News5 mins ago
Can E Voting Be Trusted?
24 Answers
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/uk -politi cs-3023 4304
I don't think so. I don't want democracy to become a hacking competition. If they do introduce it what safe guards can be put in place?
I don't think so. I don't want democracy to become a hacking competition. If they do introduce it what safe guards can be put in place?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by ToraToraTora. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I would say that e-voting has the potential to be many times safer than postal voting, so in that sense it could be an improvement on the current system. Internet security is less vulnerable, if done properly, than is sometimes made out. And we do need some form of remote/ by-proxy voting as there are people who want to vote but are unable for whatever reason to make it to the polling stations physically. Seems harsh to exclude them from the democratic process.
I think there are multiple issues with e-voting, and it was interesting to hear Jimmy Wales voice those fears on the radio the other day.
There is indeed a lot to be said for people voting in public places, where it can be guaranteed that they come under less influence at the point of voting.
I'm not sure what safeguards you could employ to address the issue for example, of people being forced to cast an e vote under duress, for example.
There is indeed a lot to be said for people voting in public places, where it can be guaranteed that they come under less influence at the point of voting.
I'm not sure what safeguards you could employ to address the issue for example, of people being forced to cast an e vote under duress, for example.
Interesting video of how internet voting works in Estonia
http:// vvk.ee/ voting- methods -in-est onia/en gindex/
http://
Maybe we trust ourselves enough as a country to follow the lead of countries like Estonia, but I firmly believe that there are implications for this that have not been thought through properly.
Imagine for example if e-voting became a worldwide phenomenon: it would give carte blanche to any unscrupulous government to hold snap elections and referenda: for example, look at the travesty of elections in Crimea and Donbass recently: these were plainly fraudulent, as the authorities could not hide the spectacle of empty polling stations, and people who did turn up getting their children and even their dogs to vote.
How much more convenient instead to make the whole thing up anyway but claim most had voted at home.
The scenario painted by Old Geezer does not bear thinking about (!)
Imagine for example if e-voting became a worldwide phenomenon: it would give carte blanche to any unscrupulous government to hold snap elections and referenda: for example, look at the travesty of elections in Crimea and Donbass recently: these were plainly fraudulent, as the authorities could not hide the spectacle of empty polling stations, and people who did turn up getting their children and even their dogs to vote.
How much more convenient instead to make the whole thing up anyway but claim most had voted at home.
The scenario painted by Old Geezer does not bear thinking about (!)
Ichkeria,
The situation in Ukraine is quite exceptional, and not really appropriate to a discussion about the merits (or not) of electronic voting. Unscruplous regimes will fix votes no matter what system of voting is used. If anything, the safeguards such as those in Estonia would make vote fixing harder, not easier.
The situation in Ukraine is quite exceptional, and not really appropriate to a discussion about the merits (or not) of electronic voting. Unscruplous regimes will fix votes no matter what system of voting is used. If anything, the safeguards such as those in Estonia would make vote fixing harder, not easier.
Voting via a ballot box is just as open to rigging. The USSR had this off to a tee. Voters were presented with a ballot paper containing only one name. If they approved they merely placed the paper in the ballot box unmarked. There was an alternative of striking out the name, but to do that you needed to ask for a pencil and go into a booth. It was a brave man or woman who did that.