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Maryland Town Tests New Cryptographic Voting System

ceswiedler writes "In Tuesday's election voters in Takoma Park, MD used a new cryptographic voting system designed by David Chaum with researchers from several universities including MIT and the University of Maryland. Voters use a special ink to mark their ballots, which reveals three-digit codes which they can later check against a website to verify their vote was tallied. Additionally, anyone can download election data from a Subversion repository and verify the overall accuracy of the results without seeing the actual choices of any individual voter."

5 of 227 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Chaum's system is very cool by zn0k · · Score: 4, Informative

    "But voters can't be sure just by looking at their ballot image that the system interpreted the codes accurately to apply the vote to the correct candidate. That's where independent auditors come in."

    TFA to the rescue.

  2. Re:Chaum's system is very cool by nacturation · · Score: 4, Informative

    but does not provide them with any way to prove to anyone who they voted for.

    But can I check to make sure not just that my vote "was counted" but that my vote was for the right person?

    Yes:

    Voters make their selections on a paper ballot using special pens with ink designed by Chaum. When a voter fills in an oval on the ballot, the ink in the pen, which is similar to the yellow ink in highlighter pens, reacts with invisible ink in the oval and turns most of the oval black. At the same time, a unique three-letter code pre-printed on the ballot inside each oval is revealed to the voter.

    After making their choices, voters use a form to write down the serial number that is printed on their ballot as well as the three-digit codes inside the ovals they’ve chosen. The codes are generated cryptographically and are different on every ballot to prevent someone from deciphering the voter’s choices and engaging in vote-buying.

    So that's the "verify that it was recorded correctly" part. For the "verify it went to the right candidate part":

    Voters can also see, based on the three-letter codes, that the system seems to have recorded their selections accurately. But voters can’t be sure just by looking at their ballot image that the system interpreted the codes accurately to apply the vote to the correct candidate. That’s where independent auditors come in.

    Scantegrity uses a process called “zero knowledge” that allows skilled, independent auditors to verify that the codes result in votes going to the right candidates, without actually revealing an individual voter’s selections.

    I don't know how it works exactly, but I assume it's similar to a public/private keypair given that they describe it as a cryptographic mechanism. The interesting thing is that anyone can audit the election results to demonstrate that votes were counted accurately: https://scantegrity.org/svn/data/takoma-nov3-2009/PUBLIC/PUBLIC/

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  3. Re:Interesting, but... by vilhuber · · Score: 4, Informative

    Not sure I'm reading you properly, but this system allows you to verify your vote was COUNTED, nothing more. You can't show or prove to anyone HOW you voted, just that you did and that your vote is in the tally AS CAST.

    This is huge. I've been waiting for chaum's election stuff to actually be used for quite some time now. I'm hugely excited.

  4. Re:Interesting, but... by Mr2001 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Not sure I'm reading you properly, but this system allows you to verify your vote was COUNTED, nothing more. You can't show or prove to anyone HOW you voted, just that you did and that your vote is in the tally AS CAST.

    Er, unless I'm missing something, it's still possible to prove to someone how you voted. You just need to take a picture of your ballot, showing that the code "JX" is in the bubble next to "John Smith" -- this is pretty easy if you're voting absentee, or if you aren't frisked and metal-detected on your way into the voting booth. When the local thug comes around to verify your vote, you show him the picture and your ballot ID, and then he goes online to make sure that your ballot ID and your "JX" vote are in the system.

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  5. Re:Interesting, but... by Mr2001 · · Score: 4, Informative

    But it doesn't scale, imho. Everybody voting absentee in a district? Red flag.

    In the state where I live, 37 of the 39 counties have nothing but absentee voting. You can go to the election office to drop off your ballot, but everyone gets a ballot weeks in advance.

    On the other hand, that means we've already conceded the battle against this sort of voter intimidation/bribery. The thug can just watch you fill out the ballot. Hasn't been a problem in practice, though... yet.

    Digital camera in the booth too often? (Some people are savvy enough to turn off the sounds, and some people are savvy enough to hide their camera. But most people are not.) Red flag. Game over.

    I don't know about your camera, but mine is cleverly hidden inside my cell phone. Doesn't take much savvy to get one of those, and before long, almost everyone will have a 3+ megapixel camera in their pocket -- if we're not there already.

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