here's a good chance that in 10
years we will have learned to design robust,
trustworthy voting systems. But voter apathy is related
not to the voting system but to the perception that the
vote counts. Politicians of both parties have so
manipulated the system that only 29 of 435 voting
districts have any sort of contest this year. It's
very easy for many voters to become apathetic when they
perceive that their vote will not affect the outcome.
- Peter Denning, Naval Postgraduate School,
Monterey, Calif./columnist, Communications of the
ACM
etwork security concerns will never be
solved, though the trend toward increasing use of
online voting will continue. The very
cost-effectiveness of this technology encourages
governments to adopt it. - Jorge Reina Schement,
Penn State University
think people will begin to devalue
voting if they don't go do it somewhere. So
increased access may lead to decreased participation.
- Douglas Rushkoff, author
The great voter riots of 2008 based on distrust of
e-voting machines will stifle online voting. -
David Weinberger, Evident Marketing Inc.
irst, network security concerns can be
sufficiently resolved without intergovernmental
cooperation of a kind that is unlikely. Second, the
ritual of casting one's ballot plays an important
role in voter participation. I fear that if we can vote
at our home computers, voter turnout might increase
only among the most committed and best-organized
interest groups. Third, many politically active people,
myself included, will oppose online voting and computer
voting of all kinds until we are assured of a viable
and legitimate paper trail. I think it would take more
than ten years to put the political and legal
mechanisms for online voting in place, even if the
technological issues were resolved tomorrow. - Lois
Ambash, Metforix Inc.
oting security is likely unobtainable,
regardless of the technology. There is too much at
stake, and there are too many incentives to corrupt the
process. There will need to be a physical
representation of a vote in the future. - Ted
Eytan, MD, Group Health Cooperative
lectronic voting will not raise turnout,
since the difficulty of casting a ballot is not a
reason for low turnout. Furthermore, the basic
anonymity of a ballot is very difficult to protect if
people may vote from home. I don't see a technical
fix for this problem. - Peter Levine, University of
Maryland
nd, if so, America will have ceased to
be a democracy. The problem is not merely "network
security" or even equipment security, but that
without a secret ballot, monitored by representatives
of the candidates and/or independent observers, there
is no reliable way of preventing coercion (even if
there were ways of preventing impersonation). Voting is
a social, not a mechanistic, activity. - Philip
Virgo, secretary general for EURIM - UK-based
Parliament Industry Group/also works with IMIS -
UK-based professional body for management of
information systems
ven with the security concerns being
solved, it is difficult to predict a turnout increasing
since the current low rate is not directly related to
the electoral tools. There are other reasons affecting
the whole political system that may better explain this
situation. - Jordi Barrat i Esteve, Electronic
Voting Observatory, Universitat Rovira I Virgili
y then there will be a serious security
layer added to the network model because politics and
economics will demand it. To what extent this also
facilitates surveillance and censorship is still
unclear. If Americans can vote online, turnout will be
increased - but the extent to which this occur will
depend on voter scandals traced back to digital
technology facilitating voter fraud. - Jonathan
Peizer, Open Society Institute
don't think this will happen
quickly. Too many people get too much joy from
suppressing voters at physical polling places. It would
take a political tsunami to make this happen. -
Susan Crawford, policy analyst, Center for Democracy
and Technology and a fellow with the Yale Law School
Information Society Project
otes will be cast online, but if current
voting technology is any indicator, we'll have no
assurance of the security of the technology. If
that's the case, concerns about the integrity of
the system may depress its impact on voter turnout. And
unless there is a major public policy initiative that
places a networked computer in every American home (a
very unlikely scenario, I fear) online voting will make
voting easier for the social groups who are already
more inclined to vote, and leave behind those who are
already disenfranchised. - Alexandra Samuel,
Harvard University/Cairns Project (New York Law
School)
challenge this prediction. You not only
have network security concerns, you also have personal
identity concerns (different but highly important
issue). You solve a lot of identity problems by making
a person come in to a centralized facility to vote.
