Dutch Commission Deals Blow To Electronic Voting 210
hcdejong writes "The Dutch commission that has been investigating the electoral process presented its final report yesterday (Dutch). The conclusions and recommendations are devastating to the current Dutch practice of voting electronically, and to plans for voting via the internet. Paraphrasing from the report: The deputy minister for the interior Bijleveld said in an initial response (Dutch only) that she would revoke the certification of the current generation of electronic voting machines. The minister plans to present an official Cabinet position on the electoral process in two months. The next elections (for the European Parliament, 2009) may see a return to paper ballots." Read on for a translation of some of the key points from the report.
Paraphrasing from the report:
- The current electronic voting machines do not comply with the basic requirements of an election (e.g. transparency, controllability, integrity).
- The paper ballot still offers the best way to comply with these basic requirements.
- The commission recommends using an electronic system to generate the paper ballot. The voter must be allowed to check the ballot before it is deposited in a locked box.
- Votes can be counted electronically (by scanning the paper ballots), with the option of a manual recount.
Why (Score:5, Insightful)
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Theft by employees can be handled by risk management. It is an industry as opposed to a political machine I was thinking of. In a sense the bank could skim off a bit and many do, through overzelous charges and mis calculation of interest. This has been a problem for a long time and a good example of the outcome can be found here http://www.financemarkets.co.uk/2007/09/12/lloyds-tsb-commences-bank-charges-war/ [financemarkets.co.uk] and has resulted in the creation of several new services like this one http://www.bankcharging.co. [bankcharging.co.uk]
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Rubbish... (Score:2)
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The people of wijvertrouwenstemcomputersniet.nl (=wedonottrustvotingmachines.nl) showed how (http://www.wijvertrouwenstemcomputersniet.nl/images/9/91/Es3b-en.pdf/ [wijvertrou...ersniet.nl]) you can reprogram the Nedap/Groenendaal ES3B voting toy in such a way that it is really hard to detect (physical checks were amateurous anyway).
First by having a test whether the test is genuine. For instance, lasting at least 8 hours with a certain randomness in the v
Re:Why -- anonymity (Score:5, Insightful)
In stock trading systems, bank transactions, etc., all parties are known in one way or another. Depending on the techniques used, if something goes wrong, the party that's wronged can prove who they are and that something didn't go as they directed.
That doesn't work with electronic voting, since it is supposed to be anonymous. There are many reasons for that: full freedom in casting your vote (no employers, governments etc looking over you shoulder to check that you voted 'correctly'), and also not being able to prove what you voted for, to avoid vote-buying (you can pay for a vote but you'll never know what you paid for)
It is very hard to build anonymity into an electronic voting system, and still have the same degree of tamper-proofness as a paper ballot.
It should be noted that in the Netherlands, you have to color a circle of approx 1 cm diameter red. It is easier to see what the intention of the voter was than with hanging chads.
Erwin
BTW -- vote buying isn't the issue (Score:2)
The real problem is when spouse/neighbor/employer/union_rep/government_official/pastor leans on you to vote a particular way, and then demands proof. Physical, financial, and spiritual intimidation is the real potential for abuse, and is illegal.
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Yes, as long as people investigate the issues and make a big ruckus when there's something wrong.
As we have seen, voting equipment vendors and governments alike will do their utmost to keep problems hidden and to downplay problems that are exposed.
They can and do go as far as threatening those who would save democracy.
And the worst thing is tha
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Something about power corrupts, absolu
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I don't know why but this shit seems really hard to get right. Electronic stock trading, bank transactions, military systems etc - no problem. Electronic voting - disaster every time.
Because anonymity plus accountability is really difficult.
In other systems you have nice trails that you can follow in the case of fraud.
In voting you need to ensure voter anonymity and it makes it that much harder to verify results. Add in political corruption a
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Obviously, Electronic Voting is too busy doing rails off a hooker's backside to get it right, and we have the Dutch Commission to blame for that.
