UK Voters Want To Vote Online 288
InternetVoting writes "A recent UK research survey by NTL:Telewest Business found that nearly half of the younger respondents would be more likely to vote online. This year the UK government has authorized 13 local election pilots including Internet voting. ntl:Telewest Business estimates 10 million UK households have broadband and 4,789 local libraries offer public access. In the US political parties are beginning to test the Internet voting waters with the Michigan Democratic Party to offer Internet voting in their 2008 Presidential Caucus. There were some notable differences in generational interest: 'The YouGov poll of almost 2,300 people, carried out on behalf of NTL:Telewest's business unit, found that younger voters were even more positive about the idea of alternatives to the trusty ballot box. 57 per cent of 18-34 year olds liked the idea of evoting, but only a third of the over 55s were as keen.' Given security and privacy concerns in the states, how likely is this to appeal to US voters? "
bah (Score:3, Insightful)
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I won't even bother to mention the potential f
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That being said, however, I don't think there could be enough security to lock things down to set up such a system in the US, so, I'd rather not go for it at this time. Testing the waters, though, is a good idea at this time, especially in the caucuses where it isn't directly electing anyone into office.
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Actually, I'd not really ever known much about them, till Katrina put me on a 2 year (still ongoing) nomadic trip around southern LA.
I have used it since then...however, the problem is, that I often don't know an election is coming up until it is too late to have one requested to be mailed to you...get it and mail it back before deadline.
And I tend to watch the news quite a bit...but, still don't know when elections are that far
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Re:bah (Score:4, Insightful)
What we're concerned with is, among other ways, someone hacking into the servers and fixing the results. Then there is DDosing the servers and other things. I'm not yet willing to trust voting computers being hooked up to the internet just yet. Dedicated networks, yes. General internet, no.
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Re:bah (Score:4, Insightful)
I'd be very careful making statements like this, even if it is jest. I don't think anyone's vote should be discounted for any reason. Slippery slope indeed...
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This is mildly humorous, but every other class of disenfranchised voter has been until they weren't.
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I think the reason minors aren't allowed to vote is due to the fact that they don't much have the capacity to understand the ramifications of who they vote for.
And the point the OP was making is that there are adults to whom this could equally apply to.
People don't magically gain intelligence at 18; drawing an arbitrary line is just the best of all other possible options, although I'd personally draw it at 16 (here in the UK you can join the army at 16; if you can die for your country, you should be able to choose those would send you to do so).
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Then they shouldn't be forced to pay taxes, or in some cases be fully responsible for their actions in a court of law.
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Maybe people who accept internet vote should be punished by living in a country where botnet owners can chose their government.
Then I'll need to move to Sealand
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And vice-versa... (Score:2)
OTOH, maybe if you can't be bothered to learn how to use the internet then your vote shouldn't count?
There are many tasks that I could do in a 200m radius, but I still do online if I can. And it's not just a question of effort, it can be a question of time, security, convenience, maybe it's raining, etc.
Consider this before you *bah* (Score:4, Interesting)
IF they instituted online voting they could have drop down boxes for each candidate with summaries of opinions and hyperlinks to voting records, speeches... Hell, they could even link in the publically disclosed lists of contributors. I believe most voters don't have the time or inclination to do this sort of research on their own, but might be more inclined if the info was more easily accesible.
A voter could spend all the time they like reading about each candidate and issue on the ballot *while* casting their vote.
All it would take is some legislation and a bit of funding to amass the linked materials.
Political spin would have a reduced effect on anyone with enough motivation to click a couple of links.
Regards.
Re:Consider this before you *bah* (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Consider this before you *bah* (Score:4, Insightful)
The current mechanism of voting in the UK is:
1. You walk into a small booth, about the size of a telephone box. It's completely open on one side, but the other sides consist of a sheet of board about 7' high.
2. You draw a cross next to the name of the person you want to vote for.
3. You fold your ballot paper once and place it in a locked metal box in the middle of the room.
It would be trivially easy to print out information similar to what you describe and pin it up inside the booth. I suspect the reason why they don't is because if the slightest piece of information that gets put up is wrong, or perhaps somehow unfair to a specific party, then the wronged party would have kittens.
This isn't a problem which can be solved by adding "... on the Internet!" to the voting procedure. About the most detail they'd be likely to provide would be a link to the party website.
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And no, you can never, ever, expect to get objective and complete political information from one source, especially a government one. You'll have the same "political spin", but one sided.
I can see it now
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You WALKED 200 miles? wouldnt driving be a litle easier?
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Its not the walk that bothers most people, but rather the 3 hour line in some places due to underfunding of local elections.
I know some states have laws that say employers must allow time off to vote, but most states don't.
