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US's First Internet Votes To Be Cast This Friday 143

longacre writes "If you thought online voting in America was a distant pipe dream (nightmare?), think again: the nation's first Internet-based voting system goes online this Friday, just days after the release of the Damning Report On Sequoia E-Voting Machine Security we discussed yesterday. In the first real world run of the Okaloosa Distance Ballot Piloting (ODBP) test program, election officials from Okaloosa County, Florida have set up kiosks in Germany, the UK and Japan where 600-700 absentee voters — mostly military personnel — are expected to cast ballots. Security experts still have many questions, of course, particularly on the potential for interception of voting data while it travels across oceans (via 'secure VPN'), the security of the kiosks ('hardened laptops' with no hard drives and other sensitive components disabled) and the security of the three data centers (one of which is itself housed overseas, in Barcelona, Spain), not to mention the fact that Florida doesn't exactly have a stellar record when it comes to vote counting. Florida's Dept. of State also has a fairly detailed outline of ODBP's components and processes [PDF]."
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US's First Internet Votes To Be Cast This Friday

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  • First (Score:1, Funny)

    by Shikaku ( 1129753 )

    Vote!

  • Floriduh (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward
    It's been two election cycles, everyone still thinks Florida is the only state with voting problems. Get over it.
  • by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @02:47PM (#25473173) Journal

    ... they'll claim it's a crack even if they were legit. (Does the system accept write-ins?)

    Now if they get 500+ votes for Mitnick...

  • WTF?!?? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by jddj ( 1085169 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @02:48PM (#25473185) Journal

    How can internet voting be both guaranteed "secret" - as in "can't tie the user to the choice of candidate", and at the same time ensure that individuals (never mind bots) aren't casting more than one vote?

    • Re:WTF?!?? (Score:5, Informative)

      by sakdoctor ( 1087155 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @02:52PM (#25473247) Homepage

      Using encryption, exactly what you asked for can be done.
      I suggest you start your reading by looking at blind signatures.

      Of course, it won't be implemented correctly, but e-voting is mathematically possible.

      • Re:WTF?!?? (Score:5, Informative)

        by sakdoctor ( 1087155 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @02:58PM (#25473323) Homepage
        • Andrew Appel. (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Irvu ( 248207 )

          I would point out that at least one of the systems mentioned on that page has been defeated by Andrew Appel (see here) the author of the top-linked Sequoia study.

          And, ultimately, as much fun as these systems are they often ignore the far more real problem of vote observation and intimidation. This isn't an indictment of the algorithms per-se but the reason that we have a closed voting booth is that voting in the open lends itself to voter indimidation (i.e. show me you vote the right way or I'll fire/kill/

      • by boatboy ( 549643 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:40PM (#25474003) Homepage
        I agree it's possible to separate a user's choice from their identity and still provide an audit trail, but wouldn't any encryption scheme require that the 'user' provide some sort of identity - be it a public key, id #, etc.? Even if that identity was in no way tied to a particular vote, it is still considered a civil rights violation in many states to require id cards/drivers license/etc. In my state, you give your name, which is crossed out in a big book- and efforts to do otherwise have been called "racist" and "voter intimidation". In other words, you get to log in by providing any username and no password. Without reliably establishing identity, you can't verify that a person hasn't voted twice.
        • by pcolaman ( 1208838 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:51PM (#25474167)
          Not requiring an ID in my opinion allows for the realistic possibility of voter fraud on many levels. Who's to say that the person is that name? Who's to say they are a legal US Citizen? Who's to say they have voting privileges (Convicted Felons have their voting privileges taken away for a specific period of time)? Who's to say they haven't voted under 10 names already that day? Having a system where you can categorically say that this person hasn't voted yet and is eligible to vote will allow for a more fair system. Is it fullproof? Nope. Is it better than what you described. Fuck yeah. Crossing names out of books? WTF?! That's just asking for fraud.
        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by sumdumass ( 711423 )

          I imagine it would work similar to the way it works in the states where these remote machines will be staffed and you will be issued a card based on your identity that gives three shots at casting one ballot. If you attempt to show up a second time, your name is checked on a list that says you already cast a ballot and the staffers would refuse to give you a card.

