Indian Voting Machines Compared with Diebold 285
Hanuman_Ji writes "The Indian general elections, 2004 is now complete - and the result is an upset. As reported earlier, this election was conducted entirely through Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs). This article gives a nice overview of the machines used in this process and also adds a comparison with the Diebold machines. More information is also available at the equipment manufacturer's website."
Elegant (Score:5, Interesting)
Happy Trails!
Erick
Re:Elegant (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Elegant (Score:2)
Re:Elegant (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Elegant (Score:2)
Re:Elegant (Score:3, Insightful)
Why? With over a billion people, even if a small percentage can "afford equipment that would let them crack the system", that's still a lot of people.
Re:Elegant (Score:2)
Re:Elegant (Score:2)
But you need both money and motivation for something like that to happen.
Uhm... nevermind.
Re:Elegant (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Elegant (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Elegant (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Elegant (Score:4, Insightful)
Notice what's not there: no network to expose data to possible manipulation between voting machine and central server; no fancy machine lacking tamperproof seals; no fancy database with built-in unpassworded backdoor "for support purposes"; no MS software anywhere in the loop; no manufacturer's president sworn to "delivering the vote" for an incompetent incumbent. It's those last couple of items which will prevent the adoption of the Indian system in this country.
Just my $.02,
Ron
Because the responsibility still rest with... (Score:3, Insightful)
It works because the main responsibility still rest with the election officials, not the electronic device.
The main difference from a normal electoral system is that the "box" is a button-based data recorder here, instead of a ballot paper box. Everything else is the same, no roles were being replaced.
Btw, anyone knows if there is a button for casting invalid vote?
Re:Because the responsibility still rest with... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Elegant (Score:3, Informative)
The article says that the system can have 16 candidates, and machines can be chained for a max of 64.
That wouldn't exactly work over here.
135 or more candidates in one race for office.
Different primary ballots for multiple parties, with different rules on who can vote in each race.
Multiple votes in a race (party central committee)
Lots and lots of races: national, state, local, judicial, etc.
Yes, we do need the massive complexity of Diebold
Re:Elegant (Score:4, Insightful)
no, we need something simple yet scalable. The two are not mutually exclusive. Anything built on top of Windows is needlessly complex.
Re:Elegant (Score:5, Interesting)
The Indian machine seems to handle voting for a single person for a single elected post. If someone needed to cast votes for many different electoral positions, they would need to move from machine to machine (and presumably would end of with a long of inky fingers in rainbow colours). It is not clear how "propositions" would be handled. It should be noted that many electoral systems require voting for multiple candidates for the same position. Here, the Indian system would clearly not work.
One objection to the Indian system, for use in the U.S., relates to the ink itself. Someone, somewhere would have an allergic reaction to the ink and would sue for about a trillion dollars.
I agree with other posters that an open source solution of some kind is needed. The process needs to be 100% transparent while protecting the secrecy of individual votes. I disagree with those that say it is not difficult: it jolly well IS.
Re:Elegant (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Elegant (Score:2, Interesting)
Yes. Allow an overcomplicated procedure to develop, design a system to implement the procedure, act all amazed when system does not work. Describes a lot of things besides the US election system.
Why is it again that elections can only be held once every four years and every possible decision must be made at th
Re:Elegant (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Elegant (Score:3, Insightful)
Very true, every state in the US has their own system, and there is a lot of pride, jobs and serious lobbying money that stops it all from being a simple, scaleable and secure system.
If it doesn't happen with
Re:Elegant (Score:5, Informative)
If the American people knew what their goverment has done to them, there'd be a civil war no doubt. Infact, as the middle class dissapears I think more and more people will begin asking pesky questions, and our gestapo FBI won't be able to handle it all.
Exploit (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Exploit (Score:3, Interesting)
Interesting idea, but I think it would be hard to pull off (especially on a sufficiently large scale to have a reasonable chance of influencing an election) without detection. And it would be relatively easy to defeat
Re:Exploit (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Exploit (Score:5, Informative)
The Indian system seems easy to verify, if the software is just a few hundred lines of assembly each major party can hire their own team who can verify the software. Try that with the Diebold system.. There would never be any elections at all then.
