ACM Eyes Policy Position on Electronic Voting 84
while(true) writes "The ACM is preparing to take a policy position on electronic voting in government elections. It has a poll page up to get feedback from it's members and where they also explain their proposed position. The proposed position calls for a paper trail to ensure a physical record of the vote. Go there and place your vote if you are a member. The ACM Public Policy Committee could be a valuable ally in many questions that are dear to Slashdot readers in the US. They have already spoken out on issues such as the DMCA, DRM, and private policing of P2P networks."
Heh, (Score:5, Funny)
--
Only 5 Gmail invitations left [retailretreat.com]
Re:Heh, (Score:3, Funny)
Easily (Score:3, Interesting)
Easily: they're the ones running it.
If you let me personally set up every computer counting votes, I would trust electronic voting too. Unfortunately this probably isn't a solution to our election problems, since other people don't seem to trust me as much as I do.
Re:Heh, (Score:2)
We can't verify that they can verify, but you would think a gathering of professional computer geeks could do it better than slashdot.
Re:Take Note! (Score:5, Interesting)
The ACM has clout, considerably more than a bunch of unwashed geeks who troll slashdot all day. They're the closest thing the software industry has to a union.
The ACM isn't a bad thing to look into-if I had a regularly meeting chapter within 50 miles I'd probably attend. They're a good deal for students, getting them internships at conferences and hooking them up with lectures and talks. I hadn't even heard of a "public policy" angle to them, but I think it's a good thing.
Re:Take Note! (Score:2)
Thanks, haven't trolled in a bit, I'm out of form.
I chock this up to one more well-meaning group preaching to the chior. Makes us all feel good, but in the end, doesn't mean a lot. I amy be wrong.
Re:Take Note! (Score:2)
No technical evaluation (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:No technical evaluation (Score:5, Insightful)
Why have an opinion poll if you are going to bias it from the beginning?
Delphi (Score:5, Informative)
actually when you ask a number of professionals in a certain field about their opinion, or expectations, about a number of topics. Then you process the results, show the results to the same group of professionals, and ask their opinion again.
Something like that.
Re:No technical evaluation (Score:5, Insightful)
The site has links to sites that both favor and oppose paper trails. It then asks its members to state whether they favor or oppose hard copy records.
The current results are running 94% for hard copy--85% strongly in favor, 9% in favor. The ACM will speak with a louder voice based on these results (if the voting trend continues) than they would if only the ACM Public Policy Committee gave its views.
If you want science, you might consider reading the Communications of the ACM some time. I think you will find it quite a bit more rigorous than what you are used to here on /.
E-Voting Quality Control (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:E-Voting Quality Control (Score:1)
http://www.wired.com/news/ebiz/0,1272,61045,00.ht
Re:E-Voting Quality Control (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not clear that E-voting should ever be trusted under any circumstance (unless there's a paper audit trail so the election results can be independently verified). The potential for tampering on the part of whoever tallies the vote is too high.
Analogy: E-voting is like having a paper election, and giving all the ballots to one person. That person goes into a locked room, counts the ballots, and then shreds them. He comes out of the room and tells ever
Re:E-Voting Quality Control (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not clear that any voting method should ever be trusted, for exactly the same reason. Any system can be tampered with.
Re:E-Voting Quality Control (Score:3, Insightful)
A system where a third party can independently verify the tally is much more trustworthy than one in which everyone is required to trust the tally. There will always be opportunities for fraud, but that doesn't mean we should make massive election fraud easy and undetectable.
Besides, even if Diebold (or other E-voting terminal manufacturer) doesn't manipulate elections, the possibi
Re:E-Voting Quality Control (Score:2)
For example, some candidate wins a close election by a tie-breaking procedure. Assume for the sake of arguement that his party doesn't cheat (or at least not more than the the opposition), and the final result is 'fair'. What happens when the new elected official hits a rough spot, and slips in the polls? A lot of the people who
It *is* open source already (Score:2)
Check out GVI [electionmethods.org], the Graphical Voter Interface.
Having a... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Having a... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Having a... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Having a... (Score:3, Informative)
The paper trail doesn't prove that the machine operators and judges didn't do some tricks, such as falsifying signatures on the rolls for people they knew weren't going to show up and then voting "for" them, but that's a trick that is risky until the polls are officially closed, and it assumes all the judges and m
Re:Having a... (Score:1)
I'm interested in why you think that (a) the computer's printout of its last maintenance date is necessarily correct, and (b) the main
Re:Having a... (Score:2)
If the tech takes the time to undo everything needed to get at the EPROMs, that's going to pad the recorded time the case is open. Unless he adjusts the clock, the times the machine would show are consistent wi
Re:Having a... (Score:1)
I don't agree that a tech would need a large conspiracy, or a lot of time, or magic. He/she would need detailed knowledge of how the machine works, a supply of fresh seals (genuine or counterfeit), and an excuse to get physical access to the machine. Audit logs can be suppressed or faked. It doesn't take a long time if you already have the replacement components ready.