          Absentee voting should all be provisional votes in my opinion. This means that your vote is in essence tracked so if it becomes challenged, it can

        • I imagine that on military bases they have less issues with fraud of that nature, and also that people are generally more amenable to showing ID when asked, since anyone who needs to know can find out who you are, anyway.

      • Re:WTF?!?? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by pfbram ( 1070364 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @04:19PM (#25474605)
        Not really, it's arguably a regressive/recursive problem. Even if the encryption is 100%, the OS could have a back-door and the private key might leak out. There are potential weaknesses at all levels on the layered network model (for instance, the OSI model). I spent some time on this problem myself, designing a concept in which the machines would: (a) print out a receipt to the voter, containing the vote itself -- as well as a unique session/hash number. (b) print the same data on an internal paper-based receipt which is visible through a window (the voter could visually inspect it, and match it with his print-out or complain to the election judge immediately that there was a mismatch). This internal copy/spool would be retained for manual recounts. (c) retain it electronically. But in the end you have a system which is a LOT more complicated and expensive than an ordinary paper-based system, and therefore more easily corrupted in the end anyway. You also have a system which probably can't handle write-ins, without complex handwriting analysis, it would be implemented by a vendor with heavy political connections to the party in charge (basically a truism), etc. I genuinely believe it to be a regressive/recursive human/machine problem.
        • You also have a system which probably can't handle write-ins, without complex handwriting analysis[...]

          Wait, what? isn't that what we invented keyboards for? (in this case, probably a virtual keyboard, but still...)

          Just because they are called 'write-ins' doesn't mean you have to physically write them.

        • That's fine, but even paper systems have lots of flaws and a high level of spoilage. A lot of people hold up paper voting as the best form, but that really isnt true. Focusing on theoretical flaws in digital voting isnt the same as exposing real life flaws.

          >Even if the encryption is 100%, the OS could have a back-door and the private key might leak out.

          In paper voting there could be a guy with a gun outside making sure that I voted the way he wanted me to vote. Or an election commissioner throwing away

      • Of course, it won't be implemented correctly, but e-voting is mathematically possible.

        Kinda like DRM, in that sense.

        • DRM is actually mathematically impossible.

          You cannot keep data from pirates, and still give it to consumers, because the DRM cannot tell the difference between them. Many times, there is no difference between them, that is, they are the same person.

    • by KDR_11k ( 778916 )

      It marks you as having voted but not for whom?

    • Re:WTF?!?? (Score:5, Informative)

      by CaptainPatent ( 1087643 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @02:54PM (#25473273) Journal
      I think you misinterpret what the intention is. While voting is cast back to the US via the internet, these are still electronic voting machines in a designated location for military serving overseas to vote at. Registration is still subject to the same checking procedure and you can't just do this from home. What the worry is deals with the addition to internet encryption / security and not registration checks.
    • Quite simply. Maintain a database of registered voters, send the voter registration number with the request to add a vote in the votes database. If the database responds that the registration is legitimate, the voting terminal is allowed to send the candidate. There's a few ways you could mess up this sort of transaction implementationally, but it is possible to do it correctly.

      As the description dictates that the votes are still being done at voting centers, the registration verification could be done o

    • Re:WTF?!?? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by IceCreamGuy ( 904648 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @02:56PM (#25473307) Homepage
      Dude, RTFA, even just read the summary, it's not like they pull up a website from their living room and click a fucking "vote here" button, the only place to vote is on secured laptops over a VPN from a specific location. Clearly the big "if" is "if they can do it correctly," however I think the idea that it can't be done is just paranoid and ignorant of the technology discussed in the article.
      • by jddj ( 1085169 )

        Yeah, looked at the summary, looked at TFA later.

        The summary says "Internet Votes". Doesn't say "non-Internet Votes" which more accurately describes the situation (as TFA describes). Not really Internet Voting at all...

        DC

    • As long as the voter doesn't yell out "LOL, you just got pwn3d OLD MAN!" I think the vote will remain secret.

