don't need no stinking (Score:2)
... none of thme were made by Diebold. Also the companies that did have problems had ties with the Democrat party.
It is customary to provide a URL to backup such broad statements as those above.Re:Paper, we don't need no stinking (Score:2)
Re:Paper, we don't need no stinking (Score:2)
Re:Paper, we don't need no stinking (Score:2)
Re:Paper, we don't need no stinking (Score:1)
Perhaps working with reports from field investigators, concerning problems with Diebold would be a better use of electrons than fobbing off mere assertion as accepted fact.
We could start with this report on the Florida elections and
Yes! (Score:5, Insightful)
It's hard to overstate the importance of this--no matter what your stance on any of the multitude of wedge issues, you should be behind this. Only people who somehow expect to gain from rigged elections could rationally oppose it.
So let's keep a list of who objects, shall we?
--MarkusQ
Re:Yes! (Score:2)
Paperless? (Score:2)
Is anybody really that paperless? Would the go to a paperless bank [slashdot.org] for example?
--MarkusQ
Voting System Rocket Science (Score:3, Interesting)
Am I being cynical?
Why is it that the American people sit idly by and allow the gutting of America? This Diebold voting scam was about the most obvious and malicious corruption (or coup) of the democratic process in the history of the world. But nobody even both
Re:Voting System Rocket Science (Score:2)
There were marches (Score:2)
There were marches. There was outraged protest. And the only reason I know is that I was there. If you watched the news that day all you heard about was the bread (or was it circus day?) that was deemed newsworthy by our *ahem* free and independent news corporations.
Which leads to the question: If a democracy falls in the forest and there's nobody willing to report it--where'd all the bean dip go--dang, I forgot my question. Who's got the remote?
--MarkusQ
Re:There were marches (Score:2)
i am unsure where you live, but i live in a federal republic. [wikipedia.org]
but yeah, we need election reform big time and there are already alternative sources for info. just convince your friends to get of the couch. you need to start local.
Point taken (Score:2)
Agreed, but I kind of felt that "a plurality of the local democracies comprising a federated republic" was a little heavy for the allusion I was aiming for.
--MarkusQ
oh yes, this will solve all our problems... (Score:1)
Just ask anyone from Florida.
Re:oh yes, this will solve all our problems... (Score:3, Interesting)
Certainly corruption and misreporting on a massive scale can be avoided entirely by "backing up" an electronic process with a paper trail - because paper based voting systems are infallible!
Just ask anyone from Florida.
At least paper ballots never return a negative number [bbvforums.org].
Re:oh yes, this will solve all our problems... (Score:2)
An electronic voting system isn't that fucking hard people. But if you contract a company to do it, it's up to the company to be honest and that's not something we should rest on any one company.
So why don't we jus
Why isn't this already a requirement? (Score:2)
Re:Why isn't this already a requirement? (Score:2)
Re:Why isn't this already a requirement? (Score:1)
Re:Why isn't this already a requirement? (Score:5, Informative)
They'll tell you it's too expensive to have printers on all the voting machines. (Even though Diebold is the same company that somehow figured out a way to give you a receipt for every transaction you make at an ATM.)
The real reason is that paper receipts make it too hard to rig the election.
Re:Why isn't this already a requirement? (Score:2)
Um, no they don't. Diebold is selling a voting machine right now [corporate-ir.net] that offers a paper trail.
Re:Why isn't this already a requirement? (Score:2)
they need to count both then (Score:3, Informative)
That's one way to do it. Of course I am in favor of no e-voting at all. I've voted for decades, and it's only the last three I have been required to be dieboldized. My vote has disappeared, you can't see it, it's gone
It's far worse than you think... (Score:2)
Check out the results of this this search [google.com].
They want to eliminate limits on tenure.
Re:It's far worse than you think... (Score:2)
Re:It's far worse than you think... (Score:2)
Unfortunately, that would get rid of some of the very few good ones we have left, like John Conyers [johnconyers.com].
Re:It's far worse than you think... (Score:2)
Re:It's far worse than you think... (Score:2)
Pay reform (Score:2)
Alternately, I believe that congressmen should get paid the average wage of the residents of their state. That would make the job pay well enough to live off of, but would avoid attracting those who just want the money. At the same, it would encourage raising the standard of living of those in their state (across the board), instead of just sucking them dry like parasites.
Re:Pay reform (Score:2)
i think politics should be a short term service, not a career. currently only weathly people are typically able to get elected, so that is really a red herring. at the very least we will have have them rotated out. at best a new method of campaigning can be developed where the people of all incomes can get t
Re:Why isn't this already a requirement? (Score:2)
Also how would a paper receipt stop any rigging of the votes? The paper is worthless for accountablity once the voter has it in thier hands. It would be a feel good item that just destroies some trees and creates more garbage that needs to be cleaned up.
Re:Why isn't this already a requirement? (Score:2)
The paper doesn't ever reach their hands. They see it through a window, so they can confirm that their exact vote was recorded in an unalterable way (unlike an insecure ms access database which can be changed without a trace).
If there's any question, or for a spot check, the paper votes can be counted and compared to what the access database said. If the numbers aren'
Re:Why isn't this already a requirement? (Score:2)
However that is not the type of paper system that people are talking about. If you read the orginal post and even the parent of my first post they are all talking about a paper system where the voter gets a slip of paper, like an ATM machine.