Of course, the mondo approach is to replace the entire machine with a new one that looks the same and has the same serial number, etc. B
Re:Having a... (Score:2)
Since when does insightfull mean not to think? (Score:4, Insightful)
Voting machines still allow easier voting and faster and more accurate counting, without the needs for lots of volunteers.
Re:Having a... (Score:4, Insightful)
First, it will help avoid improperly compleated ballots (i.e. accidental over-votes and undervotes). It also makes it easier those who can't read english, are blind, or have other disabilities to vote.
Secondly, it makes counting much easier. One possibility is that the electronic records are tabulated, and the paper records are made availaible for post-election audits. A second possibility is that the electronic voting machine prints a ballot which is both human and machine readable. These printed ballots are counted by machine after the election. If there needs to be a manual re-count or if an audit is desired, the ballots can still be counted by hand.
Re:Having a... (Score:3, Insightful)
It also makes it easier those who can't read english
I keep seeing this argument, and it makes no sense. In this country, you can't vote unless you are a citizen (at least so far). One of the requirements [uscis.gov] for citizenship is "an ability to read, write, and speak English."
Re:Having a... (Score:2)
And even if your family CAN speak English, it doesn't mean they will at home, and you will likely learn whatever language you hear around the host as your primary (or only) language.
Not to mention that many people who can read English may be much more comfortable in another language.
Re:Having a... (Score:2)
And even if your family CAN speak English, it doesn't mean they will at home, and you will likely learn whatever language you hear around the host as your primary (or only) language.
I don't know of any requirement (except manufactured ones in California) to provide ballots in languages other than English. If a person does not have a working understanding of English, they should not be voting in this country, since they will not have an understanding of the issues and do not have a willingness to assimil
Re:Having a... (Score:2)
This is an utterly absurd generalization. I've met many people who have a hard time communicating in English yet have a surprisingly deep understanding of the issues. On the other hand I've met many native English speakers that have no clue about political issues, let alone desire to learn. Keep in m
Re:Having a... (Score:2)
This is an utterly absurd generalization. I've met many people who have a hard time communicating in English yet have a surprisingly deep understanding of the issues.
And you would know that how? How do all these people you know who can't read or understand English gain this deep understanding of American political issues when they can't understand a candidate's speech or read the party's platform in the original language?
On the other hand I've met many native English speakers that have no clue about p
Re:Having a... (Score:2)
In the case of Spanish speakers, I converse with them in Spanish. In the case of some of my friends' parents, they translate for me. Many that I've met can speak English passably but still have a hard time reading it.
Re:Having a... (Score:2)
In the case of Spanish speakers, I converse with them in Spanish. In the case of some of my friends' parents, they translate for me. Many that I've met can speak English passably but still have a hard time reading it.
So you're either claiming that these people really didn't meet the requirements for citizenship, or that they are natural citizens who can't read English, which I can't buy. I grew up in Southern California where Anglos are a minority. I schooled, lived, and worked with many first-generati
Re:Having a... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Having a... (Score:2)
paper trail to keep tabs on the system replacing paper voting seems a tad pointless. Maybe waiting would be better.
Exactly. E-voting is a solution looking for a problem that doesn't exist. The whole thing is nothing more than hysteria whipped up by the media because a handful of geriatrics in Florida voted for the first time in fifty years and couldn't remember how.
I've used butterfly ballots for decades, and I never had a problem with them. You don't have to worry about the little metal ballot h
Re:Having a... (Score:3, Insightful)
Editorial tip (Score:4, Informative)
The [Association for Computing Machinery] is preparing to take a policy position[...]
Re:Editorial tip (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, it'd be good to do that with all computer-related acronyms. That's very important on a non-technical web site like slashdot. Why, in just the few last day's articles, we should have seen:
And of course, let's not forget
Oh, how much better Slashdot would be.
Re:Editorial tip (Score:1)
#t
Overwhelming support (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Overwhelming support (Score:1, Troll)
As a card-carrying member of the ACM I have to wonder if there is a paper trail for that vote you just cast
Re:Overwhelming support (Score:2)
Re:Overwhelming support (Score:3, Informative)
I made a comment myself that said essentially that the systems which run democracy must be reviewable by the electorate
ACM Public Policy Office
1100 17th Street, NW
Suite 507
Washington, DC 20036-4632
Tel: (20
Open source is not enough (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, I don't really care about the software and all. Just print a paper ballot that goes in a box, and have the local representatives of the political parties, or anyone else interested, recount the paper ballots if they feel like it. That's all that's needed.
Re:Open source is not enough (Score:2)
I think Open Source is important
Judging from the past... (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm far more interested in what the EFF's official stance is, considering they're the ones with the real legal and lobbying power (miniscule as it may be when compared to the twin bohemoths of the MPAA and RIAA)
Re:Judging from the past... (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm far more interested in what the EFF's official stance is . . .
Why? Do you feel the ACM is violating Diebold's right to make a profit from American elections? The ACM and EFF are really dissimilar in purpose and function. I don't see that the EFF has a dog in this fight.
Why wouldnt this work: (Score:2, Interesting)
2. Voters can either complete the card by hand, or use an electronic terminal (which can be closed or open source, doesnt matter), which they would inse
bad idea (Score:2)
Canada (Score:5, Funny)
I voted last week and it was of those lame-o paper things where we had to mark an "X".
It seems to me that this format is pretty old and should be coolified with the latest technology.
Re:Canada (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Canada (Score:2)
You should probably visit CanadaComment.com.
My poll comments (Score:3, Insightful)
electronic voting isn't the problem (Score:2, Interesting)
Remember the ghastly voting issues in Florida 2000?
Well, they actually had paper trails, and it didn't change a thing. As it turned out, the courts ruled the recount illegal.
It seems that legal deficiencies of the US voting system are a much bigger problem than missing paper trails.
Don't forget that paper trails aren't immune to counterfeiting in any way. It's probably very easy to print a lot of paper trails with a standard PC and very little
US voting can be complicated (Score:3, Interesting)
But in the U.S., most ballots are much more complicated. We (in the US) have a tradition of wanting the citizenry to speak out/vote directly on a number of different issues, and having seperate local and state elections. It's a pain to setup a poll, and a pain go to a poll, so a voting decision is actually more complicated for US citizenry than a non-US citizen
Re:US voting can be complicated (Score:2)
Seeing how we have 11 parties represented in parliment alone, and each of those parties usually have 10+ candidates on average, that's 110+ choices to choose from - just from the parliment vote.
County and city elections are a bit less crowded, but I think the ballots I was handed were pro
Re:electronic voting isn't the problem (Score:4, Informative)
Well, they actually had paper trails, and it didn't change a thing. As it turned out, the courts ruled the recount illegal.
The recount was ruled illegal because it was a selective (partial) recount and not completed within the limits allowed by Florida law. There have been thousands of recounts nationwide. Many places require an automatic recount if the margin of victory is small. Let's not extrapolate the whole from one apparently misunderstood incident.
eVoting: a solution in search of a problem? (Score:5, Informative)
Compare this to Canada. They used paper ballots with big boxes next to the canidates' names. You place a mark in the box, and your vote is cast. After the polls close, they dump out the ballot box in front of anyone interested, and a representive from each party examines each ballot and tallys the votes. When ever vote has been counted and everyone's tally agrees, they call in the count is official. They place a phone call, and they go home.
Simple. Cheap. Transparent. Effective.
We could learn alot from our neighbors to the north.
Re:eVoting: a solution in search of a problem? (Score:2)
It doesn't matter how you count them. Gore won. [democrats.com]
hey... (Score:3, Insightful)
it can be that simple, and I'd rather have punch cards than electronic storage, since electronic storage can be corrupted, or changed. one hard drive failure in one voting machine or system could lead to a panic, punch cards may be old and simple, but they work! so, why not just combine the best of both worlds?
UN watchdogs have been requested (Score:3, Interesting)
Better Yet (Score:1)
Re:Better Yet (Score:2)
Of course it makes perfect sense that elections are more than half a year after tax day, with plenty of holidays to dull memories before the next tax day. Happy dumb people are easy to hoodwink.
I heard recently that the IRS spends somewhere between $0.40 and $0.50 for each $1.00 they collect.
we don't need a government (Score:1)
The government is simply the conventional city/state/nation/world-wide power-coordinating structure (or so the theory of democracy goes).
With electronic voting WE DON'T NEED THAT STRUCTURE ANYMORE.
Voting is a means to coordinated action. Electronic voting is a means of voting conveniently, without the need of government provided voting/power-coordinating services.
With electronic voting we don't need a government.
ANY kind of coord
Re:we don't need a government (Score:1)
That's right! The government! (in the form of law-enforcement personell, mostly.)
The problem is, although it is relatively easy to get a concensus when dealing with an issue in the abstract (personX, conditionY, amountZ, etc.), the vast majority of people have very little trouble justifying to themselves making an exception for themselves.
So, you have to implement personal costs to counter the personal rewards that ignoring the community's best interests (or
I want the paper. (Score:4, Insightful)
I love tech, but if there is one aspect of live that deserves the luddite treatment, this is it. Why?
Trust is one of the pillars of democracy. Participation is another.
The transient nature of electronic bits combined with our inability to actually see them move and change breaks the chain of trust we need to be assured our system actually works. We can see paper move, we can know the persons who perform the tally. With bits, we simply have to hope the machine does what its creator says. Given our history, we are fools to place our trust into such a system. Concentrations of power have always proven bad, why would this be any different.
The rush to speed the process is counter to the goal of participation and political discourse over the issues. Voting is not supposed to be quick. Voting takes time because it takes time to make the hard decisions. Since these decisions largely affect all of us, we should be taking the time to make them correctly. Coolness factor aside, the current push to modernize voting actually marginalizes the process. This is not healthy.
Early in life, I saw the political process as being messy and time consuming. I did not always vote. Having gotten a bit older and wiser (thanks GW for getting me involved!) I see now the true value of the process.
The last 4 years have shown me the result of hasty decisions made with broken trust and I don't want to experience any more.
On a side note, why doesn't Kerry push this HARD! I don't get it. Somebody please explain this to me. Seriously. why not?
GW has motivated me to stay involved and perform my civic duty. Not everyone agrees, but there are an awful lot of people who do. Why be lazy? Isn't this stuff important to you? To put this in
I am going to perform my civic duty. My state, Oregon, has a mail in ballot system with its own problems. Still I call and write letters and tell people how electronic bits really work. I mailed a copy of "Black Box Voting" to my representitive along with a call to action on reforming the process.
You folks living in the swing states should get off your duff and do the same because it directly affects you!
Good results take hard work. This means casting your vote with due consideration over the issues, preferably with your peers prior to the vote. Some of us have to tally the votes cast, make sure you are one of them. Work hard to build trust with others doing the same. Ask to watch the process --it is public, afterall. Somebody said, "the price of freedom is eternal vigilence". (ok, so I need to work at spelling --civics first!)
Ask your peers and representitives to see the process and show their trust with an open voting process. If they argue it's too much work, let them know there are plenty of unemployed and senior citizens willing and able to get that work done. If they don't understand the trust issue, talk about the machine and their inability to know what happens inside the wires.
We need to close the circle of trust. The last election and its 4 year result should motivate a large enough percentage of us to make this a non-issue. The fact that it hasn't disturbs me. Do we really not give a fuck? Maybe we do need a bit more punishment and loss of freedom to make the point perfectly clear.
I get it now, will you before it's too late to live long enough to see the damage undone?
Fucking do something.
Back to the technology (Score:1, Informative)
For those excited about electronic voting (positive or otherwise), or those excited about the prospect of looking for bugs in JSP java code... used in an actual voting proces!
Have a look at the source [ososs.nl] (Dutch site, code under "klik hier", english code/javadoc) of the voting platform used in the Netherlands for internet voting by out of country nationals during the last european elections. Its GPL, share and enjoy.
Nothing says "internet voting != secure" as a piece of proof of concept code that could have
[OT] For the trillionth time... (Score:2)
Geeks used to pride themselves on being pedantic. What the hell happened?
Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility. (Score:2)
Also, the CRSP testimony to the Election Assistance Commission [cpsr.org] is worth a read.
Modest proposal #32767 (Score:1)
I have an idea. Why not adapt the ballots to the needs of the humans who cast votes, and design the voting/counting machines to cope with the ballots? You know, instead of adapting ballots to the needs of the machines and asking the humans to cope with it? ACM has a CHI [human-computer interaction] SIG, but voting system vendors don't seem to have heard the term.
My reply: mildly disagree (Score:2)
Voting on a hyperlink (Score:1)
The whole point of presenting a statement is to control what you're saying. You can't do that if you're linking to what others say. Presumably the links were included to indicate what 'responsible' organizations were saying both in favor of and in opposition to the policy.
What if one of the organizations rearranges their web site and the URL moves