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WI Assembly OKs Voting Paper Trail

AdamBLang writes "Madison Wisconsin's Capitol Times reports 'With only four dissenting votes, the state Assembly easily passed a bill that would require that electronic voting machines create a paper record. The goal of the legislation is to make sure that Wisconsin's soon-to-be-purchased touch screen machines create a paper ballot that can be audited to verify election results.' Slashdot has previously reported on this bill." More from the article: "Wisconsin cannot go down the path of states like Florida and Ohio in having elections that the public simply doesn't trust ... By requiring a paper record on every electronic voting machine, we will ensure that not only does your vote matter in Wisconsin, but it also counts."

197 comments

  1. Good idea but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Unfortunantly, this paper trail will still record your multiple votes if you live in Milwaukee.

    1. Re:Good idea but.... by PW2 · · Score: 1

      Voting multiple times works well in Madison also.

    2. Re:Good idea but.... by stupidfoo · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      What also works is having the son of one of the democrat candidates go and slash all the tires on the vans that the republicans rented to bring people to the polls. He was convicted of that.

      Or in Washington state you just keep "finding" more and more votes until the Democrat governor wins. And when the margin of victory is around 120 and it's realized that there are at least 5000 invalid and illegal votes (including a number of people who voted for their recently deceased relatives (who voted democrat and have been convicted)) you just have a judge say "No big deal, the vote stands".

      Or in Michigan where there is clear, wide spread voter fraud by the local democrat candidates... oh who cares, right? Even if they did threaten to kill the person who turned them in.

  2. Ka-Ching! by Ossifer · · Score: 2, Funny

    The folks over at Diebold are happy to hear this--now they can charge a whole bunch extra for printers...

    Of course they may have to spend it on software fixes...

    1. Re:Ka-Ching! by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 2, Funny
      The folks over at Diebold are happy to hear this--now they can charge a whole bunch extra for printers...

      Actually, the printers will be provided at no extra charge. However, the consumables will be a different story. Diebold predicts that by 2009, ink and paper refills will generate 87% of their revenue and over 94% of their total profits. The remainder of the profits will be generated largely by sales of extended warranty plans.

  3. Too bad by gcnaddict · · Score: 2, Funny

    Its too bad this doesnt work on punch cards, especially with those "pregnant chads"

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  4. Good but not great by katana · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While this will help people put greater trust in the system by providing a paper trail, the core problem is still there. If you can commit fraud by altering a computer system, surely you can commit fraud by altering the part of the system that generates the paper trail, or by altering/switching the paper trail itself. This is a limitation of technological solutions to problems of trust and reciprocity. They always encounter the problem of infinite regress, where the technological solution to a problem (often a problem generated by a previous technological solution) is always able to be undermined. This is one of the arguments why DRM is doomed to fail (eg DVD Jon can always hack the next "improved" version of DRM). In this sense, electronic voting systems are much like DRM: an inevitably limited and imperfect techonological solution that gets in the way of an important process of trust and reciprocity.

    1. Re:Good but not great by Ossifer · · Score: 1

      How about giving voters the opportunity to verify their machine recorded votes (i.e. let them look at the printout)?

    2. Re:Good but not great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Here's my question. A national election happens what, every 4 years? It's the single most important event in any country. One might say that no expense should be spared to conduct it fairly and effectively right? So why the electronic voting machines? Do they make it more reliable? No. Do they make it more accurate? No. Do they make it easier? No.
      Do they make it cheaper? No. So what's the advantage here other than that the CEO of Diebold has his fingers up the ass of some politicians? It's obvious from here that America is corrupt and rotten to the core.

    3. Re:Good but not great by xTown · · Score: 1

      Pardon the bad pseudocode...


      send_to_printer($vote);
      if ($vote=="Candidate A")
      then record_vote($vote)
      else record_vote("Candidate A")


      The only way to ensure that this doesn't happen is to have the source code 1) available; and 2) reviewed by experts. Even then, it's spoofable unless the experts can verify at each stage of compilation and assembly that the code is unadulterated, and that that code is successfully downloaded to machines, and that that code is then used by those machines. Letting people see a printout is just cosmetic IMHO.

    4. Re:Good but not great by saskboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The only solution to a paper trail that the public can trust, is to have the paper marked in front of the voter, and have it inserted into the ballot box in front of their eyes, so they can be confident that a machine isn't mis-marking their ballot, or discarding their ballot for another that's put into the ballot box.

      Punch cards are really a good way to do a paper trail, as it's visible to the voter, and if there's a dimple or pregnant chad it's clear the voter meant to mark that one. If there's more than one dimple, it's spoiled. In Canada if there's any kind of a mark in the designated area, the ballot is considered valid, it doesn't have to be an X. But if there's marks outside of the Voting O circle for the candidate, then it's bad, or if there's more than one marked. It's not rocket science, it's democracy. Diebold just gets it very, very wrong.

      --
      Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
    5. Re:Good but not great by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The REAL way to verify is to audit a random selection of precincts. Compare the recorded electronic vote count with the paper records.

      Select a group of 10 local voters, at random, and have THEM select 10% of the relevant precints to audit.

    6. Re:Good but not great by Ossifer · · Score: 1

      You don't think would get caught when they compare the print out counts to the machine counts at the end of the day?

    7. Re:Good but not great by Dachannien · · Score: 2, Informative
    8. Re:Good but not great by Doppler00 · · Score: 1

      I think you underestimate the "next" improved DRM. Manufaturers now easily have the ability to encrypt the entire signal stream from the media all the way to the display devices. The only reason that DVD's were cracked was because that software was sold that could decode them under an "untrusted" computing environment that the user controls. Once this control is eliminated, it would be virtually impossible to hack. They may even design the decryption IC's to self distruct if an attempt to open them is made.

    9. Re:Good but not great by aywwts4 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, because we all know machines suck at tasks like accurately counting numbers in the millions, a situation that simply humans excel at.

      We also know that it will only be easier to use some archaic punch card system than simply touching your candidates name and confirming it.

      We also know that hanging computer code is a frequent problem, requiring many votes to be discounted regularly.

      Also, since many places already use a computer to read analog votes; That doesn't add any extra possibility for error.

      In conclusion, what the hell are you ranting about?

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    10. Re:Good but not great by aywwts4 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Great link!

      (not to steal your thunder) For the lazy, and those who hate PDF's the relevent paragraph:

      The bill also provides that the coding for the software that is used to operate the system on election day and to tally the votes cast must be publicly accessible and must be able to be used to independently verify the accuracy and reliability of the operating and tallying procedures to be employed at an election. In addition, the bill provides that each municipal clerk or board of election commissioners of a municipality that uses an electronic voting system for voting at an election shall provide to any person, upon request, at municipal expense, the coding for the software that the municipality uses to operate the system and to record and tally the votes cast.

      --
      Web Developers: Celebrate to our roots! Animated Gifs and Tiled Backgrounds, dont let our history die!
    11. Re:Good but not great by Neoprofin · · Score: 1

      Good point, then the only people who can screw with the system are corrupt poll workers and ballot counters rather than corrupt software programmers.

      Not to mention the corrupt voters in either scenario.

    12. Re:Good but not great by bergeron76 · · Score: 1

      If you can commit fraud by altering a computer system, surely you can commit fraud by altering the part of the system that generates the paper trail, or by altering/switching the paper trail itself.

      The introduction of difficulty (and complexity) creates a de-facto checks and balances system. Accountability is a core value of patriotic Americans, and as such, having an auditable trail is fundamental.

      The right to/ability to/integrity of/ the voting process is the deepest core of our country (as our founders intended). If there's anything we can all agree on, it's that every person have a "say"/vote in the overall direction of the Nation/homeland/Country.

      --
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    13. Re:Good but not great by Red+Alastor · · Score: 1

      In Canada, we get the result when one candidate have enough votes counted for that the others can't catch up. We always end up getting the results before the voting period is over. And we don't use plain paper.

      I heard on the news that it's fast because the system is 100% uniform.

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    14. Re:Good but not great by j1m+5n0w · · Score: 1
      Good point, then the only people who can screw with the system are corrupt poll workers and ballot counters rather than corrupt software programmers.
      Fortunately, individual poll workers have very little influence over the outcome of an election. Given the safeguards that polling places tend to employ, skewing results of a paper election by a significant margin would require a large conspiracy with significant cooperation between many people -- such a thing would be hard to keep secret. On the other hand, bad software can easily skew an election if there are no safeguards in place to verify the count.
    15. Re:Good but not great by PygmySurfer · · Score: 1

      We don't use plain paper? I recall placing a big X in the circle next to my candidate of choice in the last federal election.

      Or was that paper not plain? Maybe it was recycled?

    16. Re:Good but not great by quentin_quayle · · Score: 1

      Black-box electronic voting simply abolishes democracy. No electronic system can approach the public certainty that the announced result is true; they can only take us away from it. And certainty of the result, in a publicly verifiable way, is the only thing that gives any election any legitmacy (in the political-science sense).

      But never mind that! Suppose we have to live with the machines. Can a "paper trail" give that approximation to the legitamateness of simple paper-ballot voting?

      Well, no, clearly it cannot - for a simple reason that no one above (high-modded at the time I started writing) seems to have noticed. All U.S. states today have laws saying that no contest of an election is allowed unless the election is within a few percentage points. So any nefarious characters manipulating the results (that's a whole other discussion) would merely have to make their candidate win by less than that number of points.

    17. Re:Good but not great by AaronGTurner · · Score: 1

      My concern wouldn't be so much with deliberate intentions to skew a poll as that involves a conspiracy that often leaves its own paper trail. My concern would more be with bugs in the voting software. Testing should ideally catch these bugs, but then many software systems, closed or open source, some subject to massive scrutiny, still have bugs.

    18. Re:Good but not great by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      I thought he meant hard-to-counterfeit paper like the stuff that's used for banknotes?

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    19. Re:Good but not great by xTown · · Score: 1

      Excellent!

    20. Re:Good but not great by xTown · · Score: 1

      Sure, if that happens. I didn't see anything in the article that said they'd do that--just that they could if there was a problem. It's my impression that voting machine records are not checked at all, unless someone demands a recount; perhaps that's incorrect. If Candidate A were to win by a realistic margin, say six or seven percent, over someone who had a shot but wasn't a clear favorite...I don't think a recount would happen.

      Someone else linked to the text of AB627, which says that the source must be provided to anyone who asks for it, which is a good thing. I think they should take it a step farther and make the machine count and the paper trail available, too. That way, *anyone* could see what happened, and see the effect of the code, not just the code itself.

      Of course, all of that requires that you trust the provider of the source (and the counts, if it comes to that) to give you the right stuff. Trust has to begin somewhere, I guess.

    21. Re:Good but not great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This law requires a voter verified machine-produced paper ballot that is the official record of the vote and can be used for manual recounts. Although it is black box, the paper-based manual system is perserved as a check. Now it's just a matter of having a few legal challenges when ever the vote is different than what one expects; if the paper ballots differ from the computer generated tally -- then the entire _state_ is recounted manually.

    22. Re:Good but not great by espo812 · · Score: 1
      The REAL way to verify is to audit a random selection of precincts.
      Yes.
      Select a group of 10 local voters, at random, and have THEM select 10% of the relevant precints to audit.
      No. If you can select 10 local voters at random then you can select 10% of precints at random. Asking people to pick things "at random" isn't.
      --

      espo
    23. Re:Good but not great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One could still alter the computer system now.

      In almost every county in wisconsin we have ScanTron like forms with broken arrows pointing to candidates or to a yes or no for a proposal. After you fill out the ballot, you insert it into a machine which checks to see if you've over or under voted, and if your ballot is good it is tallied and by an immediate printout.

      I'm happy with the accuracy, and speed of the current system, but it has just as many ways to commit fraud. With the current system you can do the same thing, granted you'd have to have an intimate knowledge of the current counter, but could you do that now? A paper trail is very, very important for auditing, in the event of a grand failure (and in some-cases a matter of law) it is needed.

      I guess my point is all tally methods have the ability to introduce fraud (and in wisconsin it is really easy to commit voter fraud), don't dis this one because it has a computer, the machine is rarely the weakest link.

    24. Re:Good but not great by Neoprofin · · Score: 1

      Sadly my jaded mind couldn't look beyond a devious conspiracy theory.

      You'd think it would be simple enough to write software that's just a gui and some functions to put +1 to various values but simplicity does not imply correctness especially when large corporations are invovled. If I get another defective inanimate carbon rod I'll be very upset.

    25. Re:Good but not great by Neoprofin · · Score: 1

      Direct organized skewing of an election by a single person would be hard. Say if the Nader wanted to win he'd be burning the midnight oil to get all the schemeing done to organize that election. However, most voting corrcuption isn't done on that level, atleast not in America. It's students who vote twice, once at home and one at school. It's felons and those who vote without citizenship, or vote multiple times under assumed names. These people haven't revceived the call from their party, they're working independently to skew the results, and no computer safeguard will stop that.