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How likely? (Score:5, Interesting)
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I keep hearing about how everyone in the UK wants online voting - no one ever asked me and I fear these stories will influence the politically and technically ignorant masses who lack such healthy cynicism!
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No way to make it secure (Score:2)
Why should politicians (you know, the guys with the tubes) have more success in securing something that doesn't really bother them too much?
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http://www.alternet.org/story/50941/ [alternet.org]
More specifically, they were concerned that the Ohio Secretary of State was hosting, tallying, and reporting election results with hardware / software architectures developed by companies with partisan connections.
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Re:How likely? (Score:4, Insightful)
It's not broken, but there are degrees of brokenness.
The big advantage with paper ballots is that it's very hard to make a substantial change to the outcome without it being pretty damn obvious to even the most lacksidaisical of officials. The same is simply not true of the "magic black box" which the computerised voting systems in common use are.
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Voting in the UK is anonymous i.e. they know you voted but not who you voted for. You cannot make online voting both secure and anonymous.
That is quite possible. Silly but working way: Let someone send everyone a (private) key, and publish the public key. Then use that for certification by someone else. As long as those 2 are seperate, no problem. Or the login could be protected by a unique password, but when the vote cast is not registered under this key. And so on. This is no more unsecure than today, really.. someone could mark all the voting forms with invisible ink and keep track, for all you know. Public audits of the code, the server
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True, but it's a lot quicker to have the computer fill out the database of "who voted for whom". As soon as you introduce databases to the equation, suddenly a lot of things which simply weren't practical before become so - and then it's only a matter of time before someone comes up with an abuse of the process.
We have some fairly strict data protection laws which in the
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Voting in the UK is anonymous i.e. they know you voted but not who you voted for.
Not completely true. In the UK your voting slip is marked with a unique identifier, and when the officer hands you the slip to vote that identifier is recorded against your name. If the government wants to know how a particular individual voted, looking for their voting slip would be like looking for a needle in a haystack. But if the government wanted to know who voted for a particular candidate -- especially if it's a candidate who only gets a small vote -- then all the information is there on record.
Scariest shit i have heard in ages (Score:5, Insightful)
Computer voting = StupidByDesign (Score:3, Insightful)
I'll say it again: Computer voting is Stupid By Design.
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They'll never do that (Score:3, Insightful)
Presidental elections are mandatory here, and by custom the first thing the new president does is declare a general amnesty for all those who didn't come to vote. It would be a farce anyway.
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First past The Post (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plurality_voting_sys tem) is our deeply flawed and useless voting system. In a hypothetical seat with 100 voters, you want to put the effort in to win 51 of them. winning 49 wastes all your effort, and any support beyond 51 is a waste as well. If you think you won't win 51 of those voters, you can basically treat them as cannon fodder for policies that le
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I don't think you need to jail them. A fine should do, deducted from whatever your PAYE equivalent is. Or removed directly from your benefits.
I used to not vote due to apathy. A lot of people had a go at me with the 'if you don't vote you can't complain' line. I still have no truck with that, I will complain when I like
I vote now, even though my vote is always against the mainstream, even though my vote means nothing and does nothing to change my local or national democracy. But I vote t
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But I thought that was the point of politics to provide to the citzens in the first place.
Should be like you driving test. If you want it , turn up and fucking do it.
I hate to break it to you, but I showed up to a test once about 15 years ago and now I just renew my license online (my state supports online registration)
All I have to do is show up at a valid photo booth with the information the State DOT mails me and they take a photo of m
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While that is a very nice thought, it isn't practical. There are WAY too many elections throught the year...at least in all the states in the US. You have local elections, state elections, national elections...and they don't always happen at the same time. That would mean just w
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Did you even read the headline? This is the UK.
We elect only a handful of officials - nothing like the number of people in the US whose position is elected. Our system is therefore a lot simpler and less prone to breakage - we really don't need anything complica
If it were more open... (Score:4, Interesting)
So, my question is: what's wrong with everyone knowing what everyone else voted? Does it create bias in the workplace? Do Liberal bosses see their Conservative employees votes and thus not give them raises, or worse, in an at-will state such as mine, just fire them outright?
Is this the kind of person you want to be your boss anyway? Wouldn't the system naturally cleanse itself from people like that? Sure, at first it'd be a bumpy road and a lot of chaos would ensue, but it seems to be the final state of things would be a lot smoother than the state of not even knowing if your vote was counted right, or if the people counting the votes stacked them somehow. It just seems like hiding votes has always been a crutch.
But please, correct me if I'm wrong...