Getting that process computerized is the next logical
step. Only after that can we consider the next step. I
seriously doubt 50 percent of Americans are going to be
electronically voting within the next ten years. I
don't know about the increase in voter turnout
either. I question the implicit assumption in this
prediction that making voting electronic will
automatically increase the number of people voting. I
suspect one of the primary reasons for low voter
turnout is a perceived lack of personally relevant
choices that the people have. This is very likely due
to the two-party political system in the United States.
What I see happening is that a lot of campaigning is
going to be online. Once that happens, the
"two-party" political system is going to
dissolve. That should lead to more choices, and that
should increase voter turnout. In other words, what I
see happening is that the entire political power
structure of the United States is very likely going to
change as a result of the internet. However, that is
not going to happen in ten years either. - Robert
Lunn, FocalPoint Analytics/USC Digital Future
Project
o, there will always be new risks -
technology has never been and will never be foolproof
and error-free. Increased voter turnout is not
guaranteed as A) many people continue not to vote in
spite of the increased options available to them - once
again it's a personality and not a technology issue
(technology only gives more freedom if an individual is
predisposed to accepting more freedom); B) technology
problems could still lead to inaccuracies in vote
counting! - Bornali Halder, World Development
Movement
his prediction could only come true if
there was an American standard for voting. It isn't
only network security concerns that will drive this
opportunity. It is a long list of special interests,
local political situations, and lack of voter
education. What happens outside the network security is
vastly more complex and important. For example, when
the software vendor sends an update CD to a local voter
administrator, whose to say that the administrator
won't take the CD home and melt it in the microwave
for a planter? Certainly a voter has no idea whether or
not the software that supports the vote transaction is
up to date, built with integrity or backed up to the
extent that a vote cast will be a vote counted. -
Elle Tracy, The Results Group
t is much more likely that mail-in
ballots will become the norm. The voting system is very
change resistant and power is distributed among many
nodes. - Ted M. Coopman, University of
Washington
he reasons for low voter turnout are
many and complex and are not, in the majority of cases,
to do with the effort involved in voting. The Internet
may make it easier to vote, but it may not solve issues
of disaffection, alienation from the political process,
feeling that votes don't count, that voting
doesn't give you a voice, being ill-informed about
politics, feeling that there is no real choice within
the current constraints of (in the US) the two-party
system. The Internet is a tool - you need to understand
why other democratic tools "aren't
working" in order to understand how this tool
might affect voter behaviour. - Susan Kenyon,
University of the West of England, UK
eginning with this election (2004),
challenges to the accuracy and safety of electronic
voting will become a major concern, which will take
several decades to resolve. - Peter W. Van Ness,
Van Ness Group
hile network security concerns may well
be solved, I don't expect to see widespread trust
in the fact that they have been solved. That is, to
really "work," an election must be perceived
by the populace as having been fairly conducted and
fairly counted. - Thomas Erickson, IBM
Research
WAH-HA HA HA HA HA HA HA!!!
''What? Would you then disenfranchise the noble
dead?'' - A statement by "Congersman
Frog," in the cartoon strip "Pogo," by
Walt Kelly. - Mike O'Brien, The Aerospace
Corporation
dd open-source software, a public agency
that manages the systems, the requirement to attend a
polling station and a verifiable paper trail, and most
electronic voting systems can be made to work, and
probably will be. But voting online from home, without
having to show up in bodily form at a local location,
is a system that cannot be secured. - William
Stewart, LivingInternet.com
And the following are from predictors who
chose to remain anonymous: [Workplaces of respondents
whose reactions are listed below include Microsoft,
Internet2, RAND, IFC Consulting, Ohio State University,
AOL, The Aspen Institute, Morino Institute, MIT, Big
Horse Incorporated, Connexia, Jupitermedia, University
of Minnesota, Council on Competitiveness, National
Center for Technology and Law, Harvard, Future of Music
Coalition, Integrated Media Association, AT&T,
Portland State University, Information Week, FCC, Big
Vision Design, France Telecom, Gartner, Bradley
University, Center for Digital Government, U.S.
Department of State, Consumer Reports WebWatch and
others.]
As long as one human being designs it, another will be
able to break or hack it. This is one truism we can
never lose sight of.