Voter does not keep the paper (Score:2)
I think having the voter move the paper from the machine to the box would inspire more confidence that it really is their vote (the machine *may* be incinerating the enclosed paper you see and printing another...) However I can see problems with some scheme where many voters are somehow mad
Paper trail unimportant, auditability is. (Score:2)
That said, I do suspect that the current US voting methods do not meet the requirements set out for an open and fair election by both the UN and the US when they go about observing elections. Invited U
Let a thousand ballot-bills bloom... (Score:1)
How does this change anything? (Score:2)
Even with paper ballots being printed, how are we to know that our vote gets tallied on the right column? What is to stop the program from printing one result while tabulating another?
Furthermore, even if source code is publicly available, what guarantees are there that the publicly available code is the actual code running on the balloting machine?
I would personally have more confidence in the system if completely separate syst
Re:How does this change anything? (Score:1)
Re:How does this change anything? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:How does this change anything? (Score:2)
Re:How does this change anything? (Score:1)
Re:How does this change anything? (Score:1)
You have to trust someone -- whether it is individuals or computers tallying the votes.
Printed records allow recounts. As far as I am concerned, recounts should be mandatory, for all elections. Count once by computer, once by hand. The hand count takes precedence over the computer count.
This bill takes several steps in
Re:How does this change anything? (Score:2)
This is a Wisconsin Bill. The state's Open Records Law already makes ballots, ie paper and optiscan, public records which can be inspected by anyone who asks to do so.
EFF: verified vote bill introduced in US Congress (Score:5, Informative)
There is a link on the EFF page so you can send a canned or customized letter of support for this bill to your Senators and representative.
E-Vote Programming (Score:2)
if(optKerry)
kerryVote=kerryVote + 1;
else if(optBush)
bushVote=bushVote + 1;
else
msgBox("You stupid moron. Please choose one or the other before voting");
None of this leaves any room for votes to disappear, or more than one vote to be tallied per person. Am I missing something here? Is there any reason it should be more complex than t
Re:E-Vote Programming (Score:1)
Re:E-Vote Programming (Score:2)
if(optThirdParty)
if (floor(rand()*2)
kerryVote = kerryVote -1;
else
bushVote = bushVote -1;
Only then will it become truly obvious that third parties only steal votes from primary candidates.
=)
Re:E-Vote Programming (Score:1)
User Error?
Wisconsin Rules (Score:1)
Re:Wisconsin Rules (Score:1)
Three cheers for Wisconsin! (And I promise to never again make jokes about Wisconsinians and cheese!)
Re:Wisconsin Rules (Score:1)
Re:Wisconsin Rules (Score:1)
Either way, no more jokes about people from Wisconsin and cheese from this quarter . . .
Unless they start making ballots out of cheese! *hides*
'cause after all (Score:2)
e-voting (Score:3, Informative)
a bill that would require electronic voting machines to produce a paper ballot.
Good, they should. If atm machines can print a receipt so should e-voting machines. I seem to recall some years back about how Deibolt, one of the companies that makes them, said having these machines print receipts wasn't practical. Funny because Deibolt also makes atms.
Falcon
Help support Black Box Voting [blackboxvoting.com], they guard your right to have your vote counted.Re:e-voting (Score:2)
Diebold makes voting machines that print receipts.
Reviewer: hart noecker - 5 out of 5 stars - January 30, 2005 [archive.org]
Subject: Fucking insanity...
So, like, NOW Diebold has to make voting machines that print a piece of paper. Now! How has the lives of billions of people been subject to the wims of a fucking printer? Paper and ink have been forced together for THOUSANDS of years. Why, after cloning animals and traveling to other objects in space, have we just figured out how to print a ballot after a compute
Re:e-voting (Score:2)
Re:e-voting (Score:2)
Having a "receipt" is pointless, except for extortion uses; it isn't a reliable indicator of the machine tabulation and can't be used for manual recounting
This is only true if those who control the system won't allow it. The voting machines can have a small window showing the paper record of the vote, with the paper being a roll. Once the roll is used up it can be replaced with an empty roll and the rolls are transported to one place for verification. Where available the machines themselves can be hoo
Re:e-voting (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, it's only pointless if it's returned to the voter. I think what was meant by the parent (which wasn't very clear) was to simply allow the voter to confirm that their correct vote is also recorded on paper. The receipt can then be automatically dropped into a paper ballot box. (Or alternatively if it wasn't correctly recorded on paper, the
The Bill was born on /. (Score:2)
Got the Attention of the State Elections Board in Jan 2003, resulting in decertification of prior machines that April.
Pocan had a paper trail bill a little over a year ago which passed the Assembly unanimously, but was not acted upon in the Senate before they closed shop for the year. Pocan at the time told me adding an open source code clause was too late, buy promi
Possible Solution (Score:1)
Who counts the paper ballets? (Score:2)
Sigh... I hope this gets passed and enacted upon before the 2006 elections. This was introduced by my state representative - that's cool.
R
Re:Who counts the paper ballets? (Score:1)
The reason you cannot allow anyone to leave with a record of their vote, is that that record will be used by the bad guys when they coerce or bribe people into voting for their candidate. If no-one can prove who they voted for, you can't force someone to vote one way or another.
Paper Trail (Score:2)
It couldn't hurt, could it? (Score:2, Interesting)
1) Change the computer printout of our list of names to allow voting at our facility.
2) Pose as
A Step in the Right Direction (Score:1)
At work, almost every electronic machine we use leaves a paper trail. Our registers print a journal of every purchase we ring up, and mistake we correct, in addition to keeping track pay-at-pump purchases, and the verbosity can be changed. The Minnesota State Lottery Machine produces a paper report
Wired (Score:1)
Controversy (Score:2)
Re:Controversy (Score:1)
Re:Controversy (Score:2)