Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Software Government United States

Indiana Is Purging Voters Using Software That's 99 Percent Inaccurate, Lawsuit Alleges (thedailybeast.com) 509

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Daily Beast: More than 99 percent of voter fraud identified by a GOP-backed program is false, a study by Harvard, Yale, and Microsoft researchers found. Now Indiana is using the faulty program to de-register voters without warning. In July, Indiana rolled out a new law allowing county officials to purge voter registrations on the spot, based on information from a dubious database aimed at preventing voter fraud. That database, the Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program, identifies people in different states who share the same name and birthdate. Crosscheck has long been criticized as using vague criteria that disproportionately target people of color. Now Indiana voters who share a name and birthdate with another American can have their registrations removed without warning -- a system ripe for abuse, a new lawsuit claims. Crosscheck's premise is simple. The program aims to crack down on people "double voting" in multiple states, by listing people who share a first name, last name, and birthdate.

Indiana has used Crosscheck for years. But until July, the state had a series of checks on the program. If Crosscheck found that an Indiana resident's name and birthdate matched that of a person in another state, Indiana law used to require officials to ask that person to confirm their address, or wait until that person went two general election cycles without voting, before the person's name was purged from Indiana voter rolls. Under the state's new law, officials can scrub a voter from the rolls immediately. That's a problem for Indiana residents, particularly people of color, a Friday lawsuit from Common Cause and the American Civil Liberties Union argues.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Indiana Is Purging Voters Using Software That's 99 Percent Inaccurate, Lawsuit Alleges

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 30, 2017 @03:14PM (#55459123)

    More than 99 percent of voter fraud identified by a GOP-backed program is false

    So then for the GOP it’s working 100% as designed. Sounds like a feature not a bug in their perspective.

    • by interkin3tic ( 1469267 ) on Monday October 30, 2017 @04:14PM (#55459653)
      "Flamebait" being of course saying what is universally accepted as true, even by the GOP itself... [huffingtonpost.com]
  • by Jzanu ( 668651 ) on Monday October 30, 2017 @03:25PM (#55459209)
    This is why the US needs to make voting compulsory and a federal obligation.
    • by DaHat ( 247651 )

      When/how do you propose amending the first Amendment? No biggie, I mean, it's all that stands in your way.

      Remember, the courts have generally took a dim view on compulsory (forced) speech... which voting would almost certainly qualify as.

    • That's what US right-wingers are probably scared of.
      • by Obfuscant ( 592200 ) on Monday October 30, 2017 @03:49PM (#55459411)

        That's what US right-wingers are probably scared of.

        EVERYONE in the US should be scared of this. It would force people who give absolutely zero shit about the process to vote. It would increase the effect of political advertising because the pool of people who would vote based on name recognition or sound bites would be vastly larger. It would increase the likelyhood of vote fraud because everyone would be registered, so it would be much easier to pick names of people who won't vote to use fraudulently. It would also increase the opportunity for spouses or employers or others to vote on someone's behalf because people who don't give a single damn about voting would be sent a ballot -- in states with vote-by-mail.

        No, forcing people to vote is not the right way to solve any problem.

        • by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Monday October 30, 2017 @03:53PM (#55459439)

          It would increase the likelyhood of vote fraud because everyone would be registered, so it would be much easier to pick names of people who won't vote to use fraudulently.

          How do you NOT vote if it's compulsory? Come to think of it, how is everyone being automatically registered to vote NOT a huge problem in my country? :-p You Americans seem to have awfully peculiar problems.

          • How do you NOT vote if it's compulsory?

            By not voting. How is any law violated? Given the number of ways a ballot can be lost between the voter and the election office, how do you prosecute?

            Come to think of it, how is everyone being automatically registered to vote NOT a huge problem in my country?

            I don't know what country you live in, so I can't tell you. If it's the US, it has to do with some small concepts like "freedom" and "Constitution" and "First Amendment" stuff. Otherwise, who knows?

