[ale] OT: Free Showing of "Invisible Ballots", Thursday, 3/16, 7:00pm, UUCA
Jim Popovitch
jimpop at yahoo.com
Thu Mar 16 14:02:34 EST 2006
Nothing is preventing the same capabilities from being implemented in
electronic voting. As Joe pointed out, Bruce discussed this years ago.
The problem with today's electronic voting is that it just isn't
mature enough. BUT, is the solution to discount/discard it until it is
perfect (perfection is in the eye of the beholder), or is the solution
to keep vigilant and work at enhancing it. Take the "case" of a single
person being able to alter the post-election results... just make sure
that a single person never has that oppty, or have duplicate/triplicate
results so that they can be individually tracked. Electronic voting may
be new, and may have it's shortcomings, but with the right
implementation guides it can be much less subject to fraud and much more
accurate and easier to use.
-Jim P.
Jeff Hubbs wrote:
> "And hey, the great thing about paper ballots is that YOU HAVE THE
> BALLOTS. So you can do things like re-count them and examine them for
> evidence of tampering."
>
> Yep - so learned Gaius Baltar!
>
> Jeff
>
> Charles Shapiro wrote:
>
>> And hey, the great thing about paper ballots is that YOU HAVE THE
>> BALLOTS. So you can do things like re-count them and examine them for
>> evidence of tampering. At least you can determine whether fraud has
>> taken place.
>>
>> Electronic voting records, by contrast, have no physical
>> manifestation. They can be changed, deleted, or added without the
>> possibility of an authoritative audit.
>>
>> -- CHS
>>
>>
>> On 3/16/06, *Joe Knapka* <jknapka at kneuro.net
>> <mailto:jknapka at kneuro.net>> wrote:
>>
>> Jim Popovitch wrote:
>> > While no one can say that electronic voting is 100% secure and
>> valid, it
>> > has also been shown (for decades) that manual voting is full of
>> fraud,
>> > much fraud. There have been cases of paying people to vote,
>> dead people
>> > voting, etc. (btw, mostly for liberal leaning candidates).
>> >
>> > The technological solution at least offers means for
>> improvement. As we
>> > have seen recently in Georgia there is a large number of people
>> against
>> > showing proper ID to vote (even though they have to show ID to
>> cash a
>> > check at the bank). So I say enable technology to solve the
>> problems
>> > that people themselves can't. Should we trust everyone,
>> No. But you
>> > have to trust someone, else your life is shallow and difficult. ;-)
>>
>> I shouldn't have to trust *anyone* with my vote. I should
>> be able to anonymously and securely verify that my vote,
>> as cast, has been properly accounted in election results.
>> It is perfectly possible to do this (see "Applied
>> Cryptography" by Bruce Schneier; there's a whole chapter
>> on election protocols), and clearly any such solution will
>> involve electronic voting. However, existing electronic
>> voting systems do not implement anything like the proper
>> security measures, and are therefore far *more* vulnerable
>> to tampering than are paper ballots. With the Diebold
>> machines, a *single person* with the right password can
>> completely and un-traceably change election results (which
>> is just one among a great many other flaws). Yes, election
>> fraud has been committed with paper ballots, but at least
>> in that case, you need a conspiracy in order to accomplish
>> such a thing. So until a secure and voter-verifiable system
>> exists, just say no to electronic ballot boxes.
>>
>> (And incidentally, "voter-verifiable" does NOT mean simply
>> printing out a copy of the ballot. That's a meaningless
>> gesture whose purpose is merely to lull the sheep into
>> a false sense of security.)
>>
>> -- JK
>>
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