• SzethFriendOfNimi@lemmy.world
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      A classic. By the way electronic with paper trail gives you faster counts, a way to validate the results and recompute them by hand when there’s an issue.

      And doing voting over multiple days and/or by mail in ballots gives you time to count everything.

      The people pushing for same day and only that day with all votes counted that day just ignore the logistics and practicality of having people vote. Or, I suspect, rather like that it makes it impossible for highly populated areas to have their votes counted while lower populated areas votes are counted.

      I’ve seen pushes for mail in ballots to be held and not counted until Election Day and then only those ballots counted by the end of Election Day counted. Which is absurd. Do mail in, count them up to and after. Or count them up to and give people with mail in ballots access to them a lot earlier. So they can be accurately counted leading up to Election Day.

      Of course the logistics of having people able to monitor those ballots over a larger period of time is tricky too. Hence why they’re often not counted until day of and so, by extension, result in ballots not being fully counted for a few days.

      • friek@sh.itjust.works
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        One day only in person voting is purposeful suppression of votes.

        Also, am coder, 100% agree with xkcd. I’m still amazed the Internet itself works.

        • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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          It is theoretically possible to devise a mathematically secure electronic voting system using cryptography, but only if everyone can follow instructions perfectly and people can understand how it works and why their vote is secure. In other words, not in any way that would work in real life.

          The principal benefit of pen-and-paper voting is that it is really easy to convince people that taking a ballot paper into a booth, marking it, and then depositing the ballot into a locked glass box which is later counted in front of a room of independent observers is a secure way to run elections. It is impossible to convince the average voter that cryptographically secure voting schemes are actually immune from tampering.

          Edit: I never understood why we have “election days”. Why not have an “election week”?

        • dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world
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          I’m still amazed the Internet itself works.

          Same here. FWIW, it’s built on older, slower, less-reliable tech, which forced ridiculous amounts of resiliency into every layer of the design. It’s still amazing, but perhaps slightly less so if we look back 40 years. I’m convinced that some parts are running just fine over infrastructure no better than wet string.

      • Rose Thorne(She/Her)@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        Having multiple days of open voting would be a game changer for some people. It can be absurdly difficult to actually get the day off, depending on the employer, and I’ve had ones try to treat it as a “perk”, like it shouldn’t be the damned baseline that we’re able to actually take part in the democratic process they’re parading around like a shiny bauble.

        • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin@lemm.ee
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          Personally I think they should do something like opening the polls on October 1st and then have November 1st be closing day, and all through October we take a page from the aussies and just have a rolling cookout/party at each of the polling places.

          Ya get your “I voted sticker” any time in the month and can walk right in for beer and hot dogs and heck maybe even some of Kronk’s spinach puffs if that one guy can make Babish’s recipe work like he said he was gonna at the planning meeting for who’s bringing the goods, and best of all, it’s rolling for a month, so you’ve got every opportunity to stop in and cast your ballot, or just to come back with your “I voted” sticker to keep enjoying the festivities!

          This is our most sacred institution as a nation, we should be making a celebration out of it!

          • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            Yup, I’m in a state with mail voting, and it’s great! The ballot comes with the “I voted” sticker, you can drop off the ballot any time before election day (or mail it), and you can check if they’ve received and counted it online. It’s great! I’ve never been to a voting booth and I don’t intend to ever go.

        • uis@lemm.ee
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          I’ve had ones try to treat it as a “perk”

          Damn. “Perk” of being citizen.

      • barsquid@lemmy.world
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        The people pushing for same day and only that day with all votes counted that day just ignore the logistics and practicality of having people vote.

        Oh, I can assure you that-

        Or, I suspect, rather like that it makes it impossible for highly populated areas to have their votes counted while lower populated areas votes are counted.

        I never should have doubted you.

      • uis@lemm.ee
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        Of course the logistics of having people able to monitor those ballots over a larger period of time is tricky too.

