1 / 23

E-voting

E-voting. Bringing the voting process to the technology age. Overview. Using technology to aid in the voting process Can be using electronic machines in polling places, or Internet based There are several positives and negatives. First things first. Basketball. Time for a skit.

blancha
Download Presentation

E-voting

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. E-voting Bringing the voting process to the technology age

  2. Overview • Using technology to aid in the voting process • Can be using electronic machines in polling places, or Internet based • There are several positives and negatives

  3. First things first.. Basketball

  4. Time for a skit.

  5. Some positives • Philosophically speaking, e-voting is an amazing opportunity to help achieve a true democracy • In the past, democracy was almost every person voting for almost every issue • Distance made this impossible • E-voting can help to achieve a similar turnout

  6. Quicker Times • No more long lines to vote • If voting can be done on a computer, it can be done quicker and easier, and within the comfort of your own home

  7. More accessible • Because it can be done from any computer, voting easier • People with disabilities can vote much easier • Overseas citizens and servicemen will have an easier time as well

  8. More constraints on interface • Some people cannot follow simple instructions • Computer can be made to accept only one type of input (whether radio button, etc.) • No more underlining instead of circling, or hanging chads

  9. Less human error • In terms of not following directions • Also, in terms of counting the votes • Computerization is faster, more efficient, and, if implemented correctly, less prone to normal errors Are there any problems to evoting?

  10. Problems with evoting • Computers can lose data • People can make computers lose or change data, result: voter fraud • Depending on the system, no “paper trail” • Possible loss of voter privacy • Digital divide– discriminates against those who do not have Internet access

  11. Hack an election? • Man of the Year

  12. How can you hack an election? • If they are on-site digital voting machines, pretty easily • One Minute Hack • One way around this is to put no tampering tape on machines • All someone has to do then is cut the tape, and all those votes are discounted

  13. Hacking Internet voting • Lots of ways • Once the information is sent, it is probably safe (using Internet encryption) • Problem: You can change information BEFORE it is sent.

  14. Virus • Hacker puts malicious code onto person’s pc • Intercepts information before it is sent out • If hacker is smart, can change the vote to whomever he wants, or make it not vote • Vote confirmation would solve this problem • Privacy vs. Security (we’ll talk later)

  15. Rogue agent • Hacking gets better as the publicity gets better (for the most part) • Election would be HUGE publicity • “sitting duck” • One rogue programmer may be able to implant a virus – they could work for any of many companies • Winzip, adobe acrobat, etc. • Slightly unlikely, but possible

  16. DDOS attack • DDOS: Distributed Denial of Service • Election servers attacked, forced to go down • Large number of people wouldn’t vote in the election • Happened in Canada, had to extend • Remember registering for classes?

  17. Phishing • People are stupid • Someone could send out an email “reminding” people to vote or register, and giving them a link to a fake site • After getting all of their voting information, the hacker would have multiple votes at his/her disposal

  18. Selling of votes • A smaller problem, but one that is similar to basketball tickets • Someone doesn’t care enough about election, so gives their vote to someone else • End up with one person having multiple votes • Too easy to vote

  19. Digital divide • By making voting online, you are making it easier for only one segment of society to vote • Since you are not making it easier for others to vote, their vote would effectively be diminished

  20. So what would it take to make e-voting plausible? • Confirmation that the person voting is who they say they are • Confirmation of each person’s vote • The system needs to know the person is correct, and the person needs to know the vote is correct

  21. Problem: Privacy vs. Security • In order to confirm a vote, the voting system must store, somehow, who voted for whom. • This goes against our System – you don’t need to say who voted for who. • By keeping this information, it brings up the question: What’s more important, privacy or security of votes? Thoughts?

  22. Summary • E voting is a good idea • It allows more people to vote, bringing us closer to democracy • If it was safe, it would be a great supplement to normal voting • There are still many issues that need to be resolved

More Related