Of course, the central counting office might still be compromised, but it seems this is made hard by simply following the old way of counting paper ballots. (I.e. looking at each machine as a ballot box)
Re:Exploit (Score:4, Funny)
I think that's the point.
Re:Exploit (Score:5, Interesting)
EVM Success (Score:4, Interesting)
For those with concerns about security, hacking, etc. there are possible solutions. A good, low cost, locked-down EVM can be deployed on a standard PC - running any OS - the UI needs to be only a radio-button-type list box, with a submit/cancel button, and a tracker for each entry in the list box. The Admin views can be kept on a separate machine, and downloaded into the actual EVM PC. Top-class encryption can be thrown in with no additional complexity. A basic reporting app can tabulate and display results. No network cards needed on the EVM
What other features would ensure better acceptance of EVMs?
Re:EVM Success (Score:2, Insightful)
Key management in a massively distributed system is a hard problem. It WILL create additional complexity.
EVM's aren't the problem (IMO). Unauditable systems are the problem. India appears to audit a vote count and ensure that there aren't more voters than expected. But I don't see how their system allows someone to ensure that t
Re:EVM Success (Score:2, Insightful)
I'll take the Indian system over any pc-based setup any day. No exploits in the software, no network connection to attack, and just as secure as paper ballots (ie relying on the officials not to tamper with the box). And if you want to make the tallying automatic too, it's as simple as putting a jack on the back that gives read access to the internal
Re:EVM Success (Score:2)
There have to be electronic solutions to fraud detection & prevention, some form of authentication, possibly
Are there any design patterns from other fields that could be applied?
Re:EVM Success (Score:2, Informative)
India's setup is fantastic (Score:3, Interesting)
The bulk of the states have generally free and fair elections. The poorest states, especially those in the North, do not. There, the local strongmen actively use force to swing voted to their side and in a lot of constituencies it is not the most popular candidate who wins, but the most popular. In the poorest of the poor states, this fraud happens on a very large scale.
Today, vote rigging is a very simple exercise. All you have to do is get a bunch of very strong men with weapons of some kind and visit each polling station one by one, threaten the officers there and stamp the ballot papers in your favor. The more organized efforts include printing fake ballot papers and having them counted.
Now that EVMs have been introduced, the potential for localized fraud will be several restricted in some ways. Fake ballot papers cannot be printed, votes cannot be changed or removed. However, the local strong men and criminalized parties will still be around. They will still be able to threaten/cajole/buy people and subvert the democratic process. These problems are more systemic and will solve themselves with the passage of time.
Centralized election fraud is a very different matter. On paper, it looks like EVMs can take care of it. The results of "electronic" elections can be easily verified repeatedly and it should be somewhat difficult to systematically rig EVMS. I'm sure that people will find some way of manipulating EVMs, but it shouldn't knew the results much.
Finally, EVMs have delivered a lot of tangible results in India already. For example, results have been tabulated almost instantly, considerably shortening the political and economic uncertainty associated with elections. They definitely help democracy at every level in India.
Don't forget the paper trail... (Score:5, Interesting)
Every voter has to produce a proof of identity. Upon verification, his/her name is called out, and all the representatives go through their individual paper lists, as well the EC representatives, and they mark that person has cast a vote.
After you cast the vote, an indelible ink mark is put against the fingernal of the index finger (or other fingers if you have any handicap), which takes a few days to dissolve and disappear.
The number of people that cast the ballot is then verified against the number of people who have been marked as "voted" in these individual paper lists at the end of the polling day.
On the final counting day, of course the EVM provides the actual votes cast, but the count of votes is re-verified against EC representative's list.
Re:Don't forget the paper trail... (Score:4, Funny)
This system allows someone to vote up to 10 times. All that has to be done is to remove the finger that has been marked, then they could cast the next vote as someone else. Repeat until out of markable parts. Please note this will only work for 1 election...
