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Bureau van Dijk - Bureau van Dijk's comprehensive Orbis company database. Contact the Prime Minister. In Theory And Practice, Why Internet-Based Voting Is a Bad Idea. A few countries, like Estonia, have gone for internet-based voting in national elections in a big way, and many others (like Ireland and Canada) have experimented with it.

In Theory And Practice, Why Internet-Based Voting Is a Bad Idea

For Americans, with a presidential election approaching later this year, it's a timely issue: already, some states have come to allow at least certain forms of voting by internet. Proponents say online elections have compelling upsides, chief among them ease of participation. People who might not otherwise vote — in particular military personnel stationed abroad, but many others besides — are more and more reached by internet access.

Online voting offers a way to keep the electoral process open to them. With online voting, too, there's no worry about conventional absentee ballots being lost or delayed in the postal system, either before reaching the voter or on the way back to be counted. (Read more for more, and look for a video interview with Halderman soon). Hgsvn 0.1.9. Layer 8: DARPA set to develop super-secure "cognitive fingerprint" Developers at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency want to build information technology security that goes beyond simply recognizing complex passwords but rather gets in your head to confirm your identity before you get access or continue to have access to important information.

Layer 8: DARPA set to develop super-secure "cognitive fingerprint"

Specifically, the agency's Active Authentication program looks to develop what DARPA calls "novel ways of validating the identity of the person at the console that focus on the unique aspects of the individual through the use of software-based biometrics. " Tor Operations Security. 13 December 2011 Tor Operations Security.

Tor Operations Security

Hand counts of votes may cause errors. Hand counting of votes in postelection audit or recount procedures can result in error rates of up to 2 percent, according to a new study from Rice University and Clemson University.

Hand counts of votes may cause errors

"These procedures are intended as a safeguard against computer and human error, but until recently, no research existed to tell whether these efforts helped or hurt the accuracy of the vote," said Michael Byrne, associate professor of psychology at Rice. "Post-Election Auditing: Effects of Election Procedure and Ballot Type on Manual Counting Accuracy, Efficiency and Auditor Satisfaction and Confidence," will appear in an upcoming issue of the Election Law Journal. In the study, participants simulated two types of group-counting procedures commonly found in U.S. elections. The first procedure, the "read-and-mark" method, utilizes four election officials who count the ballots sequentially as they are taken from the top of an unsorted stack of ballots.

The study was funded by the National Science Foundation. Consensus-Oriented Decision-Making: The CODM Model for Facilitating Groups to Widespread Agreement eBook: Tim Hartnett. Pragmatic Source: Open-source voting technology is the cure for what ails democracy. Washington, D.C., has decided to go with open-source voting technology in a pilot project to, basically, speed up the process of getting back absentee, military and oversees ballots.

Pragmatic Source: Open-source voting technology is the cure for what ails democracy

The results on election night are always unofficial, as they need to be certified by elections commissioners. But even then, other votes need to be counted - and one need only to look at the 2000 Presidential election to know how much those extra ballots can mean for the outcome of a race. Problem is, it can take weeks for those ballots to be returned from a war zone. Even fax or e-mail can be dodgy, and neither form is particularly secure - at least as secure as one's ballot need be. The thing that's interesting about the project being open-source technology is that many have expressed concerns about the proprietary software used in electronic voting. Look at what just happened in the South Carolina primary. Independent professionals. Said Rokey W. Helios Voting. Jxta-jxse. Open-source voting. November 03, 2003.

Open-source voting

Open Source Voting: Accurate, Accountable. Open Source Digital Voting Foundation (OSDV) Open-Vote.org. Open-Source Voting. In the aftermath of the Florida recount debacle of the 2000 presidential election, the U.S.

Open-Source Voting

Congress appropriated billions of dollars for state and local governments to buy electronic voting systems. But in the years since, a string of problematic elections has led much of the voting public to join early critics in concluding that available machines are buggy, easily subverted, and impossible to accurately audit. So perhaps it was only a matter of time before members of the open-source movement would enter the fray, with the claim that their kind of technology can guarantee free and democratic elections. Already, two bellwether states, California and New York, have taken notice. Nation's First Open Source Election Software Released. LOS ANGELES — A group working to produce an open and transparent voting system to replace current proprietary systems has published its first batches of code for public review.

Nation's First Open Source Election Software Released

The Open Source Digital Voting Foundation (OSDV) announced the availability of source code for its prototype election system Wednesday night at a panel discussion that included Mitch Kapor, creator of Lotus 1-2-3 and co-founder of the Electronic Frontier Foundation; California Secretary of State Debra Bowen; Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder Dean Logan; and Heather Smith, director of Rock the Vote. The OSDV, co-founded by Gregory Miller and John Sebes, launched its Trust the Vote Project in 2006 and has an eight-year roadmap to produce a comprehensive, publicly owned, open source electronic election system. “We believe we’re catalyzing a re-birth of the industry … by making the blueprint available to anyone who wants to use it,” Miller said.

“That was unexpected,” Miller said. Gov 2.0 Summit 2010: Bryan Sivak,"Why We Need Open Source Electronic ..." Open Source Voting Software Concept Released.