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Demo of Free Software Voter-Verifiable Voting

Lulu of the Lotus-Ea writes "The Open Voting Consortium (OVC) is holding a demonstration of its Free Software voting system in Santa Clara, California on April 1, 2004 (yeah, I know the date, but it's not a joke). An announcement on the OVC homepage has further details. The Sourceforge hosted EVM2003 project of the OVC has produced touchscreen and vision-impared interface voting systems that produce visually inspectable (or machine-aided audio verification) paper ballots. As well, OVC will demonstrate systems for reconcilliation and reporting of precint results, and provide handouts and a presentation explaining the virtues of a publicly inspectible system with a tamper-proof paper trail."

16 of 238 comments (clear)

  1. Cool, the citizenry strikes back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I guess there are plenty of examples of doing nothing leading to the undesirable. Go for it you people. Stand up and be counted (Accurately :-)

  2. go OVC! by linoleo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    With Diebold's flaws being exposed, it may be a good time to effect some real change. What are the chances of this being actually adopted for some election?

    --
    Be faithful to your obsessions. Identify them and be faithful to them, let them guide you like a sleepwalker. JG Ballard
  3. What, no backdoors? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It'll never catch on.

  4. This has everything that Diebold Lacks by amigoro · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Diebold: I quote: fraud-prone, blackbox, proprietary, expensive, idiosyncratic, unreliable

    OVC: I quote:technically sound, accurate, secure, inexpensive, uniform and open voting system

    That really sums it up.

    If you don't believe me try a demo of the Diebold voting system

    DIEBOLD: Boldling rigging where no man's rigged before
    (Well... Let's not talk about the presidential election 2004)

    --


    Nothing to see here
    1. Re:This has everything that Diebold Lacks by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      and is why it will not be adopted by the United states in any state.

      sorry, but Even though most of the citizens of the USA (me being one of them) prize honest and fair elections, there is no way in hell that Diebold or any State will allow this to be used in elections.

      The fact that it eliminates any chance of ballot stuffing or other hokey pokey that the Powers that be rely on has doomed it to death.

      Yes I know, there are NO reported cases of ballot stuffing here int he states to back up my claims, but many MANY citizens feel the same as I do... we are all looking at the fiasco that is lforida and how it looked that the Bush Brothers made sure there was a win there that really hit home with many americans...

      I would absolutely love a 100$ open system with verifications and audit trails voting system...

      It's just a sad reality that the USA needs to be called the United Corperations of America...

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    2. Re:This has everything that Diebold Lacks by Wellspring · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Excuse me saying so, but this is totally unfounded nonsense. I worked for five years in politics, and never encountered any major official who was involved in such a thing.

      Once or twice, a local party official, it's true, has cheated-- and they're looked down upon and attacked, especially by the ones they 'help'. Did the United Corporations of whatever-you're-saying choose President Clinton? And President Carter? And President Reagan? Did Paul Wellstone and Phil Gramm both answer to these secret masters? The disputed system in Florida, for example, was designed by a Democrat-- one who fully supported VP Gore.

      Part of democracy is living with the fact that your views aren't always going to win or be popular. You may call that half of America stupid or wrong or manipulated or whatever you want, but under a democracy, a majority wins. It's a fact of life that close elections happen. If 2000 had gone the other way, no doubt I'd be writing this to someone else.

      Conspiracy theories like this do little other than encourage higher levels of acrimony and lower levels of voter turnout. If you want an excuse not to participate (by volunteering, voting in the primaries, or voting in the general election) then just say:

      • "I don't want to be responsible for the people I elect."
      • or "I'd rather not participate in democracy because I don't like what everyone else votes for."
      • or "I'm not confident enough in my beliefs to admit that my opponents are as earnest and well-intentioned as I am.
      • or, quite simply, "I'm lazy."
      </rant>
  5. The only way........ by MrIrwin · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I have always thought a big obstacle in the way of eBallots is the idea that a company owns the voting system.

    I had been thinking that there would need to be an open standard and rock solid set of validation tools to test potential software.

    OSS voting soltions is not an option that sprung to mind, but it's neat.

    --

    And if you thought that was boring you obviously havn't read my Journal ;-)

  6. Open SOurce Paper Elections by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful


    I don't think i could ever trust voting if a computer is involved to count "virtual" votes

    this is just way too easy to abuse by a rogue government either now or in the future.

    creating an OSS voting software actually reinforces the argument for digital voting.

  7. Lawmakers by Dachannien · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do these people have the attention of legislators and governors? There are a lot of legislators who are keen on the idea of including a voter-verifiable paper trail, and several state governors have expressed concern as well with the voting systems that have debuted so far. This is (should be) as much a PR project as it is a coding project.