It is foolhardy to underestimate
the fragility and vulnerability of any online system to
attack and manipulation. Anything that can be made
secure can be hacked.
This will no doubt come, but it has already surprised
me how slow the evolution in this area has been. I
don't think we will get to "more than
half" in 10 years. Maybe 20.
Network security is the biggest unsolved issue for the
Internet. There is no indication that security issues
will be solved. The inherent conflict between privacy
and security remains unsolved.
No doubt about it. Make it easier, vote from home,
send an email reminder and more people will vote. This
will happen faster than 2014. It will make the campaign
process more interesting and more interactive. We can
all be virtual delegates.
I do not believe network security concerns will be
solved - ever. There will always be threats. As old
threats are mitigated - new threats will emerge.
Online voting in Europe has not been shown to result
in increased voter turnout.
The democratic political process should not be left to
the internet and I do not believe that elected and
appointed officials responsible for running elections
will take the risk in the next decade ... it could make
2000 presidential election look like a cakewalk.
Here's my revision: By 2014, network security
concerns will still be with us, more than half of
American votes will be cast online anyway, and this
will have no effect on the rates of voter
participation.
Not all security concerns will be solved. I believe
that there are non-technical objections to online
voting that are fundamental, for example the
facilitation of vote-buying. Other sorts of voting
(such as share-holder meetings) will be totally on
line.
So far, rate in changes in voter technologies has been
slow, public distrust is high, even in the face of
major scandals after the 2000 elections. I am not sure
whether moving voting online is a good thing in any
case given the inequalities of internet access. It
could result in the disenfranchisement of a significant
segment of the population if the digital divide does
not get resolved.
Although voting may move online increasingly, security
issues will not have been solved (current ones maybe,
but new ones will keep arising) leaving us with a very
vulnerable and corruptable system.
Security concerns will be ignored. Votes will be cast
on-line, but public-choice theory suggests there is no
reason that this should increase voter
"turnout."
Whether or not the security concerns are solved,
voting will move online. Pressure from citizens as well
as key legislators will make that happen. It could do
one of two things: help conquer the digital divide or
make it grow ever wider. It will all depend on access.
Politicians will argue against anything that will get
greater involvement.
Network security concerns over online voting will grow
dramatically in the next decade, not decrease. I do
believe that we will see significant deployment of
online voting within a decade. However, this will not
increase turnout, which is most heavily influenced by
the ease of registration and availability of absentee
ballots. In Washington State, the majority of ballots
are already cast by absentee ballot.
The prediction implicitly assumes that online voting
is held up by network security concerns. While I
believe that network security will vastly improve in
the coming years, I don't believe that voting
security will improve. On-line voting is open to very
much the same fraud patterns as absentee ballots, with
one aggravating circumstance: it can be automatized.
Network security will not make absentee ballots
safer.
Considering the travesty of the last election and
continued reports about campaigns of disenfranchisement
for this upcoming one I think we will have to go a long
way before people give unquestioning trust to an all
digital system. Furthermore, both Democrats and
Republicans actively benefit from low voter turnout in
that they have smaller target groups to convince each
election year. The fact that we are only watching
presidential commercials in a handful of swing-states
this election surely says something about the parties
desire to have the entire electorate vote. That said,
the convenience of the web speeds progress and
diminishes cost.
If we want to, this is a solvable problem and by 2014,
we could do it. I don't know if we have the will or
the resources, though.
Trust mechanisms are just starting to be explored. The
infrastructure necessary to support this kind of
wide-spread authentication and authorization policy and
operation will only just be making real progress at
this level.
Security concerns of "Internet voting''
cannot be solved. Those who claim otherwise lack very
basic understanding of the problems associated with
voting.
Network security will always be an issue, as there are
always "smart" people out there trying to
sabotage the network. Votes? The same people who
won't vote, won't, AND the 30% of the
population without "on-line" capabilities
will not be able to vote unless there are polling
stations.
I'd say that substantial # of votes will be cast
online, although not 50%. Security problems may be
contained but certainly not solved!
I don't see information assurance as having a
"solution." It is an evolving struggle
between attackers and defenders. I don't see
anything changing that in 10 years.
