David Dill (Stanford University) I Think I Voted: E-voting vs. Democracy
Touch-screen voting machines store records of cast votes in internal
memory, where the voter cannot check them. Because of our system of
secret ballots, once the voter leaves the polls there is no way anyone
can determine whether the vote captured was what the voter intended.
Why should voters trust these machines?
In January 2003, I drafted a "Resolution on Electronic Voting" stating
that every voting system should have a "voter verifiable audit trail,"
which is a permanent record of the vote that can be checked for
accuracy by the voter, and which is saved for a recount if it is
required. I posted the page with endorsements from many prominent
computer scientists. At that point, I became embroiled in a
nationwide battle for voting transparency that has continued now
for three years.
In this talk, I'll explain the basic problems and solutions
in electronic voting.
  |