Slashdot Mirror


New Bill Could Finally Get Rid of Paperless Voting Machines (arstechnica.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: A bipartisan group of six senators has introduced legislation that would take a huge step toward securing elections in the United States. Called the Secure Elections Act, the bill aims to eliminate insecure paperless voting machines from American elections while promoting routine audits that would dramatically reduce the danger of interference from foreign governments. "With the 2018 elections just around the corner, Russia will be back to interfere again," said co-sponsor Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.). So a group of senators led by James Lankford (R-Okla.) wants to shore up the security of American voting systems ahead of the 2018 and 2020 elections. And the senators have focused on two major changes that have broad support from voting security experts.

The first objective is to get rid of paperless electronic voting machines. Computer scientists have been warning for more than a decade that these machines are vulnerable to hacking and can't be meaningfully audited. States have begun moving away from paperless systems, but budget constraints have forced some to continue relying on insecure paperless equipment. The Secure Elections Act would give states grants specifically earmarked for replacing these systems with more secure systems that use voter-verified paper ballots. The legislation's second big idea is to encourage states to perform routine post-election audits based on modern statistical techniques. Many states today only conduct recounts in the event of very close election outcomes. And these recounts involve counting a fixed percentage of ballots. That often leads to either counting way too many ballots (wasting taxpayer money) or too few (failing to fully verify the election outcome). The Lankford bill would encourage states to adopt more statistically sophisticated procedures to count as many ballots as needed to verify an election result was correct -- and no more.

4 of 391 comments (clear)

  1. Scantron is fast, but not reliable by raymorris · · Score: 3, Informative

    At my last job exam scores were calculated with Scantron machines. Though the Scantron was faster than grading by hand, it is unreliable, so every sheet had to be double-checked by a human. The people had to correct the Scantron results rather often.

    One Scantron machine was noticeably less reliable than another; perhaps some maintenance, aligning and cleaning it, makes a big difference.

  2. Cost by michael_cain · · Score: 3, Informative

    The big question is, "Congress might mandate it, but are they willing to pay for it?" In most states the cost of the voting equipment falls on the counties. Any that bought voting equipment in the last decade are going to fight tooth and nail against having to replace it. I have a friend who works in the electronic voting machine business; she tells me that they're still doing repair work on 20-year-old machines because of counties who don't have the money to replace them.

  3. Re:Voter ID by EndlessNameless · · Score: 3, Informative

    There are 12.5 million illegal immigrants in the US. In California, they are given a drivers license which is enough to be able to vote.

    Calling bullshit right there. You have to be a citizen before you can register to vote. A driver's license doesn't get you on the voter rolls.

    I know this may be confusing, but you can do two different things at one place. The DMV can both issue licenses and register voters---and they can have different rules for each thing. Amazing, right?

    Anyway, if you think I'm as full of bullshit as you are, feel free to read it yourself:

    http://www.sos.ca.gov/election...

    --

    ---
    According to the latest ruleset, this post should be modded as Vorpal Flamebait +5.
  4. Re:Voter ID by Uberbah · · Score: 1, Informative

    Care to try that again, without the dumbassery of pretending Alabama is the entire country and that this one law represents all voter ID legislation?