View Full Version : US Election Day
mbossman2
11-07-2006, 08:47 AM
I know that we actively discourage political discussions here and direct them to www.forumclick.com (please stop on by) but......
today is election day in the USA, it you are registered to vote, please get out and do your civic duty.
jimmyrules712
11-07-2006, 10:17 AM
for some reason it never hit me that being registered to vote in a completely different county from where I'm currently attending school is a problem.
guess I'll have to sit this one out.
doctorgonzo
11-07-2006, 10:18 AM
I voted today. I'm glad I live in a state where you can register to vote on election day with the proper proof that you live in your precinct (although I was already registered).
It sounds like a lot of the new voting machines are having problems. It could be a long night for poll workers.
David M
11-07-2006, 11:23 AM
I am not fond of electronic voting. There is no paper trail with which to audit the votes. There is no such thing as a legitimate recount without paper. I think for everyone's peace of mind we need to eliminate electronic voting. Most computer type people in here know how common an occurance it is for supposedly secure systems to get broken into.
mbossman2
11-07-2006, 11:46 AM
I am not fond of electronic voting. There is no paper trail with which to audit the votes. There is no such thing as a legitimate recount without paper. I think for everyone's peace of mind we need to eliminate electronic voting. Most computer type people in here know how common an occurance it is for supposedly secure systems to get broken into.
i think that you have to balance the 2: technologic progress and voting security/integrity.
I used to live in upstate NY where the big voting machines with the little pull levers and I had no idea that they kept a papertrack of the votes. In NC, i have only used a paper ballot.
As an aside, I believe that any election via secret ballot requires a certain level of trust in the counting, collecting and collating authority.
David M
11-07-2006, 11:49 AM
I would rather have the inconvenience and the security versus the convenience and poor security. If technological "advances" are going to make something less secure then take me back to the old days...especially for something as important as an accurate vote count. There are unscrupulous people who have no problem altering votes which favor the candidate of their choice.
An audit trail is started when you sign the registrar.... and there had better be the same number of paper votes as there are signatures at the end of the day. This can only be confirmed with paper.
There is quite a degree of trust involved which does not mean that gaping holes in security should be left open.
doctorgonzo
11-07-2006, 11:50 AM
As an aside, I believe that any election via secret ballot requires a certain level of trust in the counting, collecting and collating authority.
That is true. In most places the counting is done fairly and accurately. Minnesota runs some of the cleanest elections in the country. But I know that this is not the case in all areas unfortunately.
I hate electronic voting machines too. It is simply ridiculous that many of the touch-screen machines have no paper trail. If the machine crashes and loses all the votes, well, I guess the voters who voted that day are simply out of luck. That's not democracy. How these systems are in place I have no idea.
We use optical scan ballots here, the ones where you fill in the bubble and then put it in the machine. If the machine doesn't work, just count them manually. Best of all worlds.
HAL9000
11-07-2006, 11:52 AM
That's the same system we use here DrG (just had our civic election).... and that system seems to work quite nicely.
faulkner132
11-07-2006, 11:55 AM
I am not fond of electronic voting. There is no paper trail with which to audit the votes. There is no such thing as a legitimate recount without paper. I think for everyone's peace of mind we need to eliminate electronic voting. Most computer type people in here know how common an occurance it is for supposedly secure systems to get broken into.
I completely disagree. Electronic voting is the future and it CAN be secure.
Just a simple reason why: if a website and a database are on the same system, the traffic between the two never leaves the system, hence not subject interception and is secure unless the *entire* system is compromised. A lot of people with a lot more knowledge than myself can easily make it happen. When was the last time you heard of a bank system being hacked? This is infinitely more complex than electronic voting would be.
Electronic voting won't happen for a long time because of politics. I'm not going to go into details on this statement, as that is not a topic for this board, but there is no doubt than elimating humans from a simple count will lead to more accurate results.
Also, how common is a secure system broken into? Please name a few because I can't think of any secure systems broken into lately at all.
If the machine crashes and loses all the votes, well, I guess the voters who voted that day are simply out of luck. That's not democracy. How these systems are in place I have no idea.
The answer to this is simple, lack of funding for hardware and software leads to poorly designed software, crap hardware and a severely lacking infrastructure and implementation.
HAL9000
11-07-2006, 12:00 PM
I completely disagree. Electronic voting is the future and it CAN be secure.
Just a simple reason why: if a website and a database are on the same system, the traffic between the two never leaves the system, hence not subject interception and is secure unless the *entire* system is compromised. A lot of people with a lot more knowledge than myself can easily make it happen. When was the last time you heard of a bank system being hacked? This is infinitely more complex than electronic voting would be.
Electronic voting won't happen for a long time because of politics. I'm not going to go into details on this statement, as that is not a topic for this board, but there is no doubt than elimating humans from a simple count will lead to more accurate results.
Also, how common is a secure system broken into? Please name a few because I can't think of any secure systems broken into lately at all.
How about credit card payment processing center.... just as secure... there was a major one just last year affecting millions of Canadian and US card holders.
What it comes down to, if there is a close running, what "hard" verification do you have with electronic systems?
faulkner132
11-07-2006, 12:05 PM
How about credit card payment processing center.... just as secure... there was a major one just last year affecting millions of Canadian and US card holders.
I don't remember the details on it, but if I'm not mistaken... that was due to a leak from someone inside. There is absolutely nothing you can do about corruption on any system, electronic or manual.
What it comes down to, if there is a close running, what "hard" verification do you have with electronic systems?
That's for people who are smarter than us to determine. You have to have an Id to vote and you have to have an address to have an Id. Just put the two together and make it work. I know this is over simplifying, but it is a possible way for something to be figured out.
doctorgonzo
11-07-2006, 12:07 PM
Yes, it CAN be secure, just like an OS CAN be secure. The problem is in the implementation, and so far the implementation is awful. They can be hacked in less than a minute (http://itpolicy.princeton.edu/voting/). Is that kind of security good enough?
When was the last time you heard of a bank system being hacked? Well, it depends on what you mean by "hacked". If you mean a loss of security like giving names to the public, it happens frequently. But aside from this, banks have an economic incentive to make systems secure: it could cost them lots and lots of money. That economic incentive does not exist for voting systems.
If electronic voting systems were to be used, they would have to be open source. Hardware and software. Proprietary code is not good enough.
But even beyond the implementation, the question is this: what problems are electronic voting machines trying to solve? I don't see any significant problems with our current system that can be solved by electronic voting machines. On the other hand, I see lots of problems that electronic voting machines introduce. Just take a look at the news today: there are problems with voting machines in Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Illinois...it is absurd. Paper ballots don't break and don't crash.
Edit: This (http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/cnn_topstories/~3/46261731/index.html) is not how election day should be.
David M
11-07-2006, 12:16 PM
Agreed HAL. Paper is something physical therefore it is darn near impossible to alter without evidence that it has been altered. There is no physical evidence or proof with electronics if the information in the system has been altered. It is very easy to alter an electronic system and leave no evidence of alteration.
As magical and seemingly futuristic as electronics are....perhaps there are some applications for which electronics are totally unsuited? This is the major downfall of electronic security....there is nothing physical to back it up. No signatures, no paper receipts etc.
There is no such thing as an impenetrable electronic system. There will always be a password that someone is supposed to have and many others who are not supposed to have this password. It only takes one incident of someone obtaining the password that they are not supposed to have therefore compromising the whole system.
faulkner132
11-07-2006, 12:20 PM
Yes, it CAN be secure, just like an OS CAN be secure. The problem is in the implementation, and so far the implementation is awful. They can be hacked in less than a minute (http://itpolicy.princeton.edu/voting/). Is that kind of security good enough?
When was the last time you heard of a bank system being hacked? Well, it depends on what you mean by "hacked". If you mean a loss of security like giving names to the public, it happens frequently. But aside from this, banks have an economic incentive to make systems secure: it could cost them lots and lots of money. That economic incentive does not exist for voting systems.
If electronic voting systems were to be used, they would have to be open source. Hardware and software. Proprietary code is not good enough.
But even beyond the implementation, the question is this: what problems are electronic voting machines trying to solve? I don't see any significant problems with our current system that can be solved by electronic voting machines. On the other hand, I see lots of problems that electronic voting machines introduce. Just take a look at the news today: there are problems with voting machines in Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Illinois...it is absurd. Paper ballots don't break and don't crash.
I'm not talking about voting kiosks (see my reasoning about underfunding above). I'm talking about Online Voting.
Simple example of how software can be bulletproof:
The software used in hospitals for life support monitoring and air traffic controller software must be proven (not simply stress tested, but actual proof must be given) to work before they are implemented. Why couldn't someone do the same with a voting system?
Paper ballots are subject to human intervention... nobody can argue this. Conversely, you can't argue with electronic results.
As for banks having financial interests... I don't see why the government wouldn't have an extreme interest in a guaranteed acurate, undisputable voting result. It all boils down to funding and elected officials are not willing to fund it. I wonder why this is...
I don't understand why people are so resistent to change a system which has proven time and time again to be severely flawed... especially when our "democracy" is what is at stake.
doctorgonzo
11-07-2006, 12:25 PM
Paper ballots are subject to human intervention... nobody can argue this. Conversely, you can't argue with electronic results.
Sure you can. As long as the data is stored in a database somewhere, it can be hacked.
Plus, not everybody has internet access. Not everybody knows how to use a computer. Online systems would have to address those issues.
I am resistant to change because of the reason I posted earlier. I see this as a pretty simple issue. First, what problems do we have with our current system? Second, how would online voting solve those problems?
If you can't say what is wrong with our current system, then there is no need to change it for the sake of change.
David M
11-07-2006, 12:25 PM
I think we are fooling ourselves if we think humans can invent a 100% secure electronic system when there are other humans, who are just as smart, that want to prove them wrong. This is exactly why we need physical evidence, paper, for voting.
HAL9000
11-07-2006, 12:34 PM
So what is being said here is that credit cards can be comprimised due to an inside source, but ballots cannot? BTW, the incident I am talking about was not an inside job, they were hacked. I remember that week clearly, the calls coming in were beyond insane and I was taking in the area of 175 calls per day for 7 hours working time... 25 calls per hour.
faulkner132
11-07-2006, 12:38 PM
Sure you can. As long as the data is stored in a database somewhere, it can be hacked.
If it were that easy, banks would be "hacked" every day.
Plus, not everybody has internet access. Not everybody knows how to use a computer. Online systems would have to address those issues.
You wouldn't have to have a computer. Voting booths could simply be a bunch of computers with touch screens.
"Touch here to vote for A"
"Touch here to vote for B"
If someone can't understand this... they don't have the brain power to understand what they are voting for... sorry if that sounds harsh, but we all know it's true.
I am resistant to change because of the reason I posted earlier. I see this as a pretty simple issue. First, what problems do we have with our current system? Second, how would online voting solve those problems?
What problems do we have? Lets see just a few of the issues the 2000 election brought up just in Florida:
1. The Supreme Count can stop/order a recount
2. Counters determining the "intent of the voter" based on cards not fully punched (enter human error)
3. "Misplaced" ballots found after the election
4. Absentee ballots miscounted
5. People with 2 residencies able to vote twice
If you can't say what is wrong with our current system, then there is no need to change it for the sake of change.
See above.
I think we are fooling ourselves if we think humans can invent a 100% secure electronic system when there are other humans, who are just as smart, that want to prove them wrong. This is exactly why we need physical evidence, paper, for voting.
There is a reason virtually *everything* is done electronically... because it is not subject to human error. As I stated earlier, if compent, integelligent people (or an AI computer [<- for Gonzo] :)) were in charge there is no reason it could not be done correctly.
faulkner132
11-07-2006, 12:41 PM
So what is being said here is that credit cards can be comprimised due to an inside source, but ballots cannot? BTW, the incident I am talking about was not an inside job, they were hacked. I remember that week clearly, the calls coming in were beyond insane and I was taking in the area of 175 calls per day for 7 hours working time... 25 calls per hour.
Like I said, I could be mistaken and it appears I am on this CC issue. Thanks for pointing it out.
The point being an electronic system is infinitely harder to tamper with than a people centric system.
doctorgonzo
11-07-2006, 12:52 PM
You wouldn't have to have a computer. Voting booths could simply be a bunch of computers with touch screens.
"Touch here to vote for A"
"Touch here to vote for B"
IIf someone can't understand this... they don't have the brain power to understand what they are voting for... sorry if that sounds harsh, but we all know it's true.
Umm...but that's just an electronic voting machine. Nobody says that the problem with electronic voting machines is that people can't understand how to touch the screen. The problem is that they are insecure.
What problems do we have? Lets see just a few of the issues the 2000 election brought up just in Florida:
1. The Supreme Count can stop/order a recount
2. Counters determining the "intent of the voter" based on cards not fully punched (enter human error)
3. "Misplaced" ballots found after the election
4. Absentee ballots miscounted
5. People with 2 residencies able to vote twice
Well, let's take a look at this:
1. Recounts have nothing to do with voting systems. In fact, if we went to an all-electronic system with no paper trail, then courts would only be able to throw out results instead of recounting them. Not good. At least with paper ballots there is something to take a closer look at.
2. That was a problem with punch cards. I agree that punch card voting systems should be eliminated. They essentially have. You don't need electronic voting machines to fix this.
3. Electronic data can be misplaced too (or haven't you ever dealt with a user who "lost" an important file?).
4. I would have to know how an electronic voting system fixes this problem before I say more. But is this a significant problem?
5. Electronic voting systems would not fix this at all; if they have two mailing addresses, for example, then presumably voter username and password info for voting online would be sent to both. If you are worried about a voter voting in one precinct and then voting in another, take a page from Third World countries and use the old "dip the finger in indelible ink" solution. Cheap and easy.
There is a reason virtually *everything* is done electronically... because it is not subject to human error.
No, things are done electronically these days because it is cheaper, not necessarily because it is more accurate. There is still plenty of error. Grocery store scanners are notoriously unreliable, for example.
Where is the human error in our well-run elections right now? Take my polling place. I went there this morning shortly before the polls opened. The polling place was staffed by volunteer election judges from both parties. Every ballot was signed by two judges saying that it was correct. If need be, the ballots will be hand-counted by more than one judge, and if the parties want observers there I believe they can send them. Since there are many people present throughout the process from different sides, there are no opportunities to cheat. There are random audits done of random precincts to make sure that the machine totals match the hand count totals. This system has served our state well for years. I like it. There are no worries about database dumps or reboots or hackers.
David M
11-07-2006, 12:53 PM
Like I said, I could be mistaken and it appears I am on this CC issue. Thanks for pointing it out.
The point being an electronic system is infinitely harder to tamper with than a people centric system.
People design and operate electronic systems.....they are not mutually exclusive. Electronic systems are "people-centric". Electronic systems do not operate by themselves without human involvement. I don't see how this is any more secure than being able to audit something that is physical.
Is there any court in the country that accepts electronic evidence as evidence without doubt? Physical evidence...sure.
mairving
11-07-2006, 01:34 PM
I am hoping that online voting will never happen. While it would be tremendously convenient there is no way to prevent massive fraud. No way you could prove that the person doing the voting was actually that person.
Funny my sister-in-law works at a voting place. They told her that in 4 yrs time they probably won't have an election day. It will become more of a voting period rather than a voting day. So you would vote at various places around town within a 2 week period. Much of this is due to the popularity of early and absentee voting.
Sunset
11-07-2006, 01:40 PM
I am not fond of electronic voting. There is no paper trail with which to audit the votes. There is no such thing as a legitimate recount without paper. I think for everyone's peace of mind we need to eliminate electronic voting. Most computer type people in here know how common an occurance it is for supposedly secure systems to get broken into.
The electronic system on which I voted this morning has a paper trail. It is made by Diebold. The system generates a paper back up for every voter's ballot which can be cross referenced against the electronic poll results in case of dispute.
HAL9000
11-07-2006, 01:49 PM
That is something I don't have a problem with, there is a hard copy then,.
mbossman2
11-07-2006, 01:57 PM
security is a funny thing. It is a balancing act between security and usability.
I have seen some of the government's "secure" workstations: 2 keys to unlock a metal panel that covers the keyboard (that is hard wired into the computer, ditto the mouse), no output slots (no floppy drive, CD drive, USB ports and the like), screens that are only viewable from a 10 degree cone from center of screen all of this connected to a private network that at no time or point connects to the outside world (and yes, users like this would have 2 PC's on their desk: a secure one and a non-secure one...just like telephones). As you can guess using them is a real exercise in patience (BTW I forgetto talk about the password challenge after password challenge).
So absolutely secure computing is possible, but neigh near unusable.
I have been thinking on this since I posted. While I am sure that we can create a secure electronic voting infrastructure, like david M pointed out, it may not be in our best interests to do so. To mantain the required level of trust, there must be a tried and true method of audit and verification in case questions are raised. Unlike Florida, the methods and procesures must be clearly spelled out and adhered to. perhaps a national standard as it comes to machinery and processes but then that would impinge upon states rights
Redfallon
11-07-2006, 02:57 PM
Grocery store scanners are notoriously unreliable, for example.
I'm curious about this one. I think the scanners themselves are very reliable. Incorrect pricing and such enters into the picture at the human end, where people manually key the price into a "gun" and tie it to the product's barcode. The other typical problem occurs when there's a physical problem with the barcode it's attempting to scan, again no error or problem on the part of the scanner itself.
Cricket
11-07-2006, 03:01 PM
My wife and I voted by mail last week...so I can goof off all day long if I want to.
:) Cricket
doctorgonzo
11-07-2006, 03:02 PM
Yes, the electronics of a scanner are reliable. The point is that electronics are run by people. People can key in the wrong prices. People can manipulate the prices on purpose. Somebody may forget to install a patch. All of these issues could happen with electronic voting machines too.
rjfvillarosa
11-07-2006, 03:13 PM
My wife and I voted by mail last week...so I can goof off all day long if I want to.
:) Cricket
Being a "Brit abroad" I am not eligible to vote so I am gonna join Cricket and goof off all day.:)
on a side note an interesting thread with some interesting points of view, being an ex government officer I actually worked as a returning officer at a few elections back home and to be honest the system could do with an overhaul, lets just say "Old people + pencil + paper" not a good mix especially when the pencil is blunt.;)
mbossman2
11-07-2006, 03:25 PM
as to the human error, a friend of mine works for a company that does the vote tabulation for an upstate NY county and on election night the initial returns are called into their phone bank for "rough" tabulation (the results on election night are not inal...that happens a month or so later) and he says that in an evening they have probably 15-20 mistakes in the keying process that need to be corrected (they use this cool "double" system - 2 people on every call, each keying the same information and the system flags discrepencies)
piasabird
11-07-2006, 04:46 PM
So I go to the polling place and I fill out this sheet by shading the circles. Then it is scanned and sucked into a big metal box. I had no way to even know if my vote was counted or not. I dont know if the scan was functional, if it counted my vote, or if it just rejected my vote. There is no way in hell I can get any confirmation of who I voted for or even review it to make sure it is correct. This is a lousy voting system.
My occupation is that of a database programmer. I think I could trust a system that would write the results to a database and then read them again and let you change what was written. However, I do think that it should write the results to a local hard drive and also a network database for security reasons. That way you have a backup. After all, this is not rocket science. If you can trust what your bank tells you with real money, then why not a voting system?
doctorgonzo
11-07-2006, 04:50 PM
So I go to the polling place and I fill out this sheet by shading the circles. Then it is scanned and sucked into a big metal box. I had no way to even know if my vote was counted or not. I dont know if the scan was functional, if it counted my vote, or if it just rejected my vote. There is no way in hell I can get any confirmation of who I voted for or even review it to make sure it is correct. This is a lousy voting system.
On our optical scan machines, you are supposed to wait to see if the counter is incremented on the display. If it is, it was counted. If the ballot is rejected, it means you voted too many times. The confirmation of who you voted for is looking over your ballot before you take it to the machine and proofreading it. :)
Really, it's not different from marking a paper ballot and dropping it in a locked box, but with the optical scan machine you will at least know if you overvoted. If you are unsure of whether the people at the polls are going to actually sit down and look at the ballots, you can volunteer to be an election judge next time around to see the process yourself. I'm sure they would love the help!
I'm a database programmer too, which is why I would never trust an electronic voting system. If I know how to change a database without leaving an audit trail (and I don't consider myself to be a very good programmer), then so can lots of other people. With an electronic system, all it takes is one person to change things without anybody's knowledge. With paper ballots, everybody who comes in contact with the ballots would have to be in on the cheating. That's a lot less likely with a large group of people.
pam123
11-07-2006, 04:56 PM
Go vote, it's your duty and your privilege.:)
piasabird
11-07-2006, 05:00 PM
You dont get it. The user should be able to verify the accuracy of the vote. Scantron has no way for me to verify for each issue to verify how I voted. I just have to trust the system. Excuse me, but I have never trusted a computer in my life. I beliieve in Trust-but-verify.
I do have a friend who was an election judge last year maybe I can ask her about this.
I dont mistrust computers per se, however, everything breaks down sooner or later. Not only that, someone has to program these machines. All it takes is one error and the votes could be manipulated. The user can not even verify the machine actually can read the ballot correctly.
doctorgonzo
11-07-2006, 05:06 PM
You dont get it. The user should be able to verify the accuracy of the vote. Scantron has no way for me to verify for each issue to verify how I voted. I just have to trust the system. Excuse me, but I have never trusted a computer in my life. I beliieve in Trust-but-verify.
Well, that's because the Scantron machine is just a convenience. The actual vote you made is the paper ballot. If there is a problem with the machine, then the paper ballots are counted. In this state, a random number of precincts have to count the ballots by hand and ignore the machine. The paper ballot is all that matters.
Which is why electronic machines with no paper trail are so dangerous. Like you said, things break down. You can't always trust a computer. If you use an electronic voting machine and somebody changes the code to manipulate the results, you have no paper ballot to fall back on. "Verifying" your ballot choices on a screen doesn't matter if the code is lying to you, or worse, the totals are changed after the polls are closed and you have gone home. With a paper ballot, that's the legal document, and it can be looked at after the fact.
ktkendall
11-07-2006, 06:49 PM
Here in PA, we might become the third state to get an Athlete/Celebrity type for our next Governer.
faulkner132
11-07-2006, 07:06 PM
It seems most of the arguments against electronic voting assume one of the following:
- Incompetence [Faulty machines/software/implementation/infrastructure]
I can understand this because it is what we deal with in "electronic" voting as it is implemented now. As I stated earlier, funding solves this problem.
- Conspiracy
There isn't going to be some sort of high level conspiracy where the database will be magically erased and the clever system admin will cover their tracks. There is a reason 5 people have to turn their keys before launching a missile and the same would be true for any system with this much importance. A single person would not be in charge of this or have complete control. Yes, software and hardware can be designed and implemented this way.
- Machines breaking down
Simple, the data is stored on a redundant disk system. If it's good enough for Iron Mountain, it should be more than adequate for online voting. Let's be realistic and not deal in hypotheticals. A voting station could just be a bunch of PC's loaded with special software (like ATM's as mentioned below).
- High school students hacking the machines
Seriously, do I even need to counter something as rediculous? ATM's run off Windows XP and they are never hacked, at least not that I know of (I'm not talking about the card readers, but the actual software which dispenses the money).
A lot can go wrong with the system we have today, here are a few examples:
- Fire: oops, all the ballots are gone... oh well. I highly doubt ALL paper ballots are stored in a facility such as a high end data center.
- People incompence: much more likely than a well designed electronic system.
- Tampering with mechanical voting machines: much more likely a high school student would do this.
- Polls closing before everyone can get in: Yes, it happens even though it is illegal.
It seems the conversation is getting to the point where rediculous "what if" scenarios are being thrown around to counter points, instead of focusing on the *actual* problems and solutions.
HAL9000
11-07-2006, 07:10 PM
So that is why you have the redundancy... electronic AND hard copy.... makes sense to me.
fleeingpepper
11-07-2006, 07:34 PM
One of the only things Oklahoma does well is it's voting system, simple, secure, and easy.
David M
11-07-2006, 08:38 PM
To put it into accounting terms....voting with paper is a double entry accounting system. It is very hard to cheat a double entry accounting system because it all has to balance in the end. Signature's have to match the number of votes and there are physical records which can be used a a backup with which to verify and confirm. Records can be double or triple counted if necessary or audited in other words.
