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The Cost of Electronic Voting 158

Wired's Threat Level blog is reporting on an analysis of the cost of electronic voting compared to traditional methods of vote tallying. A group named SaveOurVotes examined Maryland's budget allocations for elections during their switch from optical scanners to touch screens, and found that contrary to official claims, the cost was higher for e-voting (PDF) — much higher. "Prior to purchasing the touch-screen machines, about 19 of Maryland's 24 voting districts used optical-scan machines. SaveOurVotes examined those counties and compared the cost of the optical-scan equipment they previously used to the touch-screen machines they were forced to buy. The cost for most counties in this category increased 179 percent per voter on average. In at least one county, the cost increased 866 percent per voter — from a total cost of about $22,000 in 2001 to $266,000 in 2007."
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The Cost of Electronic Voting

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  • The article claims that you need 10 touch screen machines to replace a single optical reader device. I have a few questions about that...

    1. Why do we need touch screen - what is wrong with a mouse. Even the most retarded computerphobic morons can figure out how to use a mouse in 60 secs.
    2. Use some sort of remote desktop/web service to accomplish this. Buy the cheapest thin clients possible to connect to a "server" that could be run by a P4 2ghz computer at each site.
    3. Even better than #2, create a
    • Extrapolate #3 even further. Hire cheap techs for each county to ensure they have internet connectivity - State runs the servers

      This doesn't work very well when RIAA and NSA feels that it's necessary to monitor and read all network traffic in order to stop the terrorists.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      I don't know about you, but it'll be a cold day in hell before I want my individual vote traveling over an unsecured network.
    • "I wonder how much the servers cost?" well according to the white house ( for recovering the corrupt e-mails)a server will caust about $500,000.00 US
    • by MttJocy ( 873799 ) *
      I personally would go only as far as #2 would prefer data between centers was sent over a secure network (the cheapest way to do this would be to take physical drives to the central machine for processing) saves on infrastructure and I am sure for any polling station even a whole hard disk drive would weigh far less than the paper ballots and be easier to move. The main reason for this is considering the resources of your potential attackers, we are not talking about your joe credit card fraudster, your at
  • by jesco ( 598308 ) on Sunday April 06, 2008 @12:22PM (#22980482)
    I don't understand why then U.S. is so keen on using electronic counting. I mean even optical scanners are quite a system. What speaks against a letting volunteers count the vote like in lots of other countries? It sure is at least as safe as electronic voting, much cheaper and not that much slower.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Electronic voting systems have proven easily corrupted, are profanely expensive, and undermine the very spirit of democracy itself. This is why many politicians find them so attractive; it's like looking into a mirror.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by zippthorne ( 748122 )
      Consistency, speed, and cost.

      Humans are guaranteed to make mistakes, and make them regardless of whether a ballot is well-formed or not. Machines should, in theory, only ever make the same kind of mistakes (so the mistakes should be easily caught, eventually). Obviously, they're a lot faster than people are, and that time costs money. Unless all your vote-counters are volunteers, but then you'll find it very difficult to recruit people who are both A) proficient and B) don't have an agenda.

      What the hell
      • Humans are guaranteed to make mistakes. That's why you have 2 people count the votes, and have people watch the count, and ensure that the same results are obtained by both counters. In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is a difference. Identical machines running identical software should produce identical results. However, as far as any electronic voting system I've seen, the machines aren't identical across the country. Also, it's impossible (for most peop
        • Humans at all levels make mistakes, and are sloppy. And lack of resources encourages sloppiness. For example, when I worked at an election, one year, I was told, You're a _party_, for the purposes of helping people in the booths. The problem was that while I was technically "independent" that didn't mean that I was in any way sympathetic with the party I was "assigned" to represent (which I did to the best of my ability anyway, by not trying to influence anyone's vote who needed help, as was expected)

          Any
          • by rtb61 ( 674572 )
            When a manual system is established and firmly entrenched your problems really do not exist in that high a degree. Volunteers from all political parties attend the voting booths, provide voting assistance and count the votes (there are paid elections officials but they just monitor the volunteers). How are they all available, simply the elections are held on a Saturday so most people are not at work and are available.

            Then in a manual system to corrupt the vote you have to corrupt nearly every polling stat

            • Except, and here's the problem I have with that idea:

              Why would Democratic counties (as in, predominantly democratic party leaning, that is) choose to be involved in a conspiracy to enrich a company that was accused at the time of planning to manipulate the election in favor of Republicans?
      • by lenski ( 96498 )
        Every credible study of electronic voting systems has revealed numerous security limitations, often the result of inadequate architectural understanding of what "voting" means. It's the very first assumption of any programmer (me included) to think voting is easy.

        I studied the issues and got a real lesson in the process. It's way more interesting than I ever thought. I volunteered to be a poll worker for the primary election, and whatever I learned about voting before then, I got an entirely new set of less
        • I suggest you volunteer to work an election.

          I've done it. I might do it again, probably not this year, though. Now, granted, when I did it we had the mechanical lever machines where were absolutely horrible (much, much worse than touch-screens. They were talking about switching to touch-screens, but went with scantron-type in my district.) The absolute worst thing about the day was, after telling people going in to only pull the curtain-lever when they're ready to lock in their votes, having to then tel

    • by yuna49 ( 905461 )
      In parliamentary democracies like most European systems, voters are casting only one, or at most a few, votes in an election. American ballots usually have a wide array of races from the presidency down to at least the state legislature and sometimes some local races as well. American ballots may also include referenda items as well as the races for the various offices.

      So it's not as simple as, say, a British general election where each constituency's officials are counting votes for a single parliamentar
  • by TheLink ( 130905 ) on Sunday April 06, 2008 @12:22PM (#22980484) Journal
    The USA is rich. Rich enough to spend trillions in choosing the governments of other countries.

    So it should be able to afford a good voting system. Nothing like the diebold crap.

    Manual vote counting and counter-checking can be easily parallelizable. The more voters you have, the more vote counters and observers you should be able to recruit.

    It is MUCH harder to tamper with paper ballots. You might be able to do a few areas, but to do it all while the other parties have people watching is hard.

    With most electronic voting systems, 3rd parties can't watch the "counting" easily. If you have an e-voting system where 3rd parties can watch easily and it's verifiable, it'll probably cost more in the end.

    So what if you have to wait a few hours before you get the results?

    Lastly, Elections don't just have to be fair, they have to be _SEEN_ to be fair (enough ;) ). Otherwise you get too many people not accepting the results. In which case it becomes a big waste of time (and often lives).
    • It shouldn't, but paying more while getting less (of almost everything else) at the same time is just stupid. Also since these machines are made with current tech (XP, Access, etc.) the cost to replace every 4-6 years and keep patched is REALLY stupid.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      It is MUCH harder to tamper with paper ballots. You might be able to do a few areas, but to do it all while the other parties have people watching is hard. With most electronic voting systems, 3rd parties can't watch the "counting" easily.

      heck, I can't watch the "counting" easily for my own vote while I'm there in the voting booth. Most voting machines, including the manual pull-the-lever type, lack the most basic check: Verification by the voter doing the voting. The infamous "hanging chads" were a good
    • You don't have to wait any longer. In Canada we have paper voting, and the results are ready for the 11 o'clock news. They had to create a law against releasing results too early, because they felt the results from the east were influencing the west. I'm not sure why anybody would need to have the votes counted much faster than that. Maybe they should just have a big score board in the voting room. As soon as you enter your vote, it shows up on the score board. And have the whole thing is networked, s
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Kjella ( 173770 )
      Here would be my design idea:

      1. When you register, you get one "vote card" and a thin envelope. Make the vote card special say with a watermark so it's hard to fake extras.
      2. You go into the booth, insert card and make a selection.
      3. After it's asked you if you're really really sure, prints it in cleartext and as a barcode (or those better-than-barcode things, I forget).
      4. Take the card out and verify your printed vote against the cleartext.
      5. The vote should be left on screen until you click "ok, it matche
    • Funny thing is I can come up with a system to do each without to much thought. Fancy display terminals etc with whatever you like for a GUI touch screen voice prompting morse code for all I care. Connect a modified daisy wheel printer with a mag stripe encoder. Print out in the vote in English (OK I'm biased here but I'm a one country one language sort of guy but thats a different topic) and brail that takes care of most people. Use an ink compatible with optical scanners and punch holes while encoding
  • by firefly4f4 ( 1233902 ) on Sunday April 06, 2008 @12:26PM (#22980504)
    As much as technology has made our lives easier in some ways, and as much as I am pro-technology for most things, for some things using a high-tech method just doesn't make sense. Voting is one of those things.


    No need to worry about educating people on how to use the machine (either for voting or setup), and the paper trail is built in.