Mod parent funny (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:India's setup is fantastic (Score:2)
correction please?
Upset? (Score:3, Insightful)
I see no reason why using EVMs would necessarily result in an 'upset', unless of course they are using closed source voting machines in which no one can review the code to see there isn't any hanky panky.
Things that should be open source: voting machines, encryption programs, anonymous p2p applications, the majority of things dealing with security.
Hmmm (Score:2)
Don't change my message though, I look forward to more EVM's in the future if they are done correctly.
Fraudulent voting is still doable ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Read the article (Score:5, Informative)
So even if you managed to capture the entire output of a polling place, you only affect 1500 votes maximum. With the votes-per-hour limit, you have to hold that polling place for hours to do even that.
Thats a lot of risk for a pretty uncertain and limited advantage.
Only in troubled areas.... (Score:2)
Remote voting (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Remote voting (Score:5, Insightful)
Thank god. What's the point of internet voting? If someone can't be arsed to walk 100 yards to vote, why do we want to know what they think -- they probably don't. We have proxy and postal votes for people who really can't make it to a polling station.
in any case isn't `secure internet' a conradiction in terms?
Re:Remote voting (Score:5, Insightful)
OTOH, they presumably do so on a daily basis, so it just becomes `go 100 yards out of their way'.
There is a widely recycled assumption that we need to get more people to vote and/or `become involved in politics'. This seems to be to be amazingly stupid. We need to get more people to think about politics. The voting etc will come as a natural consequence. Getting them to vote without thinking first is just a way to reduce the average information content of an election.
Re:Remote voting (Score:2, Insightful)
This goes into a ring. If the voter is ensured that the election is 100% secret, ie. no one can _ever_ get to know who you voted for, then it's also more difficult to force someone to vote for a certain candidate.
This is allready becoming difficult to ensure, as the bad guy might force the voter to bring a video cam, and film the
Re:Remote voting (Score:2)
Imagine the Java App which accepts your vote and, if you vote the right way, sends you free porn for a month.
Public Voting has the merit of being public and creating a body of people who at least care enough to walk a block for their country.
LS
Diebold system should have been... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Diebold system should have been... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Diebold system should have been... (Score:4, Insightful)
Maybe it was. Does anyone know for sure who wrote the code?
FYI (Score:4, Informative)
Re:FYI (Score:3, Informative)
Hmm.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Who really knows?
Blaster - This is damning, if true: (Score:4, Interesting)
The claim is that a Diebold box was insecure enough to be wide open for use by any passing hacker via the back-door.
India own3d (Score:5, Funny)
He has also started construction of a massive sign extending right across the Indian sub-continent proclaiming "0wn3d" in large black lettering.
Not a fair comparision (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Not a fair comparision (Score:2)
Do you want to characterize the Dieboldt voting machines as a financial exchange, in which non customers have little say, or as part of the Democratic Process in which every American has a say?
ls
Re:Not a fair comparision (Score:2)
Yes.. (Score:2)
It also marks a shift in public opinion - the ruling party admits it miscalculated the public poll and did not do well with its India Shining campaign.
For a more insight into the surprises brought by the election, have a look at the pictures here [bbc.co.uk] [BBC] (among them, the EVM's being transport
About the new Indian PM (Score:5, Interesting)
And while we're talking about Indian Election results, I would like to point out that she was an Italian citizen till 1983 when she obtained Indian citizenship - she's still a Roman Catholic - though she follows Hindu practices (for example during former PM Rajiv Gandhi's (her husband - no relation to Mahatma Gandhi) funeral).
In addition, India, a primarily/traditionally Hindu country has a Muslim president - Dr. Abdul Kalam - who's an all around great guy and a scientist/genius - and an open source advocate. RMS met him personally when in India.
I know I'm tottering a little OT, but I think it's something to be proud of, when a country and it's citizens can be secular/open-minded enough to ignore religious/cultural differences and choose their leader based on personal merit - moreover with today's world affairs.
