• @Snowclone
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      714 days ago

      But is scantron voting electronic voting? Is mail in voting and early voting electronic voting? Is being ID’d on the voter registry because you know your SSN and address, name, signature, without having to use yet another ID electronic voting?

      • Melllvar
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        814 days ago

        I would say that “electronic voting” means that the ballot itself is digital rather than physical. So, scantrons are not electronic voting and voter registries/ID/etc. are not ballots in the first place.

      • @[email protected]
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        514 days ago

        I think the supposed risk to electronic voting machines is that there would need to be thousands of them, are distributed, somewhat unattended, and operated by people that don’t know them.
        The possibility of an exploit or misconfiguration increases, and the ability to compromise someone supervising one of the polling station increases.
        If there is are centralised systems, fewer higher skilled people would be required to secure/monitor/run the system. It can also be airgapped.

        While some of these risks are also applicable to in-person and mail-in voting, these systems have been around for ages, are not proprietary, and anyone can figure out “how it works” and can make sure “how it happened” matches.
        As soon as you get into cryptographic vulnerabilities and security, 99.99% of people would be lost in the woods

        The rest of the questions, I feel, are more systematic things.

    • @[email protected]
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      14 days ago

      Seems to work alright for Estonia, they have had an option to vote electronically since 2005. If I can sign legal documents, pay bills and do other government related stuff electronically, why suddenly voting is a huge problem?

      • @Evotech
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        14 days ago

        Because what you vote is supposed to be anonymous…

        If you ignore the anonymous part, then it’s obviously not an issue.

    • @iAvicenna
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      413 days ago

      even a broken clock is correct twice a day

      • @[email protected]
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        -713 days ago

        Off topic, but… Can we retire this idiom? It’s in this thread like 3 times and it’s always used by people uncomfortable by the fact that someone they don’t like made a good point.

        • @iAvicenna
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          613 days ago

          it also exists in multiple different cultures with very different languages, so it seems it is not going away anytime soon

        • @[email protected]
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          313 days ago

          We should retire the idiom because people are using it as intended and everyone understands it as intended?

          • @[email protected]
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            013 days ago

            I think people intend it to be a clever undercutting of the person they dislike. But it stopped being clever ages ago. When does something become a cliche? Because it just sounds petty now.

        • @zeppo
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          113 days ago

          It’s not about “someone I don’t like”, it’s that this guys opinions are pretty much always beyond total shit.

    • @Aux
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      -214 days ago

      That’s loads of BS. Manual in person voting is easily scammed, just look at voting in Russia. Fuck this shit, everything should be 100% digital.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 days ago

        Paper voting leaves a literal paper trail unlike electronic voting that’s always a total black box in all countries that have tried it.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          112 days ago

          Blockchain based voting leaves a permanent and indelible record on the blockchain for all to see.

        • @Aux
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          -1414 days ago

          Look, mate, paper voting simply doesn’t work. And Russia is not the only example.

          • @[email protected]
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            814 days ago

            Canada here, paper voting works just fine.

            What doesn’t work is when the voting systems are gamed for the benefit of the few, and that can happen with any and all systems.

          • @[email protected]
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            113 days ago

            If you think results contradict content of the boxes, then online voting just allows to do it on greater scale much easier.

      • Melllvar
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        1014 days ago

        Manual in person voting is not easily scammed on a scale that can swing an election. The slow, inefficient, in person, physical process is a security feature.

      • AbsentBird
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        413 days ago

        I don’t get what’s wrong with paper ballots sent by mail. It’s convenient and easy, with a paper trail for recounts. It’s worked great in Washington for decades.

        • @Aux
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          -113 days ago

          Look at my other replies.

        • @[email protected]
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          -313 days ago

          There’s no way to guarantee privacy. An overbearing spouse, an anti-union boss, or a judgmental pastor could all insist on seeing the votes marked as they prefer.

          A voting booth was invented for this very reason.

          • AbsentBird
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            313 days ago

            You can fill it out in a booth if you want, there’s in-person locations with help for the disabled and privacy areas.

            It’s illegal to insist on seeing someone’s vote, so I’m not sure what would stop such people from requiring this hypothetical person to record themselves voting at a polling location. In general mail in ballots make voter intimidation much more difficult.

      • ASeriesOfPoorChoices
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        it absolutely is not easily scammed at all.

        every single piece of paper is numbered and tracked. (tickets and stubbs, basically). all counting is done by multiple people and watched by anyone who wants. political parties are banned from voting premises.

        even better: early voting, in person, up to a week or two before. no crowds.

        errors happen about 1 in 1,000,000 with a maximum of a couple hundred, and are caught immediately.

        there is no scamming. all of the USA’s voting problems are self-created.

        • @Aux
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          012 days ago

          Ahaha! Ok.

      • @[email protected]
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        013 days ago

        Manual in person voting is easily scammed, just look at voting in Russia.

        Let me check. *looks through window* It’s not the biggest source of voting fraud. Biggest source of voting fraud is Venedictov’s box - Digital Electronic Voting.

        Fuck this shit, everything should be 100% digital.

        Sobyanin approves.

      • @[email protected]OP
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        -614 days ago

        Not just digital but trustless decentralised blockchain based so it’s impossibly hard to manipulate