    26. Re:Good but not great by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1
      Having the citizens select the precincts to be autided introduces an abstraction layer. Otherwise....what is the selection process for picking the precincts? Some software that can be manipulated? There aren't THAT many locally.

      Citizens? Select all drivers licenses ending with 6. Shuffle so you don't get -0016, -0026, -0036. Start calling people until you get 10 to agree to do it.

    27. Re:Good but not great by espo812 · · Score: 1
      Having the citizens select the precincts to be autided introduces an abstraction layer.
      No, it removes the randomness. You get 10 people who will pick their own precinct, the one next to them, the one where they work, the one their mom lives in, and etc. This is not random.
      Select all drivers licenses ending with 6.
      How do I know that 90% of the people with DL#s ending in 6 are your friends, and that they will pick precincts that you didn't ballot stuff? Your plan is not statistically valid. Put all the precint numbers in a hat and draw from it, use a cryptographically secure random number generator, etc - don't let people do it because people are not random.
      --

      espo
  5. Also good for error checking? by Deathbane27 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I assume that after the vote is cast, the voter can view the receipt. That way they can make sure their vote registered (no more dimple or chad issues). Also, if there's a discrepency between what you actually voted and what the receipt says, you can take it to the election judge.

    --
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    1. Re:Also good for error checking? by Dachannien · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yes. Usually, the paper copy of the ballot feeds up behind a plastic window, allowing the voter to view the receipt for accuracy. When they indicate that they are satisfied that the ballot is correct, the machine then automatically feeds the ballot into a box. The paper ballots can then be used if there is doubt as to the accuracy of the electronic vote tally kept by the machine.

    2. Re:Also good for error checking? by icebike · · Score: 1

      Do not confuse a paper trail with a receipt. You don't get a receipt with paper ballots, and you should never get one with an electronic ballot.

      (Receipts open up way more potential for vote buying, - take the receipt down to your friendly campaign headquarters for a quick hundred buck, - in a sense creating a bigger problem).

      You might get to view the paper trail before it advances to hide your vote, but even this is uncommon.

      Paper trails are so that there can be a hand count, and that is all the were meant to provide.

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    3. Re:Also good for error checking? by Eric+Smith · · Score: 1

      Actually, every time I've voted with a paper ballot (not punched card) in California, I have in fact gotten a receipt. The receipt doesn't show my votes, though; it just has the serial number of the ballot.

    4. Re:Also good for error checking? by addaon · · Score: 1

      Of course, who knows how many votes print into the box after everyone's done voting for the day.

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    5. Re:Also good for error checking? by CosmeticLobotamy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Where I'm from, they get signatures from everyone voting in a book. If the signature count doesn't match the total votes, something's gone wrong. So at least automated fraud is trickier. The people running it could still sign in for people that didn't show up and vote for them, but no more so with an electronic system than an manual one.

  6. CE? by divisivemind · · Score: 2, Funny
    "And best of all, the next system is built from a modified version of Windows CE to ensure all votes are counted."

    Oh...nevermind. I made that up. ;P

    --
    Blog: http://richardrandomrants.blogspot.com/
  7. Now If Only.. by TheFlyingGoat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This takes care of one issue. Now they need to start requiring a photo id to vote. A couple of state politicians have presented plans that would work, including ones that provide free photo ids to anyone who doesn't have a driver's license. People who didn't have a photo id when they went to vote would still be able to cast their vote, but it would be flagged in case of a recount. The vote would be unflagged if the voter provided a photo id at any point after the vote.

    It makes sense, especially when there were many cases of voter fraud in Milwaukee during the 2004 election. Many votes were cast from addresses that don't exist. Granted, a photo id won't solve all the issues with voter fraud, but neither will a paper trail. Both are still a step in the right direction.

    --
    You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life. --Winston Churchill
    1. Re:Now If Only.. by bitingduck · · Score: 2, Informative

      The vote would be unflagged if the voter provided a photo id at any point after the vote.

      Except then you no longer have secret balloting if you can connect people back to their votes after they've been cast.

    2. Re:Now If Only.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Photo ID to vote. Hah! It'll never happen in Wisconsin without a veto override. Doyle, the governor, has vetoed a number of senate-and-assembly-passed PIDTV bills already.

      But, since a reasonable person might ask if he isn't in office because of vote fraud in the first place, at least his position on the matter seems consistent.

    3. Re:Now If Only.. by Re-Pawn · · Score: 1

      While there were some cases of voter fraud in Milwaukee - along with every other major metro are in the US - I don't think an ID is the answer - it certainly wouldn't have stopped both Dems and Reps from giving cigarettes and alcohol to indigent and poor individuals to cast there vote. Adding even more red tape to the mix is not going to solve any voting issues - the major voting "problem" is that the country is pretty evenly divided - and there is no longer a middle or common ground. So - it really doesn't matter who wins or loses - people will be bitching about voter fraud or vote rigging (that is not to say it isn't happening) In theory a paper trail will at least confirm what vote was cast.

    4. Re:Now If Only.. by Dachannien · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The balloting at my polling place isn't any more secret. I have to register beforehand, and then when I arrive, I have to give my name and sign a voter roll before I cast my ballot. There's even a number on the top stub of the ballot that matches a number they write down in their records. The only time that my identity and my ballot are separated are at the very end, when the poll worker tears the top stub off the ballot and drops the rest of the ballot into the box.

      And since it's generally illegal to vote by proxy, forcing the voter to show ID before they vote to prove their identity doesn't add any more anonymity concerns than what the current system already has.

    5. Re:Now If Only.. by bitingduck · · Score: 1

      separated are at the very end, when the poll worker tears the top stub off the ballot and drops the rest of the ballot into the box.

      And at that point it becomes a secret ballot, and nobody can match you back to your ballot.

      That you voted isn't secret, how you voted is secret.

      Mine works the same way. While the number is still attached to the ballot, the ballot is either in my hand or in a little envelope covering the markings, or folded over, covering the markings. At no point during that can someone try to see how I voted without it being very obvious, and they can't accidentally see. Then at the end they tear off the numbered tag and voila, secret ballot.

      If there were a requirement that your ballot be flagged if you showed up without ID, but you were allowed to bring ID before the results were finalized there would have to be some way to connect you back to your ballot.

      I suppose you could take those ballots from people without ID and put them in sealed envelopes with their identity on the outside, and if they show up later with ID they get to watch the envelope be unsealed and the secret ballot tossed into the anonymizer (ballot box). People without ID then get to cast their vote on time, but it doesn't get counted unless they show up with ID later.

      Then again, it'll probably become moot as everyone moves to absentee voting anyway.

    6. Re:Now If Only.. by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There's also the whole thing with having a corrupt two-party political system, but we'll just ignore that for the purposes of your point.

    7. Re:Now If Only.. by Krimszon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Do I understand this correctly: After three years of fighting terror, US citizens are not required to have or carry photo id? So how do these people get anything done, like open a bank account, get membership at a video rental place, or vote?

    8. Re:Now If Only.. by NardofDoom · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The idea that there are tens of thousands of people that go to other districts and vote is just wrong. The majority of voter fraud isn't caused by people voting twice, but by people inside the system altering the results.

      --
      You have two hands and one brain, so always code twice as much as you think!
    9. Re:Now If Only.. by shaggz · · Score: 1
      With same-day registration and no proof-of-identity required, Wisconsin really leaves the door open for individuals intent on committing voting fraud. Milwaukee even had more votes in the 2004 election than registered voters! Granted, with unprecedented interest in the 2004 election, there could be an innocent explanation to the statistics, but it should seem at least a LITTLE suspicious. Unfortunately, the idea of requiring an ID is mired in racial issues. Apparently, minorities in the area lack photo IDs and don't drive, buy alcohol, or use tobacco products (or maybe they rely on getting cigarettes in exchange for votes). Don't look for solutions to the voting fraud problem from the area's political leadership.

      Since requiring a photo ID is too much, my solution is to use the purple finger dye they used in Iraq. Hopefully there aren't too many outspoken fingerless individuals for that to work.

    10. Re:Now If Only.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You shouldn't need a government issued ID to open a bank account, rent videos or vote.
      For banking you want some way to authenticate yourself to the bank to make sure you only withdraw money from your own accounts. If you aren't being paid interest, then the government has no compelling reason to know about
      your financial transactions. And if we switched to a value added tax system, you could even pay the taxes on interest anonymously.
      For videos, you should be able to leave a deposit instead of an ID.
      For voting, people voting multiple times is not a significant problem in practice. One person can't vote enough times to make a significant difference and if you get caught there can be very significant penalties.
      If you really want to rig an election, there are better ways to do it.

    11. Re:Now If Only.. by TheFlyingGoat · · Score: 1

      One local mayoral race was determined by under 10 votes. I'm not saying there are tens of thousands of fradulent votes. I'm saying there are definitely a few hundred (see the other poster's link about more votes than voters). In addition, the current voting system in Wisconsin leaves very little room for people to alter votes. We use those nifty ballot scanning machines and double records to ensure each vote is cast only once and cast properly. I'm sure there are some issues with it, but they're much harder to solve than individuals voting twice. Why not eliminate the easy problems so the tougher problems become more obvious?

      --
      You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life. --Winston Churchill
    12. Re:Now If Only.. by m0nk3ym1nd · · Score: 1

      The voter cannot verify the paper printout accurately reflects the electronically-recorded vote. Neither does it prevent vote-buying: the the voter may still surreptitiously snap a digital photo of his touchscreen to later convince his handler to pay as agreed. Consequently the paper printout solves nothing while providing political cover for the vote-rigging party in power.

      As for Milwauke's 'multiple vote problem' in 2004: I live in Milwaukee and wore out a pair of shoes working to defeat the incumbent. Thus I have an interest in how Milwaukee is being used as an example.

      The accusations of voter fraud were, to the best of my knowledge, never substantiated. The accusations seemed essentially sour grapes from the ruling party, which was pretty thoroughly trounced in our town. Rather than repeating scuttelbutt you might consider thanking Milwaukee for belonging to the clearsighted 49 percent versus the deluded 51!

    13. Re:Now If Only.. by MjrTom · · Score: 1

      The problem with requiring a photo ID to vote is particularly sensitive in the black community of the United States. Keep in mind that there are many living people out there who remember having to show ID, or pay a poll tax, or prove that they could read before voting. These issues are not something that died with slavery. The thought is that one is given the right to vote, and that they shouldn't have to do anything to prove that they have that right. The simple fact that they show up at their precinct is proof enough that they have the right. There are those who believe that the might be targeted in retaliation to their votes if they show a card with a photo, their address and names before they vote - it doesn't make a whole lot of sense but it is true.

      For the poor in general the photo ID requirement can also be considered a poll tax. Keep in mind that photo IDs typically cost around between $15 and $25 - for many urban poor this is a weeks worth of groceries - it doesn't sound like a lot to people who read /., but to a single mother making minimum wage with three kids it is an awful lot. In essence it costs them a whole lot to be able to vote.

      Then there is the homeless issue. With no fixed address, no birth certificate, no social security card it is pretty much impossible to get an official photo ID, regardless of the money issue.

      All of the above people have the right to vote, and the photo ID requirement might prevent them from voting. Your elected officials have to keep all of this in mind, plus more when they decide about laws like this. Until a manditory ID for everyone law is passed (and I hope it never is), we can't really required ID for something like voting.

    14. Re:Now If Only.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The simple fact that they show up at their precinct is proof enough that they have the right.

      What about illegal immigrants who show up at the polls? What about people who already voted in another precinct? Do they also have the right to vote?

      There are those who believe that the might be targeted in retaliation to their votes if they show a card with a photo, their address and names before they vote - it doesn't make a whole lot of sense but it is true.

      If they're really that dumb, then I'm glad they're not voting.

      For the poor in general the photo ID requirement can also be considered a poll tax.

      Wisconsin's proposed law would provide a free photo ID to people who don't already have one.

    15. Re:Now If Only.. by NardofDoom · · Score: 1

      If there is a problem with people voting twice, why not do it the Iraqi way? Purple ink that disappears in a couple days provides a way to identify who voted and who didn't without any action on the voter's part. No need for ID or anything like that.

      --
      You have two hands and one brain, so always code twice as much as you think!
  8. Thank god... by chriswaclawik · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...everybody knows that votes on paper can never be tampered with.

    --
    A guy walks into a bar... well, I forgot the joke, but the punchline is that he's an alcoholic.
    1. Re:Thank god... by Mateorabi · · Score: 1

      But for physical things, at least the evidence is harder to get rid of. What evidence do you have of a bit flip? Also, with both an e and p trail, you can check them against each other. It may be more dificult to figgure out which one is wrong if there is a discrepancy, but at least you'll know to look for a problem.

      --
      "You saved 1968." - Ms. Valerie Pringle to the crew of Apollo 8

    2. Re:Thank god... by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1
      everybody knows that votes on paper can never be tampered with.

      Traffic signalling systems use an electronic conflict detector, in addition software conflict detection. This is to ensure that the system can not display crossed green signals.

      As a last stage safety measure, the relay which enables green for (say) south, also switches off green for east.

      My point is that where you want to be absolutely sure of the behavior of a system, it pays to mix different technologies. Perhaps having three totally different layers of safety.

      I think a paper trail is part of the way there but I would like to see a proper design with multiple independant audit trails.

    3. Re:Thank god... by popular · · Score: 1

      You can manipulate the paper trail, but that's why (in Minnesota, at least) we have bipartisan election judges at every voting precinct. As an additional security measure, state election officials can randomly select polling places after the polls close to audit the paper record, versus the electronic record. If the numbers don't match closely, you'll know that votes are being tampered with. Pulling just a few dozen sites at random should also reveal any sort of distributed attempt to fudge the numbers.

    4. Re:Thank god... by interiot · · Score: 1

      Kentucky has announced a system whereby electronic voting machines will eject a toothpick into one of two piles, and afterwards, Rain Man will be hired to count the votes in each pile.

  9. Makes you wonder... by Pichu0102 · · Score: 1

    What would happen if the printer messed up and started printing on the paper ballots a few inches off?

    1. Re:Makes you wonder... by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1
      What would happen if the printer messed up and started printing on the paper ballots a few inches off?

      You seem to be assuming that the paper log will look like the sort of multiple choice ballot paper which people fill out. I don't think it has to be like that.

      If it uses a dot matrix printer then a paper jam can result in thousands of lines of records being printed in one place until the paper wears through. I have seen that a few times on remote sites.

    2. Re:Makes you wonder... by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      How many times have you had an ATM misprint your receipt? The same company makes those, you know.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    3. Re:Makes you wonder... by frause · · Score: 1

      How many times have you had an ATM misprint your receipt? The same company makes those, you know./p>

      None. It's always out of paper.

  10. Have the OSCE watch over US presitential elections by Crouty · · Score: 1

    The OSCE has done it before, they have experience and manpower to do this. I say let them survey the next elections in the US. Ironically the US go to war allegedly to bring democracy to other countries.

    --
    On se Internetz nobody noes your German.
  11. Ohio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Machines in Ohio do create a paper record.

    1. Re:Ohio? by saundersr · · Score: 1

      at least in my county they do... machine prints the record which is then viewable to the voter.

    2. Re:Ohio? by ValiantSoul · · Score: 1

      In my county (Summit) we don't even use machines, good old punch cards!

    3. Re:Ohio? by stinerman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I asked a poll worker how everything worked and he explained how it was all "triple redundant" and that "my vote would count this time". Other than that, I couldn't get much more out of him as he was busy. I'd like to know what role the paper copy plays in the official results. If the paper copies are only used in recounts, then all a crafty attacker would have to do is make sure he altered the votes enough that any recount would not need to be triggered.

      Issues 2-5 went down hard when there were some polls that showed them ahead a few days before the election. I'm a bit suspicious when I hear issue 2 is going to pass 60/40 and it gets shut down 35/65 (or something similar).

    4. Re:Ohio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Machines in Ohio do create a paper record.

      Yeah, but this added an excessive burden to the people who were tampering with the vote in Ohio in 2004. Not only did they have to alter the electronic record, but they also had to find dumpsters to put the right number of the paper copies in to make sure the two came out similar. I don't think it's fair to put this much of an unfunded burden on the officials tampering with the vote. We should just trust them and let them do their job of picking candidates for us.

  12. I live in Mexico... by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 4, Insightful

    and here are more or less the electoral fraud techniques used by the party in power for about 70 years:

    * "pregnant urns". Before the votes took place, urns were already filled with votes.
    * Operation "Carousel" - groups of persons voting twice, or more
    * Operation "Tamal" (a tamal is some kind of corn candy kept inside corn leaves). You grab two ballots and fold them, so now you vote for two.
    * Operation "Ratón Loco" (crazy mouse). Some guy steals the urns in strategic areas (specially where the opposition is strong) and disappears.
    * Vote rewriting. Before impartial organisms counted the votes, the people in charge would alter votes that were against the party in power, and nullify them.
    * Dead votes. People who had died managed miraculously to resurrect and vote in favor of the official candidate.

    And the most famous of all... (drum rolls, please)
    The system crash. In the 1988 elections, after all the ballots were collected, the computer counting the votes suddenly went down, and when the system was up again, the votes now favored the official candidate.

    After having to endure all these forms of electoral fraud, laws in Mexico became stricter to make the elections safe from frauds. These laws were promoted and approved, of course, by the opposition congressmen. One of these measures, was the inclusion of photographs in the voting credential (official ID). Another was having a designated area to vote according to your registered address. The voting areas are usually schools or museums, not farther than 5 or 6 blocks from your home.

    As a result of all these measures, we finally had a president from the opposition party in 2000.

    And it's kinda ironic that we have surpassed the U.S. (whom we had taken as model for transparency and democracy) because of U.S. problems like electronic voting machines, and because we use the popular vote and have more than two political parties.

    1. Re:I live in Mexico... by Neoprofin · · Score: 1

      We have dozens if not hundreds of political parties, it's not a failure of democracy if the majority of votes go to two of them. That the votes go to them because they're the best funded is a shame, but the people choose how they do.

      It's interesting that you'd bring up the popular vote. America uses the popular vote for everything except the election of the president, and if Mexico has any equivilent to Wyoming, or for that matter, anything that isn't urban sprawl, I bet they'd wish you did the same.

    2. Re:I live in Mexico... by quarkscat · · Score: 1

      That is a very interesting take on politics and the election "process" in Mexico. In other words, the neo(Con)artists and the Dubya regime have adopted Mexican political shennanigans. I cannot really say that I am too surprised -- nobody in the Dubya regime seems to have an independent or original thought between them. Even their use of foreign nationals to wage war, even against ourselves (in the cae of 9/11/2001), was a rehashed clone of earlier historical events.

      BTW: When (and if) you decide to come to America, the only state that you might have a problem voting in is Arizona (due to their Proposition 200 passing last year). Everywhere else in the USA, being a USA citizen in good standing (non-criminal) in order to be able to vote is strictly optional. Apparently, most of our politicians like it that way (, along with whatever other vote fraud they can get away with).

      Buenavende and buena suerte!

    3. Re:I live in Mexico... by Bodero · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Please, grandparent, do not listen to people like the parent poster, who still believes that somehow President Bush "stole" the election. Our President's administration is not a "regime," and his mismatched recollection of history implying that President Bush used September 11th to go to war is at the height of idiocy.

      Then the parent poster goes on to criticize Arizona's Prop 200, which says you must present proof of US Citizenship in order to vote. I'd love for anyone to point out how this would "create a problem" if you are a "USA citizen in good standing." In fact, it is doing exactly what he wants - eliminating voter fraud! Please don't think that Slashdot is representative of American politics and beliefs. It's much, much different, and the parent's poster's idea that our President ordered Al Qaeda to attack us and kill 3,000 of our own people so we could attack Iraq is absolutely ridiculous, and I hope anyone who is impartial (or even a Democrat) can see how outside the mainstream his "belief" is.

    4. Re:I live in Mexico... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why shouldn't non-citizens vote? They are here and are subject to forced-labor laws that prevent them from being able to get real jobs. They pay taxes on all of their purchases. They can't collect unemployment or welfare, so they have to work even if they are injured.

      Sounds like slavery, doesn't it? Only this time, Mexico is worse than slavery so all of the Indian-descendent Mexicans want to come here because of oppression and racism in their own country.

      Better watch out or your will see the Mexican labor force that keeps this country running revolt and start burning cars. Then where will the US be?

    5. Re:I live in Mexico... by Bodero · · Score: 1

      Why shouldn't non-citizens vote?

      I hope you just wanted to object to what I said, and didn't really think through this statement. Why, I ask, do you think it's a good idea to give the power of the United States government, because that's what voting is: power, to people who show no allegiance (which is what you must do when you get your citizenship) to America? Why should Canada's citizens who are non-naturalized have any say in our intragovernmental affairs?

  13. There's more in the Bill by bmasel · · Score: 1
    As originally introduced, Representative pocan took my suggestion of publicly viewable code. As amended in Committee, we got something less desirable, but adequate.

    Analysis from the Legislative Reference Bureau

    ..provides that if an electronic voting machine is used at a polling place, the board of canvassers must perform the recount using the permanent paper record showing the votes cast by each elector, as generated by the machines.


      and

    The substitute amendment also directs the Elections Board to promulgate rules to ensure the security, review, and verification of software components used with each electronic voting system approved by the board for use at elections in this state. Under the substitute amendment, the board must require each vendor of an electronic voting system to place its software components in escrow with the board. The substitute amendment prohibits the board from providing access to the components to any person except in a recount of an election. If a valid petition for a recount is filed in an election in which an electronic voting system is used to record and tally the votes cast, the board must provide access to the software components used to record and tally the votes to one or more persons designated by each party to the recount if each designee first enters into an agreement with the board under which the designee agrees to maintain the confidentiality of all proprietary information provided to the designee. The substitute amendment permits a county or municipality to contract with the vendor of an electronic voting system to permit a greater degree of access to software components used with the system than is otherwise authorized under the substitute amendment.


    Full text of AB 627, in pdf
    --
    Ben Masel: 51,282 votes for US Senate in the Wisconsin Democratic Primary
  14. information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Brazilian's electronic voting machines create a paper ballot that can be seen.
    I believe its a nice security measure and give me more trust in the system
    They almost never use the paper, except when the machine brokes or when someone suspects some fraud

    1. Re:information by sophuslie · · Score: 1

      Brazil was the first country to use electronic voting system in 1996. In the last election 175 millions of people has vote. Its used on the president election and all others. About 0,5% of the voting machines has some problems in this election. And sometimes this votes really matters, most on some municipal elections, where the differences are really small. Unhappily they used windows...

    2. Re:information by daniel422 · · Score: 1

      Exactly! The US has a huge amount of people voting as well (100+ million) -- electronic voting allows decreased costs (know how much the paperwork for voting takes to publish and distribute every election?) and a highly accurate vote count. I've used electronic voting in the last few elections here in California (and used again last week) -- no paper trail, simple touch-screen voting process -- easy to read, choose, and verify (it reviews my selections at the end). Having used electronic systems for tests, company questionaires, and other data-recording purposes I have no problem or discomfort with this. 0.5% of the voting machines have problems? Now I'll admit that 0.5% of 175 million is still a pretty big number (I work in the semiconductor industry -- we strive for 0.001% failure rate or better) it's miniscule compared to the failure rate of paper ballots. I'd say the whole concern is media hype, but reading here on slashdot (which I would have thought to be less technophobic) proves otherwise. Maybe we're just more paranoid?

  15. Why not just trust the fucking machine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does this mean that they try to ignore the voters' obvious will to fill all political positions with "George. W. Bush"? Morons. In real democracy, if the machine says the result is George then the result is George, simple eh?

    1. Re:Why not just trust the fucking machine? by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      You don't know Wisconsin very well. If Madison didn't swing Democrat, there would be all kinds of warning bells and accusations of fraud being thrown around. Hell, Wisconsin voted for Dukakis. What does that tell you about the ticket?

      I've always been surprised about the vote in Wisconsin, however. While Madison is extremely liberal, the rest of the state tends to be very conservative. (Thus the phrase, "Madison is 12 square miles surrounded by reality.") Yet the democrats always win in Federal elections, usually by a significant margin. My only theory is that Wisconsinites still have generational memories of Mccarthy. His little witch hunt for communists made Wisconsin look bad, and it didn't help the Republican party either. There had to have been a backlash against Republicans. Now the current generation of voters vote for Democrats because their parents did, and they don't even know the reason why.

      It's just a theory, but it would explain a LOT.

    2. Re:Why not just trust the fucking machine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God forbid it if people voted Democrat because they meant to.

    3. Re:Why not just trust the fucking machine? by Spock+the+Baptist · · Score: 1

      If you'll take a gander at the following: http://bigpicture.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized /where.jpg. You'll see that Kerry had very strong showings in large urban counties with high population densities. The fact that Kerry got about 48% of the popular vote is due to the very large margins that he accumulated in few heavily populated urban counties.

      If you do a bit of homework you'll find that seven states: Washington, Oregon, Minnesota, Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Illinois, would have been won by Bush but for the largest urban county (please note the singular tense) in each of those states.

      Furthermore, New York State would have fallen into the Bush column but for NYC, and California was but three counties (LA County, SF County, and Contra Costa County) from going into the Bush column.

