touch screen
The Risks of Touch-Screen Balloting
The
Risks of Touch-Screen Balloting
Henry
Norr
Monday,
December 4, 2000
San Francisco
Chronicle Page D1
With no end in sight to the election debacle, readers had strong reactions
to last week's column about voting technologies. Most of them agreed with
the case I made for touch-screen systems, but a few sharply disagreed,
and others provided some interesting additional information and perspectives.
One issue -- or, to my mind, nonissue -- concerned absentee voting:
Several readers worried that if their jurisdictions converted to touch-screen
voting machines, it would be more difficult or even impossible for them
to cast a ballot without visiting their local polling place on election
day.
That one is easy to dispose of: The equipment used in polling places
has no necessary bearing on how absentee voting is conducted. Jurisdictions
that use old-fashioned mechanical lever machines obviously can't ship those
to absentees -- they have always had to send out some kind of paper ballot.
Places that adopt touch-screen "direct-recording electronic" systems
can do the same. Riverside County in Southern California has converted
to DRE at the polls, but it still mails out paper ballots to absentees.
They're scanned optically, and the results are added to the totals from
DRE equipment.
This adds a bit of cost and complexity to the process, but it's hardly
a reason to rule out the electronic approach.
Much more serious objections came from Peter G. Neumann, and he's certainly
not someone to argue with lightly: He's principal scientist at the Computer
Science Lab at SRI International in Menlo Park, chairman of the Association
for Computing Machinery Committee on Computers and Public Policy and author
of a book called "Computer-Related Risks," among many other distinctions.
Among his areas of expertise is the problem of election security.
In essence, he argues that the challenge of ensuring the integrity of
elections conducted on electronic equipment is much greater than my column
suggested. In fact, he describes touch-screen systems as "disasters waiting
to happen -- with enormous opportunities for fraud and accidents that are
very difficult to detect and almost impossible to rectify."
Through Neumann I also heard from Rebecca Mercuri, a computer scientist
who recently completed a Ph.D. dissertation on "Electronic Vote Tabulation
Checks & Balances." In laying out a perspective similar to Neumann's,
she focused in particular on the absence of an audit trail with electronic
systems:
"It is essential to elections that there be an alternative method for
independently verifying that the votes cast correspond to the totals reported.
Since I (as well as many 12-year-olds) can write programs that accept one
input value, record a different one and report yet another, computer systems
can be no more trusted to provide their own verification than can a fox
guarding the hen house."
NEW YORK STORY
Both Mercuri and Neumann cited the experience of New York City, which spent
more than 15 years and $17 million in search of an electronic system to
replace its lever machines. At one point city officials even signed a contract
with Sequoia-Pacific, a well-known manufacturer of voting equipment, but
canceled it after experts, including Mercuri and Neumann, pointed out problems
with the system, particularly in the area of security.
In the end, the city gave up because, according to Mercuri, no vendor
could satisfy the security requirements in a specification that was "not
really very strict" by her standards.
If you want to check out their arguments for yourself, go to Neumann's
page,
www.csl.sri.com/~neumann,
scroll down to the section on Computer-Related Elections, then follow the
links. For Mercuri, go to her company's site, www.notablesoftware.com,
and click on Electronic Voting.
These are obviously serious arguments from serious people, but I'm not
ready to give up on the touch-screen solution. For one thing, other experts
claim DRE equipment can be designed to meet security requirements -- see
the paper by Michael Shamos, the computer scientist, lawyer and voting-equipment
examiner I cited last week, at www.cpsr.org/conferences/cfp93/shamos.html.
It's also worth recalling that all voting systems are subject to some
kinds of abuse. Optical-scan systems, for example, are subject to most
of the vulnerabilities Neumann and Mercuri bring up about touch-screen
equipment -- in both cases the results are tabulated electronically, which
means they could in principle be manipulated by code hidden in the machine
by a malicious programmer.
In her message to me, Mercuri wrote that "it is impossible to verify
that such hidden code is not present" because "voting system vendors do
not provide their code internals for inspection, claiming trade-secret
protection. " As long as that's true, the safeguards I mentioned last week
-- an escrow requirement and line-by-line audits -- aren't available.
