Evoting in the News 218
key45 writes "Just a few days after California rejects Diebold E-Voting machines, and Ireland bans e-voting too, the Information Technology Association of America (which represents election equipment makers and other technology companies) released a poll showing that the majority of Americans trust those machines. The war for public opinion is on!" Reader theRG writes "The U.S. Election Assistance Commission held hearings on May 5 about the pros and cons of electronic voting machines. They debated whether or not machines should have paper trails, and what standards should be set. Meanwhile, NPR reports on California's recent decertification of Diebold machines and on one Ohio county's switch from punchcards to electronic voting." And finally, our own OSDN has a report from the election commission meeting: Joe Barr writes "Thom Wysong has a report at NewsForge this morning on the first public meeting of the new U.S. Election Assistance Commission. Questions like whether or not a voter verifiable audit trail and open source should be mandated for e-voting solutions were the order of the day."
American opinion is no measure of truth (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:American opinion is no measure of truth (Score:2)
Re:American opinion is no measure of truth (Score:4, Funny)
..
BTW, one reason that Ireland rejected electronic voting machines is that the "Change the vote to Republican when nobody's looking" feature was only tested in America, and it doesn't accomplish the same thing in Ireland....
Re:American opinion is no measure of truth (Score:3, Informative)
However, even if there were no Iraq/Al-Qaeda connection, Iraq was still on the top 5 list of countries that sponsor terrorism [cfrterrorism.org] for over a decade prior to the US invasion.
Re:American opinion is no measure of truth (Score:2, Insightful)
As for Bill Clinton - he is as right wing and ill informed as many of the american public.
American has a two party system - the right and the far right.
Re:American opinion is no measure of truth (Score:3, Insightful)
...discovered in Baghdad by The Telegraph.. (Score:5, Insightful)
With the British presses high journalistic standards, I trust that The Telegraph on their own found the conclusive proof that Saddam worked with bin Laden. I also believe in Sasquatch.
Re:American opinion is no measure of truth (Score:4, Insightful)
The Telegraph is the most right-wing mainstream newspaper in Britain. It's also the most popular. And it's a European paper (albeit one that doesn't like other European countries). Proving:
And, for the record, it's not Sharon who gives me nightmares: apart from the 6-day War Israel has very limited experience of invading other nations, and it's arsenal of WMD is presumably very limited. My personal nightmare is a Texan.
Re:American opinion is no measure of truth (Score:2)
OMG they were in it with saddam!
Oh shit.. they actually were, weren't they
The Telegraph (or torygraph as we call it) was one of the news outlets along with the christian monitor that falsely alleged george galloway UK MP was being paid off by Saddam.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0620/p01s03-woiq.htm l [csmonitor.com]
Christian monitor (hey thats like trusting news from Islamic Jihad!) now say
"An extensive Monitor investigation has subsequently determined th
Re:American opinion is no measure of truth (Score:2)
This document purports to show a link between Al Qaeda and Hussein, but it's claimed the overtures were due to their mutual hatred of Saudi Arabia...
Isn't Osama bin Ladens family from Saudia Arabia ?
US Elections 2004... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:US Elections 2004... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:US Elections 2004... (Score:2)
Sorry, I've been reading way too much Gregg Palast lately.
Public Opinion? (Score:5, Insightful)
OTOH, I wonder how the results would have skewed if the poll question was preceded by "Who is Diebold?" and the question had to be answered correctly. Americans (of which I'm one) are uniformly ignorant of anything that doesn't happen on Survivor XXXVIII. It's easy to give a yes or no answer when you don't have to prove that you know anything about the subject!
Re:Public Opinion? (Score:2, Insightful)
Maybe they think this will help the current state of Democracy/Government in the USA...
Once again, I am not American, so I can be taking this out of my ass.
Why, why, oh WHY? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Why, why, oh WHY? (Score:4, Insightful)
Try manning a helpdesk for a while if you don't believe me.
Re:Why, why, oh WHY? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Why, why, oh WHY? (Score:2)
Re:Why, why, oh WHY? (Score:3, Insightful)
Remember a few years ago? There was this national election. One side did not get the outcome they wanted from a few counties in one state. Something about not being able to determine whether a card was punched or not... No one really cared about problems or lack thereof in any other town. Just the ones in Florida.