Re:About the new Indian PM (Score:3, Interesting)
OT. The leaders are not selected on personal merit. Had it been the case, no Indian leader can parallel Shri Vajpayee's clean, moral and inspiring career. Active in national level since 1957 - a lifelong bachelor - he's beyond doubt the last leader with moral obligations. Well,
Examples: how does India "abuse" secularism? (Score:3, Interesting)
But tell me --
-- what specifically are you saying there? I'm not trying to strike up sparks, here, just curious what "abuses" we're talking about in "some cases." What harm's recently been done under the
That's a farce (Score:3, Interesting)
"choose their leader based on personal merit "
Anyone with something between their ears'd tell you that this doesn't apply to Ms. Sonia Gandhi
Everyone and his/her dog knows that she's becoming the PrimeMinister only because of being the widow Mr.Rajiv Gandhi who happened to become the PM only because of being the son of Ms. Indira Gandhi who again happened to become the PM only because of being the daughter of Mr. Jawaharlal Nehru
Enough said
now flame me
Machine Pictures and More Information (Score:5, Informative)
Here's what's missing in the US: (Score:5, Interesting)
I saw Greg Palast [grepalast.com] in Berkeley a few weeks back and he was talking about the 'systems' in place in Florida. In one county if you spoiled your vote, the machine spat the ballot back at you and you got a fresh chance to vote. In another county, your ballot disappeared into a chute and if you spoiled your vote, you never knew about it. In the case of the former, the county was overwhelmingly white (and Republican-voting) while in the latter the county was overwhelmingly black (and Democrat-voting). But then invesitgative Journalists like Mr Palast are just 'conspiracy theorists,' aren't they?
Re:Here's what's missing in the US: (Score:2)
As a matter of fact, the highest election official in Florida during the Bush-Gore elections was also a Dem.
Ockhams Razor is only useful if you have the intelligence to see the other possible solutions before concluding: Aliens did it.
Re:Here's what's missing in the US: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Here's what's missing in the US: (Score:3, Interesting)
How did this overwhelmingly black Democrat voting county end up electing Republicans as local officials? Is it the
Wow! They also make voting machines? (Score:2)
I actually worked with BEL many years ago. I worked for a company that developed this [bel-india.com] with BEL (we did the simulator part, they did everything else).
Casino Game Machine Engineers (Score:5, Interesting)
Simplistic devices with a single input method and a disabled output method until the machine is closed out for voting. At that point only those responsible for the voting machines can even transfer the votes. On top of which a verified paper ballot is essential in any election with electronic devices.
Sadly the US populous is far less informed than the rest of the world. Most don't even care how big an upset the Indian election was, nor the fact that it is historic for it's electronic voting methods. I doubt this will have much of an impact on the Diebold hotbutton of the week.
Re:Casino Game Machine Engineers (Score:3, Informative)
Open and closed (Score:4, Interesting)
I am not an Open Software fundamentalist, as I use interchangeably Windowns and Linux in the course of my work. But I always get to see the direct result of my actions, even when they don't occur in the exact same manner I intended them too (sometimes, it's just because I did it wrong :) )
But as far as software-only e-voting, how the hell can I trust my vote, of which I have no feedback, will be registered right by a system whose source-code I have no access to? In this case, I believe that OS is clearly the way... and I agree with the article on the need for simple solutions. Such a complicated architecture is bound to have errors!
But, I live in Portugal, where e-voting is still just not an issue :) It just scares me that elections in such an important country, as far as the world equilibrium is concerned, might have it's leadership stolen
Last elections in Liberia were won by a candidate which boasted a full 1500% votes. :))) Hope I never hear anything similar from that side of the Atlantic
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Amazing. (Score:3, Insightful)
One of the principle reasons for the upset was the fact that much of India's economic progress was due to their "in-sourcing" of foreign tech jobs. Well, at least that was the appearance to the working poor in India. The new party is going to try to spread out India's economic success to a greater percentage of the population. In short, there's a very good chance India's economy is about to tank. Between that and your snide melod
Say hi to the Tamil guerilllas (Score:2)
simplicity/reliability isn't Diebolds problem (Score:4, Insightful)
Tap tap tap. These Indians are crazy: (Score:5, Interesting)
Shouldn't it be the other way around? no wait.. Humm..
All said and done, we've just witnessed how a real democracy ought to operate its elections. No hanging or pregnant chads, or dimpled and pimpled ballots.. Importantly, a minority vote cannot decide the fate of a government and that of thousands of innocent people elsewhere in the world.
And most importantly, a robust, self-governed machinery that operates the elections, NOT county officials who can be influenced by the local political establishment (Florida, remember?). The election commission of India answers to nobody but the president who has luckily so far has been someone with little autocratic ambitions, and anyway there are constitutional safeguards against that. Election officials operating the poll booths are school teachers mostly from the neighborhood, meaning that they'd likely know you by name anyway. I remember seeing my primary school teacher ticking off my name at the poll booth, just as she used to do in the classroom when I was younger.
Talk about first-world and third-world democracies
Re:Tap tap tap. These Indians are crazy: (Score:2, Interesting)
Which means they could be susceptible to local influences, just like Florida. They probably aren't in large parts of India, but how do you think local chieftains threaten people with hookah-paani boycotts [telegraphindia.com] in North India? The perception that villagers have is that at least in some places, the ballot is not so secret after all.
amount of paper saved (Score:2, Insightful)
Batteries (Score:2, Interesting)
Sometimes if any generating station is overloaded, the entire regional distribution grid collapses, plunging a quarter of
Thought (Score:2, Interesting)
Some comparisons weren't right (Score:2)
I'd also like to know where the author gets the idea that illiterate Americans don't get to vote. (Or maybe that
What about people with disabilities? Quick story. (Score:3, Interesting)
Sure. This works. And it's what was done in most American polling places until the advent of the electric machine.
We have a large blind community at the polling place where I usually work - and I asked one how the new machines worked. She was practically in tears because she was so excited - she had just cast a vote by herself for the first time in her life (and she wasn't no spring chicken).
I realize in the scheme of creating a fair election system, this may seem like a minor point, but it certainly wasn't to her or anyone who talked with her and cares about the human dimension of democracy. Just a quick thought
It's often more complex than that (Score:2)
You need a more complex machine for all that.
But your process has some good ideas. For us, maybe the
Ironic (Score:2)
So now we've outsourced the frontiers of democracy, too...
No. Never. Absolutely not. (Score:2)
To put it in technical terms, there's not a chance in hell anything on the equipment manufacturer's website after a scandal like this can be called "information", even when stretching the definition of the word until it hurts.
If you want information about a product, you can't trust the vendor. End of story, unfortunately.
Re:Obviously there's something wrong with them (Score:5, Informative)
Jawaharlal Nehru, the first Prime Minister of Independent India had a daughter, Indira Priyadarshini Nehru who married Feroze Gandhi, a Parsi(Iranian)and took his name. Sonia Gandhi is the daughter-in-law of Indira Gandhi.
Interestingly, Feroze Gandhi's name was originally spelt Ghandy or Ghandi - this may have been changed to play on the allusion to Mahatma Gandhi.
There is a great book "The Nehrus and the Gandhis" [litencyc.com]that has interesting information on the dynasty. A bit out-of date as it does not refer to the new generation - Rahual, Priyanka and Varun Gandhi
Re:Obviously there's something wrong with them (Score:2)
Parsis aren't Iranians, any more than other Indians are. They are Zoroastrians who have lived in India for centuries, but whose ancestors came from Persia (present-day Iran). If you care about that, the Vedic Aryans from whom today's Indians are descended, too, came from the Caspian Sea region near present-day Iran, a couple of millenia earlier.
Re:Obviously there's something wrong with them (Score:2)
The legend I heard is: The Nehru family had a problem allowing their daighter to marry a "Parsi", a non-hindu. Mahatma Gandhi didn't like that, and officially adopted Feroz and hence he became Feroz Gandhi.