Really Simple (Score:2)
Not technical, it's a matter of political will. (Score:2)
It's not hard to get right, it's hard to get past vested interests which are intent on selling crap. I wrote an article for CounterPunch dealing with free software voting machines [counterpunch.org] and served on an appointed committee which recommended election hardware and software to the elected county board (the county board made the real decision, taking our input as just a recommendation). I was able to explain the fatal flaws in all the options before us and they're not hard to understand or see how to do a better jo
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How quaint... I assume you don't live in the US right?
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If you think stock trading has even 1% of the inaccuracy of PAPER VOTING BALLOTS you're delusional. I would know, IAITFAEE (A am IT for an Electronic Exchange). We will never have a bunch of stock trades just 'disappear' like votes can. You will never see a transaction that's not authenticated and tracable from initiation to completion. Ever. We're audited regurlarly. Do yo
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Fixed that for you. Seriously, we're talking about obtaining significant power in a nation for 4 years; I'm shocked at the level of naïveté of the comments here today. And that's with my tin-foil hat off.
Oh and BTW, if we're going to be governed for 4 years, or 1461 days, I don't mind if it takes 1 day to count the votes. It often takes months to
Ireland (Score:5, Informative)
Fortunately this was enough to scupper use of the machines in Ireland (as it was too much effort for the government to try and address even the very lenient concerns of the committee). Unfortunately, we are still storing the machines at a cost of millions of euro a year. Also the politician responsible for the mess got re-elected, cause his own constituency are happy that he's looking out for his area - national e-voting débacle is not in the minds of the locals.
The recommendations of this Dutch committee would be good here in Ireland. There are often spoilt or disputed ballots because we use PR-STV (you number your preferred candidates rather than tick a box). Also counting takes a long time - up to a week including recounts sometimes till the last constituency is declared. So machine filled-out ballot papers and machine counted ballots would be great - especially if manual processing of the ballots is allowed in parallel, or for a certain no. of randomly chosen constituencies, or in any case of a challenge.
But it's not likely the powers that be here would succeed in implementing it. Last time around they nearly ended up not being ready with enough simple partitions for the ordinary bog standard voting!
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In fact, the rejection of the machines in Ireland seems to have sparked the (grass-roots, kudos go to wijvertrouwenstemcomputersniet.nl [wijvertrou...ersniet.nl]) investigation in the Netherlands. Finally, they seemed to have stirred up enough commotion that the government took some measures (although, I must say, they fell short of what would have been desirable).
It is amazing that voting systems like the ones we had in the Netherlands (and the Nedap machines we shipped to I
Online Voting... (Score:2, Interesting)
Agreed, at least in the US, there should be some provision for those who work long hours to go vote during the day (national holiday or something).
Online voting has basic structural problems. (Score:2)
No way, this is not how governments work!! (Score:2, Funny)
Oh, it's about the Dutch; that's ok then - those people care about their elections.
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Is it fail proof? (Score:2)
- The new voting machines will look almost identical to the current electronic voting machines.
- But instead of a message on the screen "You have voted. Thank you.", it prints the vote.
- You take the print, check it, and deposit it in the voting box.
This will be much harder to beat, but it remains to be seen how accurate the scanning system will be. By printing the vote, one can eliminate many
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Additionally, since you are not limited to a single piece of paper on which to display all information, it should be possible to make the UI much more user-friendly. As I understand it, on US ballots, there are often multiple selections that need to be made at one time. With electronic voting, each electoral race (President, Police Chief, Congressman, etc) could
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It's just a machine helping your hand while you are making your choice, like a jig or someting.
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Yet the way I understand it is the electronic tallying will still be the prime result for the evening news.
Later, possibly only after a complaint will the paper ballots be counted.
I would find this satisfactory, even with a Closed Source machine there is a 100% check on the validity of the outcome.
Why the need for speed? (Score:3, Interesting)
In case you don't know Holland like Belgium is a coalition goverment, that means we do NOT have a single party who wins the election, unlike say Britain, France and the US.
For a long time now it has taken ages to get this coalition together, it is usually done by the largest party (but not a majority) exploring what other parties are close to its ideas and are willing to work together so they can have a majority. The problem is that this ALWAYS takes a lot of time, sometimes months. So who cares about the speed of counting, what does 1 day spend counting mean if the goverment then needs 2-3 months to get together?