      The point of my post is that the US is divided, politically, into urban, and non-urban political spheres. The Demos win LARGE margins in urban counties, but the GOP hold sway in the vast majority of non-urban counties. This has lead to very close elections in 2000, and 2004 in terms of the popular vote.

      --
      "Oh drat these computers, they're so naughty and so complex, I could pinch them." --Marvin the Martian
    4. Re:Why not just trust the fucking machine? by Spock+the+Baptist · · Score: 1

      I failed in the parent post to point out that if either Milwaukee County, or Dane county, not to mention both were subtracted from the rest of Wisconsin in the 2004 election, Wisconsin would have gone Bush.

      For Michigan it was Wayne County,
      for Oregon it was Multnomah County,
      for Minnesota it was Hennepin County,
      for Pennsylvania it was Philadelphia County,
      for Washington it was King County,
      and of course for Illinois it was Cook County.

      Each of these counties are the most populus in their respective states.

      --
      "Oh drat these computers, they're so naughty and so complex, I could pinch them." --Marvin the Martian
    5. Re:Why not just trust the fucking machine? by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      Furthermore, New York State would have fallen into the Bush column but for NYC

      I beg to differ. Subtract New York City and Kerry/Edwards has 2,486,265 votes (including the Working Families Party) to Bush/Cheney's 2,375,033 (including the Conservative Party). That's a margin of 111,232 votes. Subtract Long Island (Nassau and Suffolk counties) and it's still 1,847,286 Kerry to 1,776,729 Bush. A margin of 70,557 votes. Either way it would have made us quite the battleground state but Bush still loses.

      You underestimate the Democratic Party in Upstate New York (mostly urban but also rural) and the fact that New York Republicans are typically fiscally conservative Republicans -- not religious right Republicans -- and they probably had a hard time voting for Bush.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
  16. technophilia by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    what we need is simplicity when it comes to voting, not complexity. i believe we should never go to electronic voting, and even get rid of mechanical voting booths, which has a sordid history of tampering

    fraud happens in all forms of voting mechanisms, and voting is just too much of an important and vulnerable part of our social cohesion and the source of so much faith in and integrity of our government. being so vital and vulnerable, the point in my mind would be to oversimplify the voting process on purpose. the more complex the system, the more points of failure and the more possibilities of fraud. so make the process very simple: paper ballots

    i mean seriously, why the technophilia? voting is a problem that is not solved better with more technology, just made more complex. paper ballots i say. the slashdot crowd of any crowd of people should know all about the various and sordid ways malfeasance can be achieved in electronic communication and electronic storage. voting is not a complex math problem. it's very simple. no computer need apply

    the slashdot crowd, as technophilic as it is, should know better than any crowd of people why electronic voting can be a downright scary prospect. don't mess with it, simplify it, which means avoiding computers in the voting process like the plague. i'm not a luddite, i am simply saying that specifically in reference to the voting process, it must be simplified technologically to ensure faith and integrity in our government

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:technophilia by bitingduck · · Score: 1

      i mean seriously, why the technophilia?

      You're right that technology makes accurate voting harder rather than easier, but we also have this culture that wants instant results.

      The combination of electronic machines that produce a human (and maybe machine) readable paper ballot that the voter verifies gives you both. The electronics count the votes on the fly and give you a preliminary result, then the paper ballots are the official votes and used in case a recount is needed.

    2. Re:technophilia by sophuslie · · Score: 1

      Using electronic voting you can cut the costs, improve the speed of counting and give people more security.... The problem is not with the tecnology, but how its used

    3. Re:technophilia by pesc · · Score: 1

      what we need is simplicity when it comes to voting, not complexity

      Amen!

      The elections in Sweden uses paper ballots that you put in envelopes. Usually, very accurate preliminary results are available just some hours after the election is closed. And the counting is done by people, not machines. I would say that the public trust in the election procedures is very high although there have been cases of cheating (a case when a party person "helped" mentally handicapped people to vote).

      In the Swedish elections, you (1) choose a party by selecting a ballot and (2) optionally select a person from a list on the ballot by using a pen. In cases where the pen markings are illegible, the party still gets the vote.

      If there is a Yes/No election, we have Yes ballots and No ballots.

      One thing that differs from the American system is that Swedish elections normally vote on three or four things at the same day. I believe that Americans vote on many more things.

      If you are interested, visit the election web site and click on "international" for english text. ("val" means "election")

      http://www.val.se/

      --

      )9TSS
    4. Re:technophilia by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Done properly, electronic voting could be a good thing. An electronic voting machine can easily be made accessible to people who are physically handicapped, blind, or speak a language other than English. Ideally, the machine used by the voter should present their options in a clear intuitive way, then print a paper ballot and give it to the voter. The voter should then be able to review their vote, and if they see a problem, get a new ballot. After the voter has verified their ballot, they feed it into a second machine, which scans the vote, counts it electronically, and stores it securely so it can be recounted.

      This is really not that difficult a concept, but it'll be years before it's implemented properly, because the people with money and power aren't particularly interested in doing this properly, they're only interested in acquiring more money and power.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    5. Re:technophilia by dbIII · · Score: 1
      i mean seriously, why the technophilia?
      Choice - only two parties but sixteen different ways to vote.

      Lobby money would have to do the rest - someone must have been paid a lot of money to accept some of those Diebold machines.

      Also there may be some horse judges in high positions dealing with electoral process - things like the Florida debarkles in the last two elections made the USA a laughing stock in other democracies.

    6. Re:technophilia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here in the UK we can elect an entire Parliament of some 650 people, and know the outcome usually within 6 to 8 hours.

      The US took the better part of a month to determine if they had voted one man in....

      We use bits of paper, pencils and strong steel boxes. The entire process is overseen from start to end, and to meaningfully subvert it would require you to get at enormous numbers of volunteer obvservers.

      Sometimes technology is not the answer.

  17. After RTFA, 2 questions arise: by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 1

    Who voted against it and why? That is to say, who was bribed and who was bribing?

    1. Re:After RTFA, 2 questions arise: by Halfbaked+Plan · · Score: 1

      Well, the company that will be selling the printers and the paper to the state bribed congressman A. The company that will provide the service technicians needed to maintain the printers bribed congressman B.

      Does that partially answer your question?

      --
      resigned
  18. It Takes a George by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 0

    The sad Bush GOP legacy: no one trusts the voting system.

    The silver lining: no one trusts the government. That's the entire basis for the American Revolution and our innovative constitutional democratic republic.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:It Takes a George by corrosive_nf · · Score: 0

      Yeah like when Aaron Burr was so pissed about losing his election he had to duel someone, or when Nixon and Kennedy had the same issue. Yeah GWB sure introduced disputed elections.

    2. Re:It Takes a George by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Yeah, "disputed elections", that's what we've got. Are you reading these articles, or are you living in the 19th Century?

      --

      --
      make install -not war

  19. It's so simple... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I don't see what the fuss is all about. Many retail stores use (or used to use) a receipt system that is exactly what we're looking for. It was a roll of two-ply paper. One ply came out of the register as the receipt, the other ply spooled up inside the machine as the register journal. SInce both layers were printed to at the same time (the top layer got hit by the inked print head, and the bottom layer was carbon-less carbon copy), both said the exact same thing.

    Think about it. You choose your candidate and the receipt prints. You look thru the 'window' and confirm your vote. The 'public' receipt emerges, and you take it home. It contains nothing but the vote, the serial number of the voting machine, and some sort of timestamp, all in english and a machine-readable barcode. This allows for 'manual' recounts, while eliminating the possibility of vote selling (there is no link between the vote and you).

    The other copy of your vote remains in the machine, on a big roll of paper. This roll can be run thru a machine reader after the election to verify the votes. Any inconsistancies, and you perform a manual recount (see above).

    See? It's really quite simple.

    1. Re:It's so simple... by John+Marter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I can't think of any reason why you should be able to take a record of your vote with you, but I have heard of one reason why you shouldn't. Allowing the voter to take proof of their voting choice allows for vote buying.

    2. Re:It's so simple... by icebike · · Score: 1

      Yes, and take your yellow copy down to the campaign headquarters and get your fresh crisp $50 bill for voting the way they wanted you to.

      No thanks, Receipts are a fundamentally stupid idea that just screams VOTE BUYING on a grand scale.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    3. Re:It's so simple... by sophuslie · · Score: 1

      They will not give you a paper with your vote! It will be stored in a bag like a normal & old vote...

    4. Re:It's so simple... by Mnemia · · Score: 1

      How about a system where they don't give you an actual receipt but instead they just let you check that your vote was accurately counted later? It could be just a random number assigned to your ballot that you can then go online and check in a downloadable huge list of all the voters in the country. The numbers could be assigned in such a way that there are no duplicates but that there is no way to extract any information about who a voter was from the number.

      Then, they don't give you an actual printed receipt. You just have the option of writing your ballot number down on your own piece of paper. Then, if you tried to sell your vote, there is no way for the party machine boss to actually verify how you voted and that you are not lying to them, since they cannot verify that the number you are giving them is actually the number you were given when voting.

      There's also the added bonus that if enough people checked their own votes that there is an extra check on the credibility of the official count. If widespread instances of people not finding their vote or having it reported wrong were reported, there would be evidence of fraud. And people could use their own verifed outside algorithm to count the votes.

      Of course, there is still the problem of what to do if someone does claim fraud, since there is no way to verify this claim. But that would at least warrant independent investigation. Maybe the goal of our current system (though people don't know it) is simply to make people trust the official count regardless of whether they have any reason to believe it should be trusted (for stability/power reasons). Would it undermine stability and faith in the process if people were able to see all the fraud that DOES go on?

    5. Re:It's so simple... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DId you even read what was written?!?

      This allows for 'manual' recounts, while eliminating the possibility of vote selling (there is no link between the vote and you).

    6. Re:It's so simple... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And why would they pay you for a receipt that might not be yours??

      You see, if you bothered to read what was posted, they is NO IDENTIFYING INFORMATION on the receipt. There is NO WAY TO LINK THE PERSON WITH THEIR VOTE.

      Sheesh. Read for comprehension next time.

  20. yay! by sum1 · · Score: 0

    yay!

  21. Punch cards don't need it by game+kid · · Score: 1

    The pregnant chads will reproduce themselves, so Florida will be the easiest state to count.

    --
    You can hold down the "B" button for continuous firing.
  22. i'll grant you half of what you said by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    reading all the blasted things requires a machine

    of course, the reading machine is a source of fraud and failure right there, but i don't want 100 old ladies tabluating precincts for four months, so automatic reading becomes unavoidable. scanning a bunch of paper ballots might take a few hours, while tabulating a database might take a few minutes, but hours versus minutes is a tradeoff that SHOULD be palatable to people. even though we both know somebody somewhere will be impatient, but fuck them, they can stew a bit. so not instantaneous, but speedy enough to get results the next day

    as for preparing the paper ballot, no machine need be involved. it's just as time consuming and, a case could be made, LESS daunting and complicated for voters (and costs a hell of a lot less) to fill out a paper ballot with a number two pencil than it is to tap on a screen

    what do you trust? a machine controlled by the government? or a number 2 pencil? opportunity for fraud is increased with a complex machine involved in any part of the process

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  23. We almost as democratic as Venezuela by Serveert · · Score: 0, Redundant

    they had paper trails for their last election.

    --
    2 years and no mod points. Join reddit. Because openness is good.
    1. Re:We almost as democratic as Venezuela by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Pat Robertson said the United States should assassinate the president of Venezuela. You know what pisses me off the most about that? If I tell people I'm a Christian, they'll think I agree with people like him. :-\

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    2. Re:We almost as democratic as Venezuela by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i'm sorry, but the united states is no longer any where near venezuela in this respect

    3. Re:We almost as democratic as Venezuela by Halfbaked+Plan · · Score: 1

      It pisses me off when people stereotype other people, too.

      Just give a hint that you may have voted for George W. Bush, for instance, and some people automatically assume you are a bloodthirsty war-advocate, and dress and look like the rich guy printed on the 'Community Chest' cards in the game Monopoly.

      --
      resigned
    4. Re:We almost as democratic as Venezuela by vegetasaiyajin · · Score: 1

      they had paper trails for their last election.

      Yes, but the people was forbidden to count them.
      Electronic voting machines in general only serve to increase the probability of fraud.
      The counting of votes must be done publicly using a system that can be verified by everyone.
      A computer that counts the votes simply cannot do that.

      --

      My heart is pure, but make no mistake, it's pure evil
  24. Business regs require audit trail; what of govn't? by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

    In any decently-sized business in the financial services industry, it is generally corporate standard to have audit trails for any non-trivial work that is done.