Solving the problems of online voting will prove very
difficult and there will resistance at almost every
level to the implementation of these systems.
I am contaminated by the current norms of two-party
political behavior. I see nothing but continued
estrangement from national/conventional politics. But,
at the same time, I believe virtual communities of
interest will exercise episodic political power ...
like a swarm of angry bees!
There's always a better mousetrap that can be
compromised by determined individuals bent on
disrupting the Internet. Not everyone is computer
literate and will vote correctly. There will be some
sort of hanging chad in cyberspace.
If more Americans vote, it will be because one of the
major parties manages to distribute an application that
does your voting for you, as directed by the party;
disengagement with the world is not solved by tech
toys. Issues are complicated, and voter pamphlets
require time to digest. That's the barrier to
entry.
We have some hard thinking here about how to have
elections that are not rippled with fraud. We will have
to consider whether the anonymous vote continues to be
viable. But if it is not, what then - how can we have
accountable elections but anonymous votes? Something
may have to give.
Voting will never be done via Internet for a large
portion of the public.
The people who benefit from the current electoral
system will not allow if to change. ''Ballot
security'' concerns will trump technological
advances.
There will always be hackers and workarounds. IF
network security concerns are ever solved in such a way
as to allow absolutely no possibility of voter fraud, I
doubt it would happen within the next 10 years.
Even if it could be done, I don't think a majority
of the population would trust it.
1) Network security concerns will never be solved. The
hackers will always be one step ahead of the good guys.
This is not an Internet issue, it's a
human/organizational nature issue. 2) There are so many
more obstacles to online voting than network security,
that they cannot be resolved by 2014. 3) Every report
of a failure, however small and however quickly fixed,
will result in decreased trust in the system; hardly
conducive to greater turnout. There are many other
actions that would increase turnout more predictably
and with fewer drawbacks than Internet voting - a
uniform 24-hour voting period, for example. On the
other hand, we have good evidence via research and
e-commerce that if people really want what the Internet
offers, they will hold their noses and plunge ahead. If
Internet voting can be made good enough, it could have
a positive effect on voter turnout, but not a dramatic
one.
This is a no-end battle. A good security engineer is
sure to have work all his life. The question being not
how to make a secure system but: How long will it live
before being hacked? This has no impact on
voting.
Network security concerns won't be
''solved'' ...ever. Folks might vote
online but this will not necessarily increase voter
turnout.
There will still be too much social suspicion of
technologies (and more importantly, our political
process) to see e-voting by 2014 ... perhaps further
down the road, but not by 2014.
I agree with the first part, but not the second.
Sooner than 2014 it will be safe to cast votes online.
However, it will not increase voter turnout, because
there will be a single party after the election of
George W. Bush to a second term. Redistricting will
continue at a fervent pace beneficial to Republicans,
the Democratic Party will collapse, and America will
''evolve'' to a one-party
plutocracy/Christian theocracy that represents the
values of approximately 25 percent of the American
public. By 2020 America will begin to resemble early
1990's South Africa. Wealth and power will be
concentrated among corporations and a small number of
individuals (even more so than it is today) and the
majority of the American people will be
disenfranchised.
We're going to an online vote for fast results,
verifiable by a paper ballot, where elections are
close. I don't think security is ever going to be
that good. Some people don't trust government. Why
do you think there are guns?
I would point to IPv6 as the solution and key
enabler.
Not only must network security be solved, which I do
not believe you will ever have complete network
security, you must also solve the issue of online
authentication.
[I agree with] all but the network security, which [is
a problem that] will always be with us. We live in a
world of 10 levels of device iteration. Not all can own
the latest technology all at once.
There is very little proof that ease of access beyond
a certain point actually increases voter involvement.
Removing actual barriers to voting certainly has that
effect. But in the U.S., where all you have to do is
remember where and when to vote and then show up, there
will not be a dramatic increase in voting.
Let's hope so. But networks may be the least of
the security concerns. Take that leaked Diebold letter
that promised to deliver Ohio to the GOP. This would be
a great leap forward, so long as there isn't a
finger on the button.
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