We are so obssesed with instant results that perhaps we fail to realize that we add speed as a requirement when it isn't needed. "We need the election results as soon as possible". Why? "... just because". Drop the speed requirement and then see what kind of system you can come up with.
On a side note, the belgium goverment at the moment is taking a long time to form a new goverment, whole months have gone by without a party in charge (in the dutch system the current goverment has to stop and this leaves an effective power vacuum during formation) and yet the world keeps on turning. What about an experiment, we put all politicians in jail for a year, and see what happens. My bet is the same as usual, nothing at all, but at a greatly reduced cost.
Common sense from the dutch (Score:2)
Computer voting sounds good but the reality is very different. No system should be trusted without a full, audited paper trail which allows recounts.
PS: What exactly is wrong with mechanical ballot counting machines? Anybody who can't figure out how to punch a hole in a piece of paper shouldn't be allowed to vote anyway.
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Hanging chads (Score:2)
Estonian E-Voting System (Score:3, Interesting)
The only prerequisite for a country to use the system is that it has to deploy PKI [www.id.ee] at first...
Credit to "We Don't Trust Voting Computers" (Score:5, Informative)
Thanks guys, you rock.
A solution without a problem? (Score:5, Insightful)
In new zealand we use paper ballots, you tick the box you want with a marker pen. Polls close in the early evening, and the result of the election is usually known later that night.
The paper ballets are anonymous, transparent, reliable, and cheap.
Remind me, what problem do electronic voting machines solve?
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The only role for computers to play in voting is helping to prepare a paper ballot. And even that role should be optional, according to the voter's desire. In that role there are genuine advantages no voter should have to do without. Computers can help the illiterate and blind vote in privacy (meaning that they don't have to bring a buddy into the booth with them, thus divulging their vote).
No computers are needed to count ballots at any stage of the election process. All counting can be (and is, in s
Re:Vote counting is a perfectly scalable problem (Score:2)
When Will It End? (Score:2)
I know the Netherlands is a open, permissive country but the government dealing cocaine is just a little too much. No, I did not RTFA.
Too many choices... (Score:2)
http://stomwijzer.nl/ [stomwijzer.nl]
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The problem with this is that it can lead to vote buying ... show your reciept... get $$$
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In not so nice circumstances this could be used to blackmail the voter, "You better vote for my candidate or I'll find you're daughter".
A paper proof that the voter has to deposit in the (back up) ballot box is all what's needed.
Re:Unfortunately (Score:4, Insightful)
Let the machine produce a piece of paper that you carry to the poll box, a piece of paper that you can trash to make a new one if you're not satisfied with the first. The procedure should never be that you have to complain to a poll worker when you're not satisfied with the printout.
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Extremely bad idea. No record of a vote must ever be allowed to leave the polling station -- it could be used for coercion. ("Everybody who takes time off work to go and vote had better show a receipt for [factory owner's brother] when they get back, otherwise they're fired.")
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Or hell...give the people the benefit of the doubt and start with the assumption that they'd be honest and show integrity. If you assume I'm a liar to start wit
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It would probably have an effect on exit polling too... only count the votes of the receipts people let you see. I've never been exit polled since my district always splits in the ballpark of 75/25 on state/federal level offices, but if I were exit poll
Inherently flawed to begin with? (Score:2, Informative)
And it's people with attitudes like that which make it "inherently flawed to begin with."
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Put a big button for "I want a receipt".
If you want to stay employed at our company you'd better push that button.
The secrecy of your vote is a basic tenet of democracy. When international observers check on the voting process of a country, this secrecy is one of the absolute requirements. If it's not carefully observed, the observers will inevitably declare that the election did not conform to the basic requirements of free and open elections.
That's because when this secrecy is not carefully observed, this fact is invariably abused all over the
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Good god...you people are paranoid to the point of needing medication.
an ad hominem is a good, logical way to refute a point
I'm arguing that it's not the end of the world if they do that you seem to think of it.