TLF
Re:If it were more open... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Mark the ballot for who the other party asked you to vote for, take the picture, then tell the poll worker you spoiled the ballot by accident. Poll worker takes the "spoiled" ballot and destroys it, gives you a fresh one. You fill out that one for who you want. Even easier for electronic voting, where the final confirmation screen says "You voted
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It's the only way you can be sure everyone's vote was really counted how it should've been. The moment you start hiding votes and secreting them away you introduce the possibility for corruption from the organizers.
Some of what I studied in my computer science degree course was just how people could find out their vote had been counted correctly; can't remember how it was done, but it certainly wasn't "just show everyone's votes".
So, my question is: what's wrong with everyone knowing what everyone else voted?
It creates the potential for intimidation on the basis of voting, and the ability to skew the vote that way. Jesus, in some countries simply *voting* is enough to make you the target of violence. (Please don't use that as justification for saying "well, it won't make any difference if they
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You may be right. Maybe I'm naive to think people would be able to work together despite knowing who each other voted for. I guess I'm delusional to think the human race can get along with each other and cooperate despite the fact that some of them may have voted for a different politician. I thought we were beyond that. I pe
Re:If it were more open... (Score:4, Insightful)
It's a cliche, but you know the expression about "one bad apple". Perhaps you think I have a somewhat cynical and downbeat view of humanity; well, I probably do, but that's not the problem here. Put simply, there only need to be a relatively small percentage of corrupt, selfish people (basically those with psychopathic or simply selfish behaviour) to subvert and exploit any system which relies on an overly idealistic view of humanity. The "bad apples".
Until the human race fundamentally changes, these people will always be with us, and I certainly don't intend letting them destroy things.
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How many people will vote "their principals" rather than with their wallet?
It would be almost impossible to prevent this sort of thing once you make voting verifiable in any way after voting. Sure, there might have to be a bit more subtlty with the offer, but it would be impossible to stop completely.
Paid for votes? (Score:2)
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TLF
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So your argument for openly encouraging v
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Year 2000 presidential election.
GWB 'bribes' or 'buys' enough votes to win. 9/11 ensues. War and economic unrest ensue.
People who sold their vote in 2000 are wondering if it was worth it. How much did they get? $100 each? $1000? $1000 seems barely possible considering to 'buy' just 1000 votes at such a cost woul
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1) People aren't going to rethink. People don't care. People would rather rationalize their action than admit the possibility of being wrong. People will be bribed to vote the desired way, election after election, and, yes, they will be bribed for $100, or even $10, in numbers large enough to swing election. We're talking about people who can't be bothered to take half-an-hour to vote in a convenient polling station, no matter what's at s
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Or how about this: the local union holds an "online voting party" and invites all its members. Of course, they'll be able to see how you vote, and if you decline the invitation, well, you must be trying to hide something, right?
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I don't recall all the details, but there was a case a while back of parents complaining about a teacher because he was fund-raising for the BNP. Similarly police officers would face scr
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Fixed.
Point is, when I vote, I sometimes feel like there's no way for me to know if it really counted. When you see what everyone voted for, and NONE of those people are up in arms because their vote was
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Perhaps. It's happened before, and it happens all over the world in countries with less strongly established democratic principles. Look up the phrase 'rotten borough', a constituency where the landlord corruptly controls both the elec
Consititionally busted voting (Score:3, Interesting)
For anyone to trust online voting, we would need some sort of paper trail or other form of accountibility. Can I print out a vote receipt? Not in the US.
Heck the only reason that we kinda trust the voting system we have is tradition and a lack of other choice. No the two party political system here is actually reliant on the electoral college and the untrackable vote to hold their two faceted monopoly on US Government. For further reading: http://gning.org/electoral.html [gning.org]
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Anonymity requires a physical ballot. (Score:4, Insightful)
Conduct elections online, and you open the process up to massive abuse where anonymity effectively become nullified.
For audits and recounts, computer forensics aren't nearly up to the abilities of traditional forensics. Physical ballots are why the Florida 2000 problems were so readily apparent.
Having computers print out physical (human-readable) ballots is fine. But trying to make an electronic "ballot" work anonymously is sheer stupidity.
There is a good reason to retain the voting booth. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:There is a good reason to retain the voting boo (Score:2)
One of the major reasons for a confidential voting process taking place in the voting booth is that it is difficult to intimidate the voter or make vote buying effective. As soon as the vote takes place elsewhere all kinds of influences become possible and almost impossible to detect or prevent.
There are already problems with the postal voting system; intimidation, coercion and fraud. Throw in the issues of traceability and massively insecure and trojan-ridden computers half the country have and online voting is a damned stupid idea.
