Showing posts with label May 2007 Pilots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label May 2007 Pilots. Show all posts

Sunday, 29 April 2007

Slashdot article

They've picked up a story I was going to post about anyway:

UK Voters Want to Vote Online

Some interesting comments in the story (bear in mind the majority of contributors are from the US, so they tend not to know about the odd bits of UK legislation):

"One of my biggest gripes about elections is how simplified the issues have become, and how difficult it is to understand what each candidate *really* stands for.IF they instituted online voting they could have drop down boxes for each candidate with summaries of opinions and hyperlinks to voting records, speeches... Hell, they could even link in the publically disclosed lists of contributors. I believe most voters don't have the time or inclination to do this sort of research on their own, but might be more inclined if the info was more easily accesible.A voter could spend all the time they like reading about each candidate and issue on the ballot *while* casting their vote.All it would take is some legislation and a bit of funding to amass the linked materials.Political spin would have a reduced effect on anyone with enough motivation to click a couple of links.Regards."

Thursday, 26 April 2007

ORG as observers

Still no word from ORG / Jason on which pilots they've been allowed to observe. They've been refused access to one pilot, which Jason seems reluctant to name (wonder why?).

One of the requirements for observers is that they're independent and impartial. Do ORG meet these requirements? They've already stated their clear opposition to electronic voting (although they haven't given me the clarification I was after), and now their activities are being funded by the same organisation that funds the LibDems. Independent and impartial? Maybe not.

Wednesday, 31 January 2007

ORG - eVoting campaign

Happy new year. Sorry it's been a while since my last post, the joys of Christmas and the New Year huh? Well the DCA have revealed which authorities are running pilots this year and the nay-sayers are off!

Looks like the Open Rights Group have teamed up with our friend Mr Kitcat for their opposition to the May 2007 eVoting Pilots.

Unfortunately for them they've let him produce a lot of the materials which has lead to more of the usual nonsense being spouted (from the briefing pack):

"Voting is a uniquely difficult question for computer science: the system must verify your eligability to vote; know whether you have already voted; and allow for audits and recounts. Yet it must always preserve your anonymity 4 and privacy"

As we full know voting in the UK is not anonymous and the only reference to this fact (despite the references to constant anonymous votes) is left until the footnotes at the end of the document. Burying the bad news hey?

"To prevent ballot stuffing, we must mark your vote so that we can be sure it came from a real voter, yet we cannot trace this vote to you personally."

Under judicial oversight we can. You might not like the current law, you may wish to challenge the current law, but the current law is the current law. Either lobby Parliament to change it or live with it. It probably does more to protect you than a completely anonymous vote anyway (ooh there'll be letters on that one).

Anyway, even if we lose the requirement to tie a vote to the voter, we can still tie the vote to the credentials (anonymous of course) that were used to cast the vote. Surely that helps significantly?

"Indeed TV production companies encourage multiple-voting as a way to increase their revenue from each vote cast. For the very enthusiastic fan, software is available on the internet which automates dialing, allowing a single individual to vote hundreds of times."

Say that again into my good ear would you? The point seems to be that IVR channels in elections are bad because people will stuff them... yes those credentials allow you to vote as many times as you want and every vote counts. No really. Little know secret that only us eVoter advocates know about. Watch out for some surprises in May, my diallers are ready, and the extra 10 phone lines have been ordered from BT!

Jason then proceeds to do a lovely bait and switch around postal voting (still haven't had an answer to the question "What's the difference between remote eVoting and postal voting for the purposes of coercion and vote selling?) :

"Nevertheless postal voting’s remote nature opens the way for voter intimidation and manipulation."

but then seems to think that

"Postal voting is still paper-based, so the scale of the fraud possible is limited by the logistics of collecting and moving the ballot papers." & "With e-voting the paper is gone, hence the scale of possible fraud becomes as large as the fraudster’s imagination."

is reasonable mitigation for postal voting and the death for eVoting. Say what? The fraudsters are working at the end points here, they still have to visit the person they're coercing or buying off regardless of whether it's eVoting or postal.

"Furthermore, software fraud can be committed long before an election, by someone far beyond the UK’s legal jurisdiction, thereby making detection and prosecution difficult."

Of course it will because I leave sensitive systems plugged into public networks when they're not needed all the time. Force of habit, my bad. And how does the attacker being outside the country make detection more difficult? There's a valid point around prosecution, but certainly not around detection.

That's enough for now...

Sunday, 3 December 2006

A tiny victory!

Just noticed that the article over on the Open Rights Group wiki concerning eVoting has been changed to remove a reference to pilots being funded by the Local Authorities (I'd appended a note to the effect that it wasn't being funded by the LAs).

Yes, Jason is correct that not all of the cost is being met by DCA funding, but 95% of it is, with the Local Authorities only having to meet marketing costs (the level of which is up to them), and additional staffing costs (which shouldn't be too high as automation is supposed to reduce staffing, not always the case I know, but certainly the goal).

Monday, 27 November 2006

Warning - Sunspots may bring down democracy

Quick last post for the night. Check out this great vid of Mr Kitcat, the best bit is at the end :

"Powercuts, sunspots" - Yes because it's beyond the wit of man to provide backup power at a hosting center. Or to provide a DR site that duplicates the systems in use at the main site isn't it? I visited hosting centres over the past couple of weeks that have multiple diesel generators that can power the hosting center for three days with just the fuel onsite. And the centers are a priority for delivery of fuel in the event of a fuel crisis. As to the sunspots bit, I'm not even to going to gratify that with an answer. I mean really, sunspots?

"Open to manipulation by the election officials"
- WOW! So a paper ballot isn't? And given what has been said about the technical ability of election officials by the anti-eVote brigade I'd thought they'd be lucky if they could identify a server, let alone find theirs in a SECURE HOSTING FACILITY, then gain privileged access to encrypted databases... yes it's the mild mannered election officials that are the biggest threat to democracy in this country.

"By people that have access to them surreptitiously" - Again, very little chance of this in a SECURE HOSTING FACILITY.

Sorry for the shouting, but I really think Mr Kitcat has no idea how these pilots are run. But that's hardly surprising, the man's never done any serious systems work himself and that seems to be the pattern. These people get the idea into their heads that they are the be all and end all of knowledge in computing and try and dictate to the majority as to how we use technology.

Well good luck Mr Kitcat, because neither the Government, the public nor Local Authorities are listening (and don't think you swung the decision in B&H not to run an eVoting pilot Jason, that was all just politics anyway, the subject for another post).

2007 eVoting Pilots - Funding clarification

Just a quick post to clarify how the May 2007 eVoting pilots are being funding. They are not (as has been noted by a number of talking heads) being funded by the Local Authorities themselves, but rather by funds set aside by the Treasury for the DCA to use for the pilots. So don't worry, your Council Tax isn't being used to fund these wild and fanciful ideas that arrogant technologists such as yours truly think might be a good idea.