    • Re:WTF?!?? (Score:4, Informative)

      by JesseMcDonald ( 536341 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:59PM (#25474313) Homepage

      Well, let's look at how a traditional absentee ballot works:

      To begin with, you have a list of eligible voters and some way of identifying each of them. This is easy enough to duplicate with public keys, passwords, whatever.

      The ballot itself consists of an inner part, containing the actual selections, and an outer part, containing the voter's ID. The inner part is sealed, and remains that way until the ID portion has been stripped away.

      The same thing can be done with encryption. Create the digital equivalent of an anonymous ballot, indicating your preferred candidates. Encrypt that ballot (with a "salt" value to ensure uniqueness) with the public key designated for the purpose. Sign the encrypted ballot with your own public key and submit it.

      When the voting authorities receive your ballot they simply validate the signature and store it for later use, still in its encrypted and IDed form. If you change your mind, or the original ballot was submitted under duress, etc., you can submit a new ballot later or show up in person on the day of the vote, and the old ballot will be discarded unopened.

      When it's time to count the votes -- after deleting the obsolete ballots of anyone who showed up in person -- the ID information is discarded (permanently) and the raw ballots are decrypted and counted. The tricky part is ensuring the complete destruction, or at least disassociation, of the ID data, but that's just a matter of developing the proper policies. The same concern applies regarding current absentee ballots.

    • Not any different than mail in ballots or provisional ballots, IE the container has to be identifiable all the way to a "authorized person" where the outer layer is stripped away (hopefully, since it is un-verifiable to the voter) then counted. At least with the digital layers it is trusting a machine (hopefully, and verified by a qualified group, since it is un-verifiable to the voter).

      which is the other option for absentee voting.

    • I just saw the article today...

      Actually regular ballot voting isn't exactly "secret" -

      A given registrar will have a list of voters for a given precinct. You belong to precinct x and use ballot with a group number 123 (which is known because you were sent a sample). There will be - at most - 1,000 ballots cast for that precinct. When you vote, you sign your name alleging that it is you and you've registered. You're then given a unique ballot with a stub as a receipt.

      Now - the registrar can (but probably wou
      • by jddj ( 1085169 )

        I've voted in a bunch of elections and that's not been my experience. Since it's the responsibility of states and localities to run them, practices can and do vary.
        In several elections, I've been handed an anonymous chit that tells the guy guarding the machines: "this guy is registered and legit to vote". The chit is reused by other voters. In Georgia's current touchscreen system, the chit is an electronic card, and it is handed to me between the time I've had my registration checked and the time I get to t

  • First? (Score:5, Funny)

    by DoofusOfDeath ( 636671 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @02:50PM (#25473227)

    US's First Internet Votes To Be Cast This Friday

    How do we know that Internet voting hasn't already occurred, if we can't see Diebold's source code?

    • by tomcode ( 261182 )

      And release the spambots in 3... 2... 1...

    • Re:First? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by clam666 ( 1178429 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:31PM (#25473825)

      The fact that government officials are even considering internet voting, e-voting, early voting, or any other changes to voting show how much they want to control people and absolutely remove the concept of a government elected (and deriving it's powers) from the populace via representative government chosen accurately and freely.

      We have all sorts of voter fraud, deception, dead people voting, and tampering with a voting system based on paper ballots which could be shoved in a box and counted in front of witnesses, and a solution is to shove MORE of the mechanisms of voting into the shadows? Having the algorithms and technology being used hidden from any eyes and oversight? I'm not talking the "source code" that's shown to people, but what's actually installed on the box. Stuffing 2 paper ballots instead of 1 by a person adds slightly little to the total votes, and to manipulate the vote successfully requires a large number of people, duplicate voters, bussing around people from location to location, etc., which decreases the ability to hide a secret collusion to at least a small degree. To change it so one person can change thousands of votes with a simple UPDATE statement or any other security violation technique required, is a much worse proposition.

      This clearly shows to me that both political parties are doing absolutely as much work as possible in order to remove control from the electorate and transfer it to a political class, on the basis that they all support these types of systems and do nothing to secure true votes from the people (with the possibility of it being at the expense of their own power).