Re:There is a good reason to retain the voting boo (Score:5, Interesting)
Intimidating the voter (Score:2)
One thing that must be noted is that voter intimidation must be a scalable process to be effective. Even if one or other particular voter could be intimidated by neighbors or relatives at home, it's much easier to do it wholesale when everybody has to go to a certain place to vote.
Let's say the local drug lord has spread the word that "for every vote for candidate X a random house will be burned down in the neighborhoo
Insecure by design? (Score:2)
The only thing I can think of was a story here sometime ago which mentioned a design of a ballot which provided a voter verifiable receipt without revealing their vote, but I recall it being quite complica
I deem that highly dangerous (Score:3, Insightful)
How much more interesting would it be to change his vote cast to a party you deem more desirable than the one that he actually wanted to pick?
Democracy is too valuable a thing to hand it to a machine. Money, fine. Business, ok. But not politics.
Brilliant (Score:4, Insightful)
ha, i'm a cynic (Score:2)
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Really bad intference here (Score:5, Insightful)
It just means they admit there are times they might vote online when they wouldn't bother to go to the polls. It doesn't mean they think that online voting is better, or as good.
I've missed a couple elections over the last two decades. They were local elections for offices where I didn't think there was much difference between the candidates, and I was scheduled for business travel. It wasn't worth it to reschedule my trip or get an abstentee ballot. If we voted on line, I'd have voted remotely and I suppose I wouldn't have missed any elections.
So technically, this article would count me as ready to "embrace" online voting, even though I'd fight the idea tooth an nail if it ever came up. If it was the only way to vote, I'd vote that way. I might, over the course of my life, vote in a half dozen elections that I would otherwise have skipped because they weren't important for me. However, I'd never trust any election result again, including the ones that are important to me.
No we don't (Score:2, Interesting)
This report is a concoction. Based on the evidence of what I've seen in the United States I have no faith in
electronic voting systems whatsoever.
I will absent myself from the country and use my legally ensured right to vote by post if necessary.
Why is security important? (Score:2)
If you are motivated enough, you can vote 100 times for the same candidate. So what? If you are really motivated or have enough funding, you can get 1000 people to enter votes for you. How is this different from the current situation where party hacks drive around picking up people to take them to the polling place today?
If
NO NO NO (Score:2, Insightful)
Now I know that there will be lots of geeks immediately thinking of technical feasibility and a system architecture seems to want to start drawing itself in my head too. But this is just one thing you never want to make "more efficient".
W
Neutral Third Party (Score:2, Insightful)
Misleading presentation (Score:2)
"Half of the kids who rarely vote say they'd probably vote if they could do so without getting off their fat asses, but two thirds of the people who actually vote say it's crap. Oh, and a trial run shows the lazy kids are full of crap anyway; when they can vote this way, they still don't."
Let people use email to request their absentee ballots; evoting, done. Next problem.
Younger voters and e-voting (Score:2)
"When an opponent declares, 'I will not
No Fscking Shit, Sherlock! (Score:2)
They're hardly likely to promote research which says "Actually, most people couldn't care less about voting online."
Politics and software are so related... (Score:2)
Security of the vote? (Score:3, Insightful)
One major reason to have polling places is to attempt to guarantee a situation where a voter can go into a little room and cast his ballot without any threat and with deniability. There's nobody in the booth with him ensuring that he's voted the way he's been told or paid to vote.
Allowing people to vote from wherever they want MAY still grant anonymity, but we'll never be sure of the circumstances behind the vote. There could be a man with a gun or a checkbook watching the ballot being cast.
Even if all of the engineering and political challenges are overcome, this sort of voting has more fundamental issues that may not be solvable.
A Bad Idea (Score:4, Insightful)
For every reason that people oppose electronic voting, this is much worse. The machines aren't even visible to the voter, there is no paper trail at all. It's a black box, but there isn't even a box visible to the voter. You have no idea if your vote was counted correctly.
Securing the system will be very hard, with tons of people trying to hack it, and being able to do so anonymously and from anywhere in the world.
People will have to get some kind of password to vote, and will have to register, and at least the former can't be done on the internet. This eliminates the purpose of online voting. I guess you could send everyone a password, though.
It will open new doors for corruption. There will be no secret ballot at all, and selling your vote will be incredibly easy. As will voter coercion.
And last, it has no great benefit. If someone is too lazy and/or apathetic to go to the polls to vote, they don't need to be voting.
Re:What difference does it make (Score:4)
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I predict a landslide.
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Here in France we are in presidential elections right now. Politics used to say that French were not interested in politics because we had a very low participation rate in 2002, that voting was to hard, that people weren't educated enough to understand how important it was to go voting. Never, ever, they wondered if it could be because French felt that political parties had no interesting propositions to make. This year, nothing changed in the way of voting, but we broke participati