        When city falls asleep, mafia awakens

    • ikidd@lemmy.world
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      Yah, on this particular thing, he’s not wrong.

      Everythinge else, though, he’s fucking batshit.

    • TVgog56789@lemy.lolOP
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      Blockchain technology based (BBVS) could be safer but regular EVMs are still hackable

      Trustless systems are always better than centralised systems especially when the government in power is also in authority to decide whether they continue to stay in power.

      US has been blessed till now.

      But look at Russian or North Korean elections. They also use paper ballots

      I am confident that Putin is not gonna last if they go for a blockchain based voting system.

      • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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        The problem is not being secure; it is convincing people that it is secure. Even the stupidest person understands that marking off a paper in a booth and then depositing it in a locked box is secure. The voting method must give voters confidence that their vote was counted, the election was fair, and the results are legitimate.

        • Tar_Alcaran@sh.itjust.works
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          Also, you can recount papers if you think something somewhere went wrong for some reason. You can’t manually recheck software.

        • TVgog56789@lemy.lolOP
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          That gives so much more opportunity for human intervention.

          A good locksmith is all it takes to manipulate the votes.

          Even if you keep it under tight security and surveillance they can bribe the security.

          • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            In my state, here’s how it works:

            1. Receive ballot by mail
            2. Drop ballot off at a drop box
            3. Wait a few days
            4. Check online that it was received and the signature is accepted
            5. Check on election day that the vote was counted

            To break that system, you’d need to also hack the website or manipulate the votes on election day. That’s a lot harder than manipulating proprietary software by bribing a software engineer somewhere.

            • zazo@lemmy.world
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              In my country here’s how it works:

              1. Parties provides free food and transport to unemployed masses they know will vote for them
              2. Wait 3-4 hours in queue at polling station to receive ballot in person
              3. Drop ballot in secure box
              4. Go back to work for a few days
              5. See on election day that the party that spent the most on voter courting wins

              How would you propose we deal with this when people who are working (and can’t take a day off to go vote) would come out in much smaller numbers than ones that have nothing else to do (and get free lunch and transit to and from the polling stations) and even when voting happens on a weekend you have to trade your only time off to go and vote out of the goodness of your heart.

              I think this is one of the reasons for digital voting - I’d much rather be able to vote from work or home or anywhere when I don’t have the time to sit on a queue for 5 hours just to have my vote diminished by a group that isn’t politically active but loves a free lunch and something to do

              • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                EVMs aren’t a vote from home option, they just replace steps 1&2 with a machine instead of a ballot drop box. So maybe your wait goes down to 2-3 hours because it’s a little faster.

                I’m saying we replace the physical voting locations entirely and you can drop your ballot in your mailbox, or drop it at one of the secure voting boxes throughout the city. So it doesn’t matter if you work two jobs and can’t get a couple hours off, if you can check your mail and fill out a form, you can vote. And the ballot comes a few weeks before election day, so you have time.

                I think we should also have a federal “election day” holiday so people can research candidates and vote.

              • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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                I believe that’s why people are pushing for a week of early voting, and the ability to vote by mail with postage paid.
                Also, if you increase the number of polling stations and keep them available longer, the wait goes down.
                We can also pass laws to make it so employers must give workers time to vote at the workers discretion.

                Most of what you describe is the result of an effort to make voting harder to keep turnout low. The way to fix it is to make it easier, not to make it less secure.

              • TVgog56789@lemy.lolOP
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                I am not in favour of EVMs here.

                However there are pros and cons for both systems

                I am just saying if you go for an electronic voting system using an airtight blockchain like Bitcoin and ethereum to verify votes using a biometric database is the only system trustworthy enough because.

                If you use multiple blockchains like these it would require 10 trillion dollars or more to get the computing and staking power to hack the system.

                It’s inconceivably costlier than hacking a physical election.

                Russia also has paper ballots and I can assure you we can easily kick out Putin with a blockchain based voting system.

          • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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            In many countries there is a security camera placed over the ballot box which is livestreamed to the Internet

  • Potatos_are_not_friends@lemmy.world
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    Reminder that this fucking moron is pushing Twitter as a financial tool. He wants you to use X like you would use your credit card.

    But voting machines are insecure?

    • Snowclone@lemmy.world
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      But is scantron voting electronic voting? Is mail in voting and early voting electronic voting? Is being ID’d on the voter registry because you know your SSN and address, name, signature, without having to use yet another ID electronic voting?

      • Melllvar@startrek.website
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        I would say that “electronic voting” means that the ballot itself is digital rather than physical. So, scantrons are not electronic voting and voter registries/ID/etc. are not ballots in the first place.

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        I think the supposed risk to electronic voting machines is that there would need to be thousands of them, are distributed, somewhat unattended, and operated by people that don’t know them.
        The possibility of an exploit or misconfiguration increases, and the ability to compromise someone supervising one of the polling station increases.
        If there is are centralised systems, fewer higher skilled people would be required to secure/monitor/run the system. It can also be airgapped.

        While some of these risks are also applicable to in-person and mail-in voting, these systems have been around for ages, are not proprietary, and anyone can figure out “how it works” and can make sure “how it happened” matches.
        As soon as you get into cryptographic vulnerabilities and security, 99.99% of people would be lost in the woods

        The rest of the questions, I feel, are more systematic things.

    • OfficerBribe@lemm.ee
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      Seems to work alright for Estonia, they have had an option to vote electronically since 2005. If I can sign legal documents, pay bills and do other government related stuff electronically, why suddenly voting is a huge problem?

      • Evotech@lemmy.world
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        Because what you vote is supposed to be anonymous…

        If you ignore the anonymous part, then it’s obviously not an issue.

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    It’s pretty rich that one of his stans is harping about how the Left “steals elections”, yet his guy literally tried that in the last election cycle. Then there’s also Bush v Gore. But yeah, it’s those crafty lefties doing the stealing!

  • blackstampede@sh.itjust.works
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    I agree. While we’re at it, we can also make election day a holiday and require employers to give workers at least a paid half-day off so that they can vote, and create a citizenship ID that is free and easy to get rather than using ID with requirements like a driver’s license. Then maybe we can try out ranked choice voting and eliminate the electoral college. You know, since we want the election to be fair.

    • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      and create a citizenship ID that is free and easy to get rather than using ID with requirements like a driver’s license.

      Just a heads up, these already are a thing, you still have to go to the DMV to get it since they’re the people who issue it, but they have IDs that are just “IDs” and then they have IDs that are also “drivers licenses.” The one that is just an ID like you’re talking about they just have to bring their birth cert, social security card, and proof of address like a bill or paystub or anything like that, then they fill out the info, take their pic, and voila, “Identification Card” without the driving priveleges.

      People do it all the time, because without one you can’t buy smokes, vapes, booze, go to 18+ concerts, have a job in some cases, hell watch porn in some states lol, etc, anything age restricted really.

      • authorinthedark@lemmy.sdf.org
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        i remember reading that even those are highly inaccessible to minorities, in areas with large minority populations the offices are farther away/have weird hours/other obstacles that make them harder to acquire

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          I mean, they all keep the same hours in my state and it seems like more of them are actually in the bad areas (where I happen to live myself, lol) rather than making the “rich neighborhoods look bad” with all the DMV offices. I can’t speak for the entire country, but you’d think my area would be one of the worst with it if it were actually about stopping “the blacks” from acquiring them (US, South.) Also every single minority I know (which is actually a fair number, my area is diverse af,) has an ID and/or driver’s license, so they definitely can get them.

