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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#1 |
Lucky Sailor
![]() Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Rome
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/politi...314_story.html
Sum it up, Romney has interest in the company that runs voting machines in key locations in Ohio. Another article I read (lost the link), stated his son has deep financial ties with HART. For democracy's sake, shouldnt these machines be ruled out and a manual system be used? At least for just this election? |
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#2 | |
Wayfaring Stranger
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They should be ruled out permanently imo. Votes need to be recorded in a more permanent way. With manual ballot voting I check a box next to the name of my chosen candidate on a piece of paper with an indelible ink marker. Anyone who looks at that ballot will see the mark that I made. Very difficult to spoof that. With electronic voting however there is a separation between the button a voter pushes and how his vote is eventually recorded. There are no boxes of ballots that can be recounted and checked just database entries that are far more easily manipulated. I see their adoption as perilous for my country.
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#3 |
Born to Run Silent
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I agree with you, voting does not need to be fly by wire, I think each vote should be manual, with a thumbprint attached.
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#4 |
Dipped Squirrel Operative
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Ballot machines have been used in Germany and the US for cheating before - they really have to be banned.
Regarding thumbprints this is good idea, however if you can find out who voted for whom, this is not the idea of a (secret) ballot (?) - may have misunderstood though. Greetings, Catfish |
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#5 |
Stowaway
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In my opinion its not just the ballot machines that need work in regards to voting.
Electoral college where you don't actually vote for a candidate just someone who might (Not required by law) vote for your candidate. Gerrymandering. A general voting system that leads to a two party system where half the people are voting against a candidate instead of for a candidate. (See: all the people who are voting for Romney solely because they don't like Obama) Oh and not to mention just the absolutely terrible choices of politicians you have in general. |
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#6 | |||
Dipped Squirrel Operative
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![]() But i like August's quote "Public business must always be done by somebody. It will be done by somebody or other. If wise men decline, others will not; if honest men refuse it, others will not." - John Adams Problem is no one with a decent mind and common sense would like to do such 'work' and be a politician. ![]() |
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#7 |
Soaring
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Wooot...?
![]() You maybe mistake this with that there is one German company producing such machines for the international market. P.S. Did some Googling and you could be right, I found a message saying that "voting machines used in German elections" have been demonstrated by the Chaos Computer Club to be vulnerable to manipulation. But they did not say which elections that were. I refuse to go voting - did so only on two communal referendums on local issues - , so procedures there may have changed more drastically than I am aware of. But as far as I believed to know it still is the old ink-and-paper thing over here.
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert. |
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#8 |
Soaring
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P.P.S. German Wikipedia lists as only exmaple for a machine used in German elections, elections for mayor in one city. While the Bundestag had rushed a law pushing for machines in 2005 or 2006, the Constitutional High Court has ruled this law anti-constitutional in 2009, since then they are banned in Germany. German experts and engineers said that in principle it is impossible to make machines totally safe against manipulation, and that any voting machine always can be manipulated, if you really want to do that. There is no known way to immunize them completely. Well, who wants to argue with Germangineers...?
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert. |
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#9 |
Eternal Patrol
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A good point. Perhaps a checklist at the voting place, with your name and a box for a thumbprint. That way everyone who voted would be accounted for, but the ballot would still be secret.
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“Never do anything you can't take back.” —Rocky Russo |
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#10 | |
Fleet Admiral
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Now if Romney were personally programming/maintaining/operating the machines I could see. If Romney were in some official capacity and somehow influencing the states to purchase this specific machine than I could see CoI. But Romney does not have any official capacity. But just having a financial interest in a company? I don't see it. Even if Romney owned the company all by himself, I would not see a conflict of interest. These machines undergo a lot of testing and code verification. Any monkey-business is most likely at the local end than the manufacturing end.
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abusus non tollit usum - A right should NOT be withheld from people on the basis that some tend to abuse that right. |
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