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The Only Safe Election Is a Low-Tech Election

nytimes.com

35 points by mterrel 6 years ago · 7 comments

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isaaafc 6 years ago

Summary of why e-voting is bad:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w3_0x6oaDmI

A newer video basically reiterating the points:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LkH2r-sNjQs

jeffrallen 6 years ago

I work on e-voting systems and I approve of this message.

  • tunap 6 years ago

    Having worked on Accuvotee systems in the past, I concur. However, live feeds of the hand count are an absolute must. Teh shenanigans(criteria to throw out votes) that occurs behind closed doors needs exposure scrutiny.

    • funcDropShadow 6 years ago

      In Germany, every citizen is allowed to watch the counting at his local election buro. I think that is what is needed, and the larger parties send one member to every single room where counting is happening. So you need to involve a lot of people if you want to forge an election at scale.

kitpierce 6 years ago

I’m all for paper backups/verification of voting systems, but perhaps it’s time to consider open-source election software w peer review and/or open-hardware in addition to “low-tech” election oversight?

foxyv 6 years ago

Low-Tech elections are fraught with similar perils. Paper votes can be forged, discarded, modified and cloned as easy as pie. Not to mention impersonation of voters, theft of mail in ballots and registration of deceased voters. Then again, a single person cannot modify the results of an entire election. In addition the risk of being caught is greater because you are doing these things in person.

EricE 6 years ago

Duh!

Thumb (or other finger) in ink, ink on paper, done.

Highly resilient to all kinds of attacks. Drop dead simple.

Less is more.

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