Skip to main content
Home
Dave Lane

Main navigation

  • Abilities
  • Blog
  • CV
  • About
    • About
    • This Site
    • Commercial Terms
  • Contact
User account menu
  • Log in

Breadcrumb

  1. Home

Response to Ian Apperly regarding Online Voting

Profile picture for user dave
By dave , 21 September 2015

My response to Ian's blog post supporting online voting:

Ian, online voting's been trialed in dozens of places around the world. The fact is that it's been found to have actually failed, or probably failed, everywhere. I say they "probably failed" because the online voting system was unable to record the failure because with software you can't record what you didn't anticipate, and by definition, security vulnerabilities are unanticipated - that doesn't breed confidence in a system whose use depends on public confidence.

Your suggestion that we in NZ will somehow succeed with online voting where far better resourced (and, frankly, probably smarter and more qualified) people elsewhere in the world... smacks of bravado and, well, breathless blind faith.

The oft quoted online voting "success stories" like Estonia, are the places where the politicians have wilfully failed to heed the technologists whose advice they've requested. They've persevered in the face of opposition by technologists who've said to them what I've been saying: the systems *cannot* be made secure. Note, most of the people (75% of voters) in Estonia shun the online system because they don't trust it. It hasn't increase voter participation - if anything online voting further disenfranchises those who don't vote. There're plenty  of other articles about the so-called "E-stonian" online voting success story...

There's no point in trialing online voting here in NZ, because it is simply a bad idea. Accepting that will save us all a lot of money and grief, and allow us to invest our energy in the real problem: actually improving voter engagement rather than gratifying some armchair technophile's pipe dream.

Also, it's a bit rich referring to the people who work to define the state-of-the-art in IT as "Luddites". They are, almost by definition, not. Making that accusation comes across as pretty shrill, and rather silly.

I think it's more appropriate to recognise that responsible and mature technologists accept that a technical solution isn't always the best approach. Moreover, in a situation like online voting, human factors are the greatest source of intractability - people simply don't "get" IT security - we're not ready.

Note to commenters: due to problems with spam comments, your comment will only appear on this site after it's been deemed (by me) to be legitimate.

Blog posts

Why Slack is better, and why open communities shouldn't use it
7 Mar 2018 - 14:16
Modern Trade Agreements and the Mega-corporate End Game
26 Jan 2018 - 09:06
Why should we open source our code?
18 Nov 2017 - 21:19
Understanding Free and Open Source Software
10 Oct 2017 - 10:00
How NZ National could partner with the NZ Greens
30 Sep 2017 - 17:53
NZFuelFail - Worthy of further investigation?
22 Sep 2017 - 15:01
NZ 2017 Election Voting Advice
13 Sep 2017 - 15:12

Pagination

  • Previous page
  • 6
  • Next page
More posts...
RSS feed

Creative Commons License - CC By attribution, Share alike - International 4.0

Contact Dave!
Download Dave's CV
Eliminate DRM!

Contact Modes

Social Media

Software

Terms of Engagement
Terms of Reference
Powered by Drupal