          Hell I know one dude, trans, half black, dad left as a kid because he was a crackhead, grew up poor with me, current heroin addict (hope he gets better before he dies like many of our other friends,) and he still has an ID. I think it may deadname him still, but he has one. I’ve actually never even met a single person over the age of 18 without one afaik, hell I know 4 homeless dudes and they have them. One lives in a tent and the other three just have sleeping bags under a bridge and they figured it out. I mean the address is a local shelter that lets them use the address specifically for this, but they do have one.

          Tbh I think the whole “the blacks can’t get IDs” thing is not only overstated, but also kinda racist, like how saying “we have to take care of women because they can’t take care of themselves” is technically “nice” or whatever because they have good intentions but it’s actually misogynistic af.

          • peteypete420@sh.itjust.works
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            My state is similar to yours, dmv hours are same state wide and location wise they are not totally out of the way.

            Same documents, birth cert, social card, 2 proofs of address.

            Those requirements, while easy enough and even doable for the homeless, are harder for some than others, specifically the poor.

            Those people who used shelter addresses didn’t have to pay (thats national, first time and renewals are free to homeless.) Someone who is poor but not homeless has to pay. Also poor people often leave their parents home without their social and birth cert. Or have no where to safely store them and lose or have them stolen. Also, social security cards are not assigned to you at birth. If mom or dad never filed for one for you, congrats you get to do it as a adult. This can create a whole catch 22 style loop of them getting fucked.

            Anyways, I’m not explaining myself well, but yes requiring state ID (non drivers license) to vote is prohibitive to a lot of otherwise entitled voters.

            • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              I am “the poor.” Less so now, but still not “not,” lol.

              As far as the documents go, yeah, you need some, and can likely get them if they’ve been lost. The alternative is me claiming to be Elon Musk, getting an ID in his name, whole ass stealing his identity to fund my life (which while that sounds funny to me is a crime lol.) Really without some proof of identity there’s no point to even have IDs at all.

              State IDs are also required for another right, the right to bear arms. You can’t buy a gun in the US without an ID, and buying a gun being a right much like the right to vote, if it’s prohibitively hard to get an ID for one right so too must it be for all rights. Frankly you can kill more people with a vote, too.

        • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          5 months ago

          Mine was $10. I agree they should be free but let’s be real here $10-$26 isn’t prohibitively expensive, my homeless friends would beg more than that in a few hours, even if you have to save a dollar a check that’s still doable for something that by all accounts you do need, and for more than just “voting.”

          • irreticent@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            So you’re saying that you believe some people should have to resort to begging for money in order to vote? I mean, I know you said you think they should be free but the rest of the paragraph makes it seem like you feel people having to pay to vote is okay.

            • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              5 months ago

              More like “we should be helping people get IDs” but cute you ignored the “i think they should be free” for good boy internet points.

              Seriously you think “black people can’t get IDs” and instead of “we should help them get them” your first thought is to feel sorry for them and do nothing other than say “well we shouldn’t have them for voting?” What’s wrong with you? Again, they need IDs for more than just voting.

              Frankly, if we did provide everyone with an ID like we should, what then would be your argument against it? Would it still be racist?

              • irreticent@lemmy.world
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                Me: “I know you said you think they should be free…”

                You: “…you ignored the “i think they should be free”…”

                Wait, what? You’ve already started out with false statements, but let’s continue:

                You: “Seriously you think “black people can’t get IDs”…”

                When did I ever say that? What I was referring to was poor people that might have to decide between eating or paying for an ID. I never said that the poor people were black. That racist stuff was conjured up in your head. I’m actually offended by your assumption.

                You …"instead of “we should help them get them” your first thought is to feel sorry for them and do nothing other than say “well we shouldn’t have them for voting?”

                Again you’re misunderstanding (or intentionally trolling) what I was actually saying. I was saying that your opinion that it’s okay to charge people money to be able to vote was the antithesis of democracy. Everyone should be able to vote regardless of their socioeconomic status.

                You: Frankly, if we did provide everyone with an ID like we should, what then would be your argument against it?

                Again, I think your reading comprehension is amiss because we’ve been in agreement that ID should be free to all.

                You: Would it still be racist?

                I would like to once again remind everyone that I never mentioned race once. I was referring to poor people that can’t afford an ID. Someone else made it racial.

                • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  Ignored, dismissed, use whatever word you like idgaf.

                  If you didn’t say it reread the thread, that’s what we’re talking about over here. Dudes are posting whole ass ACLU links that actually are pretty convincing, catch up junior.

                  Again you ignore or dismiss the “free” part. Are you intentionally doing that or is your memory about the quality of a goldfish’s?

                  OH so NOW we all agree it should be free but I want to charge money? Get your fucking story straight you pompous ass.

                  Again catch up. But fine “if we did provide IDs like we should, would it still be classist?”

                  Fucking christ lmao. You ok?

      • uis@lemm.ee
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        USSA is not car-centric country, it is car-ruled country.

        • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          Ok c/fuckcars, calm down. Just because you have to get the non-drivers-license-ID at a DMV because they combine the two when it is a drivers license is no reason to pop a blood vessel.

          Frankly it makes more sense to me to also offer them at high schools, but it couldn’t only be that because homeschoolers/dropouts etc, so they’d still need to be somewhere else too.

      • darkpanda@lemmy.ca
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        We literally have none of those things.

        Edit: except perhaps the citizenship certificate but I’ve never seen one before, but yeah they exist. We don’t have ranked voting, and elections aren’t holidays, although your employer must give you paid time off to vote, like 3 hours, and there are exceptions of course, like truckers for some reason don’t get the time off.

  • MrMeanJavaBean@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Unfortunately Republicans are not good faith actors in this space. There are many issues to discuss about voting, but I’ll just stick to one very important one, access. Republicans limit access to voting. They are not for mail in voting and continue to close down polling places forcing thousands of citizens to stand in line for hours. If they really cared, they would make it easier for the citizens to vote. But we know that’s not their goal. They win when fewer people vote. So, whatever means to achieve that, that’s what they’ll do.

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    Isn’t this the doofus who wanted to send a submarine into a cave? Dude doesn’t have the intellectual heft necessary to manage a QuikTrip in Topeka.

    But, take this drivel seriously. They like it when rural, red areas report their vote totals first, so that the news outlets will report that Republicans are “leading” early in the evening, before the blue cities finish their counting and overtake the early totals. It’s a cheap trick to sell the claim that the election was stolen to their followers, y’know, the people who think that chocolate milk comes from brown cows.

  • BaldDude@sh.itjust.works
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    Well, he’s got that one right.

    Elections should be as low tech as possible. Everything going on should be verifiable with your eyes and basic tools only.

    Keep it simple and keep it monitored by at least 3 to 5 people at all times.

    who cares if the counting takes a few days, as long as i can trust the results.

    And dear fellows in the USA, for the love of god, move the voting day to a Sunday already.

    • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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      Counterpoint: There’s a big difference between electronic voting machines and electronic counting machines.

      The way we do elections in Canada, your vote is made on paper. The paper ballots are fed though electronic counting machines to get the initial tally, but the paper record is then kept and tallied up separately to check for discrepancies. This is both fast and secure.

      Electronic voting machines, on the other hand, are an exercise in absolute insanity that security experts universally agree no one should be using.

      Of course, Musk is railing against them because he’s drunk the far right Kool-Aid about stolen elections, but actual smart, educated people have been saying the same thing for a lot longer.

      • BaldDude@sh.itjust.works
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        5 months ago

        Good point, thanks!

        As long as the hand count is recognized as the actual result i would be fine with that.Knowing humans and our tendency to be lazy, i fear we would first reduce the redundant checks and then skip them completely. In the name of efficiency of course.

        Also after witnessing the history of absolute fuckups my government (germany) produced in the field of software and IT, i don’t want them to use machines. They lost any trust i had in them with any kind of technology. Let them count and add up by hand, i’ll gladly pay extra taxes for that.