And I think you're minimizing the impact it could have on people. Right now, you can tell your spouse, parent, boss, whatever that you voted the way they wanted you to and there's nothing they can do to prove it. If you even offer receipts to take from the polling station, it becomes "You will vote the way I want and you will show me the receipt. Failure to do either will result in [X]."
Giving people proof they voted isn't going to bring the world to a conspiracy colapse that you're predicting.
Who said anything about a conspiracy? I know people who grew up
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2) [...] hash the information.
[...]
Should you wish to confirm your votes were accuratly recorded, go to www.x y z.com and enter this number.
I've been an advocate of this sort of solution for some time. However, it won't work if the voter can verify their vote w/o insuring that others are not permitted to view the "counted" vote (else, we are right back to enhancing vote buying and/or coercion).
Although with more thought I'm sure a better system could be found, one approach would be to encrypt the vote selection (and database record number to later match with the actual recorded vote) on the receipt. One pass of encryption would be done with a
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2) Make a detachable part or a separate receipt to prove you voted or hash the information. For the "abstention crowd"
I like #2 - how many people leave early to vote and go home for a beer instead? I know more than one or two. Accountability for your actions is something i'm a big fan of.
And once again, I never argued that we NEED receipts. I'm arguing that it's not going to destroy the voting process.
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Great, your employer has intimidated you into voting a certain way. Run to the cops? It may bankrupt him, costing you your job. At the least it would spell bad blood between the employee and employer, making it real hard to continue to work there, and there's no way additional legislation can overcome that.
In short, anyone who can intimidate you into voting a certain way has some sort of influence over your life, and pissing off such a person is just not a good idea. You must never w
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It's not a unreasonable or nefarious idea that, say, an employer would give a free vacation day to anyone going to vote. They just need to bring back proof that they did. It would be convenient for people in such a situation to have a receipt from the polling place to show.
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When the stakes are this high, you can't trust anyone.
A receipt that shows which candidate a person voted for is of absolutely no benefit to anybody except cheats. It doesn't help the voter one single bit. The only way it could ever be useful is if everyone who voted in the election gets together in the same place, with their recei
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False. If the total count of votes for someone/something is N, you only need N+1 votes to show an error. For N=0, that means a single receipt.
As for the potential for abuse, that would exist if, and only if the receipt would le
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I wrote some time ago how easy it would be to pull a fraud in a situation where a Big List of everyone's name, address and way they voted is published on the Internet. All you need is some advance knowledge of who knows who (which you can get from studying correspondence, CCTV records &c) and a big nasty DRM system. (Actually you do
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You'd better do. It's an extremly good idea.
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Re:Unfortunately (Score:4, Insightful)
Because anonymity plus accountability is really difficult.
In other systems you have nice trails that you can follow in the case of fraud.
In voting you need to ensure voter anonymity and it makes it that much harder to verify results. Add in political corruption and pressure from moneyed interests and it becomes a very hard problem indeed.
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If a machine pays out less than it's meant to, the punters will notice and just leave it alone (or better, post all over the Internet that it's crap). The amusement arcade / ca
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That's because all parties with a saying share the same point of view (Las Vegas tycoons have a vested interest for their slot machines not to be broken into; slot machine builders could try to cheat Las Vegas tycoons, but since they are not the ones that take the money out of them, they lack the chance and even with the chance, they could be a bit of worried about their reputation and having a sorry end
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How on earth did you manage to reply in the wrong thread?
[...] realised mistake [...], felt like idiot.
This is an example of an important reason why we should be wary of voting machines. When people make mistakes on machines they feel more embarrassed than otherwise. Trivial mistakes that would be shrugged off if they happened with paper and pencil, with machines people will often feel as if the mistake were important, especially with computers they'll feel as if people around them might sneer at them. Much more so than with similarly small mistakes made with simpler technology like paper and pencil.
In a vo
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And how would it be useful? When afterward you go to that website and check your vote, if it's shown with incorrect selections, how do you prove that it's wrong?