Anyone in a position of authority in Florida was tarred with
Lots of valid alternatives.... (Score:2)
Punch cards are not the olny alternative to e-voting. For example, in local elections in my area, we use a felt marker to draw a big black line between two arrows, and these cards are then read by a scanner. No hanging chad here... There are reasonable alternatives that do not require unreliable Di
Re:Lots of valid alternatives.... (Score:2)
By the way, how do the blind and legally blind complete the felt marker ballot without assistance? Everyone else has the advantage of submitting a private ballot.
Re:Why, why, oh WHY? (Score:3, Insightful)
You have it wrong. With e-voting, the administrators get to sit back and relax on election night. The results get tallied automatically, and there's no possibility of recount. If the machine says it, it must be true, end of story. Nice way to do their job.
The election-rigging folks have had 4 years to practice. I'm confident they'll create plausible-looking results this November.Follow the Money (Score:5, Informative)
John82's point that elections officials don't want to be the next ridiculed Florida Elections Commission is appropriate also, but a big factor is that the Republicans in Congress and the Bush Administration wanted to be perceived as "Doing Something" to fix the big embarassment that they came into office with. (Oh, and also the Diebold folks were big Republican contributors, so they of course wanted to help out their friends.)
One big advantage of competently designed electronic voting machines is accessibility for blind people, which is a real problem with most voting systems. This lets the election officials help out blind people, and others with limited sight or hand-eye coordination (e.g. old people.)
how in the world does this matter (Score:3, Funny)
If we based everything off what the majority of Americans trusted, we would get someone like George Bush for President.
Oh wait, Damn!
Re:how in the world does this matter (Score:4, Insightful)
No, we would get someone like Gore.
Re:how in the world does this matter (Score:4, Interesting)
Ol' Jebby is ALREADY starting to throw the election, and we are 6 months away from actually voting. He must have to wipe the drool off his chin when he reads about E-voting.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:how in the world does this matter (Score:5, Informative)
Click here [gregpalast.com]
What they are doing with removing votes recently. [globalresearch.ca]
How they are preparing to use E-voting to do it again... [infernalpress.com]
And to the guy who modded it flamebait....Fuck you
Re:how in the world does this matter (Score:2, Informative)
First of all, Disney is a private corporation- they have nothing to do with free speech. Freedom of speech does not mean that a private entity like Disney is required to distribute every crap-filled documentary that Michael Moore makes.
And your claim about Jeb Bush is even more laughable. Jeb Bush doesn't have the authority to remove ANYBODY from voter rolls. According to Florida law, that responsibility falls on the election supervisor in each county. It was tha
Re:how in the world does this matter (Score:5, Funny)
Well of course, the poll was taken using electronic voting machines.
Re:how in the world does this matter (Score:2)
Who cares what most Americans think? (Score:5, Insightful)
If the machines are not rigorously trustworthy, and provably so, they should not be used. End of story. What Americans think is irrelevant.
If the machines are totally secure and reliable, but most Americans don't trust them, they still shouldn't be used. The voting system not only has to be trustworthy, but has to be seen to be trustworthy. If machines are more reliable, faster and more secure than paper, then election authorities should try to persuade the public that they are reliable, but until the public so believes, they should not be used to determine the result of an election.
Re:Who cares what most Americans think? (Score:2, Interesting)
Yeah, maybe a Windows app might crash every now and then, but it doesn't entirely alter that non-technical person's perception of industry.
On the other hand, we know that flaws exist all the time. Many of us here feel that at least of any software, that the software used in voting machines out
Re:Who cares what most Americans think? (Score:3, Interesting)
You are absolutely correct, but the problem is that what Americans think tends to drive public policy. People vote for those who support their views, even if their views are demonstrably wrong. That so many people trust the machines means that not enough people know how bad they are and is an indication that the people need to be educated, not that the machines shoul
Re:Who cares what most Americans think? (Score:2)
As for the poll results, maybe they were diebolded too
Split the difference (Score:2)
When I worked at a hotel, th
And for quite some time, the majority ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Having an industry tell me that the majority of people are uninformed, misunderstand or are unconcerned about major failures of their product is not particularly presuasive in my book.
Majority views of asbestos... (Score:2)
However, the problem isn't just that the public maybe uninformed - they're usually misinformed as well, and industries like Diebold certainly want to keep them that way.
In other news (Score:3, Funny)
Smoking _what_? (Score:2)
Here in San Francisco, you can't smoke tobacco at the local music halls. But it's a health regulation, not a fire department regulation, so rock concerts still have plenty of smoking, and it smells a lot better than that nasty tobacco stuff.
