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Stevepol

(4,234 posts)
Sun Nov 1, 2015, 05:51 PM Nov 2015

Anybody found to have deliberately falsified an election should get a long prison term.

Here is my comment to Beth Clarkson's requirements at the following link:

http://showmethevotes.org/2015/11/01/minimum-requirements-for-a-new-voting-system/#comment-59

MY COMMENT:

The touch screens should be completely outlawed, even if they provide a so-called paper trail. There are too many ways to maliciously program these machines. Opti-scans (machines that merely COUNT the paper ballots marked by the voters) would be OK, even ideal, IF AND THIS IS A BIG “IF” there is an ample (not just 1% but closer to 10%) REQUIRED audit of the paper ballots in randomly chosen precincts following each election to make sure the purported vote matches the actual (paper) vote and IF IT DOESN’T, there must be a requirement that the whole vote be recounted using the actual paper ballots. If the paper count doesn’t match the machine count, heads should roll. I think long prison terms should be mandatory for anybody that can be shown in court to have falsified an election.

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HassleCat

(6,409 posts)
1. Election reform
Sun Nov 1, 2015, 06:01 PM
Nov 2015

We need a law that mandates all elections be conducted by paper ballot, optical scan counting, and random verification, exactly as you suggest. Electronic voting machines can't be trusted, since there is no backup, no way to confirm the accuracy of the electronic tally, and no way to know the machines were not programmed to change votes as they were being cast.

 

99th_Monkey

(19,326 posts)
4. Try locks and armed guards, who are bonded, etc.
Sun Nov 1, 2015, 06:19 PM
Nov 2015

funny how many nations and some states manage paper just fine,
and have notoriously clean elections.

In Oregon, we have paper vote-by-mail. very blue state.

Thinkingabout

(30,058 posts)
6. Yea, right, that does not work either, the toich screens are under lock and key also, some people
Sun Nov 1, 2015, 06:29 PM
Nov 2015

Think they are compromised also. I remember some years back a guy was going to prove the Louisiana machines could be tampered with, after weeks of trying he proved one thing, he did not have the ability to compromise them. It ended his claim and wasted several weeks of his life.

 

99th_Monkey

(19,326 posts)
7. Well then, vote by mail w/ paper. duh.
Sun Nov 1, 2015, 06:31 PM
Nov 2015

why do you insist that every election is fraudulent and it's impossible to have clean elections?

Thinkingabout

(30,058 posts)
9. I am not the one who wants all ballots recorded on paper and claim all voting methods are not
Sun Nov 1, 2015, 06:43 PM
Nov 2015

Tamper proof. Voting by mail can easily be tampered and stuffed. I have worked in elections, there are lots of checking and cross checking the voters at probably not aware, in the precinct where I worked was checked and cross checked by the ones working there.

Stevepol

(4,234 posts)
12. A thousand guards on the machines will make no difference.
Sun Nov 1, 2015, 08:44 PM
Nov 2015

The tampering with the vote takes place in the "programming" of the machines. This is "inside" the machine, accessible only to the manufacturer of the machines and the people who maintain or do the specific programming for each election.

As one expert has pointed out (and a Republican too), it takes a lot of time and trouble to alter 100,000 paper ballots. It takes three seconds for one person to change 100,000 votes. Plus, since the mistake would be inside the machine, a result of malicious programming either at the factory or at some point later on by some "insider," probably not some lone hacker (though that's possible), it would be impossible to discover the crime unless the guy who did it confessed, which isn't very likely.

The best method is the opti-scan machine which merely "counts" the vote and leaves the actual paper ballot so that it can be audited and recounted as needed. If you have the paper, you can always "audit" the results by counting the paper in a few randomly chosen precincts and if needed, recount the whole election by counting the actual paper vote.

BTW, do you have a link to an article about this Louisiana guy who tried vainly to prove that the machine could be compromised and failed to do so? It would be interesting to see who he is. There are perhaps a hundred articles about studies at many universities showing how easy it is to "compromise" the machines. I'm sure if you google "voting machine hacks university studies" or something like that you can get a huge number of articles. Bev Harris in the documentary HACKING AMERICA which showed on HBO in about 2006 takes part in an experiment in which a Finnish computer whiz uses a memory card to alter the results on an opti-scan experiment. It comes at the end of the documentary. But there are many many other ways to alter the results of an election with almost zero possibility of being detected.

GoneFishin

(5,217 posts)
8. Yeah, but it can't be done remotely from a wireless laptop in a parking or from a rented office
Sun Nov 1, 2015, 06:32 PM
Nov 2015

anonymously over the internet.

eridani

(51,907 posts)
3. You mean touch screens that directly records votes, don't you?
Sun Nov 1, 2015, 06:12 PM
Nov 2015

I have no problem with touch screens as long as they are strictly limited to being interfaces, which generate a checkable paper ballot.

GoneFishin

(5,217 posts)
5. One simple innocuous law would do it : 1 day in jail for each adulterated vote, mandatory sentence.
Sun Nov 1, 2015, 06:27 PM
Nov 2015

Innocent mistakes by volunteer poll workers would amount to nothing. But computer based manipulation of entire columns of voter could easily add up to decades. The masterminds behind these schemes would probably have enough clout to avoid prosecution. But if you were an IT guy, a technician, or a software engineer you probably would steer clear of any involvement in vote manipulation.

madamesilverspurs

(15,798 posts)
10. From someone who knows more about the subject than I do:
Sun Nov 1, 2015, 07:58 PM
Nov 2015
When it comes to balloting, until we can be certain beyond even the remotest shadow of doubt that a system is tamper-proof, we would be foolish to rely on computers. Paper ballots that can be counted by hand may be cumbersome and the counting may be time-consuming, but democracy requires reliable accuracy more than expediency.

That comes from someone who started in IT through an OJT program in high school and retired from upper level IT management after thirty years in the field.

RichVRichV

(885 posts)
13. The only way to make an all electronic system 'tamper-proof'
Sun Nov 1, 2015, 09:38 PM
Nov 2015

is to record identifying information of every vote. This could assure validity via self auditing. This is how congressional voting works.


If we want a secure anonymous vote then paper is the only thing that makes sense. It's substantially more difficult to manipulate on a any scale, and much harder to hide.

yourout

(7,524 posts)
14. I would like to see....Life - Long prison terms for it.
Fri Nov 6, 2015, 07:36 PM
Nov 2015

I want the punishment to be so severe no-one would dare risk it.

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