    Of course, you can still mess with things if the layout of the ballot is inherently flawed (butterfly ballots in 2000, anyone, although with a pen chads aren't a problem), but at least the mechanism itself shouldn't be in question.

  • ...if there really is something to bible revelation mention of the stone image of the beast.
    Of course the beast is man and the image is his invention of computers.

    But its stuff like this you have to wonder how in the hell did it ever come about this spending huge amounts of money on a different way of voting?
    And a way that just is not so secure, but rather easy to manipulate.

    Hmmm, so I bet it was an electronic vote that "forced" purchase and use of such systems???

    But one thing is for sure, its another strik
  • by Zen ( 8377 ) on Sunday April 06, 2008 @01:00PM (#22980712)
    Insert your favorite quote about statistics here...

    I glanced at the article and didn't see any useful data, so I paged through the pdf. There's some stuff in there that I don't understand and could cause some major problems with their statistics.

    1) They appear to be comparing projected costs of optical scanners with actual costs of touchscreen machines. The PDF shows a 7 year lifespan of the original optical machine purchase, amortized over the first five years with zero additional purchases for that 7 year period, only warranty repairs. I sincerely doubt that there were zero additional purchases.

    2) Can't they hire the same project managers for the touchscreen rollout as for the optical? People management is people management, no real difference.

    3) Warehousing costs - aren't they storing the equipment at a state run facility? No reason why there should be a huge capital payment associated with that.

    4) Transportaion costs fluctuate wildly on the touchscreen actual costs page, but are unwaveringly cheap on the optical page. The same equipment would always have to be moved to the same place, so I don't see that assumption as valid.

    5) Voter outreach is 2x more for touchscreen as it is for the optical assumptions. I don't see how that cost would be different.

    6) I don't see a line item for absentee ballot printing on the optical page at all.

    7) I call BS on the statement that 10 touchscreens are needed for the job of a single optical scanner. Why would a county be willing to have a single optical scanner during an election? What if it failed? Those people wouldn't be able to vote that day? I think 2-3 is a more legitimate answer to account for quick processing and/or machine failures.

    8) What exactly are the optional services that Diebold provides that account for almost $28M. That's a third of the overall total cost. There's no breakdown of what the services are, so there's no way to compare them with line items on the optical scanner costs.

    They're comparing apples to oranges here with the projected costs of optical. It's simply not a fair comparison. And then not listing what those services are that almost singlehandedly account for the entire difference in cost between optical and touchscreen is ludicrous. If you take that line item out since there is no equivalent line item on the optical sheet, you have $67.5M for touchscreen and $52.4M for optical. Even using the listed number of $95M for touchscreen, that's still a little less than 2x the cost of optical. How exactly did they arrive at a 10 fold increase statistic?

    I'm sure that the touchscreens are more expensive than opticals at first. Same thing when companies were first rolling out desktop computers to their workforce a couple decades ago. They understand that it cost a lot of money and a lot of lost productivity, but they also knew that they would reap huge rewards in additional productivity in the long run.

    Now that said - let's find some other electronic voting firm to spend our next $100M with instead of Diebold.
    • by ocie ( 6659 )
      The difference I see between optical scanners and touchscreens is that the optical scanner is not needed at each polling place. One optical scanner could tally the votes from several polling places. Also, the optical scanner would only be used by election officials who are presumably trained in its use, where touchscreens are put in front of the general public and as such need to be built to withstand that level of use/abuse.

      I once had to cast a provisional ballot due to moving before the election. Simpl
    • by OWJones ( 11633 )

      You seem to have at least one fundamental misunderstanding here, and the rest of your issues flow from that. That issue is

      I call BS on the statement that 10 touchscreens are needed for the job of a single optical scanner. Why would a county be willing to have a single optical scanner during an election? What if it failed? Those people wouldn't be able to vote that day? I think 2-3 is a more legitimate answer to account for quick processing and/or machine failures.

      In order to vote on a touchscreen mach

    • by raehl ( 609729 )
      7) I call BS on the statement that 10 touchscreens are needed for the job of a single optical scanner. Why would a county be willing to have a single optical scanner during an election? What if it failed? Those people wouldn't be able to vote that day? I think 2-3 is a more legitimate answer to account for quick processing and/or machine failures.

      Well that one at least is easy.

      EVERY voter must use a touch-screen to vote, and if your touch-screen goes down, nobody can vote. You only need one optical scanner
    • by dbIII ( 701233 )

      What exactly are the optional services that Diebold provides that account for almost $28M

      Perhaps you get to name the winner :)

      Actually there's so much complication and misdirection that it might be a bit more than a joke instead of a combination of price gouging, low level corruption (bribes for contracts) and incompetance. Voting machines are something we really could outsource to India where they have shown that the things can be cheap, can be limited to small numbers of votes (to cut down on the infune

  • by xZgf6xHx2uhoAj9D ( 1160707 ) on Sunday April 06, 2008 @01:01PM (#22980722)

    They had to buy new stuff. And even the article admits some of the money went to training. This isn't necessarily an indication that the higher costs are inherent, just that switching to something new has an initial cost. It would make more sense to see how the costs changed over, e.g., 10 year periods than just after the new technology was introduced.

    Personally I think the higher cost would be justified if it led to an increase in democracy. As another poster mentioned, the US is a rich country. If there are demonstrable benefits to the new technology, I would bias in favour of it, even at increased cost.

    The big problem, of course, is that the machines are not only expensive, but terrible. They seem to be a step backwards in democracy, not forwards. I live in Canada where we use pencil-and-paper ballots and they work beautifully for our purposes. I can't imagine switching to anything electronic at this point, as it would surely be a step backwards.

  • by jo7hs2 ( 884069 ) on Sunday April 06, 2008 @01:09PM (#22980782) Homepage
    I lived in Carroll County, Maryland when the change to electronic voting occurred, and after years of optical scan voting, many people I knew were confused by the move to e-voting. Our system had always worked fine, was simple and easy to understand, and had a paper trail. All you needed was a marker, a sheet of paper with spaces to fill in, and bam, you voted. I'm shocked to see that the state's push for e-voting inflated the cost of voting in Carroll County from $22k to over $200k! That is simply unacceptable.
  • Outsourcing (Score:3, Funny)

    by Frankie70 ( 803801 ) on Sunday April 06, 2008 @01:33PM (#22980944)
    What about outsourcing the counting of votes to a cheaper country?
    • What about outsourcing the counting of votes to a cheaper country?
      In the interest of fairness and mutual respect of sovereignty, I propose Iraq ;-)

      Captcha: "Patriot".
  • Has anyone from the open source community tried to write secure software for this? I suspect that it may not be possible(thus no one is trying) but has there ever been a real, open, reviewable effort to try? Maybe the real answer is that the problem is insolvable thus the only "solutions" are ones that cannot be verified (closed source, proprietary etc). Personally the whole idea gives me the creeps. Everything I have read shows that this whole idea is bad. What I find amazing is that very smart people
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by 50_1337 ( 929093 )
      Open source solution already exists, it's call pen & paper ;)

      Everything else is just insecure: Even if electronic voting machines use open source software, how do you know the code you check earlier is the same that the computer use during the election ?

      Jeez... We use this SIMPLE and EASY paper voting system for years, why the hell do we have to search for a more COMPLEXE alternative ?
  • ... their government for overspending. If in court we can prove that the people in charge were lobbied into doing things an expensive way or were simply uninformed, then we deserve our tax dollars back. The government should be the last to innovate, and this is just another example where people doing things the old way get caught trying to do something they don't know how to do.

    How about cuttings costs per vote by 500 dollars and then paying us to vote. I predict the turnout to be over 90%. That is democrac
  • How many times am I gonna have to fill out the slashdot poll?
  • She has been doing the best reporting on this issue.
  • Not commenting on whether this is a good idea to begin with (as a million others have already pointed out, even the optical system might not be one), but theis bit of news basically boils down to "new tech is more expensive than old tech".

    I think I'll wait until 11. For the film.
  • And that accounting doesn't even include the costs of recounting contested ballots. Since the paperless voting can't really count them at all, the costs of the extensive circumstantial forensics are either extremely high, or have to be counted as the costs of leaving the ballot unprovable at all. Which costs can be extremely high, perhaps higher than the entire budget controlled by the people "elected".
  • by rbrander ( 73222 ) on Sunday April 06, 2008 @02:34PM (#22981360) Homepage
    Perhaps an American /. reader can explain to the rest of us why you use machines at all? I don't mean just electronic voting, I mean all its predecessors - pulling levers, "butterfly ballots", punch cards and their infamous hanging chads.