And who built the polling machines? (Score:2, Funny)
[Sarcasm] Yeah, those numbers are totally reliable and will definitely reflect the average American opinion. [/Sarcasm]
Campaign for Verified Voting in Maryland (Score:4, Interesting)
--Paul Suh
Wouldn't you need a biometric for e-voting (Score:2, Interesting)
How would the Voter Verifiable Audit Trails (VVAT)work? Could I check online to see that my vote was recorded correctly?
Re:Wouldn't you need a biometric for e-voting (Score:4, Informative)
You vote at the poll on the machine. The machine records the vote locally (and later to the poll team and later to the central office). The machine prints out a scantron. You check the bubbles are right for your vote and put it in the box.
The machine vote is the main vote, the scantron is just a backup. The backup will later be used to check the machine vote. Due to printing errors, there will be statistical anomalies taken into account and some will be checked by hand.
Hackers would have to fool two separate, complementary systems: machine and optical scan.
You would NOT have the ability to verify your vote over the Internet or ex post facto as this breaks secret balloting.
-l
Paper trail? (Score:3, Insightful)
You may want to ask ... (Score:2, Informative)
You may want to ask voters with disabilities what they think [aapd.com], then ask Caltech and MIT what they have to say on the topic [caltech.edu], then investigate other options [newsforge.com]. Just a suggestion.
Open Source Evoting (Score:3, Insightful)
Look, folks, it isn't that hard! If situation X occurs, then y (being the number of votes for Situation X) = y + 1. At the end, y = the number of votes for (candidate, proposition, measure, etc.) z.
Simple! *I* could probably program the stupid thing, and I've got CRAP for programming skills! Why does this need to be proprietary? Why does it need to be so damned EXPENSIVE?
Re:Open Source Evoting (Score:2)
However, I think an open source implentation could be viable provided you can find a company that would support it. It will be safer, and quite possibly chepaer than the proprietary system.
Most don't care (Score:2, Insightful)
Ireland didn't ban e-voting (Score:5, Informative)
To everyone's surprise, the commission said that there wasn't enough time to guarantee the accuracy and security of the machines, and that their introduction should be postponed until such things could be guaranteed.
So, it hasn't been banned, just postponed.
Scanned paper ballots (Score:3, Interesting)
And, of course, our public education is increasingly geared towards teaching kids how to properly fill in ovals.
Of course, if we had had fully-electronic voting, I might not have lost the town election on Tuesday (I was a candidate for Selectman, which is roughly the equivalent of city council).
Re:Scanned paper ballots (Score:2)
Re:Scanned paper ballots (Score:2)
That's ok (Score:2)
If you want to use human r
League Women Voters Opposes Paper Trails (Score:5, Informative)
-l
Re:League Women Voters Opposes Paper Trails (Score:2)
"VVPT systems are not certified." That doesn't mean they CAN'T be, does it?
They say that printers jam, etc, then in the next line item, they say paper records are required by Fedreal law.
I also don't see how VVPT really prevent disabled or non-English speaking people from voting properly, the argument doesn't specify. If they can't grab a slip of printed paper, I don't see how a touch screen is going to be that much better. The printing can be dynamically mu
Re:League Women Voters Opposes Paper Trails (Score:2)
VVPT are paper records seen and used by voters at the time the ballot is cast. "Records" are just printouts the polling places get from the machines' electronic counts.
Re:League Women Voters Opposes Paper Trails (Score:3, Interesting)
Ok the poll part is made up, but my experience is that there is a trend, the more a person knows about computer programming and or administration, the more likely he or she is to want a paper trail for transactions of any type.
Re:& they require control of source! (Score:2)
Good point about the source, though. I mean, how many state employees kn
e-voting in MD (Score:3, Insightful)
The bottom line is that (IMO), e-voting will win the day because
it looks slicker than paper votes
it's easier on polling officials
the lack of serious recount ability will make all election outcomes final, which will substantially reduce the uproar in contested elections.
In short, e-voting is pitched towards the masses. It's sad, but likely inevitable.
Re:e-voting in MD (Score:2)
That certainly is a boon to my world domination plans tho. I'm looking forward to the lack of uproar as the Znork for Lifelong Dictator option gets 100% of the votes.