    For example, software that is more than 50-100 LOC and not written as a "one-off" app generally must be documented with a project proposal, requirements, design, and testing docs, and so forth. It depends on the size, scope, business need, computing environment impact, etc. of the app, but other documents -- such as a cost/benefit analysis, architectural board approval doc, a traceability matrix, etc. -- may be required too.

    What about government? Why should the process by which the democratic part of the election of our republican form of government be subject to any less oversight and bureaucracy than the financial industry?

    It should not be news that the government is finally getting around to doing what it has demanded of industry via burdensome regulation for years or even decades... It is hypocritical and -- for a supposedly "free market" economy like that of the U.S. -- economically bass-ackwards to have such a situation as this.

  25. Electronic trail by toddlll · · Score: 2, Funny

    In other news, Gov. Jeb Bush has signed a contract with Diebold for a system that can provide an electronic audit trail for Florida's paper ballots. Gov. Bush said "This is a great day for democracy. We will now have the capability to handle vote recounts in a fraction of a second."

  26. What good does this do? by ShatteredDream · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Most states don't even really try to keep illegal immigrants from voting! The voter fraud in this country is getting out of hand and it has nothing to do with voting machines since it's a basic human problem. The bleeding hearts want the illegals to have a legal ability to drive or to pander for their illegal vote and the fat cats want the cheap labor.

    Why don't we instead hear about them passing a new law that abolishes the old voter fraud statute and instead puts "intentionally false voting or aiding and abetting the same" as a possible condition for being prosectued for attempting to overthrow the democratically elected government? Seriously, what is voter fraud if not a low level attempt at a coup, especially if it actually changes the outcome of an election?

    If there was any justice in this country, anyone convicted of organizing voter fraud would be given life in prison or, depending on the scale executed, and the regular plebes would be slapped with a minimum of a five year felony prison sentence. Of course part of the common excuses that the politicians and workers use is that people show up demanding their right to vote without having registered or that certain groups scream "disenfranchisement!" If you haven't registered to vote, tough luck and if you don't have an ID on you, I don't care what your skin color is, get out of the precinct as you have no right to participate if you won't prove that you're a citizen with the legal right to vote.

    1. Re:What good does this do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      People are people. If somebody lives in a place, should they have the right to vote for the local government just as many times as everybody else?

      Also, can't wait for the point that the US gets so bad that everybody is migrating to Canada. (It could happen!) And then you are the "illegal immigrant". See how you like scrub'n floors, pluck'n chickens, and not being allowed to vote.

      Tough luck, buddy.

    2. Re:What good does this do? by Cheapy · · Score: 1

      It's too late to do anything now about illegal immigrants. The economy is too dependent on them for ANYTHING to change the policy towards them.

      And changing the law to what you propose? If you've left your house in the past...oh say...twenty years, you are aiding illegal immigrants.

      Yes, they are illegal. No doubt about that.
      Yes, they aren't citizens of the United States of America.
      No, there isn't a thing we can do about it without seriously hurting the economy.

      --
      Would you kindly mod me +1 insightful?
    3. Re:What good does this do? by Guppy06 · · Score: 1
      "Most states don't even really try to keep illegal immigrants from voting!"

      Their problem. Aside from prohibitions against denying suffrage for certain, specific reasons, enfranchisement (unlike naturalization) is not a federal matter.

      Also, you are taking the interesting position that people who pay taxes and are counted in the Census, and therefore represented in Congress, should not be allowed to vote.

      "Why don't we instead hear about them passing a new law that abolishes the old voter fraud statute and instead puts "intentionally false voting or aiding and abetting the same" as a possible condition for being prosectued for attempting to overthrow the democratically elected government? Seriously, what is voter fraud if not a low level attempt at a coup, especially if it actually changes the outcome of an election?"
      Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort.
      "If there was any justice in this country, anyone convicted of organizing voter fraud would be given life in prison or, depending on the scale executed, and the regular plebes would be slapped with a minimum of a five year felony prison sentence."
      Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.
      "you have no right to participate if you won't prove that you're a citizen with the legal right to vote."

      While I will bite the bullet here in order to maintain the integrity of my political beliefs, others would point out that you're looking to deny these people their right to vote without "due process."
  27. Off-topic question by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

    Does anyone else think we should simply abolish political parties? Enough infrastructure has grown up outside of them to publicly, privately and illicitly back and fund any candidate that a particular think-tank, movement, foundation, PAC or other organization wants to see in office, so what purpose are parties serving other than being nuclei for political machines and holding back the entire system of government through allegiance catfights?

    All we'd have to do is declare all political parties null and void and let the new political institutions drop into place where they already were.

    1. Re:Off-topic question by Eryximachus · · Score: 1

      We didn't used to have political parties. In fact one of the founding fathers, I do not remember which, said that a two party system would be the death of this democracy. I believe that the reason that there are official parties today has to do with ballot printing. Each party used to print its own ballots, but that lead to problems and so a centralized agency took over the printing proccess, but which candidates do they put on the ballots? Any native born citizen over, I think 35, can run to be president. They had to decide how to choose which candidates were serious enough to put on the ballot. They needed to keep costs down, if nothing else. Can you imagine a ballot with even 500 candidates for one position?

    2. Re:Off-topic question by Whumpsnatz · · Score: 1

      How about we stop providing public financing (tax dollars) for private organizations (political parties)? If the party organizations want to hold a "primary", fine, let 'em. Just don't let that be relevant to the voting for office. Establish reasonable rules for getting on the ballot, and use instant-runoff voting. Voila! Parties instantly don't matter, and the whole concept of "throwing away your vote" by voting for a "third" party becomes obsolete.

    3. Re:Off-topic question by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      How many times must you IRV folks be refuted! IRV can cause preferred candidates to be runoffed out of the race before lower-rank votes are counted, even if those votes would give the candidate a majority.

      The most democratic voting system is a Condorcet Method, which IMHO should have ties broken by Borda Count.

  28. huh? by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    cut the costs

    how much does 100 number two pencils cost versus a touchscreen?

    improve the speed of counting

    i'll grant you that

    give people more security

    no: the more complex the system, the more avenues for exploitation

    so you have 1 out of 3, i have 2 out of 3

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:huh? by sophuslie · · Score: 1

      I don't know if you feel this way, but the international perception of the last two presidencial elections os USA has been of fear and doubts... (Florida was a shame) I believe that you can give more secureness with a electronic voting system (with paper safeguard). With the old system its almost trivial to modify some votes... With a electronic one, i believe is more difficult to change a small part of votes... But if you believe in conspiration, yes is more easy to change a large part of the votes if you have money and power. The cost? Brazil could implement this.... I believe this show that its not too expensive.

  29. Finally by binaryspiral · · Score: 1

    Someone passed common sense through this god forsaken state.

  30. So someone... by intangible · · Score: 1

    So someone in power in WI finally got hit with a "clue-stick"? I mean, wow, this kindof thing should be so obvious; I'm amazed they actually allowed a real vote in some states last election with zero audit-trail. Luckily I was able to vote in NV last election (all the electronic vote machines here had to have a paper audit trail last election).

  31. Damn, people, this is a no bainer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You go to the machine. You vote for Thief #1. It spits out a piece of paper that says "THIEF #1!".

    You look at the piece of paper, verify that you did indeed vote for Thief #1 and not Thief #2.

    You go over to the ballot box. You put that piece of paper in the ballot box.

    Done deal.

    In the event of a contested election, you count all the pieces of paper in the ballot box.

    Duh.

  32. California already did this by shanen · · Score: 0, Troll
    There were a bunch of articles that mentioned it just in the last few days. Here's the first one I picked up with Google News:

    http://www.berkeleydaily.org/text/article.cfm?issu e=11-11-05&storyID=22730

    That only mentions it in passing, though in the headline part of the passing. The earlier story I saw on it was more amusing. They wanted to pretend it was "balanced" coverage, so they had to find a quote from someone who was in favor of paperless voting and sorry to see it going away. Guess who? They closed with a quote from some honcho from a paperless voting machine company. Balanced coverage in a pig's eye.

    Just a coincidence, but something I wrote for a different forum today. Not perfectly on topic, but close enough (and I'm too busy to do more rewriting just now):

    A lot of pundits are saying that this week's election shows something new or a surprising change in voter trends. The only surprising thing is that anyone still listens to such stupid pundits. All this election shows is that money buys votes and that modern American politics is just a war of big money. This is true in all of the elections, but the mayor's race in New York City is the best example. The only interesting question there is why he wanted to spend so much money to buy the relatively minor office of mayor.

    I'd give the voters more credit if they had sold their votes for cash on the barrelhead. That's illegal in these "enlightened" days, but it doesn't change the big money reality. The political-power-buyers just have to disguise it a bit now. As a candidate, it doesn't matter what your policies are or what kind of person you are or anything else. The only thing that matters is coming up with the scratch--millions of dollars. (It does matter a little bit what kind of person you can pretend to be, but the Reagan/Dubya problem is relatively minor compared to the overwhelming influence of big money.)

    Root cause? Easily manipulated voters. Show the voters enough of the appropriate ads, usually slash-and-burn attack ads, and many of them will even vote for a total incompetent and loser like George Dubya Bush.

    Deeper root cause? "Free" advertiser-sponsored radio. An innovative (~70 years ago) economic model that ultimately led to rightwing talk radio. Finest propaganda ever! It was also propagated into TV where it led to increasingly mindless programs, and now it threatens the intellectual foundations of the Internet, too. The funny part is that the policy-makers of those days understood the risks and required that the public's interests should be protected. Thus started an erosive process that culminated when Reagan's handlers stripped off the last major protections. The negative dynamic is pretty obvious, however. Advertisers do not want well-educated and thoughtful citizens. They want easily manipulated suckers. That's how you get the most bang for your advertising buck--and the bucks have finally won out. Intelligent voting has to be reality-based, but advertising is NOT about the truth.

    In conclusion, nothing matters except for the money. Good for a 20% margin in NYC! The only problem in New Jersey was that the Republican couldn't afford to run the ex-wife-attacks-ex-hubby ad enough times. If you actually believe (as I do) that freedom and democracy are good things and that they confer competitive advantages on the societies that have the most of them, then the sad conclusion is that America is doomed.

    --
    Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    1. Re:California already did this by corrosive_nf · · Score: 1, Informative

      The new printers on the Sequoia machines worked. Well worked well enough. I work as a ROV'er for my county's registar of voters, and we had 5 out of 25 printers jam in the 4 precincts I covered. Replacing them was as simple as turning the machines off and replacing the printer, which used a lpt cable. The machines run linux on AMD Geode 300 MHz procs with 64 megs of ram.

    2. Re:California already did this by SimFlyer · · Score: 1

      And how many times have you cast your vote based upon which candidate spent the most money on TV and radio ads?... or is it just everybody else?

  33. What of OTHER states? by Lead+Butthead · · Score: 1

    We're so busy celebrating this, what of other states?

    --
    ELOI, ELOI, LAMA SABACHTHANI!?
  34. Now to get the Photo ID bill passed by dhartman · · Score: 1

    Three times Governor Doyle vetoed the requirement for a photo ID. The fiasco in Milwaukee wasn't enough. This idiot Gov'nor won't allow us to validate the people who are voting! Currently the state allows same day registration. You can walk up to the voting booth (even if you don't have an ID) and register to vote. All you need is someone else there to "vouch" for you. ...It's corruption at the highest level. Make people prove who they are if they want to vote!

    1. Re:Now to get the Photo ID bill passed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or they could stamp everybody's hands like all the other amusement parks.

    2. Re:Now to get the Photo ID bill passed by dontknowman · · Score: 0

      That's easy for someone who already has a photo id to say. What about the people who have no driver's license? Like the elderly or the people in the inner city? Here's a couple of articles you should read, before you are so quick to codemn anybody that wants equal access to voting for ALL citizens.
        article 1
        article 2

  35. No Machine Required by bitingduck · · Score: 1

    reading all the blasted things requires a machine

    A machine will make it a little faster, but it's not required. With machines counting what amount to scantron sheets, we start getting returns as little as a few minutes after the polls close. With paper counted by humans it might take a few hours, but you can still have pretty complete results in the morning.

    Canada, which has a population similar to that of California, still uses paper for federal elections. They're counted by pairs (or more if their are more candidates) of real live people, who are party reps, at the end of the night. They don't even use a machine to mark the ballots-- just a pen.

    I'd be more than happy to mark my ballot with a pen and have opposing party reps sit and count them together (along with whoever else wants to watch).

    I don't even care if it takes a couple days to get the results. The less hype around instant knowledge of the outcome the better. People can take their time and get the count right.

    But if you do the math, it's entirely possible to count each precinct accurately by hand at the end of the night. The throughput for voting is really low--it takes a long time to get people checked in and get the ballots marked up, but they all get marked in the 12 hours from 8 am to 8 pm, with a lot of dead time when most people are at work. Counting them is a much higher throughput activity, and there isn't the built in dead-time that goes with having a polling place waiting for people to show up.