        Maybe i’m just a bit to paranoid :/

        • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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          As long as the hand count is recognized as the actual result i would be fine with that

          That’s how it works, yeah. Since there’s unlikely to be any issue with the machine count, that works fine for getting results on the day, but ultimately you have the paper record that can be checked by hand, or run through different counting machines, in order to verify if there’s any concerns.

      • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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        In a smaller local election a few cycles back, I got to trial a paper backed electronic voting machine they were testing out for people who have dexterity or vision problems.

        You basically got the same paper ballot as everyone else, but then you slipped it into the machine and it colored the bubbles for you after you selected the option on the screen.
        Then you took your piece of paper out and handled it like a ballot filled in by hand.

        Wasn’t networked and didn’t see anything that could tie you to a vote.
        I got to share my appreciation for the concept, but concern about difficulty verifying it filled things out correctly, and the potential for touch screens to be difficult to use or act funny, all the difficulties of ux work to handle fixing an error, and the need for the UI to be exceptionally clear, which was difficult on the smaller screen with the larger font.
        I think it also has screen reader support, but I didn’t use it, so I’m not sure.

      • BaldDude@sh.itjust.works
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        5 months ago

        Very Interesting, thanks!

        Still I’m not sure if I would trust that system more than a handcount with at least six eyes present at all times.

      • anton@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        5 months ago

        If you get an RSA receipt, it can be brute forced (in some years), if you don’t you can’t be sure it was counted.

        If you get coerced into voting a certain way on paper and taking a photograph*, the coercing person needs to be in the toom to make sure you don’t mark, take a photo, spoil and vote differently. With a receipt you can coerce the receipt, wait some time and buy some computing power to decrypt the vote later.

        * secretly as it’s illegal/vote spoiling for obvious reasons

    • uis@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      who cares if the counting takes a few days, as long as i can trust the results.

      I’ve never heard of in-person stations counting for longer than 6 hours.

      move the voting day to a Sunday already.

      It isn’t already? Then USA gets “worse than Russia” award again.

    • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      As others have said, the scalability ideal is to have electric/mechanical counters but with paper ballots. Keeps the paper trail for double checking, but also allows poll workers to deliver quick initial results to everyone breathing down their necks.

      • usualsuspect191@lemmy.ca
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        5 months ago

        Pretty sure that’s how we do it up on Canada. I think random samples are hand-counted to make sure the machine count is accurate. There’s early voting too so not all just in one day.

        • ikidd@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          I’ve never used a machine in 40 years of voting in Canada. And if they show up, I won’t use them.

          • NotMyOldRedditName@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            We fill out a paper, but a machine might scan them based on what OP is saying.

            Then they will spot check it and have the paper backup if needed.

            • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              5 months ago

              That’s how we do it in my part of the US. And the whole thing is live streamed and audited. My mail ballot is also scanned twice, and I can check if it was received (and signature checks out) and counted. If there’s an issue, I can correct my ballot before election day.

      • theonyltruemupf@feddit.de
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        5 months ago

        Well here in Germany we have about 40-50 million votes to count in a federal election. Right when the booths close we get an exit poll that is already pretty close. After 1-2 hours there are extrapolations that are even closer and next morning, there is usually the certified result. All on paper, counted by hand.

  • pyre@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    not even joking, i find that if there’s one Twitter account to act as a definitive guide to policy, science, technology and various issues, it’s Elon’s account.

    just carefully read every tweet and do the exact opposite. there’s no way you can go wrong with it.

  • Linnce@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Brazil has used electronic voting since 1997 and has had no major issues since (there was a bad history of fraud in the paper ballot era). It runs on Linux and they hold a public safety test in the year before where they test the system’s security.

    • OsrsNeedsF2P
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      If the machines are running open source software and are easily auditable that’s fine. The problem is in the US, they’re not.

  • stoy@lemmy.zip
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    5 months ago

    Wow, this is one of the very few oppinions me and Musk share.

    @OP why add an acronym when it is just a twitter post that doesn’t even mention said acronym?

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      Yup, mail voting every time, with dropoff locations everywhere. There’s a paper trail, so recounts can be done if we suspect issues.

      I’m not worrried about voting machine fraud, I just don’t see the point.

      • barsquid@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        I’m worried about voting machine fraud when there is no paper trail, since that is how Kemp stole an election and got away with it.

            • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              I don’t know, that’s certainly pretty sus. Here’s an article I found about it for a House seat, which Kemp oversaw but was not running in.

              The server in question, which served as a statewide staging location for key election-related data, made national headlines in June after a security expert disclosed a gaping security hole that wasn’t fixed six months after he reported it to election authorities.

              The plaintiffs were counting on an independent security review of the Kennesaw server, which held electronic poll book data and ballot definitions for counties, to demonstrate the system’s unreliability.

              It looks like the lawsuit is finally being heard in court as of earlier this year.

              I haven’t read a ton about it, but it sounds like there are legitimate concerns (at least about the original system), but the issues are theoretical. I read it as a smear lawsuit intended to cast doubt on the election process, similar to what Trump did when he challenged the election.

              I’m interested in seeing the outcome of the lawsuit, but I’m guessing there will be no evidence of vote tampering, just like with a Trump’s suits. I hope evidence is still accessible but we won’t know until the lawsuit concludes.

          • barsquid@lemmy.world
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            I was thinking of the wrong election. When the state gets sued over votes and those votes just so happen to be erased, that is suspicious af. But that wasn’t 2018. Kemp wasn’t running in the election where GA wiped the hard disks, but he was in charge at the time.

            The 2018 election where he was able to remove voters from the registry and close poll sites is just standard conflict-of-interest, I suppose.

            • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              Or in a non-conspiratorial vein, it’s literally his job to remove obsolete voters from the registry and ensure there are enough (and not too many) polls to keep costs in line.

              I don’t know anything about that guy to know if he’s acting in good faith or not. I don’t live in Georgia, and I’ve only been there for a couple days ever in my life. Maybe he’s a corrupt pile of crap, or maybe he was just doing his job. The news on this is crazy slanted, but it seems like he was at least acting within the law.

        • ThirdWorldOrder@lemm.ee
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          5 months ago

          You’re saying you don’t trust our voting machines… even though you’re not American? Elon Musk is referring to American voting machines.

          • stoy@lemmy.zip
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            5 months ago

            Electronic voting is by definition not trustworthy enough.

            A working election system needs to accomplish a few very contradictory things, while the voter needs to be annonymous, the system still needs to verify that one citizen only get’s one vote, the system also need to count each vote.

            In the Swedish system, on election day you go to your polling station, you get three envelopes, you go behind a screen and pick the ballots for the party you want to vote for, if you want to be extra anonymous you grab one from each party, you do that for all three elections (state, region and municipality), they are colour coded and the envelopes have a small cutout to make the color visible.

            You then go behind another screen and put your ballots in the envelopes and seal them, you then take your envelopes, walk over to the election officials, hand them your ID, votes and election card.

            One election official reads your name and ID number, the other finds you in the list, the first election official confrims that the second is ready, and they then say “voted white, voted blue, voted yellow” as each envelope with the coresponsig ballot is placed in the proper urn.

            After the polling station closes, they deal with the pre votes and mail votes, they check all election cards against the list, and if someone has voted in person, the pre vote or mail vote is tossed, if not they are processed just as normal.

            Then all votes are counted to get a total, if there are more votes than there should be, if just a few then I have heard it being resolved by tossing random votes.

            Then the envelopes are opened, and ballots sorted and counted, anyone may come in and watch the process at any point.

            This can’t be done on a computer in a way that anyone should trust

            • ThirdWorldOrder@lemm.ee
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              It’s not accurate to say that electronic voting is inherently untrustworthy. That’s a subjective opinion rather than a fact.