Re: (Score:2)
e-voting isn't the problem ... (Score:2, Informative)
E-Voting isn't the problem. It's possible the have secure, verifiable, and recountable e-voting machines [caltech.edu]. Most people are simply ignorant of that fact. The problem is that the e-voting machines currently in use are not designed to support verifiability or meaningful recounts. The mass hysteria whipped up this past year has most people (including a lot of techies) misunderstanding the problem.
Re: voting with frogs (Score:2)
Re: Discomfort with E-Voting (Score:2)
E-Voting Conference today, in San Mateo (Score:2, Informative)
http://csmc.ca.lwvnet.org/calendar.html
Re:E-Voting Conference today, in San Mateo (Score:2)
League of Women Voters opposes voter verified paper trails [slashdot.org].
-l
Re:E-Voting Conference today, in San Mateo (Score:2)
(From what I understand, they're afraid that the paper trail becomes the ballot instead of the machine count which makes it harder for disabled persons to have a secret ballot (need someone else to check the paper).)
Follow-up Question: If the paper trail were like a Scantron, would this alleviate national's concerns about huge handcounts (instead of just a few needing manual intervention)?
Question 3: The League wants source code t
Why doesn't the govt produce the code? (Score:2)
Who answers these polls anyway? (Score:3, Interesting)
The other thing that wasn't clear is whether trusting e-voting in general means anything related to trusting companies like Diebold. The very action California took to reject Diebold, while not rejecting e-voting in general, sends the message that it is possible to have trustworthy e-voting.
We have come a long way toward getting paper voting to be relatively secure and reliable. In spite of that, we heard all about dimples and miscounts in 2000. We can't expect the first few trial runs of e-voting to instantly be problem free.
Those machines are junk (Score:3, Informative)
There was no receipt, no way to determine after the fact whether my vote actually made it out of the polling place, or even if it was properly recorded. The machines should never have been allowed to be used in the first place.
-Matt
Slight problem (Score:2)
Yeah, but the majority of Americans are stupid, especially when it comes to technology.
The point is that these machines are not WORTHY of that trust.
War for public opinion (Score:5, Informative)
Personally, I spent Tuesday (local election) passing out the following flyer:
Will Your Vote Be Counted?
Diebold
Direct Recording Electronic "DRE" Machines
Though Diebold has gotten bad press lately, (it's costing them hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign "contributions" to stay in business), their competitors are no better. Any DRE machine would be just as vulnerable to error, tampering, and fraud. Because they do not produce a permanent record of each vote, modern computerized systems are no better than the huge mechanical lever machines of 1890. Because there is no reliable way to even detect errors, the results of any election using these machines is open to question.
Voter-Verifiable Audit Receipt
For at least ten years, security experts around the country have recommended the use of a Voter-Verifiable Audit, or "VVA," to guard against these problems. If passed, Voters Confidence and Increased Accuracy Act would require electronic voting machines to produce a paper printout of each vote. This "VVA Receipt" must be made available for each voter to check before being securely deposited into a sealed container. The paper ballots would count as the actual votes, taking precedence over any electronic tallies in case of doubt.
Urge your Senator and Representative to support the Voters Confidence Act, also known as H.R.2239 (in the House), and S.1980 (in the Senate.)
How to Buy an Election
Re:War for public opinion (Score:4, Informative)
[Shameless_Plug] :)). Check out our written testimony to the EAC for some talking points and arguments for a voter-verified paper ballot (VVPB).
I'm a member of the National Committee for Voting Integrity [votingintegrity.org], which includes Avi Rubin, Rebecca Mercuri, Peter Neumann, Bruce Schneier, Marc Rotenberg (from EPIC), Cindy Cohn (from the EFF), and other people whose names I'm sure you'll recognize (well, and then me
[/Shameless_Plug]
As a nitpicky (but important) aside, make sure you avoid the word 'receipt' like the plague. A receipt is something you get at the store that you take home with you, whereas a ballot is your vote and something you leave at the polling station. We support paper ballots, but oppose receipts. From the context of your text, I'm sure you meant 'ballot', but there's already enough FUD flying with vendors claiming that we are naive enough to support receipts that people take home with them, opening the election process up to vote-buying and vote-coercion schemes.
What really bugs me are reporters that use the word 'receipt' when we explicitly say 'ballot, not receipt.'
Cheers.
-jdm
Re:War for public opinion (Score:2)
Thank you for the feedback. I'll update my flyer and also include a link to your website.