    1. Re:No Machine Required by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Small correction: votes in Canada at each polling station are counted by the pair of impartial election officials who ran that polling station. Scrutineers from each party are welcome to watch the whole procedure, and to make objections to any ballots they think are improperly marked.

      -Marc

  36. What about... by charlie763 · · Score: 1

    What about electronic scanning of paper ballots. I remember in college some of my libral arts courses had massive amounts of students and we would take our multi-choice test on ScanTron cards. I don't see what would be so hard about putting a stack of cards through a reader. The voter would know that there vote is recorded on the card correctly, the counting would be quick and not error prone. All we would need to do is check the source code and we could all be happy, happy voters. Why not?

    --
    Welcome to the land of the free...pay toll ahead...no photography...please open your bag...
    1. Re:What about... by imthesponge · · Score: 1

      California uses a system like this. Each polling place has a scanner. The voter bubbles in the ballot and puts it through the scanner, and it falls into the box below. At the end of the day, the machine prints out a receipt with the totals that is sent in along with the individual ballots. A copy of the receipt is posted on the door to the polling place (at least it was last year, I assume they still do that.)

      It's made by Diebold but I don't know the exact name.

    2. Re:What about... by imthesponge · · Score: 1

      Here's a table of what each county uses.
      http://www.calvoter.org/issues/votingtech/currentd irectory.html

      The Diebold Accuvote-OS is what I was talking about above (optical scanner): http://www.diebold.com/dieboldes/accuvote_os.htm

    3. Re:What about... by Xantharus · · Score: 1

      Most Wisconsin counties already have a system like this. Basically you connect the Tail and the Head of arrow with a marker to make your vote. Even better, if you cast an improper ballot (Voted for two people, or marked a line between a tail and a different head) the machine will reject your ballot, and you will be given another one to vote properly with. Then at the end of the day, the box prints out the results for that specific polling place, and the vote are added. Relatively fool-proof.

    4. Re:What about... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have that in Mass. You get a large paper ballot (on heavy paper) and simply take a magic marker and draw a line connecting two arrows next to the candidate that you want to vote for. Then you take this sheet of paper to a machine and insert it into the machine and the machine counts it.
        I think the only reason the whole country doesn't have this system is because some people (diebold, republicans cough cough)want to make it easy to commit voting fraud.

  37. No chance by kanweg · · Score: 1

    "we will ensure that not only does your vote matter in Wisconsin, but it also counts."

    Sorry, but they may be able to guarantee only the last part of the statement. Voting is a way of reducing a big number (the votes) to a small number (the elected). As this reduction factor is usually in the order of thousands (local) to even milions (presidential elections), the chance that your vote has any effect is likewise one in thousands to milions. Democracy is a way of deluding individual people that their single vote can influence the powers that be. That is not true: You can stay at home, and the outcome of an election will be exactly the same (minus that one vote).

    The only way we can achieve a form of democracy in which your opinion may make a difference, is by creating a kind of moderated idea outliner where people can bring in their arguments and facts regarding any subject. Each fact/argument would be included only once. You would create openness, and improve the quality of decisions because smarter solutions can be considered. Even if those are not available, the stupidity of some solutions brought clearly forward helping to prevent politicians from implementing them.

    Dutchmen can see a (primitive) example at www.democratie-nu.org

    Bert

    1. Re:No chance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      240 million people + everyone thinks they know how to run the government = chaos

    2. Re:No chance by kanweg · · Score: 1

      That is why I propose not to let 240 million *in control*. If everyone has 5 arguments to base his opinion on, for any subject there will not be 1.2 billion arguments, but still only a couple of thousand. And it is up to the decision makers to pick from those arguments and solutions what they think is best. Because the arguments and counter-arguments are all available, anyone can verify their decision, and in particular the media (who will love it when they can show a politician uses (repeatedly or continuous to repeat) arguments effectively refuted on the webpage for that issue.

      Bert

    3. Re:No chance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://sbe.virginiainteractive.org/

      Please, do consult the recent attorney general's race in the Commonwealth of Virginia. Now tell me that my vote didn't count.

  38. How many offices in 1 election in Canada? by bmasel · · Score: 1

    For a regular November election in the States we may be filling 20 -30 offices, plus a referendum or 4, or 15 in California or Oregon, so hand counting's not so simple. If you pass the paper ballots to pairs of humans each counting a distinct office, you end up with "Did i count that stack yet?" Canada doesn't map.

    --
    Ben Masel: 51,282 votes for US Senate in the Wisconsin Democratic Primary
    1. Re:How many offices in 1 election in Canada? by bitingduck · · Score: 1

      Beats me how many offices in one election in Canada, maybe a half dozen for the federal elections. I live in California.

      Do we really need to have full results the next morning on all the minor offices on every ballot? If yes, then a paper ballot that is both human and machine readable (as I mentioned a few posts up) would allow for both. You can get them all counted by machine in a few minutes, but you can also count them by hand if anybody decides it's necessary.

      The ballots we use in LA County are to some extent human and machine readable, but not as much as I'd like. They're like the punch-cards, but use a little spring loaded magic marker instead, and just leave a black dot. If you look at the little booklet that's mounted over the marking jig, each choice has a cryptic little number next to it. If you look at the ballot, the number in the booklet corresponds to the number of the dot on the scannable ballot. You can (and I do) use this to double check that the alignment was correct when you slid the ballot into the marking jig and marked it up.

      I'd prefer a ballot that had the name or proposition next to the dot, but that makes the ballot printing more expensive because you need custom ballots almost down to the precinct level in some cases.

  39. really serious by slam+smith · · Score: 1

    If they were truly serious they would also require photo id's to vote, and eliminate same day registration.

  40. Paper trail worthless unless voter verifiable by scottsevertson · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Any paper trail is worthless unless each voter is able to verify the printed record, *AND* the printed record is considered equivalent to any other vote. The Wisconsin bill only requires that a paper record be produced, not that the voter can see it. Why is this so important? Because of the FEC source code review clusterfuck.

    HAVA [Help America Vote Act] gives the FEC governance over electronic voting, including establishing source code review procedures for all machines used in a Federal election (read: all voting machines). However, there are so many flaws in the FEC review procedure that it's downright scarry.

    1. Coding standards more concerned with technical compliance than correct function. Turns out, the coding standards say more about the correct format of a "for" statement, or the appropriate amount of boilerplate documentation per method, than they do about defining correct operation, error tollerance, or anything else.
    2. FEC code review doesn't cover "libraries". Want to include malicous code that only kicks in on the appropriate date, with sufficient voting volume to bury aberation in the noise? Throw it in a library, and use it in the project. Want to be really sneaky? Rebuild an open source library, or some external piece like a database driver or print driver with your malicous code.
    3. Fudging alowed in FEC testing. System can't stay stable enough to run 100,000 votes sequentially on a single machine? Throw in automatic application restarts at a set interval into your test harness backend; test harness code isn't reviewed.
    4. No enforcement procedure to verify reviewed code is the code running on election day. Not even checksums are required to verify compiled libraries/assmblies/executables are the same as the day they were submitted for review.
    5. Reviewer incompetence. FEC reviewers may not be familiar with the language being reviewed. One claimed unequivocally that "length" was a Java keyword, and as such, couldn't be used as a variable name (a glance at the Java spec confirms his mistake). Why? Since it was used without parens like a method call, it must be a keyword.
    6. Bogus documentation passes inspection. Don't have all the required class/method/variable documentation for the 2002 standards? Write a comment generator, fix it up a little by hand, and you're set!

    OK, so the coding review and coding standards suck. What's that have to do with the voter verifiable paper trail? Everything. Unless the voter can visually check the ballot (and ideally should have to "sign off on it" before the electonic vote is committed), what's to stop hidden/poorly reviewed code from altering the printout *AND* the electronic vode database?

    What about the paper receipt being equivelent to a traditional paper ballot? Some voting legeslation only allows the paper ballot to be used for verification, not as a true ballot. So, while you may recount the paper trail, the numbers from the recount are not legally votes, and cannot be used to change the outcome of an election (a fact that would be gleefully used by the conveniently "winning" side in a contested election). The Wisconsin bill does not specify in this matter.

    How can we do better? Take a look at the procedure recommended by the Open Voting Consortium http://www.openvotingconsortium.org/>. The *primary* representation of a vote is the printed paper ballot, with a machine readable representation output beside the human readable representation. After voting concludes, each paper ballot is scanned, and compared to the electronic count.

    By the way, hope your voting machine vendor has valid source control procedures (like not using a single account for all checkins?), so a malicious contractor can't check in random changes to the code base/libraries. [Evil laughter...]

    --


    Scott Severtson
    Senior Architect, Digital Measures
    1. Re:Paper trail worthless unless voter verifiable by scottsevertson · · Score: 1

      Sorry, missed the latest revision:

      Previously: ...generates a complete paper ballot showing all
      votes cast by each elector at the time that it is cast
      Now: ...generates a complete paper ballot showing all
      votes cast by each elector that is visually verifiable by the
      elector before the elector leaves the machine

      Previously: ...and that enables a manual recount
      Now: ...and that enables a manual count or recount

      The new text confirms visual verification *and* equal validatity with other ballots (otherwise, the paper record couldn't be used for a "count" otherwise, only a "recount")

      Go Wisconsin! Now how about a requirement for publicly open source, and some validation of software versions?

      --


      Scott Severtson
      Senior Architect, Digital Measures
  41. WI - oh that WI by MayorNagin · · Score: 1

    Do your headline writers know that to those of us outside the USSA "WI" stands for "Womens' Institute"?

    1. Re:WI - oh that WI by Zey · · Score: 1

      West Indies... It's a nation outside US borders.

    2. Re:WI - oh that WI by Zey · · Score: 1

      Oops. s/nation/region/

    3. Re:WI - oh that WI by blake3737 · · Score: 0

      do you mayors know that in the US USSA stands for Urinal Standards Safety act?

  42. Get with the program! by raehl · · Score: 1

    now they can charge a whole bunch extra for printers...

    The printers are free. But the ink costs $1,000 per cartridge.

  43. What's wrong with the old paper ballot system? by Werrismys · · Score: 2, Informative

    Finland has ~5M ppl and uses paper ballots that are counted by hand in a matter of days. Why can't US cities and counties of similar size use this old system? Just scale up the number of people doing the counting.

    --
    'Once scientists, even the dim-witted social scientists, get muzzled, the Western Civilization is finished.' - oldhack
    1. Re:What's wrong with the old paper ballot system? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (I'm a Finn living in the US.)

      The difference is Americans vote about many things with one ballot: president, senator, school board member, citizens' initiatives, sheriff, judge, local beauty queen, etc etc.

      Besides, I don't know how what percentage of votes get rejected in Finland because of bad or ambiguous handwriting. In the US, the vote must count and in my understanding the election officials at times have to apply some benevolent guessing. On the other hand, I understand that in Finland only crystal clear votes count. But I may be wrong on both counts.

  44. it's not about conspiracy by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    With the old system its almost trivial to modify some votes... With a electronic one, i believe is more difficult to change a small part of votes

    you're absolutely right, with an electronic one, it is more difficut to change a small amount of votes... because with an electronic one, it is easier to change a LARGE part of votes

    you don't have to be paranoid to appreciate what i am saying: which system is more trustworthy? answer: the LEAST complex system. is trustworthiness in a voting system important or not? to think that trust is an important element, nay, the MOST important element, is that paranoid or not?

    it's also the cheapest

    yes, it's a lot slower

    but i'll take cheap and trustworthy but slow over more expensive, more error or fraud prone, but fast any day

    what do you value most in a voting system?

    trsutworthiness/ error/ fraud vulnerability? cost? speed?

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  45. you've outlined a very nice world by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    but you didn't address what i was saying: more complexity=more chance for fraud

    additionally, my way is also cheaper

    handicapped, blind, spanish speaking?

    i believe large print paper ballots, braille paper ballots, and spanish ballots address all of your concerns, and again, a lot cheaper and less error/ fraud prone

    so what do you value? more trustworthy, cheap, but slow?

    or more error/ fraud prone, more expensive, but fast?

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:you've outlined a very nice world by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      but you didn't address what i was saying: more complexity=more chance for fraud

      At what point are you suggesting an increased risk of fraud is introduced? The first machine, which prints the ballot? The ballot is human-readable, and voters will be encouraged to review it. If the first machine doesn't print the right thing, the voter should notice. Of course errors could be missed, but if the machine runs open source code, well, that's a step in the right direction.

      As for the second machine, it's still a secure locked and guarded box, just like paper voting has always used... but with the addition of a scanner that can count the votes. This will help to give us more accurate and much faster counts than counting all the ballots by hand... but the ballots still COULD be counted by hand.

      I certainly see what you're saying, but if done right, I think electronic voting could be less error/fraud-prone. As for being more expensive, that all depends on whether it works efficiently enough to require fewer people to operate it.