With electronic voting there is no way to verify anything. Auditing is not possible. You have one chance to get it right. If there is a problem and the record is wrong, then there is no way to double check the results. There is also no way to confirm that the record is correct.
The system with the physical backup that is not alterable, although not perfect, is far superior to a system where there is no backup.
jimmyrules712
11-07-2006, 08:51 PM
so why not have electronic voting machines that simply print out some sort of voting receipt for each vote, so you have a paper trail?
rspassey
11-07-2006, 08:52 PM
so why not have electronic voting machines that simply print out some sort of voting receipt for each vote, so you have a paper trail?
Then it would be harder to rig the results :rolleyes: :eek: :D :D
HAL9000
11-07-2006, 10:41 PM
so why not have electronic voting machines that simply print out some sort of voting receipt for each vote, so you have a paper trail?
You already have the reverse of that... as mentioned.. the paper where you fill in the oval and submit to the machine... paper trail is at the beginning of the process... physical number of ballots must equal the number of votes cast.
Paintbait
11-07-2006, 11:52 PM
Go vote, it's your duty and your privilege.
Second'd Even though all the polls have probably closed by now.
Sunset
11-08-2006, 12:13 AM
so why not have electronic voting machines that simply print out some sort of voting receipt for each vote, so you have a paper trail?
I believe that is precisely what the new Diebold system does, the one I used to cast my votes this morning.
juppy
11-08-2006, 12:33 AM
On our optical scan machines, you are supposed to wait to see if the counter is incremented on the display. If it is, it was counted. If the ballot is rejected, it means you voted too many times.That's how our machines do it here too. We don't have the little bubbles everyone's talking about though....on ours there's an arrow beside each candidate's name but it looks like someone erased the middle of the arrow. Whichever candidate you want you just reconnect the front part of the arrow with the back part of the arrow by drawing a straight line between them (we just had to be different I guess :D). Then you put the ballot into the machine and if it accepts it you see the counter increment by 1 and hear a "bleep" sound. If you forgot to vote on something or voted for more than one candidate for the same office, the machine won't beep and it'll spit the ballot back out at you. I always proofread mine before I submit it though, because you feel like a real doof when this machine takes your ballot and goes "patooey!" and shoots it back out the slot! :D
Sunset
11-08-2006, 11:26 AM
What system did everyone use to vote yesterday? Was it electronic? How did it work? Mine was an electronic system made by Diebold. It was a touch screen system which generated a hard copy backup for every person's vote.
Redfallon
11-08-2006, 04:06 PM
Paper ballot that was electronically scanned. I'm in Ohio.
doctorgonzo
11-08-2006, 04:10 PM
What system did everyone use to vote yesterday? Was it electronic? How did it work? Mine was an electronic system made by Diebold.
Like I said earlier, I used the optiscan ballot where you fill in the bubble like a standardized test then stick it in a machine. Results were tallied pretty quickly where they were used. I was only up until 2 A.M. last night watching the returns from around the state, and at that point very little was not yet counted, mainly from rural precincts.
rjfvillarosa
11-08-2006, 07:13 PM
Just a thought..
If Jeb Bush carries on the family tradition and follows his brother into the oblong box oops :) (slip of the knife....I mean tongue) :rolleyes: into the oval office and he serves two terms in office, does that mean we will have a double Jeberdee on our hands? :)
David M
11-08-2006, 11:04 PM
Just a thought..
If Jeb Bush carries on the family tradition and follows his brother into the oblong box oops :) (slip of the knife....I mean tongue) :rolleyes: into the oval office and he serves two terms in office, does that mean we will have a double Jeberdee on our hands? :)
Biting my tongue and trying to do my best at not firing back. I hope your proud of me glc :)
pam123
11-08-2006, 11:16 PM
No clemency for bad puns :D
clroberts
11-08-2006, 11:33 PM
We had one Electronic Voting Machine at our Precinct and it was not working. The other way we use is the Pencil Fill in Oval method. I still remember the old voting machines with the curtains and the little levers that you flipped when you voted and when you flipped the big red handle lever to open the curtains, it cast the vote.
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