I plan to re-protest during the November elections.
Re:War for public opinion (Score:3, Informative)
In the best (and most prominent) plans, the voter doesn't actually handle the printed copy, but gets to view it behind glass before it drops into the secure container.
Super simple solution (Score:3, Insightful)
Why Diebold and these other jokers in the biz don't see $$$ for selling printers and supplies I don't know. That's more suspicious than anything.
Re:Super simple solution (Score:2, Informative)
Receipts are usually opposed. The public reason is that a receipt enables vote buying, where the voter provides the receipt to the buyer to prove cooperation.
Diebold on Diane Rehm Show (Score:3, Interesting)
An estimated 28% of U.S. voters will cast their ballots on electronic voting machines next November, but questions about security remain. A panel discusses the on-going concerns.
Joe Andrew, lawyer in private practice and former National Chairman of the Democratic National Committee
David Dill, Professor of Computer Science, Stanford University
www.verifiedvoting.org
Bev Harris, author of "Black Box Voting" www.blackboxvoting.org
Mark Radke, director of marketing,
Diebold Election Systems
Congressman Robert Wexler, D - Florida, 19th district
http://www.wamu.org/ram/2004/r1040324.ram [wamu.org]
It's a very interesting conversation no matter how you look at it. Unfortunately in Realaudio only
Open source and printers (Score:3, Insightful)
The voting companies say it would be overly expensive to add printed ballots to their machines.
But I guarantee you, if their software was made open source today, tommorow their would be three or four patches to connect printers to these stupid machines.
Selecting on a machine is fine. But we need to print the ballot in HUMAN READABLE format. In addition, ballots should not contain any machine encoding formats (like bar codes) that people cannot read.
This is the only way to gaurantee that the machines aren't being rigged to record something other than what the voter expects.
Honestly, I'm starting to think that the Canadian low-tech approach works best. Put an X next to the candidate you like. Canvassers count the ballots by hand. For all the money we spend on machines, we could afford to pay them well.
Re: (Score:2)
Harris Miller is doing what he gets paid to do (Score:2, Informative)
In a conference call with electronic voting industry officials, Harris says:
I just don't like to put it in writing because if this thing winds up in the press somewhere inadvertently, I don't want the story saying the e[lectronic] voting industry is in trouble and decided to hire a lobbying firm to take care of their problem for them," [everyweek.com]
If it comes out in the press, then his organization wil
is anyone using this to promote F/OSS? (Score:2)
retarded (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh yeah? Well I'm willing to bet that 100% of those surveyed were not qualified to make decisions on complicated technical issues, such as e-voting.
So that survey is MEANINGLESS.
All it proves is that the public does not understand the issues, not that the issues do not exist or that e-voting has no issues.
>>>Computer scientists say the electronic systems are so vulnerable to software bugs, hackers and equipment malfunctions that they should be scrapped and replaced with machines that provide paper records of every ballot cast. Despite reassurances from equipment makers, at least 20 states are considering legislation to require a paper trail.
Who should we trust? Reassurances from voting machine sellers, who stand to lose millions if their machines are banned? Or computer scientists, whose strive for unbiased analysis, and have nothing to gain?
And it pisses me off whenever any argument is made like "well, we've already spent a lot on these machines..." or "we don't have enough time before the election...". Bullshit. Just cause we've started off inthe wrong direction, does NOT mean we should continue down that same path once we've identified our mistakes. No matter what the cost, we must not allow our election process to be compromised. (at the very least, not let it be even more compromised than it already is)
A few issues. (Score:3, Insightful)
And, just to add to the other debate. I for one think that an opinion poll is only half the issue or less. It is important that the public trust the machines but only if they do so based upon truth not a well-run ad campaign. Unfortunately what this shows is that Bev Harris's Words [blackboxvoting.org] are not reaching the public as a whole.
In part this is unuspprising. I recently chatted with my local elections official. He allowed as how the public doesn't think about elections except twice a year on voting day and on the day after voting day. While he worries about this stuff and wants funding and time to deal with it, noone else cares, they just want it to work.
This is in large part due to the fact that we have all been trained in this manner. Consider school (in the U.S.) in it we are taught all about the vot, all about the elections system and the holy vote. Little if any time is spent (in my experience) on other (continuous) forms of public participation (running for office, attending council meetings, etc.) As a result everyone is trained to think that the vote is everything and that, for the rest of the year its out of their hands.