      It's a dream. ;-)

      And no, I don't expect it to be really done right on a large scale within the next decade.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  46. correction (doh) by imthesponge · · Score: 1

    Each county does things differently... so, what I said probably is only true in one. sorry for the uh, misinformation.

  47. Paper Voting Is Stupid by tjstork · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but the problem with paper votes is that they are easily fraudable. All I have to do is have my vote counters damage the ballots of my opponent and they will become rejected. I can do this in any way, by making an extra mark (voting twice invalidates), by accidentally ripping one, etc.

    The powers that be that are arguing against electronic voting are basically arguing to keep the old games in check. They will use the paper trail to trump the more accurate results of the machine and have something to manipulate and anyone that believes otherwise is a moron.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:Paper Voting Is Stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Electronic voting machines may or may not be harder to tamper with than paper ballots, but the evidence of fraud is certainly less visible with machines than with paper.

      I prefer the transparency of paper ballots and hand counting. And no; it's not slow: Germany uses paper ballots and hand counting, and they have the results the next morning.

  48. Why paper trails are necessary by smooth+wombat · · Score: 2, Interesting
    As if to show why a paper trail is necessary for voting, this past election day in a County near me a district had an issue where the electronic machines were incorrectly coded for one area. This link is the only one I could find quickly but it has all the information.

    When the original count was done the results showed that the Republican candidate had won by a 173 vote margin. However, someone noticed that the Republican candiate was coming in as a Democrat in this one district so anyone who voted a straight-party democratic ticket was inadvertently casting votes for the Republican candidate.

    A hand recount was ordered and after the recount it was found that the Republican candidate had a 2 vote margin (not in the article but the local news has stated this). This isn't the end though. The provisional ballots still have to be counted.

    Maybe in the end the Republican candidate will still win but had a paper trail not been available, and someone sharp enough to notice the discrepancy, a recount would have been nearly impossible using only the computerized records.

    --
    We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
  49. Fingerprints by Bandit0013 · · Score: 1

    You should have to register to vote and give a fingerprint, then sign on to the system with said fingerprint.

    That would cut out quite a bit of fraud.

    Also, just a note, the voting machines in ohio (I live there) do take both the electronic vote and print something, I heard a printer in the machine when I submitted the ballot.

    1. Re:Fingerprints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As for paper trails from vote machines, it is extremely important that we are not fooled by it...

      For example, take a look at the wording of this document. (from WI) http://elections.state.wi.us/docview.asp?docid=344 9&locid=47

      Read the last paragraph.

      In short, you sure the paper trail is printed at the time of the vote and can you see the result? If not, it is worthless.

  50. Paper trails alone aren't enough by Manuka · · Score: 1

    There also needs to be a consistent and reliable way (technological or procedural) to make sure that the votes cast on the machine are cast once and only once by a living, breathing legal citizen of the United States who is eligible to vote.

  51. Text of the Bill - Voter Verified & Source Cod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.legis.state.wi.us/2005/data/AB-627.pdf/

    2005 2006 LEGISLATURE
    2005 ASSEMBLY BILL 627
    August 24, 2005 Introduced by Representatives POCAN, FREESE, AINSWORTH,
    BERCEAU, BLACK, GRIGSBY, GUNDERSON, KESSLER, LEHMAN, LOTHIAN, MOLEPSKE,
    MUSSER, NELSON, PARISI, POPEROBERTS, RICHARDS, SEIDEL, SHERIDAN, SHERMAN,
    SHILLING, SINICKI, TOWNSEND, TRAVIS and WOOD, cosponsored by Senators
    PLALE, CARPENTER, ERPENBACH, GROTHMAN, HANSEN, A. LASEE, OLSEN, REYNOLDS
    and RISSER. Referred to Committee on Campaigns and Elections.
    AN ACT to amend 5.84 (title) and 5.91 (18); and to create 5.84 (3) and 5.91 (19)
    of the statutes; relating to: electronic voting system standards.
    Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
    Currently, with limited exceptions, every municipality with a population of
    7,500 or more must use voting machines or an electronic voting system at all
    primaries and other elections held in the municipality. Either mechanical or
    electronic voting machines may be used. No electronic voting system, including an
    electronic voting machine, may be used unless the system meets statutory standards
    and is approved by the State Elections Board for use at elections held in this state.
    The system must enable an elector to privately verify the votes selected by the elector
    before casting his or her ballot. All electronic voting systems must be tested publicly
    before each election to determine if they are functioning properly. If voting machines
    are used, ballots need not be printed and distributed to electors, but if electronic
    voting machines are used, the machines must maintain a cumulative tally of votes
    cast that is retrievable in the event of a power outage, evacuation, or malfunction so
    that the record of the votes cast prior to the time that the problem occurs is preserved,
    and the machines must produce a permanent paper of record of the vote cast by each
    elector at the time that it is cast that enables a manual count or recount of the
    elector's vote. Currently, there is no requirement pertaining to accessibility or
    independent verification of software that is used to operate a system or to record and
    tally the votes cast.
    This bill provides that if a municipality uses an electronic voting system that
    consists of a voting machine, the machine must generate a complete paper ballot
    1
    2
    2005 2006 Legislature 2 LRB2044/3
    JTK:kjf:rs
    ASSEMBLY BILL 627
    showing all votes cast by each elector that is visually verifiable by the elector before
    the elector leaves the machine and that enables a manual count or recount of each
    vote cast by the elector.
    The bill also provides that the coding for the software that is used to operate the
    system on election day and to tally the votes cast must be publicly accessible and
    must be able to be used to independently verify the accuracy and reliability of the
    operating and tallying procedures to be employed at an election. In addition, the bill
    provides that each municipal clerk or board of election commissioners of a
    municipality that uses an electronic voting system for voting at an election shall
    provide to any person, upon request, at municipal expense, the coding for the
    software that the municipality uses to operate the system and to record and tally the
    votes cast.
    For further information see the local fiscal estimate, which will be printed as
    an appendix to this bill.
    The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
    enact as follows:
    SECTION 1. 5.84 (title) of the statutes is amended to read:
    5.84 (title) Testing of equipment; custody of requirements for programs
    and ballots.
    SECTION 2. 5.84 (3) of the statutes is created to read:
    5.84 (3) If a municipality uses an electronic voting system for voting at any
    election, the municipal clerk shall provide to any person, upon request, at the
    expense of the m

  52. Mexican elections pre 2000 by Flying+pig · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I had the misfortune to visit Saltillo at election time, some years ago. I was amazed at how jumpy the atmosphere was, knowing as I did nothing about the country. There was the episode when we had lunch in a restaurant where it turned out three opposition politicians were having lunch, and the people with me were debating whether we should leave in case the goons waiting outside thought they might be talking to the opposition, or stay and pretend not to notice them (we stayed). The most paranoid moment was when I was leaving and saying goodbye to my hosts. We were standing under one of the twenty foot high posters of the "progressive party" which were all over town (the opposition wrote on the walls and the goons came out every morning and removed the writing. Without thinking I said "..adios (name of PP politician)", ironically saluting the poster. There was immediately a discussion as to whether it was now too dangerous for me to take a taxi to the airport and whether I would have an "accident" on the way. In fact I just had the usual accident- the taxi was two hours late but the plane was the normal five hours late and I had to spend the night in Houston. And my company was advised politely never to send me back to Mexico, which was no hardship.

    Conclusion? Mexico seems to have been slowly and steadily improving as some adjacent parts of the US seem to have been steadily going downhill, electorally.

    --
    Pining for the fjords
  53. What we need is a National VVPB Law by dontknowman · · Score: 0

    There is a bill in Congress that would require a voter verified paper ballot for all voting machines. It also mandates a manual recount of the paper ballots in 2% of the precicnts choosen at random. That's to ensure the paper records and machine totals are counting the votes the same. The bill is HR 550. It currently has 156 cosponsors, but is stuck in committee. It needs your help to come up for a vote. Here's a link to make it easy for you to send an email to urge your Representative in Congress to pass this bill.

    For those of you in Pennsylvania there is a similar bill stuck in committee in PA. To send an email to your legislators in PA. There is an action alert at votepa.us.

  54. Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Wisconsin cannot go down the path of states like Florida and Ohio in having elections that the public simply doesn't trust

    Well, the overwhelming majority of Americans do trust the results in Ohio and Florida. This speaks volumes about the author's political affiliation and mental state.
  55. You forgot Connecticut by Indiana+Joe · · Score: 1

    Connecticut passed a similar law last July, thanks to pressure from citizen action groups. All DRE machines must include paper verification.

    --
    I can't decide if this post is interesting, funny, insightful, or flamebait.
  56. Re: Prop 200 by pavonis · · Score: 2, Informative

    Then the parent poster goes on to criticize Arizona's Prop 200, which says you must present proof of US Citizenship in order to vote. I'd love for anyone to point out how this would "create a problem" if you are a "USA citizen in good standing."

    As a campaigner here in AZ against Prop 200, I suppose I have to answer, although it seldom appears that explaining this results in much information being absorbed. Warning: as some actual facts are included below, it's a fairly lengthy post.

    First, prop 200 requires proof of citizenship in order to register to vote. This makes it extraordinarily difficult to register people. In the past, voter registration drives have generally been run (by both parties and nonpartisan groups) by going out to where people are, with a table or some clipboards, and getting them to sign up. This is no longer possible; people need to have a copy of their birth certificate, naturalization papers or passport with them, and attach a photocopy of it to their registration form. This pretty much means no one can register without planning to do so and going down to the county recorder's office during business hours. This isn't exactly a flat bias, either; it's much more difficult for people who are less likely to have their paperwork carefully filed away where they can get it (students, the poor, non-native-english-speakers) and those who have less free or flexible time to deal with the problem (pretty much the same list.) (Caveat: the big exception is that if you have a recent, Arizona driver's license, you've already dealt with the same problem at the DMV and don't need to again. That's many eligible voters but far from all. OTOH, if you have changed your name - usually because you married - you also need the documentation of that name change attached. Sorry, ladies!)

    Then we get to actually voting. Now you need to bring proof of identity with you to the polls. These rules were only finalized a few weeks ago, so apologies if I get any details wrong. Your proof of ID has to be government-issued photo ID, or else the typical pain-in-the-ass of multiple utility bills or the like. In either case the address must match the address you're registered at, which legally has to be your current residence - moved since you got your driver's license five years ago? Sorry! A student in a dorm who doesn't get utility bills? Oops! The same groups, again, have a harder time voting. The alert Slashdot security geek, or anyone who has ever gotten into a bar with a fake ID, will note that this methodology isn't exactly a vast increase in security. It will, however, make lines at the polls a lot longer, particularly in places with high concentrations of - again - students, transient people, non-english-speakers. And it raises the bar for knowing the rules in advance. Who's least likely to get the information about the new rules? You guessed it. Who has the least flexibility in their lives to devote a couple of hours to the voting process? Yup.

    We had to fight to get these rules as lenient as they are, actually; at least if you don't meet the ID requirement, you're supposed to be able to vote a provisional ballot, although the process for counting those leaves a great deal to be desired. It took a veto by our governor, gods bless her, to get that far - even though it would seem to be a basic, fundamental idea to anyone who actually cared about vote integrity: no ID? we'll check your status afterwards.

    Meanwhile, the real hole in the voting system - I don't consider this an actual problem, but certainly from a security geek standpoint it's the obvious point of attack - is voting by mail. Far easier to fake in quantity than it is at the actual polls, right? No ID requirement was added to VBM at all. Yup. Show up in person, you're lucky you don't have to take a DNA scan. Send in a piece of paper from anywhere in the world, no effort is made to verify its source whatsoever. Who's least likely to vote by mail? There we are again.

    The list of peop

  57. Wisconsin needs purple fingers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As do the other States.

    Wisconsin does NOT have reliable elections, with UW students voting four and five times in elections, Democrat operatives slashing tires on busses meant to take disabled and elderly voters from statistically high-Republican areas to the polls, etc.

    The Iraqi purple finger thing works. Would sure cut down fraud in places like Madison WI and St. Louis MO.

  58. still not good enough. by zippthorne · · Score: 1

    No not good enough. you have no wa of knowing that the machine isn't tampered with later.

    The only way to be sure is for each ballot to have a unique key that you tear off when you vote. Later you can use a database server of some kind (probably web based) to check that the vote stored is the vote you made. Obviously, people must also be able to consolodate their lookups by having the ability (but not the requirement) to inform political organizations what their key and votes were. Perhaps a unique subkey could be used to allow voters to give information about one particular vote only leaving all others unrevealed.

    --
    Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  59. I can see it now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Turn in your receipt for a free trip to...

    We're organizing the voting drive, free transportation to and from the voting stations, vote after-party on our parking lot, free rides/no-ante poker tables for everyone turning in a voting receipt...

