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A Tale of Election Intrigue Wins Bruce Schneier's 8th Movie-Plot Contest 57

On April 1, Bruce Schneier announced his eighth Movie-Plot Threat Contest; this time around, he asked for a story that showed the evils of encryption, and found a winner in a story that describes an untraceably encrypted U.S. election in the year 2020 -- the first American election to allow on-line voting -- which results in victory for an unexpected third-party candidate.
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A Tale of Election Intrigue Wins Bruce Schneier's 8th Movie-Plot Contest

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  • by mentil ( 1748130 ) on Sunday June 14, 2015 @04:33AM (#49907701)

    Why no, Agent... Dontneedtoknow, is it? I have this document titled "Audacious plan to overthrow the evil plutocracy" on my computer because I'm writing it for a contest held by a security researcher, not because I'm a terrorist who has the knowhow to do all the illegal things outlined in this step-by-step document.

    *gets blackbagged and dragged to Gitmo*

    • by KGIII ( 973947 )

      How cute. You think you are going to land in the plane. Your body will be stuffed in an ammo case and dropped out of a C-130 somewhere over the South Pacific. After they use the wrench method of data extraction...

  • >"which results in victory for an unexpected third-party candidate.

    What a silly fantasy plot to even think of something so impossible with our unfair voting system. Now, if the plot ALSO says we finally switched to some form of instant runoff voting, then it might be possible to have a third-party win.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
    http://www.fairvote.org/ [fairvote.org]

    • And here I'd assumed the result was a side-effect of the "weak encryption" that was specified as an assumption. In other words, the Third Party guy won because the system was hacked....
      • Maybe not weak encryption, but that's my read as well - the system got hacked by some unspecified means, and the system was "designed" in such a way that there was no to do an audit to filter out bogus ballots.

        There is a fascinating tradeoff between having an anonymous ballot and the ability to do an audit and/or recount.

  • The scenario actually isn't a very good movie plot. If it was about some goofy mixup electing an incompetent to office as part of a comedy rather than a drama, then the absurdity would be believed. As it stands trying to be a dramatic work, it falls into the same trap a lot of geeks have in imagining their day in court: technicalities do not trump the human element. The premise is that an obviously guy subverts the first online election without gaining genuine popular support and overcoming the establish

    • The scenario actually isn't a very good movie plot. If it was about some goofy mixup electing an incompetent to office as part of a comedy rather than a drama, then the absurdity would be believed. As it stands trying to be a dramatic work, it falls into the same trap a lot of geeks have in imagining their day in court: technicalities do not trump the human element. The premise is that an obviously guy subverts the first online election without gaining genuine popular support and overcoming the established power structure and the nation would somehow let that stand.

      It's not believable because such a result would be nullified so fast, even if no one has a precedent for doing so. I know the whole point is to be over the top, but there is also the goal of being plausible enough to work in a drama.

      Actually I think this one and the child pornography one are the two worst of the five. Note none of them I think would be the main plot of a film, but would make decent subplots to drive the story.

      Actually, it could also make the good basis for the story. For example, the lack of a precedent probably would still result in the sociopolitical and legal angles of being stuck with what is a (hopefully verifiable) corrupt election, as odds are good that some countries would protest the nullification anyway and then you hit the question of "Why would anybody be this obvious?" Is it somebody wanting to make a point about how encryption isn't magic, or just really incompetent rigging of the election? And

  • I think they should get M. Night Shyamalan to direct it. Granted, he hasn't done a good movie in some time, but he can have a truly interesting twist at the end.

    In the end, the encryption will be so good that no one will be able to tamper with the ballots and that's why the independent wins. It'll be discovered that people have been voting for non-major party candidates for decades. They've just been too scared to admit it, and it ends up the two major parties have been rigging the elections against the

  • So, how did you all like mine [1]? The goal was to show the danger of their double standard: they get ironclad security; we get backdoors. They argue that anonymity, encryption, and security can be the end of the country. I argue that, if true, then it's also a confession on their part. ;)

    [1] https://www.schneier.com/blog/... [schneier.com]

    • by KGIII ( 973947 )

      I figured you took the time to write it and had the courage to post it here so somebody has an obligation to read it. I also figured I was the one bored person here who would be interested in supporting you. So, I read it. I can honestly say that it was fairly well written (some punctuation issues and some sketchy dialogue but your point remained the same and it was easy enough to understand) and that the plot was actually better than some of the others on that page. I was no longer bored and I appreciate y

      • Lol. It seems we entertained each other.
        • by KGIII ( 973947 )

          Someone had to read it because of your willingness to write it, post it here, and be open to criticism. You did, after all, ask what we thought - not something I would always recommend here on /. but it has been okay for you so far. Anyhow, I figured I would read your mindless drivel. I was pleasantly surprised to find out it was neither mindless or drivel. I would have said it was "okay" or something and concentrated on mentioning the good parts, if there were any. Fortunately I did not have to leave a va

  • I don't like the winning plot at all; it ignores reality and the Constitution.

    Forget about encryption or electronic voting -- didn't the 2000 election teach us anything when Al Gore got more of the votes from the American people across the country but George W. Bush took the White House? Does this plot presume we had a constitutional amendment to do away with the undemocratic Electoral College?

    The US Constitution clearly says that the president is elected by the Electoral College. There are only 535 members of the electoral college. We could call them via phone calls in a couple of hours to see how they voted.

    But don't let me get in the way of a good fairy tale... :-)

    • The question is not, who did the electoral college vote for.

      The question is, who did the states send to the electoral college.

    • Well, yes, this is a "Hollywood Terrorist Plot" after all. If something like this happened IRL, said terrorist's organization would be unable to provide the electoral college members (I'm assuming "no campaign effort" includes no affiliated political party that would have such electors pre-selected.) The state governments would select and instruct the electors, local laws to the contrary be damned, to vote for one of the main candidates, and in the end the gathered electors would decide amongst themselves w
    • by ericfitz ( 59316 )

      We might not have the electoral college by 2020:
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      • That's an interesting concept.

        But it does not do away with the undemocratic Electoral College, it just massages the system to force the Electoral College electors to vote for the winner of the popular vote.

        As such, it's likely an improvement, but to me the fact that this strategy is being used highlights the broken nature of our political system and the fact that it is simply too difficult to amend the Constitution so such end-around moves have to be done to reform/change things.

The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new discoveries, is not "Eureka!" (I found it!) but "That's funny ..." -- Isaac Asimov

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