
The mounting irregularities of closed-source proprietary e-voting systems clearly show the need for a new approach to securing elections in the U.S. --
one centered on the use of open source technologies, writes Paul Venezia. 'It's time for us to make good on the promise of open elections and open our e-voting systems as well,' Venezia writes, outlining the technical blueprint for a cheap, secure, open source e-voting system. The call for
open voting systems has grown louder as of late, with several projects, such as
Pvote and the
Open Voting Consortium, demonstrating how the voting booth could benefit from open source code. Such systems are already securing elections in Australia and
Brazil.
Member since:
2006-01-04
Even open source cannot fix a broken system.
Pen&Paper&Counting by humans works in every real democracy. It is tried and tested.
Electronic voting cannot be as secure and is not understandable.
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