      I'd like to think that there is a secret altruistic reason for doing this, such as an acknowledgement that when a government falls towards democracy it will inevitably destroy itself and transform into a dictatorship or tiny ruling political class (like an apartheid government). I'd like to think this is a secret attempt to control the voting to a level that would prevent the American republic from falling to a real democracy and mob rule, however this would require me to expect a lot more from the people in government than is possible, including intentions to preserve freedom, altruism, and politicians not spending millions of dollars for a job that pays little and expects bigger quiet "payoffs".

      I think the reality is that we've already passed that point, and this is a move straight to a dictatorial style of government, and controlling the vote is, as always, necessary to move to a single party system (to remove any choice by the citizens).

      There is no vote-safe electronic/internet voting technology that could be implemented safely and absolutely be correct and not subject to manipulation. Anyone telling you it is possible has an agenda, knows nothing about politics and elections, or is thinking purely in a tiny technology box and not the abuses or security issues of such as system. The only possible way it COULD work would not be electronic voting; it would be electronic creation of the paper ballot for purposes of removing hanging chads, validating that the person didn't vote for two different people for a particular job (which disqualifies a vote currently) , which is printed out and verified by the voter in a human readable form (I voted for "SMITH" for president, yes, that's what I picked), and then submitted to be counted by humans for humans.

    • by Yvanhoe ( 564877 )
      Mod it funny, but this really is the beginning of the end. Just wait for a decided man (or woman) to understand what could be possible through this system. 2008 will see the more expensive presidential campaign, the next one could cost just a few millions to the right people. That is a problem. It will cause dictatorship. Don't think that "because this is America" it won't happen to you.
  • Don't screw it up again, you guys!!

  • I can see the headlines now:

    "Postback problems cause some voters to vote hundreds of times for Obama"

    or

    "Postback problems cause some voters to vote hundreds of times for McCain"

    (whatever your political leanings are)

    • The first will not be a headline, even if it occurs. The second might be, even if it doesn't, but it will be largely ignored anyway (even if true).

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:01PM (#25473367)

    electronic voting is not bad because of either real or imagined security issues. That is totally irrelevant.

    Electronic voting is bad because the procedure can not be verified by any layman. That should be the first requirement for any voting procedure.

    Paper ballot procedures are easy to verify and anybody can do it. Simply keep an eye on the ballot box from the initial sealing of the box until the actual voting.

    With electronic voting that is not possible. A paper trail comes close, but voters can screw that up by not putting there tag in the box, or any other random piece of paper in its place.

    Bottom line: voting is about TRUST in the procedure first, the actual results second.

  • MAN ON FIVE, Cook County, Monday -- The McCain campaign is looking at an Electoral College strategy heading into the final two weeks that has virtually no room for error.

    "Democrat voting fraud is famous since Tammany Hall," says Republican strategist Karl Rove. "So we'll win without votes." [today.com]

    Voting machines have been remotely reset and the counts adjusted. "Diebold have come to the party big time." Touch screen machines for West Virginia early voting offer voters "McCAIN" or "REPLY HAZY, TRY AGAIN LATER.

    • Wow, you aren't biased one bit. Got any bridges for sale?
    • With all the things to legitimately criticize Rove for, why do you have to make shit up? Voter fraud is a serious issue. But you stepped way over the line here. Does your world actually believe the crap your spouting?

  • by nsayer ( 86181 ) * <{moc.ufk} {ta} {reyasn}> on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:07PM (#25473459) Homepage

    ... than the alternative [defenselink.mil]

  • by FourthLaw ( 1365279 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:11PM (#25473509) Homepage
    How long before some one hacks them to write in Rick Astley?
  • libertarian (Score:5, Insightful)

    by barv ( 1382797 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:12PM (#25473527) Journal
    If banks can securely (with ~ 99.999% security) transfer thousands of dollars online, then the technology exists to securely permit voting online.

    Anything that speeds up voting encourages greater participation. Our present voting system originated in the dark ages. The fastest communication was by horse, it took several days for a horse to get from one side of the USA to the other, or about 2 months by boat to get from UK to Australia.