              There are countries that have successfully used electronic voting for a long time without significant issues. Since you’re European to begin with, take Estonia for example - their system is world class. Look it up.

              Voter anonymity isn’t an issue exclusive to digital voting either. Standard voting systems also have to ensure that votes are cast anonymously while verifying the voter’s identity. With electronic voting, cryptography can be used to protect voter identity and maintain anonymity and it’s very effective.

              You can also use advanced security measures like multi-factor authentication, biometric verification, and other technologies. There’s a metric shitload of ways to enhance security in electronic voting.

              Electronic voting can be designed to be more secure and transparent than in-person. Blockchain can create tamper-proof records and paper audit trails for verification. Anything that can’t be verified can be excluded and investigated.

              It’s ridiculous to dismiss electronic voting outright because the things you are worried about can already happen in traditional voting.

              • stoy@lemmy.zip
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                The problem with electronic is that by it’s nature it can’t do secrecy while preserving integrity.

                That is just not possible, and if you can have your vote linked back to you in anyway after having cast it, then the system is bad.

                And this is not getting into the whole black box problem, there is no way to verify that the system is actually running the code it should.

                You are trusting a black box built by other people with their own political agendas, or who possibly has been influenced by other interests.

                I am well aware of Estonia’s voting system, I would never trust it if I had use it.

                There is just too much money and power combined with voter secrecy involved in the election process that it can’t be trusted to software.

                • ThirdWorldOrder@lemm.ee
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                  5 months ago

                  And on the other hand… if I vote can’t be linked back to anyone, then you have a whole other problem. So maybe voting in general is able to be manipulated no matter what.

                  Black box voting are designed to to be transparent and they are open source so the public can scrutinize.

                  Why don’t you trust Estonias voting system? You didn’t give a reason. Look up VVPAT.

            • ThirdWorldOrder@lemm.ee
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              What do you suggest then, since in-person voting has actually been linked to fraud and manipulation. Voting machines are perfectly acceptable.

              Let’s just do a quick AI generated list of examples:

              Ballot Box Stuffing

              1. 1948 Texas Senate Race: In the Democratic primary for the U.S. Senate, Lyndon B. Johnson narrowly defeated Coke Stevenson. Allegations of ballot box stuffing were rampant, particularly involving Box 13 in Jim Wells County, where 202 votes, all in alphabetical order and all for Johnson, were suspiciously added late.

              2. Chicago, Illinois (1960 Presidential Election): Allegations persist that Chicago’s Cook County, under Mayor Richard J. Daley, engaged in ballot box stuffing to help John F. Kennedy win Illinois and thus the presidency. Investigations revealed irregularities and improbable vote counts in several precincts.

              3. East Chicago, Indiana (2003 Mayoral Election): Incumbent Mayor Robert Pastrick was accused of ballot box stuffing. Investigations revealed that absentee ballots were manipulated, leading to multiple convictions of election officials for their roles in the fraud.

              Ballot Destruction

              1. Kentucky (1944 U.S. Senate Election): In the Democratic primary, incumbent Senator Happy Chandler faced charges of ballot destruction. Boxes of ballots from counties favorable to his opponent were allegedly thrown out or destroyed, leading to investigations and widespread controversy.

              2. Georgia (1946 Governor’s Election): During the “Three Governors Controversy,” ballots in Telfair County were reportedly burned or otherwise destroyed to influence the election outcome. Supporters of Eugene Talmadge were implicated in the destruction of ballots that favored his opponents.

              3. 2004 Ohio Presidential Election: In Cuyahoga County, reports surfaced that provisional ballots were improperly discarded or lost. Election observers noted that some ballots from predominantly Democratic precincts were missing or destroyed, raising questions about the integrity of the vote count.

              These examples underscore the persistent vulnerabilities in the electoral process and the importance of robust oversight and security measures to safeguard the integrity of elections.