    Free trip to Disney land in August! Just sign the back of your voting receipt, put your member number on it, and deposit it in the contest box back inside the headquarters entrance...

    You're going to vote, right? Let's carpool, I'll drive. My receipt looks weird with these numbers at the bottom, lemme see yours...

    No receipt? Wadda ya mean, no receipt? Are you tryin' to pull a fast one? Who'd you vote for? Are you with us, or against us?

    Hey, boss, these are the names of the individuals who failed to deposit their voting receipts in the box for the trip to Disney land...same ones we've had trouble with in participating in organizing and actions...looks like our suspicions were right...

    Hey boss, we could get additional receipts from the wives and girlfriends by setting up a second drawing, say for a pair of work boots, six months of boots/gloves/safety gear, etc.

    Teamsters Union Local 807.

  60. Re:Couldn't Be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or, maybe you could put a little faith in the power of statistics, and acknowledge the massive number of problems which are known to have happened as significant, rather than just dismissing it as "Who cares if it was a corrupt election, since the guy I wanted won anyway."

    The "denial" is on the part of people who don't want to acknowledge the problem because they got their desired result. You won't find it very amusing if the result no longer favors your preferences, and you no longer have the ability to fix it.

  61. Upcoming Hearing in Sacramento by sjoplin · · Score: 1

    On 2005-11-21, the California Secretary of State will hold a hearing regarding the recertification of several Diebold voting systems. Anyone in the Sacramento area with something to say, please attend.

    The Notice: http://www.ss.ca.gov/elections/voting_systems/agen da_112105.pdf

  62. Re: Prop 200 by Bodero · · Score: 1

    Thank you for your post, and I appreciate your courteous reply, although our opinions may differ. I was going to point out the reason many people object to these reasonable fraud-reducing measures, but you did it for me. The reason, quite simple, is that these mysterious people ("students, the poor, non-native-english-speakers") are, in fact, the democratic voting bloc. I am not a Republican nor a Democrat, but it is obvious to a free-thinker that the real reason most people either support or oppose these measures are not because they care (or don't care), but because these people traditionally vote Democratic. Although you mentioned this, it bears repeating.

    Voting is a major responsibility and a major right that should not be taken lightly. I am sure you are opposed to military recruiters walking around with billboards asking people to sign away four years or more of their life without a second thought, why wouldn't you be opposed to signing someone up for the power of controlling the lives of everyday Americans that same way? It should not be taken lightly, it should be something that you must sit down and think about before you go and do it.

    Your next issue is showing photo ID at voters booths. This, with all due respect, I feel is a radical belief if you do not feel that voters should show ID when they vote. You may speak about the "mythical" voting fraud that occurs (but everybody here has an opinion when the subject of electronic voting comes up), but if it doesn't exist (which I'm just giving you the benefit of the doubt), why allow the potential?

    "In either case the address must match the address you're registered at, which legally has to be your current residence - moved since you got your driver's license five years ago? Sorry!"

    I don't know for sure, since my state (New York) requires you change your address on your license within 10 days of moving, but isn't this the case in Arizona? There is no fee to do this. I don't think this is a big request.

    "the obvious point of attack - is voting by mail. Far easier to fake in quantity than it is at the actual polls, right?"

    Have you ever voted by absentee before? I did, last week. I had to request the ballot, which came with an envelope with my name, address, district, town, all the works on it. There is no way, if everybody does it this way (and I don't know whether or not they do) that this can be exploited.

    By the way, one more thing, McCain is not a conservative, he is a liberal with an "R" on his name. I'm sure you'd say the opposite about former Senator Zell Miller, and I would agree.

    "Meanwhile, the number of legitimate people denied the right to vote by paperwork problems, poll worker errors, long lines they don't have the time off to stand in, and the like is somewhere in the region of five percent."

    How come we didn't hear about this five percent when Clinton was in office? Quite frankly, I feel this is one of those "lies, damn lies, and statistics" polls. I don't see how anyone without a motive (and Democrats' motive is to make sure their poor, students, and non-English speakers vote without problems, no matter what fraud may occur) can think that the people disenfranchised by requiring a proper ID when you vote outweighs the potential fraud that is prevented. Honestly, it's not that hard to get an ID, or a utility bill, or some other form of ID.

    Again, thank you for the respectful post, however, as it's always enjoyable to have a reasonable discourse with someone whose opinion may differ.

  63. Poor favour you plonker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > BTW: When (and if) you decide to come to America.....

    Last I heard Mehico was in America before the USA was. Isn't that where Wild Bill Hico came from? And all they thar othey heyicks?

  64. Wisconsin Politics by JackL · · Score: 1
    Madison is quite liberal. But it isn't entirely due to a backlash against McCarthy and they aren't the only part of the state that is. Milwaukee has had several socialist mayors. The state's liberalism goes back quite some time. It was the birthplace of the progressive movement (strangely enough, by Republicans). This is a topic I'd like to learn more about as I have recently moved to Wisconsin, but I think its tradition is largely due to many of the German immigrants. They had a strong commitment to public education and I think it has manifested itself in many other ways.

    Jack

  65. it's a bad dream by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    if you have a system with 10 gears, and you have another system with 100 gears, the one with more gears has more places it can fail or be sabotaged on purpose

    if you have a voting system with electronic communication/ storage, the myriad ways in which it can fail or be purposely altered are orders of magnitude more varied than with simple pencil and paper

    do you understand the concept?

    it can never, ever possibly be less error/ fraud-prone

    it is a simple matter of increasing complexity

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:it's a bad dream by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Ah, but the question is, do electronic voting machines add gears, or replace gears? And are the gears they're replacing more error/fraud-prone than what they're being replaced with? If votes are counted by a machine that works perfectly, the results will be more accurate than if a group of humans were counting the ballots manually...

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  66. Actually by Shivetya · · Score: 1

    I look at it this way. If it takes George Bush being President to get our voting systems reviewed and all the dirty laundry brought out in the open then I say "so be it".

    Fraudulent voting was not a problem until the people relying on it saw it used against them or had it thwarted. Electronic voting put a big crimp in the works of those who relied on fradulent voting. As such they had to scare the public into believing the old system's amount of fraud while verifiable was "manageable".

    Look at Chicago and its elections. People joke about dead people and people voting multiple times because a "joke" is the last bastion of those who have already giving up. The apathy about it simply turned into morbid humor.

    I do like how some groups toss Ohio out there as an example of distrust or voter fraud when it was never a close contest. It simply was the closest state to victory of one part over another. Two other states showed much more possibly voter fraud but have been overlooked simply because of the party they went for. In other words, when you lose make sure people think the other side cheated, after all losing because you fail to appeal the majority isn't much fun.

    Verifiable voting and verifiable voters are BOTH needed. Having one without the other leaves the problem unfixed.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:Actually by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're mostly right, as a practical principle. But you write off Ohio as legit because "it wasn't that close". Ohio was won by Bush by 110K votes. Leave out the number of votes (possibly) reversed by machines (thereby doubled in their power), which would mean only 55K people out of 5.6M Bush/Kerry voters, or <1%. Ohio's Election day saw many thousands of black people's neighborhoods undersupplied with voting machines. Thousands of people testified that they waited hours to vote, then gave up. People reported that they were harassed by police for parking too long near polling places while waiting hours.

      And how about the obvious fraud in Warren County, where they illegally locked the counting behind closed doors, citing a fake "top-level Homeland Security alert" that was never issued, and for which they never supplied a DHS source? I personally phonebanked Warren County the week before the election, and spoke to a woman who had volunteered at the polling place in years past. She wouldn't say who she would vote for, but I got the impression it was Bush. But she was so disgusted with the total ignorance, incompetence and outright stupidity of the 2004 staff that she refused to help. She was so upset that she shared her anger with me, an anonymous phone pollster. Later in the week I saw the results: a crudely performed fraud while counting Warren's 68K:26K Bush vote, which obviously hid many "extra" state Bush votes in its margin. Then there's the testimony of other poll place volunteers of voting machine reps showing up to tinker with uncounted vote tally cards, along with cheat sheets mounted on walls and advice from the company how to sneak peeks at them to lie to monitoring officials when investigated. Then look at the rest of the fraud committed by Ohio Republicans in charge of the election (itself a basic broken system feature), including the head of the state election doubling as Bush's state campaign chief.

      These frauds are all documented - except perhaps my private conversation with the aghast ex poll volunteer. But not in the major press. It's obvious the vote was seriously rigged in Ohio. I'll be willing to look into evidence that votes were rigged in Kerry's favor there, when someone actually produces any shred of actual evidence. But it's obvious that Bush rigged Ohio, that the media is complicit in the coverup, that most of Congress (including Democrats) is complicit in the coverup - except maybe the House Judiciary Democrats and their allies, who have hammered at this fraud with hearings, investigations, evidence, demands for Congressional action, attempted legislation. Even Kerry's unnecessary - and apparently unwarranted - concession, with money in the bank and an army of lawyers, as well as at least 49% of American voters behind him, is complicit. If not in throwing an election, then at least in throwing away the chance to scrutinize and fix our obviously broken system.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    2. Re:Actually by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Informative

      Since you're interested in ongoing vote fraud, here's the latest evidence of scams in Ohio, from last month's election.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

  67. Re: Prop 200 by pavonis · · Score: 1

    Well, so civil a reply deserves one in kind, even if no one is reading any more.

    Your next issue is showing photo ID at voters booths. This, with all due respect, I feel is a radical belief if you do not feel that voters should show ID when they vote. You may speak about the "mythical" voting fraud that occurs (but everybody here has an opinion when the subject of electronic voting comes up), but if it doesn't exist (which I'm just giving you the benefit of the doubt), why allow the potential?

    Just to make sure we're clear: vote fraud, of all sorts, is probably pretty common. Exactly how common is obviously unknown. But vote fraud by means of having unregistered people vote or people vote more than once is a vanishingly small problem. It's not just me saying this; there are no known election-changing cases of this happening in, at a minimum, decades, and it isn't particularly hard to detect after the fact if you go look. If you think about it, stealing an election by getting enough people to vote illegally and not getting caught is pretty difficult, certainly compared to other methods availible.

    Now, I consider the vote sacred and election fraud to be high treason. I would be thrilled to ID everyone infallibly at the polls. But there aren't any freebies here; measures like this that attempt to catch fake voters are going to stop a much larger number of real voters from voting.

    I don't know for sure, since my state (New York) requires you change your address on your license within 10 days of moving, but isn't this the case in Arizona? There is no fee to do this. I don't think this is a big request.

    Changing your address is free, but actually getting a license with your new address - which is all that will help you - is not; I think it's $15. Little enough to you and me, maybe, but... And I don't think anyone seriously expects that students will replace their driver's licenses every September and June. Should they, legally? Sure. Will they? No. Is not getting to vote an appropriate penalty for that? Absolutely not.

    By the way, one more thing, McCain is not a conservative, he is a liberal with an "R" on his name. I'm sure you'd say the opposite about former Senator Zell Miller, and I would agree

    Well, that's a bit silly - McCain is a stout conservative on just about every issue of fundamental importance to conservatives; he just doesn't always march in step on more debatable issues. But its' beside the point; I was just picking a name /.ers would know. Almost all republicans holding elected office in AZ distanced themselves from Prop 200, though I admit some were just holding their tongues so's not to anger constituents.

    How come we didn't hear about this five percent when Clinton was in office?

    People who are in this game for purely partisan reasons are certainly making more noise about it these days, and DREs have raised the general conciousness about election problems in general, but plenty of groups interested purely in a legitimate election process - People for the American Way, say - have been pointing to this for a long time.

    Quite frankly, I feel this is one of those "lies, damn lies, and statistics" polls.

    This is pretty much hard data. We know the fraction of ballots that are 'spoiled' and never counted - varies widely, but worth 1-2% on average; from things like provisional ballots and records of people turned away at polls we know a lot about how many people try to vote and fail because of ID or address problems. 5% certainly isn't an exact figure, but it's the ballpark we're in; it's clearly more than the margin of many elections.

    I don't see how anyone without a motive (and Democrats' motive is to make sure their poor, students, and non-English speakers vote without problems, no matter what fraud may occur) can think that the people disenfranchised by requiring a proper ID when you vote outweighs the potential fraud that is prevented. Honestly, it's not that hard to get a

  68. What good is a paper trail? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what is that going to accomplish?

    so they cant just print off one thing and record another?

    this is idiotic waste of time because any well done fraud will make sure to just dump SOME votes, not all of them.

    which will mean that most people having ditched their bit of paper will be useless in a recount

  69. So what. by Mister+Gas+Fireplace · · Score: 1

    It's better to spend tax money on verified voting than the billions wasted in Iraq. Nearly 9 billion has gone unaccounted for with no oversight from the Republican-controlled Congress.