    If the internet had existed in the time of the founding fathers, I feel sure they would have used it to give the people greater oversight of the legislative process.
    • Re:libertarian (Score:5, Insightful)

      by enbody ( 472304 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:32PM (#25473845) Homepage

      If banks can securely (with ~ 99.999% security) transfer thousands of dollars online, then the technology exists to securely permit voting online.

      No, you miss an important difference between dollars and votes.

      If a dollar is lost, it can be replaced by another dollar so banks figure in a loss rate and charge for it somehow.

      A vote is unique, secret, and anonymous so if a vote is lost, it cannot simply be replaced by another (because you don't know what the vote was). In addition, a vote should be verifiable, e.g. there needs to be some way to check that the voting method worked (e.g. with a recount).

      • Well if many votes are supposedly bought and sold, is there really a difference?
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by zippthorne ( 748122 )

        I've seen schemes presented to slashdot that would appear to solve the anonymity and verifiability problem. But I haven't seen any that are simple enough for the average voter to understand well enough to be confident that that has occurred.

        I say that as an average voter, who's read some of the plans, and after a good deal of thinking couldn't find any holes, but also wasn't positive I just wasn't smart enough to think of 'em.

      • by syousef ( 465911 )

        If banks can securely (with ~ 99.999% security) transfer thousands of dollars online, then the technology exists to securely permit voting online.

        If a dollar is lost, it can be replaced by another dollar so banks figure in a loss rate and charge for it somehow

        So what you're saying is that if 99.999% of votes are secured, it's still not good enough? You think the current system is perfect and tamper proof? You can't be that naive can you?

        I'd argue electronic voting done well would increase participation, by

    • The technology exists, but the competence and willingness and sheer HONOUR required to correctly implement that technology does not exist.

      • I think the lack of competence to vote with reason, intelligence and logical thinking far outweigh the lack of competence and willingness and sheer honor to correctly implement the technology.
        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by zermous ( 1196831 )

          Well, we are supposed to assume, as a starting point for these kinds of discussions, that voting is good and that more accurate elections are more good. If this goodness is overwhelmed by the tragedy of the votes being cast by imbeciles for malicious people, then that is a problem to solve another day.

          But quite apart from all that, it is also generally assumed that support for an election is more important than which particular candidate is elected. A more accurate election facilitates belief in the democra

    • Re:libertarian (Score:4, Informative)

      by rtfa-troll ( 1340807 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:54PM (#25474229)

      Two things; a) banks can't. Fraud is a serious problem.

      More importantly; b) banks get to try again. Most electronic cash transfers have two ends. It's in the interest of each one to check it goes right. If one end is committing fraud then the other end will complain. You can then reverse the transaction (if you have correctly identified the parties) or at least take security measures so it doesn't happen in future.

      Voting is different. In order to avoid vote buying it has to happen in secret and for the most part if you can check your own vote you can also show someone else how you voted. This is much harder than securing most financial transactions.

    • Anything that speeds up voting encourages greater participation.

      How long does it take the average voter to cast his or her vote, in your guesstimate? How long has it taken you? From my vague memory, it takes me transportation [2 x 2km by bike] plus five to ten minutes. If you mean to talk about tallying speeds, you're saying that some people go "I could vote, but because I'm going to have the result in $n days instead of... still getting the result in $n days, I'm not going to".

      I don't know much about voter registration in the US [in Denmark, you get a card mailed to

    • Banks don't have a requirement of anonymity of the source of the money without increasing the chance of fraud.

  • [Insert facepalm ascii art here.]

  • Pipe dream? (Score:4, Funny)

    by Drooling Iguana ( 61479 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:16PM (#25473581)

    If you thought online voting in America was a distant pipe dream (nightmare?), think again

    So I guess now it's a tube dream.

    Or possibly a series of tube dreams.

  • by dkleinsc ( 563838 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:16PM (#25473587) Homepage

    1. Don't complain about lack of options. You've got to pick a few when you do multiple choice. Those are the breaks.
    2. This whole thing is wildly inaccurate. Rounding errors, ballot stuffers, dynamic IPs, firewalls.
    3. If you're using these numbers to do anything important, you're insane.

  • How does the state rationalize the cost of a Kiosk for 5 or 6 hundred voters? Part of automation is recognizing when it is not cost effective (or sensical) to install an automated solution.

    Someone in Florida has the techno-madness.

    • They aren't trying to automate the entire election. My guess is that this is a sort of closed beta. And the small size of voters makes it easy to guarantee that there's minimal, if any, fraud.

      • But how does this set up save any money? It's not like there has been a huge public outcry for more automated voting systems. It seems like someone got some money to buy a flashy new toy to to the job that could have been done in a safe and verifiable manner with paper ballots.

        Most implementations of electronic voting are flawed because they don't provide a way to verify that a person honestly voted a certain way. It's super messed up because the right is pushing to automation and validation and the left is

        • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
          It's not like there has been a huge public outcry for more automated voting systems.

          Yes, there has been. The reason that electronic systems were mandated in the first place is because of the people that were, for whatever reason, unable to cast a ballot with paper/pen systems without assistance. I see hundreds of people on here complaining about electronic systems all the time because it might possibly be gamed to reveal the vote of some person. Yet, they have no problem with all the disabled people ha
    • Re:Cost Effective? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by sumdumass ( 711423 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @04:36PM (#25474897) Journal

      It isn't really the costs of the voting at issue here. In the 2000 and 2004 elections, overseas ballots somehow got held up in the mail and even though the postmark was before the deadline, the state already tabulated the votes and didn't want to count the late arriving ones. Most of the over seas ballots are military personnel and for whatever reason, if it is no fault of their own, anyone potentially in harms way should have their votes counted.

      So no, the cost isn't as important as counting the votes of the military and civilians in the immediate areas of the military personnel. In the 2000 elections, it actually took a lawsuit to get the voted counted. In 2004, they brought up the results of the 2000 lawsuits to for the count. This wasn't isolated to Florida either and the mail wasn't all held up in the same places. It had more to do with the increased volume of mail then any conspiracy but the result was people who probably should have their vote counted the most (it could literally be life and death for them), ended up almost not having it counted at all. This is an attempt to avoid that situation.

      • So you are saying that to fix a problem with procedure where someone (or some group) was obviously either breaking, misinterpreting, or ignoring the existing law (ballots postmarked by x date WILL be counted), is to stop doing things in a way that works as designed so long as no party is trying to actively break, misinterpret, or ignore the law by replacing it with an untested, unverifiable, expensive way of doing things that will PROBABLY work so long as some party isn't trying to actively break, misinterp

        • No, what I am saying is that Cost effectiveness isn't a motivation as much as legally counting legal votes.

          Don't interpret this as my support for or against it. Interpret is as a motivation for actions taken by a government office.

          Personally, I think it can be done securely without having to worry about fraud. I don't know if they are taking those steps or not and it doesn't really matter in this context.

  • ...to ODBP via ODBC?

  • It looks like Cowboy Neal/Hanging Chad ticket will wind up with 27 electoral votes after taking 88% of 35 million votes cast in Florida. Any other states want to endorse his candidacy by putting their elections online?

  • by Subm ( 79417 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:30PM (#25473815)

    US's First Internet Votes To Be Cast This Friday...

    George W. Bush to be declared winner Saturday.

  • by FireStormZ ( 1315639 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:34PM (#25473871)

    Absentee ballots via the US mail work just fine... This is just smoke an mirrors to make people think there has been progress in fixing the American balloting system..

    • No, in 2000 and 2004, the increased volume of mail caused delays which almost cost the counts of votes. In 2000, it was actually part of the never ending lawsuits in Florida. Absentee ballots inside the US work just fine. Outside the US which is where this electronic voting is targeted, still has some undesirable problems.

    • ... except for the millions of dollars wasted on paper, ink, postage, return postage, and tabulation.

      Just because there is no good solution currently does not mean the current system needs to be replaced.