  8. About Damn Time by ashkar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    With all the bitching and moaning going on about electronic voting systems, one would think that this would have been the first idea to mind, but, apparently, the average citizen can only complain and deliver shit for alternate ideas. This is fantastic that someone has organized this into a feasible possibility to demonstrate to the public. With a few public showings, this might even break into the mainstream voting arena, and, while I don't believe it will assauge all worries that people have, it should help with most, and the others will be ironed out eventually.

    Thanks to all those that helped with this.

  9. UK systems by L-s-L69 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I would never trust a computer voting system, even postal votes dont seem like a good idea.
    The problem (as i understand it) in the states come from the hanging chads etc that resulted in baby bush been in the whitehouse. Computer voting is been touted as *the* solution, but i would think that no matter how good this software was, putting a cross in a big box (like the UK and Europe) then having someone count the crosses is still the best solution.

  10. Good Luck by PorscheDriver · · Score: 5, Insightful
    This sounds very noble - and I wish them the very best of luck. Because they're going to need it.

    Whilst right thinking intelligent people (everyone reading this of course), realise the benefits of such an approach to voting, the people who choose voting systems (i.e. Politicians) will ask one question:

    "Who is accountable?"

    Because it's not a company developing this system, (who after all, always act in an appropriate, legal, and fully accountable manner :-|), politicians will believe that such 'communist' philosophies are not to be trusted. "Surely if it's an open system, it can be exploited by ne'er do wells?".

    I'd liken it to companies who always buy MS - "because, hey, MS is a reputable company. They're accountable for their software". It's a mentality which goes along the lines of "Companies are better than a gang of hippies, doing it because they want to make the world a better place man."

    Same old same old - whilst this will undoubtedly be technically better than anything Diebold can come up with, politcal motives will bury this initiative I fear.

    --
    "This is your life, and it's ending one second at a time."
  11. Today, digital votations in Spain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
    Today (march 24th) in Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea (The Basque Country's University) they will elect the new vice chancellor that will rule the university.

    They will use a system called Demotek that is made by four basque companys (Ibermatica, Ikusi, Hunolt and Euskaltel), and uses a really curious way for voting, half analogic, half digital. The voter uses a normal paper for voting, but the ballot paper has a bar code that is read when it is inserted in the ballot box.

    The results are available in the moment that the ballot boxes are closed. But, they are not official until the ballot papers are counted.

    - It's a easy way because there are no skills necesary (it's not necesary to know using a computer). My grandmother can use it.

    -It's a safe way, because there are always the ballot papers for testing if the system was ok and no one has cheat the results.

    - It's a fast way for knowing the results. No more Florida like recounting needed.

    Sorry for my awfull english

    Marcus Ramius

  12. Okay, I fail to see why they don't just do. . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Something like this:

    Step 1: Walk into the booth, and identify yourself (Probably in the form of some number that the voting place keeps track of.)

    Step 2: Select candidates in a nice, easy-to-read format.

    Step 3: Print out a filled-in ballot.

    Step 4: Ask you to verify correct votes.

    Step 5: If you say yes, place the ballot into the slot underneath the printer. This slot wouldn't open until you have verified your votes. (clearly labeled in nice, bright letters again). If not, go back to step 2.

    Step 6: When the issue of verification comes up, there's a paper trail that every voter is supposed to have looked at. If they didn't, well, that's their business. Looks like their vote didn't count.

  13. Then you must not have been in California. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I worked for five years in politics, and never encountered any major official who was involved in such a thing.

    Then you must not have worked in California. Or had anything to do with the US Congress' dabbling in voting rules.

    Absentee ballots without excuses and perpetual absentee ballots. (Several thousand at one address, too, and I'm not talking about a nursing home or general delivery at a post office.)

    Motor-voter. (A recipie for fraud, even when NOT combined with perpetual absentee ballots.)

    Illegal alien voters. (And: rules against checking ID at polling places, helpful people teaching migrant workers and child-only welfare families (i.e. mommy's not a citizen) how to register and vote, "get out the vote" vans taking people from precinct to precinct - where the riders ALL go in at each precinct).

    Floating ballot box tops as a hazard to navigation.

    I could go on.

    Yes, most of the poll workers are honest and hard-working. But it doesn't take many bad apples to spoil the barrel, since one fraudster can generate thousands of votes - and swing a close elections with millions of voters.

    Once or twice, a local party official, it's true, has cheated-- and they're looked down upon and attacked, especially by the ones they 'help'.

    Because they cheated? Or because they got caught, making the candiate and party look bad?

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  14. Votes only one side of the story by spun · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I was watching 'Real Time with Bill Maher' the other night, and he had Gore Vidal on. Gore brought up the point that only one company does all the exit polling for all the news media nationwide, and there is absolute secrecy in how they do their polling. They could really say anything they want, and as long as it was close to the vote tallies, no one would question anything.

    So we have the capacity, through Diebold and others, for massive vote fraud. And only one secretive company doing exit polling to verify things. Scary combination.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton