Solving US electronic voting issues
Open Source Voting
© Lead Image © Tithi Luadthong, 123RF.com
In a quest for better voting machines, open source hardware may hold the answers.
Attempts by Russia to interfere with US elections have been headline news in the last year. But the problems with the election process in the United States goes deeper than the public generally realizes and includes obsolete, proprietary systems, a lack of funds for upgrades, and near monopolies on voting machines. As the 2020 US elections near, academics are working to provide solutions to these issues – and open source software and hardware are at the core of these solutions, together with modern interface design. One of the most promising solutions is Prime III, being developed by Juan E. Gilbert (Figure 1), a computer scientist who heads the Human Experience Research Lab at the University of Florida [1].
The problems being addressed by academics such as Gilbert go back to the 2000 presidential elections. In Florida, poor ballot design combined with difficult-to-use punch card voting machines resulted in an usually high number of voters choosing either too few or too many candidates, with ambiguous results [2]. In the ensuing debate, electronic voting became the leading solution, and in 2002, the Help America Vote Act was enacted to reform the voting process [3]. Unfortunately, the machines used in the 2004 election themselves caused problems; since then, federal funds for updating voting machines have not been available. In practice, American voters often use hardware that is obsolete by three or four generations.
Today, Neal McBurnett notes that the problems continue. In the 2016 elections, recounts in three states were done on the same machines that had produced questionable results, and auditing results were complicated by the fact that the four main vote-handling formats used throughout the United States are proprietary and do not easily communicate with one another [4].
[...]
Buy this article as PDF
(incl. VAT)
Buy Linux Magazine
Subscribe to our Linux Newsletters
Find Linux and Open Source Jobs
Subscribe to our ADMIN Newsletters
Support Our Work
Linux Magazine content is made possible with support from readers like you. Please consider contributing when you’ve found an article to be beneficial.
News
-
Framework Laptop 13 Pro Competes with the Best
Framework has released what might be considered the MacBook of Linux devices.
-
The Latest CachyOS Features Supercharged Kernel
The latest release of CachyOS brings with it an enhanced version of the latest Linux kernel.
-
Kernel 7.0 Is a Bit More Rusty
Linux kernel 7.0 has been released for general availability, with Rust finally getting its due.
-
France Says "Au Revoir" to Microsoft
In a move that should surprise no one, France announced plans to reduce its reliance on US technology, and Microsoft Windows is the first to get the boot.
-
CIQ Releases Compatibility Catalog for Rocky Linux
The company behind Rocky Linux is making an open catalog available to developers, hobbyists, and other contributors, so they can verify and publish compatibility with the CIQ lineup.
-
KDE Gets Some Resuscitation
KDE is bringing back two themes that vanished a few years ago, putting a bit more air under its wings.
-
Ubuntu 26.04 Beta Arrives with Some Surprises
Ubuntu 26.04 is almost here, but the beta version has been released, and it might surprise some people.
-
Ubuntu MATE Dev Leaving After 12 years
Martin Wimpress, the maintainer of Ubuntu MATE, is now searching for his successor. Are you the next in line?
-
Kali Linux Waxes Nostalgic with BackTrack Mode
For those who've used Kali Linux since its inception, the changes with the new release are sure to put a smile on your face.
-
Gnome 50 Smooths Out NVIDIA GPU Issues
Gamers rejoice, your favorite pastime just got better with Gnome 50 and NVIDIA GPUs.