    In the middle of that 35-day recount thing in 2000, the Canadian electorate finished their (six week, from declaration of the election to the vote) national election with a vote that was over in 24 hours, from first poll open to last vote counted. The mechanism: pencil and paper.

    I once volunteered for a local political party in a provincial election to "scrutineer" the ballots. It looked awfully foolproof to me, as all the scrutineers from all the parties watched each vote being counted in each box, some of us keeping our own tallies as they were added up. We were done in an hour or less.

    Needless to say, the ratio of ballots to humans in the room was in the hundreds, not hundreds of thousands. We just employ a lot of humans in our elections, paid and volunteer. Few of our neighbourhood polling stations record more than 1000 ballots, and they have 3-4 employees, plus "N" volunteer scrutineers, depending on the number of parties running.

    So why doesn't America just do that, is it the money? Somebody gave me the opinion that it's because Americans vote for so many offices - judges, DA's, sheriffs, local officials at the same time as federal. That this all came from previous centuries, farmers having to walk 10 miles to vote, so they only wanted to do it once every four years, and then register 25 votes at that time, making it hard to do on paper.

    That didn't fly with me. Farmers have to come to town every week or three for supplies and so forth anyway. And if you want to vote for 25 offices instead of trusting one elected party to appoint them all, what's wrong with realizing that has COSTS and paying for more people to count them by hand with scrutineers from the campaigns watching every piece of paper go by? To turn around the old phrase, you can't take your choice without paying your money.

    The paid human time (the N scrutineers are volunteers) to count one vote on paper is a second or so. One penny at $36.00 per hour, even, and most elections temporary staff are retirees making half that, giving you two seconds to the penny. Isn't counting one vote worth one penny to you? (Needless to say, the piece of paper is way under a penny, and the cost of the metal boxes is amortized over 20 elections; the high school gyms are free to use.)

    I'm not saying the total cost of our elections is a penny per vote, that's the incremental cost of the counting process. We probably spend a buck per vote or more on the whole thing, organizing the operation, paying the permanent staff at Elections Canada to hire the retirees, print the ballots, etc. But the difference between having everybody pull a lever on some complicated counting machine or just putting an X on paper and putting it in a box, after all the setup is done, can't be over a penny per vote as far as I can see.

    • I tend not to pay a whole lot of attention to the news. Despite (or because of?) this I've noticed a few times when certain subjects seem to go from "no issue" or "backburner" to national attention without any apparent good reason to do so. The electronic voting machine thing is one of them.

      My guess is that in these situations there's someone pulling the strings behind the scenes to precipitate these events. Diebold et al. stand to make a lot of money off these things, obviously, so it wouldn't be surprisin
  • Something that confuses me a little bit: Surely the optical-scanner machines are also "electronic"? Surely they also tabulate votes in some automated way? So what are we talking about here? Diebold et al are pushing for an upgrade ... why, exactly?
    • Machine makers push for upgrades to make money.

      The optical scanners are simply counters, and their purpose (compared to hand counting) is to be less labor intensive and more accurate. Touchscreen and other all-electronic systems get rid of any permanent physical medium for making the vote. Lacking a macroscopic physical medium, there is no meaningful way to inspect ballots or do a recount that has any significance.

  • The whole issue here has to do with perception. In other words, the voting public needs to feel that the count actually does represent the will of the voters that voted on that day. And the money that was spent in researching, developing, buying and using the new machines was spent due to a perception that, in the year 2000, the end result of the vote did not accurately portray the will of the voters that voted in the Presidential election.

    Now, quite frankly, many of the issues were blown out of proportion

  • Based primarily on trust and cost, many here at /. are against any kind of e-voting.

    However, by now, everyone on /. can recite the outlines of a plan for trustworthy electronic voting (print results in plaintext and barcode to paper ballots, open code, no accessible machine ports, etc.). If there were vendors building such systems, the trust argument against e-voting would be eliminated.

    If trust can be solved, aren't there advantages to e-voting that may be worth the cost?
    • Logic to enforce rules such as "v
  • by billcopc ( 196330 )
    The cost doesn't matter if the value added is less than zero.

    The e-voting machines have resulted in a second term for the world's most visible terrorist, and they've wasted countless man-millenia as everyone discussed, debated or idly witnessed the chaos surrounding voting fraud. Hell I don't even LIVE in the U.S. and I watched a "documentary" about how easy it is to screw with the Diebold counting machines. That's 90 minutes of my life I won't get back, all because of one messed up government and its con

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