Interesting, but unfortunately wrong! From the Wikipedia page [wikipedia.org] on Feroze Ghandi:
Feroze Gandhi (12 August 1912 - 8 September 1960) was an Indian politician and journalist. He was the husband of Indira Gandhi, the daughter of India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru.
Not the same person as Mohan
Re:Obviously there's something wrong with them (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Oops! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:America bashing poll options: (Score:5, Interesting)
Diebold does indeed suxx0rs. Even if you ignore their obvious bias in favor of the Republicans, their code is bad; it runs on Windows, and transmits results over a network. All of those are insecure. Dubya should have lost, but Al Gore ran a pretty bad campaign.
America sucks!
As any physicist can tell you, nothing sucks. Things can only pull (with gravity) or push (with pressure). Sucking is just a function of creating a low pressure zone. Higher pressure moves to fill it, and can move things that get in its way.
India is great, they have a Communist party!
So do we. But in India they have a possibility of winning, which does make them better. Two party systems produce very poor results. People vote for one candidate because they hate the other guy, rather than because they love their candidate. Creating more options stops this and allows people to voice their opinions. Eliminating winner-takes-all elections is a good way to do this. I'm sure there are some republicans out there who don't want to be associated with the Theo-cons.
India is great, they are poorer than we are!
That didn't make any sense. If you are intimating that "unpatriotic" Americans want everyone to be poor, you're wrong. Actually, I would like to see a minimum wage in India, larger union activity, and better programs to help the poor and the environment in India. This would bring the poverty level down and increase upward mobility in the nation, which is good for their economy.
America is proud, they deserve to have egg in their face!
We already have egg on our face. We deserve it for electing Bush and not stopping his revenge/oil/Freedom (as in beer) war. Disagree? Great, that's what being American is about.
America is too successful, they need to be taught a lesson!
And how will having massive voter fraud teach America a lesson about being successful? By saying that Diebold hacking their own system so Bush can win again would be a lesson to not be so successful, you are admitting that Bush's economic policies are void.(Bush's plans don't work, therefore if he gets reelected it would be bad for the economy, therefore we would be taught a lesson about being successful.)
Whatever, I still want my tinfoil hat!
There's a difference between paranoia and questioning of a corporation who have been shown to be biased and produce poor-quality goods. I don't want Diebold casting my votes. If I knew they were going to be used in my district, I would vote by absentee ballot.
The system that India uses is very similar to the one used in my district. It's customizable for every election, has a simple interface, and is very tamper-proof. We don't need networked voting machines when I've been using this kind of equipment since I could vote.
Re:eVoting stock spam (Score:2)
The problem is not with the voters. It's with the election. The system of single plurality (one vote, one candidate), is mathematically a very unfair, almost undemocratic way to run an election whenever there are 3 or more candidates. Using a better system like instant runoff or one of the many others would e
Re:eVoting stock spam (Score:2, Informative)
4 EVMs can be chained together, to support 64 candidates. I believe the Election Commission was prepared to have more on standby if there were more than 64 nominations from a constituency. In the last few General Assembly Elections there haven't been more than 34 nominations per constituency. (Nominations cost money, which one forfeits if one doesn't get enough percentage of votes.)
If someone wants to w
Re:Election Upset + E-Voting = Suspicious (Score:2)
Re:Election Upset + E-Voting = Suspicious (Score:5, Informative)
Re:no sore losers? (Score:2)
While I agree with almost all of your points, I'm afraid I'm going to have to sic Godwin's law on you. End of thread!
Re:Caste Your Vote! Grab Some Cash! (Score:2)
Drive through voting, thats the American way!
it might surprise you to find out... (Score:2)
Er, what do you think Diebold's primary line of business is?
(For anyone who had ever walked up to a Diebold ATM or point-of-sale terminal and seen a Blue Screen of Death, none of the news of the last two years has come as any kind of surprise.)