And even if you could somehow prove that it's wrong, how can you use this information? How do you get
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You could easily claim you'd lost the bit of paper
"We did warn you that your job was on the line, and still you lost the paper? Of course you're fired, what did you expect?"
More on the importance of secrecy in my comment here [slashdot.org].
If the system is lying, then paper votes are just as bad. How do you know someone didn't take your paper out of the box after you put it in there? How do you know [...]
At most polling places you should find several observers who are simply standing there and watching what happens. They are observers from several interested political parties. They keep observing the entire process until the votes have been counted and reported. It is in each one's interest to react to any fraud that is unfavorable
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Of course, the reason may be the (very true) feeling that there is much more potential for misuse of electronic voting machines. It st
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Having both electronic and manual count is very valuable as a double check. If there are errors, it's highly unlikely that both methods will give the same errors.
There's one detail where it seems I disagree with you. Where you say "they return the printout as a spoiled ballot" I get the impression that you mean that they give the spoiled ballot to some poll worker. But if that's what you mean, then that would break voting secrecy. Instead you just tear it apart and
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I th
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How is this different from redistricting or buying votes?
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Yet in the end it's the national number of votes that governs who gets into the parliament.
Just being the (most) popular candidate in your district is not enough to get into the national legislative counsel.
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Instead you get 400 parties, none of which represent the views of the majority of the people, with 300 of them in a coalition. Of course as so many parties are in power, they can all blame the other, and there is no accountability. You can't vote out an unpopular party, because they can just form a c
ALL voting is riggable on a wide scale (Score:2)
With a paper system, you're reduced to rigging the results one vote at a time.
In Canada in 1995, the province of Quebec held a referendum on whether to secede from confederation and pursue the goal of becoming a sovereign country. The overall vote was extremely close; the "No" side (those who wished NOT to secede and favoured remaining in Canada) won by just over 1% margin. Just as any close election should be the re
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What about *not* trusting them? What's the problem? You only need to trust your own observer but, of course, you won't trust the observers from the other parties, that's why you won't take out your eye from them.
By the way, that's exactly how the system goes in the rest of the world. In the USA it would be even easier since you only have two parties (for presidentials). Say party A and B present candidates on c
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As long as electronic voting systems make both easier, they're no good substitute for paper voting.
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Add in the questions of precision, practicality, and affordability and you'll start to get a better view of the big picture.
In short, electronic voting has the potential to wipe the deck with paper voting on almost every test, yours and mine.
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An electronic voting machine is not universally comprehensible. Even if the blueprints, schematics and software listings are published -- which would be the absolute minimum that anyone would expect in a democracy; the integrity of the democratic process is far more important than anyone's so-called "intellectual property" -- o
Re:I was just about to say... (Score:4, Insightful)
Would there be any purpose in having a commision if they where NOT allowed to give a negative advice?
the entire purpose of the commision was to give advise about the direction we should move in.
If a commision does not have the freedom to draw its own conclusion without incuring risk to itself it would in my eyes only serve to keep the populous ignorant and happy about something that was already decided beforehand.
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Nah, just kidding. This is where the "Slashdot formatting did it" defense comes into play, although the preview was alright. Odd.
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It may seem like an unnecessary expense to always count manually, but we should allow the legitimacy of democracy to cost some. It's worth it.
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Less important, but also valuable, is the quick results that you get from electronic counting. This speed is not important enough to decide which counting process to use, far from it, but it's still valuable in my view.
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I'll give it a try:
"Voting in a self-chosen polling station within ones municipality -in my opinion- facilitates the desire of those municipalities to be flexible towards the voter."
and
"For trust in democracy it is important that the elections comply to the guarantees/assurances as have been clearly put forward by the committee. As shows the title of the advice 'voting with confidence'."
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We've become so enamored and dependent on technology that we are COMPLETELY missing the point here. Get off your lazy ass, go to a polling place, wait in line, show some patriotism, and cast your fucking vote.
Quit making me barf. Voting is a civic duty, certainly. It's what keeps the gears of the democracy turning. But patriotic? Get over yourself. Voting is basically like changing the oil in your car. You have to do it from time to time to keep things running smoothly. But we don't throw a fucking part