      That's a bit like saying the abacus works just fine, who needs calculators?

  • List votes = machine.getVotes();
    for (Vote vote : votes) {
    vote.setSelection(Candidate.MCCAIN);
    }
    machine.setPaperTrail(null);
    • Everyone that I've heard on Slashdot seems to claim that Obama's campaign is more up-to-date on technology and the use of the internet and computers. It seems more likely that something like this would be engineered by their campaign rather than McCain's campaign.
  • Personally, I'd be far more concerned with ID fraud than attacks on the encryption scheme. How do they determine who's using the 'hardened laptop'?

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by sumdumass ( 711423 )

      They probably has poll workers or a senior officer in charge who gives the person access to it based on their military ID and checks their name off a list so they can only use it once.

  • Just what we need botnets of voters. :-)

  • by Anonymous Coward

    we have had paper trail voting every year the last hundred years. i costs very little, all votes are counted by 02.00 AM, with the last voter leaving the voting booths around 18. A second count is then done (by different people) which is done by lunchtime the next day.

    all papers are stored forever in a deep mountain storage facility. we have all our votes stored over the last 100 years. if you would like to go count, say 1974's votes, just go ahead.

    ~80% of our population goes voting. (US today is 40% i beli

    • I seem to recall that the actual turnout of 110 million United States voters in 2004 was 56% of the 215 million eligible to vote. 56% is still pretty pathetic, though.
  • by shazzle ( 1242132 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @04:01PM (#25474349)

    Don't forget that after one can vote from home, or better yet, cellphone, votes can be sold MUCH easier. I don't think blackmail is out of question either.

    Also, once daddy has made up his mind who the family is voting for, he can observe his family-members vote for the 'right' candidate.

    It is still necessary to go to give your vote in a voting booth and for the sake of democracy, I suggest that voting should remain as easy and uncomplicated as it is. This is one of the only things I pride myself on being conservative of.

    • If we followed your suggestion, you would effectively remove my right to vote. For the last two elections, I have only been able to vote thanks to Ohio absentee voting procedures, and I do not expect the situation to change any time in the near future.

      The requirement need only be that the voter have the option of voting in private.

  • by Jherek Carnelian ( 831679 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @04:47PM (#25475053)

    Without thinking too deeply about it, it seems like even internet voting could make use of paper ballots. The thing to remember is that the best way we've come up with to design an in-person voting machine is to use the computer to make it easy and clear which candidate the user is voting for. But print a paper ballot with those (and just those) selections so that the user can visually verify that the ballot matches their choices with no ambiguity.

    So to do the same with internet voting would require a printer, a camera and at a minimum a clock for each 'internet voting machine.' The user fills out the electronic ballot and then remote end prints the paper ballot in full view of the camera with a clock also in frame with the ballot so that the user can verify the paper ballot reflects their choices. If all is good, the user clicks 'submit' and watches the paper ballot go into the ballot box, if he clicks 'cancel' it goes into the trash and the user goes back to filling out the ballot.

    Now the reason for the clock being on camera too is to raise the bar for replay and impersonation attacks. It certainly isn't fool-proof, but no system of anonymous voting has ever been fool-proof. The goal is simply to make voting fraud en-masse prohibitively expensive. We will always have onsie-twosie fraud, but in the big picture that kind of fraud doesn't usually matter.

  • Now CNN is reporting that Al-Quaeda is attempting to "somehow" mess with the US elections. Finally, a reason to turn people away from the polls and enforce strict laws in swing states.

    The US elections are a joke, your leader is a fascist dictator.

  • Truly... seriously...

    If these elections are truly "secure", they shouldn't mind hackers (of course they will) trying to hack it. The fact that we haven't had someone say "hey, everyone we're going to have an election - just try to screw it up!" to test the procedure tells me people are still living under the illusion that this will be 100% secure.

    Sure, every vote is important, but I think a relatively small number of evotes should be used to show that evoting can be tampered with.

    CowboyNeal in '0
  • I got a write-in, Jimmy, who the hell is HAL-2000?

Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes, and not rather a new wearer of clothes. -- Henry David Thoreau

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