            You Americans seem to have awfully peculiar problems.

            Yes, we (the USA, not "Americans") are a different country, which is not a bad thing.

            • by Jzanu ( 668651 )
              Through individual registration at each polling station. I have seen US voting and names are collected just not compiled from all locations and compared for fine or notice. Advantages include requiring time off legal obligation of voting increasing availability and representation. Guess what democracy is based on?
              • Through individual registration at each polling station.

                I have no idea what this sentence fragment refers to.

                What is a "polling station"? What is "individual registration"? Here in Oregon, everyone who gets a driver's license is automatically registered. There is nothing "individual" about the process. And we vote by mail, so there is no "polling station".

                Advantages include requiring time off legal obligation

                Simply saying "obligatory voting" does not imply "time off legal obligation". Even in places where there are polls, the polls are open long after the normal workday ends, and there is absentee for anyone who

                • by Jzanu ( 668651 )
                  Response was to "how do you prosecute?". Figure out the local terms on your own, these are general phrases that map to whatever jargon you prefer. Mail voting should be illegal as there is no way to ensure the voter votes. Require every citizen to vote through automatic registration, enforcement of visiting polling station and offering voting station. National obligation implies that voting becomes a holiday, and then that votes are targeted to that holiday. On last point, you don't understand government im
            • If it's the US, it has to do with some small concepts like "freedom" and "Constitution" and "First Amendment" stuff. Otherwise, who knows?

              I would think that a citizen being allowed to vote implicitly entails more freedom than having to beg the state to graciously allow poor old me to vote before I get to vote. And considering constitutions, this is one of its articles around here.

              • I would think that a citizen being allowed to vote

                Well, there's a big difference between whatever country you live in and the US. "Allowed to vote" is a clue.

                implicitly entails more freedom than having to beg the state to graciously allow poor old me to vote before I get to vote.

                Another difference, it appears. "Beg the state" is a clue.

                Having the freedom to ignore the process is more freedom than being forced to vote even if you don't care. Making it mandatory for people who already vote changes nothing for them. Putting a legal obligation and penalties on those who choose not to is a big difference for them, and will simply result in a lot of people who know nothing at all

                • But you're *not* being forced where I live. You just don't have to jump through hoops to vote. You can just go and vote on your way from work. Or not, if you don't want to. I agree that "allowed to vote" and "beg the state" are clues and thus I'm happy that we've gotten past that and that we can just come and throw in the envelope, or not come if we don't feel like it.
          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by ftobin ( 48814 )

          Apparently there's a huge benefit in having mandatory voting in Australia because candidates can't pander exclusively to the base in an attempt to get out the vote, as it is now in the US. I'm all for trying mandatory voting and seeing how it would change things.

          http://freakonomics.com/podcas... [freakonomics.com]

      • If voting is mandatory does that mean violating the secret ballot, or do I just have to show up? Does it mean I have to vote yes or no every time a local restaurant wants an exemption to allow Sunday liquor sales, regardless of whether or not I live in the immediate neighborhood? Choose between two city council candidates I've never heard of and never spoken to? Vote yea or nay for every state constitutional amendment, even when I'm not decided on what I think is best? What's the penalty if I forget to

        • I imagine you can always thrown in an empty envelope. That's how it usually works. In fact, secret ballot plays nicely with this.
  • all colors, actually.
  • ...voting that they were chasing down. Who knew it would be the rich with multiple homes in multiple states (like the R politician recently busted for it) that are getting caught up?
  • All that Indiana needs to check is how many people within the state have their dmv id having same birthdate and same name. Since US population is about 50 times larger, there will be 50 times more people across all states with the same name. So they can identify how many valid people they are removing. By comparing with total they are removing, they can find the accuracy of their system.

  • It's still a stupid fucking idea. I expect no better from Indiana, though.

In the long run, every program becomes rococco, and then rubble. -- Alan Perlis

Working...