But that's not the final word. Audits and escrow arrangements could
be mandated by law. Failing that, officials putting equipment procurements
out to bid could simply make such terms part of their specifications; manufacturers
who refused wouldn't be considered. Some vendors might try to hold out,
but they'd have to come around -- or new competitors would surely enter
the market -- if officials in enough jurisdictions stuck to their guns.
The one real advantage of the optical-scan approach, with respect to
security, is that there's a human-readable audit trail: In case of a dispute,
election officials, observers and (as we now know well) judges have the
option of looking back at the paper ballots.
If we really want that safeguard, though, it's also possible to add
something equivalent to touch-screen technology: The machines could be
designed to print a completed paper ballot, which the voter could examine
to make sure it reflected his or her intentions before the vote is finally
recorded. Once approved, the ballot would go into a secure ballot box,
but it would never need to be counted unless some serious question arose
about the integrity of the original electronic count.
This again would add cost and complexity, and I'm not convinced it's
worth it. If we really can't create digital systems we can trust without
a paper trail, maybe optical scanning is better after all.
ON THE OTHER HAND
If we make that choice, though, we should remember how much we'd be giving
up. Last week I noted some of the advantages of touch-screen systems: They
effectively eliminate the possibility of voter errors like marking the
wrong place, using the wrong pen or voting for two candidates; they deliver
a quick and (assuming security holds up) accurate count; and they can easily
handle multiple languages and long ballots.
In addition, such systems have a couple of other advantages I didn't
mention. One is that a voice synthesizer -- software that would read the
ballot aloud -- and an appropriate input device could be added so the blind
and visually impaired could vote in privacy like the rest of us.
Reader Paul Perkovic, an elected member of the Midcoast Community Council,
an advisory council representing the citizens of the unincorporated portions
of the San Mateo County coast, wrote to remind me of another important
argument: An all-electronic system would make it much easier to implement
some new forms of democracy -- notably, what's known as instant-runoff
voting.
This idea has been gaining increasing attention in recent years. Last
month, voters in Oakland and San Leandro even adopted it for local elections
through charter amendments, and San Francisco Supervisors Michael Yaki
and Mark Leno endorsed the same idea in the wake of the city's inconclusive
district elections.
In an instant-runoff election, you don't vote for just one candidate
in each race -- you pick a first choice, a second choice, and so on. If
your first choice is eliminated from the contest, your vote then goes to
your second choice; if your second choice is eliminated, your third choice
gets your vote, and so on. For further explanation and lots of interesting
links -- including one to Yaki and Leno's paper on the subject -- see www.fairvote.org/irv/index.html,
an excellent overview put together by the nonprofit Center for Voting and
Democracy. A San Francisco group promoting instant-runoff voting has a
site at www.irv4sf.org.
The best argument for such a system, at least to my mind, is that it
would open up our politics to new ideas, new people and maybe even new
parties by eliminating the spoiler problem. Consider this year's presidential
campaign.
Millions of voters who admired Ralph Nader and supported the Green Party
program were discouraged from voting their preference for fear that by
doing so they would help throw the election to George W. Bush -- an outcome
few Green sympathizers wanted.
With instant runoff voting, they could have made Nader their first choice
and Gore their second. Once Nader was mathematically eliminated, their
votes would have gone to the vice president. That way, such voters could
express their real political views, but still get to tip the scales toward
the lesser evil.
Until now, one major problem with instant runoff voting has been the
difficulty of tabulating the ballots in a timely way. (In Cambridge, Mass.,
which has had a somewhat similar system in place for decades, it used to
take weeks to get final results for city council elections.) With an electronic
system, however, it could be done in minutes.
WHISTLING IN THE DARK: If you need a break from these weighty matters,
there's always the next version of Windows to contemplate. Code-named Whistler...
Tech21 appears every Monday in The Chronicle. Send your comments
and tips to Henry Norr at hnorr@sfchronicle.com. ©2000 San
Francisco Chronicle
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видеосъемка торжество
вал редуктор поворот
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touch screen