The real issue is how can we override this perception/instinct. How can we shatter the blind faith that most people have in the parties?
Paper (Score:3, Interesting)
The Commission's hearings (Score:3, Interesting)
The moment I enjoyed the most was when he very harshly dressed down one of the vendors, which had sent a board member who wasn't involved in day-to-day operations (having retired) and admitted he couldn't answer some of the questions posed to him. At the end of that segment, the chairman said something like "If we hold further such hearings, I would hope your company will see fit to send someone who actually goes to work every day."
Re:Those of us in the know... (Score:5, Insightful)
First, I'm going to ask for clarification. Is voting a game of big numbers or is voting a game of small numbers? Your comment supports the first then instantly switches to the opposite point. My one vote doesn't count, then, suddenly, we have a close race and it counts. Which is it?
I'll reveal my personal stance on the voting machines. Big, Bad Idea. The darling old ladies who serve as ballot judges in my local precinct have eyes like hawks, but they can't see potential voter fraud on a purely electronic platform. This is a clear case of a manufacturer using its superior resources to push an agenda against the public interest.
Plus, I insist that my vote does matter. It's not all presidential politics. Local referenda on city and county issues can directly affect my quality of life. In a race where voter turn-out is maybe 3,000 folks, my vote definitely counts. Heck, a guy of meager income like me can even swing an election through personal effort alone.
Time to quit bitching and get off the apathy wagon, kids.
Re:Those of us in the know... (Score:2)
Sorry, but I have to take issue with this. Voter apathy is not a problem unto itself. If voters have lost faith in the system, it's because the system is broken, not the voters.
Re:Those of us in the know... (Score:2, Insightful)
You've created a paralysing feedback loop with you comment, however. Chicken, egg. Egg, chicken. Voter, system. System, voter.
Action is the only thing that's going to fix the sys
Re:Those of us in the know... (Score:4, Interesting)
Truth be told, I'm not so concerned about increasing voter turnout as I am informing voters. I'd rather the people who can't be bothered to vote stayed home and left the decisions to people who care. Increasing voter turnout simply increases the number of uninformed voters. Make people care, and they'll find their way to the polls all by themselves.
Action is the only thing that's going to fix the system, cuz it aint fixing itself. Regardless of the philosophical constraints in our systems, concerted action is the only thing that makes things happen.
I agree, but sometimes the system is so fouled up that you can't fix it from within the system. In the election process, the only people who have the power to change it are in power because of it. They have no desire to change it because they will likely suffer from the change. The system has no way to change the system, so the change has to be made from outside.
There are arguments for changing the voting process itself, but I think the main reason people have lost faith is because of the end result. Choosing the lesser of two evils is still choosing evil, and voting for an independent, or worse, writing in a candidate, has little to no chance of doing any more than not voting at all.
The election process is a paralysing feedback loop all of its own. If everyone voted, regardless of their feelings about why voting doesn't matter, how would we know there was a problem? Say what you like about "voter apathy", but it's at least got us talking about how to fix the problem rather than not knowing there is one.
Personally, I think we need to fix what our choices are before we fix how we make them.
Re:Those of us in the know... (Score:2)
The other thing interesting that I saw on tv last week was that Abraham Lincoln, received 180 of 303 possible electoral votes and 40 percent of the popular vote; must have been a lot of very tight elections in that one.
Re:Those of us in the know... (Score:3, Interesting)
> Your one vote makes little differenc
Re:no indication (Score:2, Informative)
You're ignoring the statistics of sampling. With a properly chosen sample group of 1000, you can predict with a certain confidence how correct the results are. For 1000 properly chosen people, most of these kind of studies have an uncertainty around 5%.
Which means that you might be able to interpret this as being (77 +/- 5)%, which is meaningful.
Statistics 101 (Score:3, Informative)
Very rarely, polls are conducted with significantly more than 1000 respondents. The marginal decrease of the sampling error beyond 1000 observations is too small to make a larger sample worthwile. 77% being in favor of e-voting machines is pretty damn significant, and it can be said that the majority of all 291 million Americans is in favor of them (of course, I'd ne
Re:I E-Voted in FL (Score:2)
No (Score:2)
Re:What about learn from other people for a change (Score:2)
Re:My Opinion & Vote (Score:3, Funny)
Indeed, I hear that that group has been quite underprivileged for the past 200 years.