A lot of skepticism and negativity here, with a focus on "open source means something to me, not the layman" as well as mentions of is that really helpful, is it auditable, etc. Valid concerns, but I guess my reaction is hopeful because hey there's at least one group of people who are trying to build something that is more transparent.Maybe it's not perfect, but (at least to me) seems like a step in a good direction. Also for what it's worth the company making the tech has a product for auditing as well. Idk guess I'm feeling more optimistic this morning.
DoingIsLearning|3 years ago
Is it? Provided you have a working democratic state with checks and auditing, what is the problem that voting machines solve?
The level of guarantees that you have with a paper vote is hard to surpass and the inconvenience of paper vote is not that big considering how often voting occurs (even in the extreme case of Swiss style referendums).
davoneus|3 years ago
It solves the problem of waiting days or weeks for a result. It solves the problem of multiple languages on a ballot. It solves the problem of visually-impaired voters accessing the voting machine, it solves the problem of incorrectly filled out voting sheets (hanging-chat).
Hell, that's just off the top of my head, and I'm sure others can contribute more.
falafelite|3 years ago
tokai|3 years ago
kube-system|3 years ago
falafelite|3 years ago
Loughla|3 years ago
But a system that uses electronics to tabulate votes that can be verified via paper ballots that are stored long-term, securely? Why not?
Edit: Maybe I didn't describe this well. The person makes the vote on paper. The paper is counted by a machine (like the article is saying). The paper is stored securely and catalogued for later reference and audit. What is the problem there?
lm28469|3 years ago
It just add bigger SPOF. Compromise a single voting machine and you control hundred thousands of votes. Compromise one vote counter and you control thousands at most
There are literally no problems to solve in modern functioning democracies when it comes to votes, it's just some technocrat mentality that requires everything to be automated so it's faster/more efficient, etc.
So yeah you can make these things faster at the expense of basically everything else, including trust
falafelite|3 years ago
carapace|3 years ago
The only reason to have electronic voting machines is to subvert the voting process.
simiones|3 years ago
I'm putting open source in quotes, since only software can be open source, a voting machine is a piece of hardware that you do not own, so you have no idea what it software it is running.
eru|3 years ago
But yes: this is definitely progress compared to closed source machines.
ianai|3 years ago