This week, GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump openly speculated that this election would be “rigged.” Last month, Russia decided to take an active role in our election. There’s no basis for questioning the results of a vote that’s still months away. But the interference and aspersions do merit a fresh look at the woeful state of our outdated, insecure electronic voting machines.
We’ve previously discussed the sad state of electronic voting machines in America, but it’s worth a closer look as we approach election day itself, and within the context of increased cyber-hostilities between the US and Russia. Besides, by now states have had plenty of warning since a damning report by the Brennan Center for Justice about our voting machine vulnerabilities came out last September. Surely matters must have improved since then.
Well, not exactly. In fact, not really at all.
Rise of the Machines
Most people remember the vote-counting debacle of the 2000 election, the dangling chads that resulted in the Supreme Court breaking a Bush-Gore deadlock. What people may not remember is the resulting Help America Vote Act (HAVA), passed in 2002, which among other objectives worked to phase out the use of the punchcard voting systems that had caused millions of ballots to be tossed.
In many cases, those dated machines were replaced with electronic voting systems. The intentions were pure. The consequences were a technological train wreck.
“People weren’t thinking about voting system security or all the additional challenges that come with electronic voting systems,” says the Brennan Center’s Lawrence Norden. “Moving to electronic voting systems solved a lot of problems, but created a lot of new ones.”
More here
4 comments:
I want a receipt. I don't care about the little 'I voted' sticker.
A piece of paper with my name, a registration number and a record of my votes will suffice.
A piece of paper with my name, a registration number and a record of my votes will suffice.
August 4, 2016 at 10:06 AM
I doubt you will ever get either
Receipts don't really matter.
Elections are now tabulated at the national level. They can make up any number they want.
They should really be tabulated and reported from the local precinct upwards. Verifiable the entire way to the state level, where delegates are distributed.
As Russian dictator Josef Stalin once said: "It's not important how the people voted, it's important how they were counted."
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